Hall of Fame insults Baltimore by refusing Modell and letting in Tagliabue

With a special committee and expanded class, former Baltimore Ravens owner Art Modell likely missed his best chance at the Hall of Fame.

For the NFL’s 100th season, they created a very special and expanded Hall of Fame class. Up for enshrinement once again as a historical contributor, former Baltimore Ravens owner Art Modell was not among the three chosen. Once again, Modell has been unfairly left out of Canton.

However, this denial carries quite a bit of weight and finality to it. With an expanded class and special blue-ribbon voting panel, this was Modell’s best and likely last real chance of making the cut.

Instead of the same voters that had previously held Modell out, the new blue-ribbon panel was made up of coaches, former players, historians and analysts. There was hope the bitterness many former voters had against Modell would be let go and see the former Browns and Ravens owner get a fair shake. But with Modell once again being held out and former league commissioner Paul Tagliabue getting in, it was a slap in the face for Baltimore.

Tagliabue’s greatest achievement comes for expanding the league from 28 franchises to 32. However, it was Modell’s move from Cleveland that really brought the league the Ravens. Tagliabue had publicly been against the idea of Baltimore getting a franchise back after the Colts moved to Indianapolis, famously telling the city to build a museum instead of a new stadium.

Even without the genuine hatred many in Baltimore have towards Tagliabue, there were plenty of reasons to give pause to cementing his legacy in Canton. Let’s not forget Tagliabue’s dismissal concussions in 1994 as a “journalist issue.” Or his role as commissioner during the league’s opioid epidemic that saw the NFL sued for decades of abuse.

Meanwhile, Modell was chief architect of the league’s television expansion. As the chairman of the NFL Television Committee, Modell was a part of establishing “Monday Night Football” and negotiating the early television contracts NFL owners currently rely so heavily upon. There’s also Modell’s role in merging the AFC and NFL as well as negotiating the first collective bargaining agreement. We shouldn’t forget Modell made Ozzie Newsome the first black general manager the sport had ever seen.

While Modell was far from perfect as an owner, his fingerprints are all over the NFL as we know it now. It’s not a stretch to say the league wouldn’t be nearly as prominent if it weren’t for the negotiations and meetings Modell was a huge part of. Yet, it appears as though his move from Cleveland to Baltimore is the only legacy that matters to some while failing to recognize a far more shameful one in Tagliabue.

[vertical-gallery id=30322]

Paul Tagliabue’s Hall of Fame induction is a slap in the face to all NFL players

During his time as NFL Commissioner, Paul Tagliabue did all he could to dismiss head trauma. That’s why he should not be in the Hall of Fame

Linebacker Luke Kuechly’s surprise retirement on Tuesday was part of a larger trend of late, also espoused by players like Chris Borland and Andrew Luck, with the primary theme of increased awareness of the dangers of the game informing those players’ life choices.

Were it not for Paul Tagliabue, who served as NFL Commissioner from 1989 through 2006, more players would have been far better-informed, and would have been able to make their own life choices, free from league propaganda that served up disinformation for decades on the ultimate price of playing the game at the highest level.

Less than 24 hours after Kuechly’s retirement, which came in part because of Kuechly’s own concussion history, the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Centennial Slate Blue-Ribbon Panel chose Tagliabue for induction as part of its expanded Class of 2020, in celebration of the NFL’s 100th anniversary.

There could not possibly be a more conflicted message sent to the players of Tagliabue’s era, and to the players of today. The modern NFL is one that claims to care about the effects of head trauma and other injuries as regards the full lives of NFL players. During his tenure, Tagliabue could not have cared less. Instead, Tagliabue did all he could to move the needle in the direction of the old-school “rub some dirt on it, and get back out there” mentality. He was no less dangerous than a tobacco lobbyist.

This was during a 1994 summit at the New York City YMCA called “Major League Commissioners Tackle the Future of Major League Sports.” NBA Commissioner David Stern and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman were also on the panel, which was moderated by the late Pulitzer Prize-Winning David Halberstam, When Halberstam turned the talk to the effects of head trauma, especially as it pertained to the retirements of Troy Aikman, Steve Young, Merrill Hoge, and Al Toon, Tagliabue was not pleased at all. He dismissed the increased furor as “one of those pack-journalism issues.” He also said then that the number of concussions “is relatively small; the problem is the journalist issue.”

In the same year, Tagliabue established the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee, ostensibly to study the effects of head trauma. To lead this Committee, Tagliabue appointed Elliott Pellman, a Guadalajara-educated  rheumatologist with no expertise in head trauma. No results from this group were published until 2003. It soon became apparent why that was.

Pellman, who became one of the worst shills imaginable, and his colleagues, wrote in January 2005 that returning to play after a concussion “does not involve significant risk of a second injury either in the same game or during the season.” The group also stated repeatedly that there was “no evidence of worsening injury or chronic cumulative effects of multiple MTBIs in NFL players.”

It is not an exaggeration to state that without Pellman in charge of the Committee, and with a more qualified and more independent physician at the helm (Pellman also served as Tagliabue’s personal physician), NFL players would have known the full measure of their eventual fates years before they did. The NFL’s eventual settlement with more than 4,000 former players and their families, was the result of a series of lawsuits seeking to stamp the NFL with its own liability in this regard. One of the conditions of the settlement was a gag order on years of malfeasance; a huge boon for a league that would rather forget Pellman ever existed in a public relations sense.

In 2017, Tagliabue tried to stop the bleeding in an interview with the Talk of Fame Network in which he provided a perfunctory apology for his 1994 remarks.

“Obviously,” he said, “I do regret those remarks. Looking back, it was not sensible language to use to express my thoughts at the time. My language was intemperate, and it led to serious misunderstanding. I overreacted on issues which we were already working on. But that doesn’t excuse the overreaction and intemperate language.

“Bottom line, it sounded like I was shooting the messenger, which was the concussion issue. My intention at the time was to make a point which could have been made fairly simply: That there was a need for better data. There was a need for more reliable information about concussions and uniformity in terms of how they were being defined in terms of severity.”

Tagliabue also addressed Pellman’s appointment — a move recommended by then-New York Jets owner Leon Hess.

“Hess said that he was a hard worker, he was highly intelligent, he was a good organizer and he could work effectively with coaches and players,” Tagliabue explained, “and he was willing to stand up for the medical point of view and not be cowed. So I put Dr. Pellman in charge, knowing what his specialties were.”

“It was truly based on track record that these men had with their teams and what I thought they could help us accomplish with internal change,”

Perhaps the fact that it took a special committee to shoehorn Tagliabue into the Hall of Fame should be an indicator of the extent to which the former Commissioner has carried this black mark. During Tagliabue’s time in office, the NFL expanded from 28 to 32 teams and enjoyed a span of previously unimaginable prosperity that continues to this day.

There is no other reason to shut Paul Tagliabue out of Canton except for his callous and uninformed refusal to accept the effects of the game he ran and championed, but that reason is the only one required to keep him out forever. His Canton induction is an insult to all the players from his era, and the players of today, who would not be able to manage their futures as well as they do were he still in office.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar previously covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

Roman Harper pushes back against ex-49er Donte Whitner’s trash talk

Former New Orleans Saints safety Roman Harper fired back after ex-San Francisco 49ers safety Donte Whitner took jabs at his team on Twitter.

The San Francisco 49ers are readying to kick off against the New Orleans Saints in the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on Sunday, leading former players from both teams to take to social media to reminiscence about their glory days, and maybe air some grievances ahead of this year’s Festivus celebration.

Former 49ers safety Donte Whitner fired the opening salvo, claiming his team delivered “karma for Bountygate” to the Saints in their infamous 2011 playoff game. In that matchup, Whitner got away with a dangerous helmet-to-helmet hit on Saints running back Pierre Thomas on the opening drive, knocking Thomas unconscious and concussing him. Whitner insisted that his tackle was made “The legal way,” which angered retired Saints safety Roman Harper.

“Bro what a joke,” Harper wrote, pointing out how the 49ers won that game after the Saints offense committed five turnovers, and giving Whitner’s defense credit for creating so many takeaways. He then warned Whitner against putting on a tough-guy act on social media.

At the time, Whitner’s hit on Thomas was ruled legal because Thomas not a defenseless player, having completed several football moves (catching a pass and running upfield) prior to being struck. But after increased public awareness about the dangers of concussions suffered in sports put pressure on the NFL, rules changes in 2017 and 2018 outlawed all helmet-to-helmet hits like this under a blanket policy. Thomas was lucky to not suffer line-changing effects from the brain injury Whitner inflicted on him; others haven’t been so lucky.

Harper was one of several Saints players involved in the NFL’s “Bountygate” scandal, in which league commissioner Roger Goodell used the testimony of a disgruntled former Saints team employee (who now works in the league office) as grounds to suspend multiple players and team personnel for much of the 2012 season. Upon reviewing Goodell’s evidence for the claims made against the Saints and the under-oath testimony of then-linebackers coach Joe Vitt and others implicated in the drama, NFL-appointed arbiter and former commissioner Paul Tagliabue overturned all player suspensions and later reprimanded his successor in an interview with Rolling Stone.

[vertical-gallery id=23984]