Goodell plans disciplinary measures for Jones, Henry



The commissioner says they will come within the next 10 days.
PHOENIX (AP) -- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell hopes to hand down disciplinary measures within 10 days of meeting with Tennessee cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones and Cincinnati receiver Chris Henry.
Goodell's new, stronger player-conduct policy has not been fully formulated, but he'll still meet next Tuesday with the two players, who have had numerous run-ins with the law.
"These are part of the hearings I've had with a player or coach facing discipline decisions," Goodell said Wednesday as the league meetings concluded. "It's to get their perspective, look them in the eye and get them thinking. They are clearly [designed] to give me better info and more facts. I do it frequently."
It could happen even more often, given the number of off-field incidents that have recently plagued the league.
Arrested five times
Jones has talked to police in 10 separate incidents since being drafted in April 2005 and has been arrested five times. On Monday, Las Vegas police recommended prosecutors file a felony charge of coercion and misdemeanor charges of battery and threat against Jones, stemming from a Feb. 19 strip club fight and shooting.
Henry is among nine Bengals players arrested in less than a year. He had four arrests in 14 months, including marijuana possession, a weapon charge and a drunken-driving count that resulted in a guilty plea to reckless operation of a vehicle.
"I won't lump all of these incidents into a bowl and deal with it," Goodell said. "I'm not trying to send a signal here and make examples of people. We'll do what we need to protect the integrity of the NFL. That's our objective."
Jones' attorney, Manny Arora of Atlanta, said they hope the commissioner will wait until the Las Vegas case is resolved before taking action.
Preparing for a fight
If not, Jones is prepared to fight it legally, Arora said, especially if Jones were to receive a one-year suspension.
"It's going to end up being a big fight. There'll be injunctions," Arora said. "The NFL will fight this and that. We're going to draw it out through the court, and the attention's going to go through the roof."
Goodell's first meetings as commissioner saw the approval of making permanent instant replay as an officiating tool; approval of a second interviewing window for assistant coaches on Super Bowl teams who are in the running for other head coaching jobs; and the tabling of a change in overtime.
The competition committee proposed moving the kickoff for overtime from the 30-yard line to the 35 after statistics showed the winner of the coin toss won OT games 64 percent of the time. Sensing it wouldn't pass, the proposal was tabled and will be further investigated.
Other action
Also Wednesday, the owners:
approved a 5-yard penalty for players spiking the ball or throwing it up in the air on the field after a play;
made permanent the down-by-contact element of video replay reviews, and permanently lowered the time referees review replays to 60 seconds;
deleted the provision in the rules where quarterbacks can ask the referee to reset the play clock because of crowd noise;
defeated expanding the game-day roster from 45 players and a third quarterback to 47 and a third QB;
made a pass that unintentionally hits an offensive lineman no longer a penalty;
modified roughing-the-passer so that a defender engaged with a quarterback who simply extends his arms and shoves the passer to the ground is not penalized;
eliminated a player scoring a touchdown without the ball going over the pylon at the goal line in the corner of the end zone.
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