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Wysłany: Sob 16:00, 25 Gru 2010 Temat postu: s undisputed that we got it right |
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“Don’t feel offended. He’s asked everybody,” Larson said.
Both sides tried to use Brzezinski to support their claims about who employs the Williamses. Brzezinski compared the Vikings to a McDonald’s restaurant, as a franchisee operating under the parent company, during Ginsberg’s examination. During cross-examination by NFL attorney Dan Nash, Brzezinski testified that the Vikings had complete authority to hire him and dictate his salary — not the league.
Joe Schmitt, an attorney for the NFL, accused Ginsberg of “raising red herrings” and trying to “bootstrap” the arguments about unfairness onto their claim that the league broke state drug-testing law. The unfairness claim was previously dismissed in federal court.
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Schmitt argued that the terms of the collective bargaining agreement dictate league activity and said the NFL isn’t able to impose at will rules upon the individual teams and players. Ginsberg has accused the NFL of leaking the information about the positive test to the media and therefore breaking the confidentiality code, but Schmitt said there was “not a shred of evidence” that occurred.
Ginsberg argued that the NFL has tight control of both teams and players, right down to the required color of the chinstraps on the helmets (it’s white). He also criticized the league for unfairness and told the judge that “the arrogance and the cold-heartedness of the NFL in administering the policy needs to be stopped.”
“It’s undisputed that we got it right,” Schmitt said.
MINNEAPOLIS – After more than a year and a half of legal maneuvering in their labor fight with the NFL,Vick to get start in final preseason game nfl jer
[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], Minnesota Vikings defensive tackles Kevin and Pat Williams might finally learn in May if they must serve a four-game suspension for taking a banned substance.
Childress simply smiled, unwilling to make any comments about Brett Favre’s status.
“Been a long week,” Pat Williams said outside the courtroom.
An appeal by the loser is anticipated, however, so the end of this complicated case isn’t necessarily in sight. The players declined to comment until after the judge’s ruling.
The NFL has called the lawsuit a “state law end-around that can undermine all anti-doping policies in sports.” Other sports leagues — including Major League Baseball,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], the NBA and the NHL — filed court papers supporting the NFL’s position, saying the Williamses’ case could affect their ability to enforce their own rules against steroids and other drugs.
This entry was posted on Monday, March 15th, 2010 at 5:50 am and is filed under nfl blog, [link widoczny dla zalogowanych] news. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
“It’s OK to have fun in here sometimes,” Larson said.
The league alleges the leak came from Ginsberg or someone on the players’ side. Brzezinski was equally adamant that it wasn’t him.
Hennepin County Judge Gary Larson told both sides to submit final briefs by April 2 and said he will rule between 30 and 45 days after that, sometime in the first half of May.
Responded Brzezinski: “I like my job,Mark Sanchez
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“Absolutely not,” the coach said. “That’s so anti-me.”
In a lighter moment, Ginsberg concluded his examination by asking Childress: “Who is your quarterback going to be next year?”
A key issue at trial is who employs the two players — the team, the NFL or both. Players attorney Peter Ginsberg contends the NFL is the employer and thus violated Minnesota law regarding a required three-day notification of their positive test in 2008 and also failed to keep it confidential. News that the Williamses were among several NFL players who took a weight-loss pill called StarCaps containing the banned diuretic bumetanide broke in October 2008.
Ginsberg asked Childress if he was the source of the leak, after the players confided their positive test to him.
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NFL commissioner Roger Goodell wasn’t ultimately called to be a witness, but Vikings coach Brad Childress and vice president for football operations Rob Brzezinski testified Friday.
If Larson favors the league, his injunction blocking the suspensions — which were initially levied in December 2008 — likely would be lifted. That would allow the NFL to follow through with the punishment, yanking the heart of Minnesota’s stout run defense out of the lineup for a quarter of the 2010 season.
Attorneys for the players and the NFL made closing arguments Friday, wrapping up a five-day trial that included testimony from the two players, their coach and a league official. The players contend the NFL broke Minnesota law when it applied its anti-doping policy two years ago and are seeking unspecified damages.
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