ESPN: DeMaurice Smith re-elected by NFLPA

CCBoy

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DeMaurice Smith re-elected by NFLPA
Updated: March 16, 2015, 9:47 AM ET
ESPN.com news serviceshttp://espn.go.com/dallas/nfl/story/_/id/12492072/demaurice-smith-re-elected-nflpa-executive-director




In what many considered a referendum on the status quo, NFL player representatives voted to retain DeMaurice Smith as executive director of the union.

In voting Sunday by the player reps, it took just one ballot for Smith to gain his third three-year term in charge of the NFL Players Association.

He beat eight other candidates by immediately getting a majority of the votes at the union's annual meeting in Kapalua, Hawaii.

Smith won over former NFL players Jason Belser, Sean Gilbert and Robert Griffith. Also on the ballot were James Acho, Arthur McAfee, Rob London, Andrew Smith and John Stufflebeem.

"As a union, it is your duty to decide who should and will lead," Smith told the board of player reps. Then, apparently referring to what at times became a nasty competition, he added:

"There will always be those who will sacrifice their dignity in a race to the bottom so that they can climb over others to get to the top. I will not join them, and no human should."

Smith added he is "proud to represent the best athletes in the world," and NFLPA President Eric Winston said of the result: "We look forward to continue working with DeMaurice Smith to make our union stronger."

The vote totals were not announced by the union. Buffalo had no representative, so Smith needed 16 of 31 votes.

Smith beat three candidates, including current NFL football operations boss Troy Vincent, for the post in 2009. He ran unopposed in 2012.

Several of this year's candidates criticized Smith's union leadership, often citing what they term as a labor agreement reached in 2011 that is heavily weighted in favor of the owners. Gilbert, in particular, staged a nearly three-year campaign to unseat Smith, saying the 10-year collective bargaining agreement is a "$10 billion problem."

"This agreement represents a staggering shift of money from the players to the owners," Gilbert said during his presentation to the group Saturday. "Through the first five years, DeMaurice Smith gave $3.4 billion of your money to the owners. Over the life of the deal, DeMaurice Smith will have given $10 billion of your money to the owners. This is a huge problem."

Under Smith, the union recently saw victories in disputes with the league over suspensions of players -- most notably Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson -- as well as significant increases in contracts handed out during free agency. Those recent developments apparently helped Smith to an easy win in the balloting.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

burmafrd

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Players are not very smart to keep reelecting the mouthpiece that messed up the last CBA for them.
 

Stryker44

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Isn't that the dickwad that signed off on the cap punishment for Dallas and Washington?
 

JohnnyHopkins

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Players are not very smart to keep reelecting the mouthpiece that messed up the last CBA for them.

He reminds me of Real Estate agents that jumped on board during the housing boom in the early 2000s. All they had to do was slap a sign in the front yard or bring a buyer to a house and within hours an offer was accepted. The money just made itself and they were getting paid for no other reason than they were there.
 

Stryker44

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But didn't he do it to strengthen his case for collusion?

He brought the collusion suit after the damage had been done. He should have refused to agree to allow the punishment in the first place. He allowed the owners to bribe him by saying the 30 other teams would get more cap money as a result.
 

Aven8

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He reminds me of Real Estate agents that jumped on board during the housing boom in the early 2000s. All they had to do was slap a sign in the front yard or bring a buyer to a house and within hours an offer was accepted. The money just made itself and they were getting paid for no other reason than they were there.

You mean the same way the real estate market is today?
 
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