NFL vice president explains fines to unhappy Steelers
Ray Anderson held a closed-door meeting with the Pittsburgh captains.
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The NFL assured several of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ top players during an uncommon in-season meeting Wednesday that the league isn’t trying to transform Hines Ward into Fines Ward.
NFL executive vice president Ray Anderson repeatedly emphasized during an unannounced closed-door meeting that included Ward, Troy Polamalu and coach Mike Tomlin that the Steelers aren’t being singled out by the league for discipline.
During a recent two-week stretch, four Steelers players were fined a combined $50,000, including $15,000 in fines to Ward for two plays that weren’t penalized on the field. The fines — among 139 levied by the league this season — were to improve player safety and conduct and no other reason, Anderson said.
“It [the meeting] gave us a chance to get on the same page and, for lack of a better term, clear the air so this club could move on very confident that our interests are aligned with theirs and vice versa,” Anderson said.
Ward said the meeting “gave us a better understanding [of why the NFL imposes fines]. They told us their side and we explained our side. We have a better understanding and ... that’s all you can ask for. We’re on the same page now.”
Steelers captains Ben Roethlisberger, James Farrior and Ward were among those talking with Anderson during the kind of meeting the league rarely holds the week of an important game. The Steelers (5-1) play the Super Bowl champion New York Giants (5-1) on Sunday.
The meeting came about after Ward’s fines caused Steelers chairman Dan Rooney to write and Tomlin to call the league office for clarification.
Polamalu, who was not fined, also spoke out against the numerous fines being levied this season, arguing the league was taking the physicality out of a game he said was becoming “two-hand touch” and “flag football.”
The Steelers’ reaction led NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to send Anderson to Pittsburgh — and one player to joke that NFL obviously doesn’t stand for No Fines League.
“Given the discussion last week and some of the comments that were made by the players with regard to the genuineness and sincerity of our player safety initiatives, we just felt it made sense to come here ... to engage directly with Coach Tomlin and the players so we could talk things out and listen to them express their concerns about what we’re doing,” said Anderson, the league’s executive vice president of football operations.
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