I didn’t say NFL would force Rodgers’ release; I simply indicated that if GB violated a Constitutional bylaw [they didn’t] it will be enforced. The legal ramifications for the league looking the other way on this would shake the NFL to its core; perhaps end the league as we know it.
You speak of what you think the punishment should be; but this BYLAW provision has a punishment built in: the player is released as soon as healthy. So, that is what will happen, PERIOD. Now, if the league deems that’s enough of a punishment, then it’ll end there. If not, then fines and/or disqualifying picks could be incurred on top of Rodgers’ release.
There is no “readable” set of bylaws; the 1970 Bylaws you’ve probably found are it; plus 10,000 changes 😂. Some of the individual changes [thru 2006] can be found online attached to the 1970 bylaws. It’s a lawyers’ way of making sure they’re needed in the future.
Probably the closest thing online to what you’re looking for is:
2016 BYLAW PROPOSAL NO 7 , which was adopted as is.
You’ll notice there is no language about returning an IR-DTR guy to IR; I mean who’d have thunk it, right? There’s no language that indicates a player must be 100% recovered from his injury to be activated. It’s then logical to assume a guy who was restored to the roster thru IR-DTR goes to IR under the same provisions as anyone else would. So think of it this way: Rodgers is not put on IR, but is inactive for 8 weeks with injury; he plays week 15 and is then put on IR. No one would say a word. It is much less complicated than some are making it, as it has ZERO to do with the IR-DTR designation. It’s about 1 thing: did GB have a medical basis for shutting Rogers down? And who can argue that a not fully healed broken collarbone in a QB’s throwing shoulder is not a “major injury?” NO ONE!
The apparent logic is that Rodgers’ shoulder was healed; therefore it would take a “new injury” to put him on IR; hence, if there was no new injury; Rodgers was illegally stashed on IR. But, given the nature of his shoulder injury this logic is 100% a pile of steaming bulldung.
Next there was concern about teams violating/not violating the rules being some sort of contradiction. What was articulated is that a team might violate the literal language of the rule, while at the exact same time being 100% compliant with the “spirit” of the rule. Some WRITTEN rules easily convey their spirit, for example, a speed limit sign on an interstate. After reading the sign one knows exactly what is expected and enforcement is simple, go 1 MPH over limit and both the WRITTEN language and SPRIT are violated.
You know the spirit of the IR rule; you can imagine its abuses and difficulties in its enforcement. It is impossible to WRITE an IR rule that allows for an exact classification of time missed given the millions of different and degrees of severity of those injuries; varying medical opinions; and varying reactions or responses to therapy by different players to the exact same injury; etc. This IR WRITTEN rule can only at best provide a guideline, wildly subject to interpretation and extenuating circumstances.
Someone quoted Brandt as saying people are put on IR with “hangnails” as season’s end. Can’t believe he was so flip; but if he said it, he was walking out on a long limb of poetic license. If a team submitted a report to NFL that a guy was going on IR because of a hangnail [As Brandt suggests]; the league would say, “WTF, there better be an infection that threatens the future use of the appendage because this seems bogus, you can expect an investigation.” If the team is smart, and they generally are, they won’t IR this player for a simple hangnail.
You talk about Rodgers wanting to play; but a player must agree to be illegally stashed on IR. If the player insists he can play and the team says we dont care what you think; he will notify his rep and the NLFPA will inform the league of the player’s concerns. If the IR request isn’t shot down by the league upon its submission; the team knows an investigation will probably ensue. So it’d never gets this far unless the team was highly confident they had a medical basis for IRing the guy and the player/union a dunce.
The problems will come for a team when they say the player has a broken collar bone and it is later learned the team lied or exaggerated the injury.
If a team informs the league a guy has a an ankle sprain guaranteed to keep him through the end of the year; and the NLFPA and player “sign off;” and the NFL signs off; then the rule isn’t violated. Even though NORMALLY, the ankle sprain MIGHT not be considered a 6 week injury.