NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and New England Patriots
quarterback Tom Brady attended last-minute settlement talks between the
NFL and its players union Monday before a judge announced he would
decide the dispute over deflated footballs with a ruling in a day or
two.
Everyone involved "tried quite hard" to reach a deal in the
controversy that has hung over professional football since New England
easily won the AFC title game in January, U.S. District Judge Richard
Berman said in federal court in Manhattan.
However, Berman said: "We did not reach a settlement. ... In some cases, it doesn't happen and this is one of those cases."
Absent
a compromise, Berman will have to either affirm or throw out Goodell's
decision in July to uphold a four-game suspension of Brady. The NFL
concluded the quarterback colluded with two Patriots ball handlers to
deflate footballs to gain an edge in a 45-7 victory over the Colts. The
NFL Players Association has accused the league of handling the
discipline unfairly for Brady, who has denied any role in the scandal
nicknamed "Deflategate."
Speaking at a hearing that lasted less
than five minutes, Berman noted that senior executives from the league
and the players union who had not attended several previous settlement
talks joined more than an hour of negotiations Monday morning.
Giants
president and co-owner John Mara took part, as did free agent kicker
Jay Feely, Berman said. Feely is a member of the union's executive
committee and Mara is chairman of the NFL's executive committee that
oversees labor matters.
"For us it reinforces the desire and the
need for an independent arbitrator in these matters of personal
conduct," Feely said outside court. "But we understand Tom's position
and I think the process will work itself out."
Berman said he's putting the final touches on his decision.
"It
won't be today, but hopefully tomorrow or the day after," he said of a
written ruling. Berman said previously that he hoped to rule by Friday,
giving the Patriots enough time to prepare for their Sept. 10 season
opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Berman had ordered Goodell
and Brady to attend Monday's hearing. Both arrived 90 minutes early to
participate in talks in the judge's robing room. Neither spoke inside or
outside court.
Berman has said a settlement would be "rational
and logical" but also cited weaknesses in the way the NFL handling of
the controversy. The judge has also suggested that the league's finding
was too vague, that Brady was generally aware that game balls were being
deflated.
At a court hearing this month, Berman told the NFL there was precedent for judges to toss out penalties issued by arbitrators.
On
Monday, courtroom artist Jane Rosenberg returned to court after taking
heat on social networks for a sketch that critics said made Brady look
like an aging cartoon villain.
Outside court afterward, she smiled
as she posed with a new drawing that put Brady in a more flattering
light, perhaps capturing the more relaxed demeanor he displayed in court
during his second trip there.
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