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May 09, 2008
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Mike Ditka flags NFL on its CR Gameday

DitkaLeague, union slow to take decisive steps for retired players

By Dennis Schaal

Every corporation can expect Corporate Responsibility Moments. If you’re Merrill Lynch, one came with the giant mortgage write-offs and CEO Stanley O’Neal’s resignation. Citigroup faced a similar scenario with the resignation of CEO Charles Prince, and recently moved Vikram Pandit into the position. If you’re Mattel, you know what it feels like to be the newest Harvard Business School case study in CR and supply-chain management. If you’re a veteran of Enron, Arthur Andersen or Union Carbide, you know what it’s like to have your company vaporized in one swift CR Moment.

Lately, the sports world has been filled with such Moments. Major League Baseball was called before Congress on steroids use, and the Mitchell report names names. The sport’s only seven-time MVP and all-time home run king Barry Bonds has been indicted on perjury and obstruction charges. France’s largest sports enterprise, the Tour de France, has suffered catastrophic sponsor withdrawals after beaucoup doping scandals.

And now the National Football League’s (NFL) CR Moment has arrived, and the league and union finally are responding after a couple of years of fumbling. The NFL’s CR Moment revolves around its well-documented neglect—or even mistreatment—of former players concerning retirement and disability benefits.

In mid-December, after unrelenting criticism in the media and before Congress, the NFL and NFL Players Association implemented a half-dozen or so measures to streamline the disability process. They will add a medical director to a two-member initial claims committee that had no health expert on it; hire a claims specialist to help retirees decipher disability applications; conduct electronic ballots on disability appeals to speed the process; position doctors, who perform required exams, closer to applicants in major metro areas; and ease up on totally disabled players’ status reviews by performing them every five years instead of three.

There are so many parallels to other industries in this NFL Moment that it serves as a case study for others at such crossroads.Webster

One poignant moment within the NFL’s CR Moment came before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation in September when Garrett Webster, the 23-year-old son of deceased former Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs center Mike Webster, testified about the agonizing physical and mental deterioration of “the greatest dad in the world.”

“I cannot tell you what it’s like to wake up and not be able to walk to the shower without being in constant pain,” Garrett Webster said of his father, who died in 2002 at age 50. “I cannot tell you what it’s like to fear the loss of your mind and to feel it actually happening. I cannot tell you what it’s like to become a stranger even to yourself. However, what I can tell you, and what I will tell you, is what it’s like to stand by helpless, as your father’s life is turned into a constant living hell that most people would take their own lives to escape.”

A nine-time All-Pro and Hall of Fame member, Mike Webster played in 245 games from 1974 to 1991, including one six-year span when he took the battering that came from playing every offensive down. From the multiple head injuries that ensued, Mike Webster developed brain damage, was totally disabled when he retired, but was short-changed on disability benefits by the “culpable conduct” of the NFL Retirement Plan, a federal appeals court found.

Taking up the cause of Mike Webster and other former players who face similar hardships, Mike Ditka has served as a whistleblower and compelling spokesman for his former locker-room buddies, on-field foes and older veterans. A five-time All-Pro tight end with the Chicago Bears and ex-coach (Bears and New Orleans Saints), “Da Coach” is ubiquitous these days in commercials, on ESPN as a color commentator and analyst, and lately also in Senate and House hearing rooms or at press conferences as he throws verbal forearms at the NFL and its players association over their lack of attention to retired players.

And, with the prodding of Ditka and others, there are signs that some active players, despite the foot-dragging of their union, finally are taking up the cause of their predecessors. Kansas City Chiefs offensive tackle Kyle Turley recently pledged to contribute his Dec. 23 game check of $25,000 to the Ditka-affiliated Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund and the lineman urged his fellow players to do likewise. The Gridiron Greats, which designated that day Gridiron Guardian Sunday, is set up to provide immediate assistance to ex-players in need, and expects other players to contribute.

Ditka claims the league’s retirement board, composed of three NFL owners’ representatives and three players association designees, pays disability benefits “way below the national average,” when measuring the percentage of retired players receiving compensation, “in a sport called football, which is much more brutal than anything anybody else does in society.”

In defense, the players association states that from 1993 to June 2007, the Retirement Board awarded disability benefits to 42.6 percent of 1004 applicants, a mark that’s not far behind the Social Security Administration, which approves “roughly 47 percent.” However, Social Security only awards benefits for total disability while the NFL’s approvals in theory should be much higher because it approves applications for total and partial disabilities, too.

And, the amount of NFL monies designated for disability benefits is paltry. In 2006, the players received some $4.2 billion, or 60 percent of the NFL’s $7 billion in revenues, for salaries and retirement benefits, and allotted just $20 million, or about 0.48 percent, of their take to fund disability benefits.

So, how did this crisis develop and how have the players association and the league responded?
By some accounts, the NFL and players association were blindsided when the issue broke into the spotlight in early 2006. In what could be a cautionary tale for corporations in other industries, critics say the NFL and union were asleep as retirement and disability programs ran on autopilot, and didn’t focus enough attention on best practices.

For its part, the NFL Players Association, which shares responsibilities with the league on retirement issues, initially reacted very defensively.

And until the recently announced measures, which emerged two years after the issue came to the fore, the NFL and the union failed to take any dramatic steps to resolve the dispute.

UpshawLike other scandals or crises, the timeline for the NFL’s CR Moment started with a paperboy’s morning delivery and a web headline. On Jan. 15, 2006, an article by Charles Chandler in the Charlotte Observer of North Carolina featured interviews with more than a dozen Hall of Famers, most of whom lambasted the NFL and the NFL Players Association about the inadequacy of their disability and retirement benefits.

They spoke of former players who were forced to take discounted early-retirement benefits and couldn’t make ends meet because they were paying their own healthcare costs; ex-gridiron stars who couldn’t afford the trip to Canton for Hall of Fame ceremonies; and once-greats and lesser-knowns who had no money for knee replacements or worse, and had plunged through a nonexistent safety net.

In that article, NFL Players Association Executive Director Gene Upshaw fanned the flames. “The bottom line is I don’t work for them [retired players],” Upshaw said. “They don’t hire me and they can’t fire me. They can complain about me all day long. They can have their opinion. But the active players have the vote. That’s who pays my salary.”

And, by last summer, apparently no one had told to Upshaw to soften his public stance. Talking to the Philadelphia Daily News in June about Joe DeLamielleure, an ex-Buffalo Bills guard and advocate for retired players, Upshaw touched off a controversy, saying: “A guy like DeLamielleure says the things he said about me. You think I’m going to invite him to dinner? No. I’m going to break his … damn neck.”

Crisis Communications

In the interim, the players association opted to recruit a crisis communications specialist. The union tapped a savvy media point-man, attorney Lanny Davis, a partner in Orrick, Herrick & Sutcliffe. Davis, White House Special Counsel from 1996 to 1998 for President Clinton, handled campaign finance investigations, among other legal challenges, for the president, and now works for Upshaw on the former players’ issue.

Taking a more reasoned tack than Upshaw and citing positions from an “NFLPA White Paper on Benefits,” Davis says, “the union can only represent its members, who are current players. Notwithstanding that, Mr. Upshaw has fought for and attained substantial benefits for retired players as part of the collective bargaining agreement. It is a vocabulary issue. We can’t represent retired players, but we can fight for their interests.”

Many former players, of course, don’t see the problem as a “vocabulary issue,” but a life-and-death one.
Still, Davis argues that the players association has received lopsided criticism. For instance, Davis offers that the Gridiron Greats, a Green Bay, Wis., nonprofit organization whose board members include former players Ditka, DeLamielleure, Willie Davis, Harry Carson, Gale Sayers and Tom Nowatzke, unfairly bash the union when it “has joint responsibility with the NFL for all of these pension programs.”

Asking Ditka

“The Gridiron Greats, very interestingly—and this would be a good
question for you to ask Mr. Ditka—how come you never mention the NFL?” Davis asks. “Why do you always attack Gene Upshaw? [Ditka’s] never been able really to answer that question. Or any of the players that you read about. You can ask any one of them, why do you always attack the NFLPA?”
Ditka counters that the responsibility for benefits problem lies with both the players association and the team owners, who “could make this go away.”

He adds: “But, here’s my problem for singling out the players association. You go back and tell him [Davis] this. These are people who paid their dues in an association or union over a period of time and represented that union as best they could as members of it, and all of a sudden when they are not capable of being contributors any more, that union turns its back on them and doesn’t help them in filing claims for disability?”

In the spotlight for his bashing of the NFL and union, Ditka came in for some apparently well-deserved lumps, too, concerning his administration of a charity to benefit Hall of Fame players in need.
USA Today reported Dec. 6 that The Mike Ditka Hall of Fame Assistance Trust Fund took in $1.3 million, spent some $715,000 to run three charity golf events, and paid just $57,000 to former players.

Ditka quibbles with those figures, but dissolved the trust fund within days, and said he transferred a balance of some $600,000 to a housing program for developmentally disabled people in Chicago and to the Gridiron Greats, which is autonomous from the trust fund.

The union jumped all over that development, of course, arguing that it undercuts Ditka’s criticisms.
Meanwhile, there is the perception in some quarters that Upshaw’s players association is not overly confrontational with management. After all, there is much harmony in the league’s and union’s approaches to the ex-players’ issue.Davis

In that regard, Davis says the players association has “no criticism of the NFL” on the retirement issue because the players’ share of the NFL kitty is determined through collective bargaining.

Still, the union and NFL disagree on at least one key matter, a governance issue. The players association advocates taking control of the retirement board, which makes final decisions on disability applications, and the NFL opposes that change.

“The 3-3 split [between management and union] is consistent with federal law,” Davis says. “We propose a change in federal law so that if the NFLPA is getting blamed for decisions, we might as well have control of the institution that makes the decisions.”

Ties to Upshaw

Cyril Smith of Zuckerman Spaeder in Baltimore, an attorney who helped the Mike Webster estate, his children and attorneys win about $1.85 million in retroactive benefits and fees from the NFL Retirement Plan, expresses skepticism that merely enabling the union to fill all six seats on the retirement board would be a solution because appointees likely would have close ties to Upshaw.

Even under existing law, the union could improve the composition of the retirement board, Smith says.
“Nothing in ERISA (the Employee Retirement Income Security Act) would stop the union from naming a doctor, or a retired player without ties to the NFLPA executive director to the board,” Smith says, pointing out that one of the union designees on the board, Tom Condon, is Upshaw’s personal agent and negotiated his contract with the players association. “I believe, and many others believe, that retirement board members who did not answer to Upshaw would make better decisions on retirement and disability claims.”

GoodellThe union also wants Congress to establish standards that would enable injured workers to receive immediate medical help without losing lifetime medical coverage. Today, some players, and injured workers, are forced by their circumstances into accepting lump-sum payments, and give up their rights to lifetime medical coverage.

The players association also advocates having Congress eliminate the need for the union-management initial claims committee, which makes initial disability decisions. Both the NFL and players association blame some of the inefficiencies of the disability process on a 2002 federal law that mandated such a committee, which must analyze reports from retirement board-appointed “neutral physicians” and other doctors within 45 days. This additional decision-making layer actually slows the process because, with a substantial number of applications initially rejected, appeals must then
go up the ladder to the six-member retirement board for final decisions.

And what is the NFL’s strategy for dealing with retired players?

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who’s been in his post for a little more than a year, has earned high marks for his zero-tolerance policy on players’ off-field indiscretions, but he hadn’t taken decisive action on the disability question until this month.

Instead, almost two years after shortcomings in disability benefits were disclosed, Goodell told the Senate committee in September that the league had hired consultants to recommend remedial steps.

Richest League

The NFL is the richest professional sports league in the world, with each team worth about $957 million on average, according to Forbes. But, the league, which apparently hasn’t faced any sponsor defections on the issue, isn’t ready to take on more of a financial load for retirement and disability funding.

“Owners are responsibly addressing these concerns, but they are simply not in a position to absorb incremental costs,” Goodell told the Senate.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello explains that the league opposes changes to retirement board governance.

“Clubs do not believe that the needs of retired players are something for the union to solve,” Aiello says. “Instead, the needs of retired players are a concern both of the clubs and the union, and of current and retired players alike. The management trustees contribute valuable business and investment insight, administrative capacity and employer perspective to the process.”

In May, leading up to its CR Moment, the NFL formed an Alliance with the union, the NFL Alumni Association and the Pro Football Hall of Fame to deal with retirement issues, but the Gridiron Greats charged the Alliance lacks meaningful participation from player-activists. Meanwhile, the Alliance and team owners contributed $17 million and selected 14 medical centers to handle joint-replacement surgeries for former players.

Super Bowl Bruising

Ditka reportedly reacted positively to the NFL-union initiatives to streamline the disability process. But, in the interim, plans are are proceeding to put more heat on the NFL and union in the week before Super Bowl XLII on Feb. 3 in Phoenix, Ariz. Former former players Gale Sayers, Jerry Kramer, Randy White, Seth Joyner and Roy Green were slated to announce a gathering of “NFL legends” that week with all donations going to former players through the Gridiron Greats.

It all boils down to a simple issue, Ditka believes: “There’s right and there’s wrong. Just do the right thing. Take care of these guys. Give them a chance to get their disability respectfully without jumping through hoops.”

Tips For A Fix of Retiree Problem

Heads—as in Gene Upshaw's or Roger Goodell's—don't need to roll to resolve the former players' issue, but by letting the story get ahead of them, the practitioners now need to make a substantial sacrifice.

Greg Wilson, a Senior Vice President at Levick Strategic Communications in Washington, D.C., offered that perspective when asked how the parties might tackle the dispute. The firm has experience in these matters, having handled public relations strategy for Rosie O’Donnell, a prominent Order of the Catholic Church and an Enron-connected legal firm, among other clients.

Wilson believes the league and players association have bungled this David and Goliath battle. “It is a big problem if you sit on a problem over time. Ultimately, this is not what a leader does. It is what we talk about in crisis counseling all the time. They need quick and decisive action that often involves a sacrifice.”

Wilson offered additional tips, which are relevant to firms facing CR Moments outside the sports arena, too. Among Wilson’s points:

  • Acknowledge there is a problem, don’t minimize it, and fix it. “It is important for the league and union to run to the light,” Wilson says.
  • Join forces, form a joint commission of all the stakeholders while involving unimpeachable big names. Wilson suggests the commission recruit a third-party, someone with the stature of George Mitchell, the former Senator from Maine, to lead the effort.
  • Make a tangible sacrifice. In the retiree dispute, Wilson believes the burden most heavily will fall on the team owners to take a significant financial step to quell the issue.
  • Speed is all-important. Resolve the problem in 2007, or at the latest before the Super Bowl in February. “People will forgive the NFL because they think it is a great organization,” Wilson says. “But that can only take you so far.”

Wilson cautions against the league’s go-slow approach. “Saying you are examining best practices is like a one-yard gain or just getting back to the line of scrimmage,” he says. “We’re looking for the three parties—the NFL, the players association and the former players—to move on this 10 yards at a time and to be marching down the field.”

Players in NFL’s Corporate Responsibility Moment
Practitioners:
Roger Goodell, NFL Commissioner

Gene Upshaw, NFL Players Association
Executive Director

Providers:
Lanny Davis, Partner in Orrick, Herrick &Sutcliffe, Washington, D.C.

Cy Smith, Partner in Zuckerman Spaeder, Baltimore, Md.

Influencers:
Mike Ditka, Hall of Fame tight end (Bears, Eagles
and Cowboys), and coach (Bears and Saints)

Kyle Turley, offensive tackle, Kansas City Chiefs

Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund, Green Bay, Wis.

Garrett Webster, son of deceased Hall of Fame center Mike Webster (Steelers and Chiefs)

Charles Chandler, Reporter, the Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, N.C.

The U.S. Congress

As a CR contributor I am

As a CR contributor I am dismayed when an attack article is published that, for all intents and purposes, presents not only an extremely distorted view, but a one-sided view at that. And essentially you have taken the easy way here and essentially printed verbatim a series of one-sided press releases coming from and about Mike Ditka and his associates. I've watched this controversy develop over the past year--and while there is reason for concern that some former players have faced significant troubles, Ditka and his Gridiron Greats is operating more as (1) either a sham—as shown by the paucity of funds actually going to former players—or (2) a tool by remaining hard-line owners—and they are still out there—seeking to weaken the National Football League Players Association's significant gains in terms of both salary levels and benefits over the last 15 years. For example, during their fabled NFL careers, neither Ditka himself or none of Ditka’s superstars were involved with the union or did anything personally to further player rights. And before I continue, let me emphasize that I "speak" with some authority since I was a union staff member when these so-called limits on retirees took place. Given the past history of savaging Gene Upshaw by the likes of Ditka and Joe DeLamielleure, I understand why Gene may have felt any congressional hearing would fare better without his being in the room. And so I'm writing to provide you with a more balanced overview--and one far different that posed in the Gridiron Greats press releases. Even if you had a writer attempt to get Upshaw’s detailed point of view, after having been an NFLPA staff member for nearly 25 years, I know that Gene steadfastly believes he is only responsible to one group and one group alone—currently active and potentially active players, the members of the union’s bargaining unit and those are the only ones to which he will answer. Your article and its love affair with Gridiron Great are much too one-sided. And since I am retired from the union since 2005, I don’t feel reticent about filling in blanks. First, however, my credentials: I spent nearly a decade working in the U.S. Congress, first as a Research Economist for the Joint Economic Committee, then as Legislative Assistant for the late Representative George E. Brown, Jr. of California and then as Legislative Analyst for Representative Ronald V. Dellums of California. And from 1981 until I retired in 2005 I was the Director of Research for the NFLPA. When I joined the union staff in 1981—and Gene at that time was the president of the association—players were receiving approximately thirty cents out of every dollar they generated in revenues and owners were taking approximately seventy cents. That, of course, was a legacy from the Ditka era when so-called Superstars like Ditka made what in that period could be termed “high” salaries while the vast majority of players—the “grunts” in the trenches earned a pittance. The stars such as Ditka may have been big names on the playing field, but off it, they were afraid to challenge the owners over any issue—be it measly pensions or a lousy disability system. Enmity between players and owners was bitter and hostile. And the more that articles featuring only what Ditka and his buddies say, it portrays division among current players, the more remaining hard-line owners laugh all the way to the bank; for them, a weakened Upshaw is the best of all possible worlds. By 2005 when I retired, players now are receiving well over 60% of all revenues and owners are making over 30%--and those unsettling labor/management battles between the parties of the 1960’s through the 1980’s was replaced by a constructive partnership (although I personally would call it more of a “shotgun marriage”). Current NFL players have the best post-career program of any professional sport and important steps have been taken in critical health coverage and injury issues. All of this occurred under the leadership of Gene and the elected player representatives. Looking back at my service within the Congress, which wasted valuable time holding a series of hearings on this subject, I am hard-pressed to remember when an dispute—if, indeed, there was one at stake here, or anything else involved here which touches on public policy or even the need for congressional oversight—of this narrow a nature was ever accorded such exposure. Why? Pro sports and pro players—active or retired—are sexy on the Hill, an attraction for members of Congress. So, having failed to gain traction with active players—indeed, the small group of malcontents have never attempted to build a positive coalition so that the distance between themselves and active players keeps widening—the dissidents have now turned to the political arena and to the media, personally, to air their complaints. Here’s what the Gridiron Greats press releases and Ditka's empty rhetoric featured in your article conveniently overlook: (1) All decisions relating to union policies are decided by a vote of the elected Player Representatives; when it is imperative to take a quick vote—whenever it is impossible to bring together the entire Board of Player Representatives—votes are made by the elected Executive Committee. Gene, as Executive Director, does not have the power to vote in any situation. I have witnessed many instances when votes have gone against what Gene has favored; (2) Throughout every period when there has been a Collective Bargaining Agreement, the current recognized bargaining unit under the National Labor Relations Act limits membership in the NFLPA only to active and potentially active players. See if you can find any other union where retired members continue as part of the bargaining unit; so when Gene is quoted in the media as rebuffing former players because they are “not his boss”, he may seem gruff but he’s technically and totally correct; even so, every annual meeting of the Board of Player Representatives has had one or more former players attending—and no one, Dikta included, had he ever asked, was turned away; (3)Instead of stacking the deck only with outspoken critics of the union and therefore listening only to dissidents, Congress should have invited not only the current union president, Troy Vincent, but also other past presidents, such as Jeff Van Note, Tom Condon (both of whom served as player-appointed trustees on the pension board), and Michael Kenn, and Trace Armstrong, former NFLPA presidents who constitute a procession starting in the 1960’s and running through the turn of the century and they certainly could have testified under oath that any attempts to discriminate against older retired players didn’t happen; (4)Investigating only the role of the union—and Gene in particular—is disingenuous in terms of players receiving disability payments from a joint pension board. There are three player trustees and three owner trustees which means, in practical terms, only those cases that receive unanimous votes can proceed. Once again, Gene does not have a vote on the board. No matter what he personally—or any of the player-appointed trustees favors and how thorough the due diligence performed by the NFLPA staff and its consultants—the owners’ three representatives always vote as a group. I am not aware of any instance over the near quarter century I worked for the union when an owners’ trustee broke ranks and therefore I am puzzled by charges hurled at Gene for his alleged inability to grant disability payments; (5)No one is more interested in extending post-career health coverage than Gene and such insurance coverage has been expanded greatly since 1993. However, research conducted by the NFLPA’s Director of Benefits, Miki Yaras-Davis, uncovered that the cost of total post-career health benefits just for active players would be more than entire amount of funds going for all salaries and benefits—and to add coverage for the thousands of retired players would be literally astronomical. You don’t have to take just my word; the following article lays it all out:

 http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=jc-lifetimeinsurance092607&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

M. J. Duberstein Kihei, HI

Retired NFL Players

These comments came from Maureen Kilcullen, who worked in the Baltimore Colts front office from 1968 to 1980:

Dear Mr. Schaal:
I read with great interest your piece entitled "Mike Ditka flags NFL on its CR Gameday," a compelling analysis of the issues faced by many retired NFL players. However, having been involved in the effort to improve pension and disability benefits and to gain representation for retired players for the last four years, I wanted to contact you regarding the situation.

When the NFLPA failed to respond to efforts of the Baltimore Colts alumni to gain assistance for Hall of Fame tight end and former NFLPA president John Mackey, the Colts' alumni raised $25,000 to benefit Mackey, who suffers from frontotemporal dementia. Since that time, the Baltimore Colts alumni have been at the forefront of a movement to enlighten the NFL, the NFLPA, the fans, the media, and the active players about the plight of hundreds of retired NFL players from the 1950s and beyond.

Approximately three years ago -- having learned that Mackey's situation was repeated far too often in the homes of retired NFL players across the country -- we took the first steps to organize a national effort on behalf of our retired teammates. We launched a weblog to inform the public; a private Google Group that, for the first time ever, provided information, identified players in need, and offered a private forum for retired players; and a 501(c)(3) organization, Fourth & Goal, that advocates for representation and improved pension and disability benefits for retired players.

Our effort builds on those of John Unitas, Ordell Braase, Jim Mutscheller, Mike Pyle, Pete Retzlaff and a host of other retired players who formed the Pro-Fac Committee approximately ten years ago. In November 2005, Pro-Fac wrote to NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue to ask for considerations regarding retired players' defined benefit pension plan, partial and permanent disability issues, and representation. Commissioner Tagliabue forwarded the letter to NFLPA Executive Director Gene Upshaw, whose response to Pro-Fac confirmed what we had long suspected--that retired NFL players "are not union members," "have no rights here" and have no representation at the bargaining table. Through Fourth & Goal's Google Group and weblog, retired players read Upshaw's comments in his response to Pro-Fac, in the Charlotte Observer article and in an e-mail message, all of which were posted on the Google Group and the blog.

Upshaw's words helped to ignite our effort. Nearly every day, retired players ask to join our group, which has now grown to more than 1,100 retired NFL players. And the concerns they have expressed are universal:

  • How do we as retired players gain representation?
  • How do we improve our pension benefits?
  • How do we improve the disability system to ensure that those who suffer from football-induced injuries obtain the care and support they need?
  • How do we obtain affordable health insurance, given our football injuries?
  • How can we share in the profits generated by Players Inc.?
  • How can retired players share in the success of the NFL, the $24 billion business ($24+ billion over the length of the latest CBA) that we helped to build?
  • How do retired players build relationships with active players to make them aware of the issues?

Fourth & Goal is an independent national organization for the benefit of all retired NFL players. In September, our first major fundraiser -- A Salute to Art Donovan -- raised more than $100,000 to benefit retired players. We plan a major weekend of events in Atlantic City in June. To date, we've provided immediate -- albeit modest -- assistance to about a dozen retired players and the widows of two retired players. In some instances, in fact, these men and women were unable to obtain assistance elsewhere.

Bruce Laird, a 12-year NFL veteran with the Baltimore Colts and the San Diego Chargers, works tirelessly as president of Fourth & Goal. Board members include Maxie Baughan, Joe DeLamielleure, Sam Havrilak, Sam Huff, Mercury Morris, Jim Mutscheller, Jeff Nixon, and Charlie Waters. Interestingly, What makes our success so impressive, I believe, is that we are an all-volunteer organization. We have no payroll, no office, virtually no infrastructure -- and both Bruce and I have full-time jobs!

We commend Mike Ditka for his efforts on behalf of retired players. In fact, we reached out to Jerry Kramer and Gridiron Greats as the organization was being formed and we've collaborated with them on various efforts. While Gridiron Greats takes a humanitarian approach to the issues, Fourth & Goal takes a two-pronged approach. We believe Band-Aid fixes will continue to be necessary -- for generations -- without representation for retired players; thus, in addition to providing immediate financial support to those in need, we are also advocating for representation. To that end, Bruce Laird and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell have maintained an ongoing dialog that has contributed greatly to the incremental benefits improvements for retired players. (Interestingly, despite personal appeals by Commissioner Goodell, other NFL officials, and numerous retired players, Upshaw has steadfastly refused to allow Bruce Laird a seat at the "alliance" table.)

Again, thanks for covering the issues.

Sincerely,

Maureen Kilcullen
Baltimore Colts front office, 1968-1980

GORDON WRIGHT NFL PLAYER,1967,1968, 1969,& 1970 EAGLES/JETS

Dear Mrs.Kilcullen, I am Gordon A. Wright,I played 1967,68 for the Philadelphia Eagles & 1969 & 1970 for the New York Jets. I guarded Joe Namath as an offensive guard. We were the 1969 Eastern Conference Winners.I am now 64 years old and I am totally disabled and at home every day with my wife andfFamily.I do not want charity .All I want is to be paid for the 1968 season or receive my pension . Every time I ask for my pension or to be paid for the 1968 Season the NFLPA Lawyers ... write and tell me I am not elgible for the 1968 Season because I did not play the full Year, or I was not paid so I am not eligible for the 1968 season or my pension. They say I only played three years. In 2002 Philadelphia Eagles team doctor James Nixon sent to my mother and wife my medical records showing I was Injured and put on injured reserve for the 1968 season. My wife and mother wrote the NFLPA on my behalf and sent my medical records from the 1968 team doctor, but  the NFLPA has continued to deny me my benefits.I was recently denied again in August of 2007. If you can help me with a lawyer that has morals please write me: Gordon A. Wright -5816 Paradise Lane -Orlando, Florida- 32808 .Please do not write me if you cannot help me. Please do not write me with crackpot comments. I am too sick to be stomped on any more. Sincerely Gordon & Glendora Wright

 I Glendora Wrighton on behalf of Gordon Wright and family would like to thank the NFL Trust, Dire Needs and the Gridiron Greats for their support of my husband and our family, We appreciate the charity but if we had Gordon's monthly pension we would not need charity. January 21, 2007, was  MLK Jr. Day. How twisted. Gordon A. Wright was with MLK Jr. in Washington in 1963. This is 2007 and his labor rights and civil rights continue to be violated by the NFL. How twisted. One Last thing THE GOD WHO CREATED EARTH AND ALL THE PEOPLE WILL JUDGE AMERICA HARSHLY FOR THEIR MALTREATMENT OF THEIR FELLOW MAN ONE DAY AND IT WILL BE 911 ALL OVER AGAIN.  EVERY ONE WILL FORGET ABOUT COLOR, MONEY AND WHO IS PLAYING GOD THAT DAY AND JUST HELP EACH OTHER. SINCERELY, GLENDORA WRIGHT

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