Wade- I will disagree that the offer was pulled.. if anything I think the plea bargaining on this has just begun... and for us that will only help us if Hargrove is on the team. (Which I believe he will based on the intensity/attitude he has added to the team)
The NFL has held back the evidence in this case, or a good portion of it, now the question is why.
IMO, it is either one of two basic premises of why.
1) The NFL jumped the gun so to speak on this and made assumptions without total proof.
2) The informant in this case, the one that really tied the case together, did so on a basis of anonymity. Complete.
I doubt the first option, but it could stand to reason that they are starting to waiver, because they had several
"independent" sources review the case evidence and publicly state an opinion.
So I would have to believe that the source/informant has basically stated that they will not testify in court or in any real setting to the facts they presented.
IMO, this is the and has been the NFL's issue in this case from day one.. they have the proof but they have it on a basis of strict confidence that the informant will not be revealed. If they do so, they will make it very difficult on themselves moving forward on gathering facts or statements from players or NFL personnel.
Hence why they are starting to plea now.. and have been very reluctant to show there complete hand.. even when the public opinion in part has the NFL overstepping the penalties in this case.
If I had to guess.. much like a strike/lockout, the closer the NFL season gets the faster the cogs of this situation will turn. I would guess all the suspensions will be reduced and the appeal process will be replayed in some fashion.
Either that.. of the NFL and the NFLPA is going to be back in conflict very shortly as I believe in the court of law this one man judgement and appeal process will be deemed faulty and will be forced to be restructured where there is an second part appeal.
The NFL doesn't want that.. and in my opinion will bend in this case to avoid that. I think that configuration is going to change in the future.. just when is the question.
With looming lawsuits of player safety and not taking care of the former players.. both the NFLPA, current players and NFL have much to lose.
IMO, the NFL as a whole very shortly is going to have to restructure the revenue stream greatly to cover the medical costs of former NFL players.. either voluntarily, via settlements or cost mandated.
As more and more players that file suit is only going to create more and more pressure to take care of the former players. If they would have solved that issue in the latest CBA and diverted more revenue to former players than they did.. instead they band aided it and it has driven this nonstop filing of lawsuits from past players looking for their cut of the current cash cow.
The NFL revenue landscape is rapidly changing.. hence a number of owners stating the the cap may not increase. That is sooner or later the NFL is going to have to address this festering issue.. I am betting on sooner.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"