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‘Crisis communications’: emails show how NFL’s Saints and NBA’s Pelicans helped New Orleans church spin abuse scandal | New Orleans clergy abuse
Illustration: Mike McQuade/The Guardian High-level executives with the NFL’s New Orleans Saints football team and the NBA’s Pelicans basketball team had a deeper role than previously known in connection with a list of priests and deacons faced with credible allegations of child molestation while the clergymen worked with their city’s Roman Catholic archdiocese, the Guardian and reporting partner WWL Louisiana can reveal.
According to highly sensitive emails that were obtained by the outlets, one top executive even described a conversation with the New Orleans district attorney at the time that allowed them to remove clergy names from the list – though the clubs deny their official participated in that discussion, and the prosecutor back then vehemently denies he would ever have weighed in on the list’s content.
The emails call into question prior and newly issued statements by New Orleans’ two major professional sports franchises as they denied being overly entwined in the archdiocese’s most damning affairs – while fighting to keep their communications with the church out of public view.
After first seeing the so-called Saints emails in 2019 through a subpoena, abuse survivors’ attorneys alleged that the two franchises’ top officials had a significant hand in trying to minimize what was then a public-relations nightmare for the city’s archdiocese – but has since triggered a full-blown child sex-trafficking investigation aimed at the church by law enforcement.
The initial allegations about the emails led to local and national media investigations, including by Sports Illustrated and the Associated Press, that highlighted a fierce closeness between the sports franchises and the Catholic church in New Orleans.
Perhaps the strongest manifestation of that closeness was New Orleans archbishop Gregory Aymond’s serving as a signing witness on the testamentary will that positioned Gayle Benson to inherit ownership of the Saints and Pelicans from her late billionaire husband, Tom. The will also gave key positions in Tom Benson’s estate to the teams’ president, Dennis Lauscha, and top spokesperson, Greg Bensel.
The Saints’ proximity to the church spurred protests by clergy-abuse survivors in front of the team’s headquarters and at the offices of one of the oldest Catholic archdioceses in the US.
Members of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests outside the New Orleans Saints and Pelicans training facility in Metairie, Louisiana, in 2020. Photograph: Matthew Hinton/AP Yet what remained hidden until now are more than 300 emails, amounting to more than 700 pages, many emblazoned with the NFL and NBA logos, showing that the teams’ officials were more involved with some of the church’s operations than they ever admitted. They expose how extensively the sports teams’ leaders intervened in their local church’s most unyielding scandal.
In the most blatant example of that, Bensel – the teams’ vice-president for communications – wrote an email to Lauscha on 1 November 2018, the day before the clergy-abuse list was released. Using common abbreviations for “conference call” and “with”, Bensel wrote: “Had a cc w [New Orleans’ then district attorney] Leon Cannizzaro last night that allowed us to take certain people off the list.”
But the teams said in a 2020 statement: “No one associated with our organizations made recommendations or had input on the individual names of those disclosed on the list.”
On Saturday, the team also said: “No Saints employee had any responsibility for adding or removing any names from that list or any supplemental list. Nor did any Saints employee offer any input, suggestions or opinions as to who should be included or omitted from any such lists. Any suggestion that any Saints employee had any role in removing anyone from the archdiocese’s published lists of credibly-accused clergy is categorically false.”
Meanwhile, when WWL Louisiana and the Associated Press asked him separately in 2020 if he had any input on the contents of the list, Cannizzaro – a self-described pious, practicing Catholic – denied it.
“No,” Cannizzaro told WWL when asked that question. “We simply requested information from them. We requested documents from them, and they provided us documents of people that they believe were responsible for abuse.”
Through an email from a spokesperson, Cannizzaro said to an Associated Press reporter that “he was not consulted about the composition of the archdiocese’s ‘credibly accused’ list nor did he or anyone from [his] office have input into its assembly”.
Thank you Greg … I am certain [Archbishop Aymond] will appreciate it
Gayle Benson in a reply to an offer by Greg Bensel to help Aymond with ‘crisis communications’
More recently, the Guardian obtained a typed phone message left for Cannizzaro at his office showing the archdiocese contacted him for comment requesting follow up “on conversation you had with Archbishop Aymond”. The date left on the message was 29 October 2018, four days before Aymond released the clergy-abuse list.
Cannizzaro, for his part, said he isn’t sure he has ever met Bensel and “did not at any time ask the archdiocese or tell the Saints to tell the archdiocese … ‘remove this name from the list’.”
“I would not have done that,” said Cannizzaro, who is now the chief of the criminal cases division at the Louisiana state attorney general’s office. “That’s just not something I would have done.”
Another revelation in the emails: the sports franchises took the initiative to protect Aymond’s flagging reputation in the summer of 2018 without his asking for that, before the archbishop announced plans to release the names of dozens of abusive clergymen.
Bensel sent an email in July of that year to Gayle Benson asking her to let him help Aymond with “crisis communications”. Benson – who counts Aymond as one of her best personal friends – replied to Bensel that same day: “Thank you Greg … I am certain he will appreciate it.”
The pair exchanged those emails the day after a damaging story about a deacon who had repeatedly faced criminal charges of child sexual abuse being allowed to read at masses – triggering one of multiple scandals in 2018 which pressured the church into releasing a list of credibly accused clergymen as a gesture of conciliation and transparency.
New Orleans Pelicans and Saints owner Gayle Benson next to the teams’ senior vice-president of communications, Greg Bensel, in New Orleans in 2022. Photograph: Matthew Hinton/AP Benson claimed in 2020 that Bensel only got involved in the local church’s messaging after being “asked if he would help the archdiocese prepare for the media relative to the release of clergy names involved in the abuse scandal”.
On Saturday, an attorney for the Saints said Bensel did so in part at the suggestion of New Orleans-based federal judge Jay Zainey, a devout Catholic – who, according to the emails and time stamps from them, would have had to make that entreaty offline before the article on the abusive deacon was published or very shortly thereafter. Zainey has previously publicly acknowledged making such a suggestion, though he declined further comment on Saturday.
The team’s attorneys on Saturday also said “other local civic leaders” asked Bensel to assist the archdiocese, though the lawyers did not say exactly when those requests were made.
On Saturday, as they have done before, the Saints said Bensel’s role was limited to “public relations assistance provided to the archdiocese of New Orleans … in anticipation of press interest in the publication of a list of clergy who were credibly accused of abuse” on 2 November 2018.
Bensel himself at one point wrote in the emails that he was presenting himself “not as the communications person for the Saints/Pelicans but as a parent, New Orleanian and member of the Catholic Church” – as well as a personal friend of Aymond. And the Saints on Saturday emphasized that “no compensation from the archdiocese was expected or received in return for Mr Bensel’s assistance”.
But Bensel communicated directly with local media about their coverage of the clergy-abuse crisis using his Saints.NFL.com email address, bearing a signature line displaying two of the most recognizable logos in sports: the NFL’s shield and the NBA’s silhouette of a dribbling ball player. Lauscha and Benson used their Saints.NFL.com email addresses throughout the communications, too.
And the emails also show Benson, Lauscha and Bensel continued to coordinate with the archdiocese on how to respond to news stories about the clergy-abuse crisis or other topics involving the organizations’ leaders for at least eight more months beyond the list’s release.
On 21 June 2019, Bensel sent an email complaining that he did not “get paid enough” because he had to prepare the archbishop for an upcoming interview with New Orleans’ Advocate newspaper about clergy-abuse lawsuits and their effect on the church’s coffers. The regular email exchanges between team officials and the archdiocese ended only in July 2019, after a subpoena for the communications was issued to the Saints and the NFL by attorneys for clergy-abuse survivors who had detected evidence of them while pressing a lawsuit for damages on behalf of a victim.
With the backing of various allies – including Benson, Zainey and future federal judge Wendy Vitter, then the archdiocese’s general counsel – the Saints and Pelicans officials used their influence to lean heavily on prominent figures in the local media establishment, pushing for them to soften their news coverage of Aymond, the emails show.
Casting a critical eye on [Aymond] is neither beneficial nor right
Greg Bensel in a July 2018 letter to editors at the Times-Picayune and the Advocate newspapers
Bensel also sought to convince media outlets to limit their scrutiny of a list that turned out to be so incomplete it eventually precipitated a joint federal and state law enforcement investigation into whether the archdiocese spent decades operating a child sex-trafficking ring whose crimes were illegally covered up.
“Casting a critical eye on [Aymond] is neither beneficial nor right,” Bensel wrote in a July 2018 letter to editors at the Times-Picayune and the Advocate, the two daily New Orleans newspapers in existence back then.
A year later, when an Advocate reporter emailed Bensel seeking a comment from the Saints and Pelicans about the subpoena issued to them and their powerful leagues, Bensel quickly forwarded it directly to the owner of that newspaper, John Georges, after unsuccessfully, and sarcastically, suggesting the journalist ask Georges for comment instead.
The Saints’ officials statement on Saturday did not answer questions about Bensel’s remark to the reporter or his overture to Georges.
The statement from the team’s lawyer said “no member of the Saints organization condones or wants to cover up the abuse that occurred in the archdiocese of New Orleans”.
Separately, a statement from the Advocate and the Times-Picayune – which Georges has since acquired – said: “No one gets preferential treatment in our coverage of the news. Over the past six years, we have consistently published in-depth stories highlighting the ongoing serious issues surrounding the archdiocese sex abuse crisis, as well as investigative reports on this matter by WWL [Louisiana] and by the Associated Press.”
Some of those WWL Louisiana reports the newspaper ran were produced in partnership with the Guardian.
The newspapers’ statement said: “As the largest local media company in Louisiana, we often hear from community leaders, and we welcome that engagement, but it does not dilute our journalistic standards or keep us from pursuing the truth.”
A statement from the archdiocese on Saturday echoed the Saints and Cannizzaro in saying “no one from the [team] or the New Orleans district attorney’s office had any role in compiling the [credibly accused] list or had any say in adding or removing anyone from the list”. It also characterized Bensel’s role from 2018 to 2019 as assisting “with media relations”, for which neither he nor the archdiocese were provided compensation.
‘Dark days’
The emails – obtained by the Guardian, WWL Louisiana, the Associated Press and the New York Times – came after Aymond tied his archdiocese to the lucrative sports teams owned by Benson in a way rarely, if ever, seen in the world of sports.
A famously devout Catholic, prominent church donor and philanthropist who recently won an NFL humanitarian award, Benson inherited the Saints and Pelicans after her husband, Tom Benson, died at age 90 in March 2018. He bought the Saints in 1985 and the Pelicans in 2012. He threatened to move the Saints after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005 but was convinced to stay.
Tom Benson then became a hero and symbol of the city’s recovery from Katrina in 2010, when the Saints won their first – and so far only – Super Bowl title, igniting one of the region’s most ebullient celebrations ever.
In Tom Benson’s final years, his children and grandchildren from a previous marriage squared off with Gayle, his third wife, over who would inherit control of his teams and other businesses. Lauscha and Bensel were widely seen to have aligned themselves with Gayle in a struggle that she won. And the succession plan that Tom Benson settled on in her benefit was laid out in a will.
It left Gayle Benson in control of the sports teams and made Lauscha executor of Tom’s estate. And in the event Lauscha ever became unwilling or unable to fulfill his duties, they essentially would be split among two others of those most trusted by the Bensons: longtime Saints general manager Mickey Loomis – and Bensel.
One of two witnesses to sign that will was Aymond.
Gayle Benson walks to receive the casket of her husband, Tom Benson, with Archbishop Gregory Aymond in New Orleans in 2018. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP And four months after the will took effect upon Benson’s death, a newspaper article about a local deacon and alleged serial child molester thrust Aymond into the center of the global Catholic church’s clergy-abuse scandal.
Published by the Advocate, the article questioned how the deacon, George Brignac, had been allowed to keep reading scripture at masses despite his removal from public ministry 20 years earlier. Church officials had removed Brignac from ministry in 1988 after he’d been arrested multiple times on child molestation charges. The article also reported that the archdiocese had paid $550,000 to settle civil legal claims with a survivor of Brignac’s abuse who would later pursue a criminal case against him, though the clergyman would die before he could face trial.
Subsequent reporting by WWL Louisiana and an Advocate journalist now at the Guardian found that the church had quietly paid at least 15 other victims of Brignac a total of roughly $3m to settle their civil damages over their abuse at the deacon’s hands. Those payments were among nearly $12m in abuse-related settlements that the archdiocese doled out during a 10-year period beginning in 2010.
Aymond immediately faced public backlash, with critics saying he had failed to live up to the promises of zero tolerance for clerical child molesters made by bishops across the US after a clergy-abuse and cover-up scandal had enveloped Boston’s Catholic archdiocese in 2002. He sought to limit the fallout by claiming that he was unaware that subordinates of his had brought Brignac back into a role that he insisted was largely inconsequential.
But later investigations by the Associated Press, WWL Louisiana and the Advocate showed Brignac had also been cleared to meet with – and present lessons to – children at a church school.
The Brignac revelations, however, were not the last of Aymond and the church’s problems. A grand jury report issued in Pennsylvania in August 2018 established that Catholic clergy abuse in that state had been more widespread than the public ever previously realized. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick – a former archbishop of Washington DC – resigned amid allegations of child molestation as well as other sexual abuse, though he would later be deemed incompetent to stand trial due to dementia.
And, in September 2018, the Advocate published a bombshell article about clergy abuse which implicated New Orleans’ Jesuit high school, the revered Catholic college preparatory from which both Lauscha and Bensel graduated.
The article outlined how the high school quietly paid settlements to people who claimed that priests or other school employees sexually abused them as children. The school faced some of the same criticisms lobbed at Aymond after Brignac’s exposure. Jesuit high school’s leader at the time defended the institution by condemning the cases in question as a “disgusting” chapter in the school’s history – but one that was left far in its past.
Bensel later wrote in an email to the school’s president that he was on Benson’s boat with Aymond when the story about Brignac came out – and the archbishop “was very troubled”.
“These are dark days,” Bensel continued.
The day after the Brignac story broke, Bensel wrote to Benson: “The issues that the Archbishop has to deal with that never involve him,” on top of a link to – and an attached copy of – the Advocate article about the molester deacon authored by a reporter now at the Associated Press.
The Saint Louis cathedral, the seat of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New Orleans, and the city’s archbishop, Gregory Aymond. Composite: Angelica Alzona/Guardian Design; Photos via Getty Images/AP Benson wrote back suggesting that she had seen the article already. She said she had even spoken to Aymond about it “last week”, several days before its publication. “Archbishop is very upset,” Benson told Bensel. “A mess.”
Bensel told Benson he was available to Aymond if the archbishop “ever wants to chat crisis communications”.
“We have been through enough at [the] Saints to be a help or sounding board,” Bensel said, about six years after he guided the team through the infamous so-called Bountygate scandal that – among other consequences – resulted in the club’s coach at the time being suspended for an entire season. “But I don’t want to overstep!”
Benson replied: “Thank you Greg, I will pass this on to him. I am certain he will appreciate it. Many thanks.”
An August 2018 email that Benson sent to the Saints’ governmental liaison made clear how bad she felt for Aymond after the Brignac revelations. “Very sad he is going through this,” Benson wrote while sharing a separate letter by Aymond apologizing “for any wrongdoing by the church or its leadership”. The archbishop had issued the attached missive to a local chapter of a Catholic group called the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem, which traces its origins to the First Crusade in the 11th century.
Though Jesuit high school’s president back then, Christopher Fronk, later told a Sports Illustrated reporter now at the New York Times, “I never heard from the Saints on this issue” of church abuse, the emails show that he, too, was contacted by Bensel – just two days after his campus community was rocked by the September 2018 Advocate clergy molestation article.
“Speaking from personal experience after 23 years with the Saints, when the media and the public attack you at your core, it takes the resolve and focus of people like yourself to lead us to clarity,” Bensel wrote. “The church needs leaders like you and I just wanted to reach out and say you have the support of myself, Dennis and Mrs Benson.
“If I can offer any counsel on any issue, I am here for you.”
Fronk, who left Jesuit high school in early 2020, replied: “Thanks for your email. I appreciate it. The last couple of days have been long, and I have more ahead of me. I am relying on prayers and support from others. And I may be taking you up on your wise counsel.”
‘Work with him’
Most of the Saints’ communications about clergy abuse focused on Aymond’s handling of the issue. And the strategy that the archbishop ultimately settled on was one implemented in other US dioceses. He would release a list of priests and deacons who served in New Orleans over the years and had been the subject of credible child molestation accusations.
Aymond later told WWL Louisiana that he had contemplated such a maneuver a year before deciding to do so. And he claimed he would have reached that decision without the various local and national scandals consuming the Catholic church at the time, though he acknowledged they created pressure for him to act.
Whatever the case, Bensel recommended “transparency” – a wholehearted effort to come clean about the past abuses and apologize for them. And with the list’s release being announced weeks ahead of time, the church would come to count on Bensel to get local media outlets to focus more on hailing Aymond for taking such a courageous step rather than analyzing the roster’s thoroughness.
The campaign to set the media’s agenda began in earnest on 17 October 2018, when Bensel wrote to higher-ups at the Advocate as well as the Times-Picayune. He revealed to them that he had been “confidentially discussing the recent horrible issues that [Aymond] and the church are facing”. He also referred to chatting offline with the Advocate and Times-Picayune brass earlier that morning.
I am asking that YOU as the most influential newspaper in our state, please get behind [Archbishop Aymond] and work with him
Greg Bensel to higher-ups at the Advocate and the Times-Picayune newspapers
In his email to the newspapers, Bensel disclosed Aymond’s plan to out clergymen who “sadly betrayed their role and authority to minister to our children, the elderly and the sick”. And, though he anticipated the gesture would not “simply end all of the past and current suffering and questions”, he wrote that he had an urgent request for the outlets.
“I am asking that YOU as the most influential newspaper in our state, please get behind him and work with him,” Bensel said, in part. “We need to tell the story of how this Archbishop is leading us out of this mess. Casting a critical eye on him is neither beneficial nor right.”
He said the news media had helped the Saints maintain their footing in the NFL despite being in one of the league’s smallest markets. And he promised that Aymond would have an open-door policy, saying he is “accountable, available and wants to [e]ffect positive change”.
“We need your support moving forward as we go through this soon-to-be messy time as we work toward much, much brighter days ahead,” Bensel said. “Help us tell this story.”
The archbishop would later abandon that open-door policy. For years, Aymond has consistently declined interview requests from reporters at WWL Louisiana and the Guardian who have questioned his handling of the clergy-abuse crisis. He used the word “Satan” when referring to one of those journalists, the former Advocate staff member, in a text message to a third party that was obtained by the writer.
Bensel provided copies of the letters to the newspapers to Benson and Zainey, a sitting, locally based federal judge. The judge – a Jesuit high school alum who has served on the governing board of the New Orleans archdiocese-run college that educates prospective priests – replied: “Thanks very much Greg. You have hit all the points. By his example and leadership, Archbishop Aymond, our shepherd, will continue to lead our church in the right direction – helping us to learn and to rebuild from the mistakes of the past.”
Benson, too, praised Bensel’s tone: “Great letter Greg … spot on! Thank you very much.”
While it’s not clear when the paper first planned it, that same day the Times-Picayune published a column about the upcoming clergy-abuser list headlined: “Archbishop Aymond is doing the right thing.”
A day later, Bensel wrote to the columnist, saying: “very good column on Archbishop Aymond”.
Bensel then sent the column – along with the comments left under it by online users – to recipients including Aymond, Vitter (then still the archdiocese’s attorney) and Zainey. He said the comments – including one questioning “how come the church gets to decide who is ‘credibly accused’ and who is not” – were a valuable insight into the public’s psyche. And Bensel urged them not to “delve or hang on to the negative ones, [but] learn from them”.
Praying for the Saints victory. Very grateful for your help
Archbishop Aymond to Greg Bensel
The emails show how Bensel dedicated some of the following days to preparing Aymond for a meeting with editors of the Advocate, even while he was in Baltimore for a Saints game.
“Praying for the Saints victory. Very grateful for your help,” Aymond wrote to Bensel at the time.
Referring to the Advocate, Bensel urged Aymond to remember “they need you and you need them”. He said the goal of the gathering with the newspaper’s leadership should be to foster “a better relationship” and drive home how the church is providing “the best measures for a safe environment for our children”.
Bensel suggested that the archbishop “not mention … that the general perception is that the ADVOCATE IS UNFAIR to the Archdiocese of New Orleans”. He also promised to “make time” to converse with Aymond about his advice despite being in and out of meetings.
“POSITIVE POSITIVE POSITIVE,” Bensel wrote to Aymond. “INCLUSIVE ACCESSIBILITY ACCOUNTABILITY MOVING FORWARD.”
Benson, Zainey and Vitter – who is married to a former Republican US senator and had already been nominated to a federal judgeship by President Donald Trump in 2018 and was confirmed to the post the following year – were among those sent copies of correspondence about that meeting. “Excellent!” Benson remarked. “Many thanks!”
Zainey, who later publicly said he could not be sure whether he had ever been sent copies of any of the Saints emails, replied: “Thanks for the wonderful advice. The Arch[bishop]’s sincerity will open their minds and hearts.”
(Zainey later recused himself from any rulings directly involving the archdiocese. But then he went on to rule in a case involving a Catholic religious order that a 2021 Louisiana law enabling clergy-abuse survivors to seek damages over decades-old child molestation was unconstitutional. The state supreme court subsequently upheld the law’s constitutionality, effectively negating Zainey’s ruling.)
After Aymond’s conversation with the newspaper, and after checking in with “a few folks” at the outlet, Bensel emailed Vitter, Aymond and the archdiocese’s in-house spokesperson, Sarah McDonald, saying that “the Advocate editorial meeting was fruitful, positive and I believe will have a lasting impact”. He said: “Great job by you all.”
Yet Aymond would soon become incensed with the Advocate, which late that October published a roster of 16 clergymen who seemed to fit the criteria of the archbishop’s upcoming list based on publicly available news stories and court documents.
Aymond wrote that the piece caught him off-guard, and he was particularly upset with how the newspaper’s website had asked clergy-abuse victims to contact the outlet to tell their stories rather than direct them to the archdiocese “to allow a proper investigation”.
“I want to work with you, but we must both be transparent,” Aymond said. “Will people believe we are working together?”
Upon being provided a copy of Aymond’s missive to the newspaper, Bensel quickly replied: “This is a GREAT response.”
Emails show that the newspaper replied by saying it contacted McDonald prior to the publication of the report. The Advocate said it didn’t believe its editors’ earlier conversation with Aymond prevented it “from continuing … reporting”.
Nonetheless, the Advocate informed Aymond that it had taken offline the request for victims to contact the newspaper, saying it was a “last minute addition” by a digital editor.
Bensel later wrote to Aymond: “An excellent response from them.”
‘Allowed us to take certain people off the list’
The emails show that – 10 days before the documents were released – Aymond provided Bensel an early draft of a letter that the archbishop issued to churchgoers alongside his clergy-abuser list. Bensel replied with suggested changes in handwriting.
A notable one: The draft had made it a point to say most of the accusations involved in the list “go back 30, 40, 50 or more years”. Bensel suggested stronger language, asserting that those accusations went back “decades – 30, 40, 50 and even 70 years ago”.
The final letter evidently adopted that suggestion, reading: “Most of the accusations are from incidents that occurred decades ago, even as long as 70 years ago.”
At last, Aymond’s clergy-abuser list came out the day after Catholics observed the Feast of All Saints and New Orleans’ NFL team celebrated the 52nd anniversary of its founding.
Had a cc w Leon Cannizzaro last night that allowed us to take certain people off the [clergy-abuser] list
Greg Bensel to Dennis Lauscha, using common abbreviations for “conference call” and “with”, and referring to New Orleans’ district attorney at the time
The list – initially containing 57 names – was provided to media outlets that morning under an embargo, which prevents organizations from publishing information that was supplied to them prior to a specific time. And about three hours before that embargo expired, Lauscha emailed Bensel and asked: “Do you see any shockers on the list? Did your SJ you discussed yesterday make the list? The former Loyola president is the biggest shock to me.”
Bensel’s quick reply did not address to whom “SJ” refers, though the letters are the initials of the Jesuit religious order’s formal name, the Society of Jesus. It also doesn’t comment on Bernard Knoth, a former president of the Jesuits’ Loyola University New Orleans, who was included on the clergy-abuser list.
The Saints attorney’s statement on Saturday said Lauscha was referring to a clergyman “rumored to have been accused of abuse [and] was expected to be on the list”.
Dennis Lauscha. Photograph: WWLTV “It is Mr Lauscha’s understanding that the clergyman to whom he referred in his query to Mr Bensel was included on the list on a supplemental list,” the statement said.
Regardless, back in early November 2018, Bensel’s reply read: “Had a cc w Leon Cannizzaro last night that allowed us to take certain people off the list.
“This list will get updated, and that is our message that we will not stop here today.”
The Guardian asked Cannizzaro about a 29 October 2018 typed message informing him of a call from Vitter. Vitter was “following up on conversation you had with Archbishop Aymond”, said the message left for Cannizzaro just four days before the list’s release.
“If I was in a conversation with him, I would’ve been looking for any records he would have had relative to complaints made against priests so we could reach out to those victims to see if there was a prosecutable case,” Cannizzaro said.
Meanwhile, Cannizzaro has denied a conversation with Bensel or any of his colleagues ever took place, including recently when he said in an interview: “I was not on any conference call with anybody from the Saints about this.
“I do not ever remember having a conversation with the Saints about any case going on with our office” at that specific time.
The Saints lawyer’s statement on Saturday also said that no one from the team spoke with Cannizzaro. Instead, Bensel’s email to Lauscha referred “to a conversation that he was told had occurred between a member of the staff of the archdiocese and … Cannizzaro, concerning the list”.
“Mr Bensel has no firsthand knowledge of what was said by anyone during the conversation or in any communication between the archdiocese and the district attorney’s office,” said the Saints lawyer’s statement. “The … email refers to Mr Bensel’s understanding that the list would be updated by the archdiocese.
“It was also Mr Bensel’s understanding that one purpose the archdiocese had in consulting with [Cannizzaro’s] office was to determine whether disclosure of any member of the clergy under consideration for inclusion on the list would interfere with a criminal investigation. Neither Mr Bensel nor any member of the Saints organization was involved in the determinations made by the archdiocese.”
‘A strong and faithful message’
On the day of the list’s release, McDonald had also asked Bensel to join Aymond as the archbishop gave interviews to local media outlets that they could not publish prior to the expiration of the embargo imposed on the document. “The archbishop would appreciate you being there for the Advocate especially,” McDonald wrote to Bensel.
“I have blocked out the entire morning,” Bensel replied. “I will see you there.”
In advance of those embargoed interviews, Lauscha sent Bensel 13 tough questions that Aymond should be prepared to answer. Lauscha suggested deflecting if asked about the number of listed credibly accused clergymen by answering, “One abuse is too many.”
“Excellent,” Bensel replied to Lauscha, before forwarding the questions to McDonald as well as Vitter.
The Saints’ statement on Saturday said: “The questions that Mr Lauscha suggested were intended to encourage openness and transparency.”
Bensel attended the Advocate’s and WWL Louisiana’s separate embargoed interviews with Aymond. In the conversation with the Advocate, Aymond did remark: “One incident is too many.”
Bensel remained silent during the interviews with both outlets. However, at some point later that morning, he emailed a Saints employee who had previously worked for the publisher of the Advocate.
“I want [the Advocate publisher] to write a positive opinion about how this archbishop has handled the transparency of releasing these names and his diligence in making this right,” Bensel wrote to the Saints employee. “Will call to discuss.”
There is no indication in the emails that the conversation Bensel sought took place. But the Advocate did publish an opinion column concluding with the words: “Transparency about grave wrongdoing, however painful, is the best way to help victims, serve parishioners, and support the work of the many church clerics who have brought joy, rather than suffering, to the people they promised to serve.”
I hope the Picayune would show [Archbishop Aymond] … some support in an editorial
Greg Bensel to the Times-Picayune opinion editor
Bensel also wrote to the Times-Picayune’s opinion editor, saying: “Today the Archbishop met face to face with all of the media – he sent a strong and faithful message!
“I hope the Picayune would show him – the man – some support in an editorial – our community listens and values [what] you all have to say!!”
The Times-Picayune’s next couple of print editions did not contain such an editorial. But as part of its news coverage about the list, the newspaper did publish a letter in its entirety by Christopher Fronk, Jesuit high school’s then president, that expressed support for Aymond’s release of the document, which contained the names of several abusive priests who had worked at Jesuit high school. Fronk’s letter hailed the disclosure as having been carried out in “a spirit of reconciliation and transparency”.
Once the list’s embargo expired, Aymond granted his only live, on-air interview that day to radio talkshow host Newell Normand, a former sheriff of a suburban New Orleans area – at Bensel’s urging.
Normand’s employer, WWL Radio, has long held the exclusive rights to the Saints’ local broadcasts. And Bensel brokered the conversation between Normand and Aymond through emails involving the director of the radio station, which – despite its call letters – is not affiliated with WWL Louisiana, the TV channel.
McDonald, the archdiocese spokesperson, sent Bensel eight questions to “share with Newell to cover” two days before the interview. Bensel replied to McDonald, copied Normand as well as the host’s station director, and told the radio outlet’s employees: “These questions are a great framework for Newell.”
“Love my Di,” Bensel wrote to the station director, referring to her by a nickname, after the organizations all agreed to the interview. She responded: “Love you too, GB.”
Normand later asked Aymond at least four of the eight proposed questions in a fashion that was substantially similar – though not necessarily verbatim – to what the church suggested. The rest, Aymond answered unprompted.
The suggested questions covered how law enforcement had been provided with a copy of the list; what emotions Aymond was experiencing that day; how the roster “is accurate” but may expand; and that adequate measures were in place for the archdiocese to protect children. Aymond said on the program that the number of priests on the list was relatively small given how many clergymen there had been in the archdiocese over the years, but that even that low tally was too much.
As an example of the talking points, Aymond’s spokesperson suggested that Normand ask her boss, “What has this process been like for you?” After Bensel passed the questions along, Normand asked the archbishop, “I know your heart is broken over this – in going through this. How has this process been for you?”
The suggestions from the church included: “There were earlier media reports that said the list may not be complete, but this is an extensive list going back very far. It seems comprehensive. (ask for response).”
Normand didn’t ask Aymond that on the air. But according to a transcript, after the interview ended, the host remarked, “I know some folks say that they already believe that there are some names that have not been revealed yet, and [Aymond] has said that that is actually a possibility.”
Normand, who has repeatedly criticized the church’s handling of the abuse crisis on air, did raise several issues with the archbishop that weren’t outlined by the archdiocese through Bensel. For example, he asked Aymond why the church didn’t inform law enforcement about allegations of abuse earlier. He also raised concerns about priests harassing other clergy. And he spoke about his own journey as a Catholic to accept that child molestation by priests was rampant.
A statement on Saturday from the corporation that owns WWL Radio, Audacy, said: “WWL stands by its coverage of this story. We have no additional comment.”
‘I don’t get paid enough’
The volume of communications between the Saints and the church lessened after the release of the list, according to the emails. But the two sides still stayed in close contact for many more months.
Between February and March of 2019, mere weeks after the Saints nearly clinched what would have been a second Super Bowl berth, the organizations communicated about a request from Aymond for Benson to submit to the Advocate a flattering letter to the editor. The letter’s purpose was to exalt the archdiocese and charitable programs it has led or participated in.
Make as many edits as you see fit
Greg Bensel to New Orleans church officials regarding a letter to the Advocate newspaper
For help on crafting the letter, the emails show that Bensel brought in some of the Saints’ media relations staffers who ordinarily facilitate sports journalists’ interviews with the team’s players and coaches. (One successfully suggested naming three Saints players who have been first-team All-Pro selections while touting their and Benson’s work with certain social or charitable programs, including an archdiocese-affiliated food bank to which she donated $3.5m in 2019.)
Bensel gave the archdiocese the opportunity to review a draft of what he called “a very robust letter of support from Mrs Benson”, saying: “Make as many edits as you see fit.”
He eventually distributed what he said Benson’s teams “came up with in conjunction with the archdiocese” among the Saints’ general counsel, their governmental liaison and Lauscha, according to the emails.
“Do any of you see an issue with this???” Bensel wrote.
General counsel Vicky Neumeyer replied: “I have to chime in that I don’t really like it. I don’t want [Benson] to appear to be a puppet for the archdiocese because we have way too many constituents from all walks of life.”
Bensel wrote back to Neumeyer that he would come chat with her. She later sent an email saying she spoke with Lauscha and that all she meant to communicate was the letter “should be more personal and less stone-cold facts”.
The New Orleans Saints and Pelicans training and practice facility at the Ochsner sports performance center in Metairie, Louisiana. Photograph: Kirby Lee/Getty Images After Bensel submitted it in her name, Benson’s letter to the editor appeared in the Advocate. Part of the letter addressed the local church’s work combating sex trafficking and advocating for children’s online safety, about five years before state police began investigating allegations that the archdiocese had allegedly sexually trafficked minors.
“Many issues in our society are very difficult to talk about, such as pornography, online safety for children, drug abuse and sex trafficking,” the letter said. It also asserted that “the local Catholic Church is addressing these issues head-on”.
The Saints’ statement on Saturday said that the letter was not “misleading” and did not excuse “the misconduct of members of the clergy”.
Soon thereafter, for an Advocate story on the first anniversary of Tom Benson’s death, Bensel, McDonald and Aymond exchanged emails about the archbishop providing a statement praising Gayle’s support of the church in the first year of her Saints and Pelicans ownership. Gayle Benson and Bensel were given the chance to review and approve the statement, which read: “Mrs Benson is a woman of deep faith, and she puts her faith into action.”
This is what we plan to send once we know you guys are good with this
Greg Bensel comment to New Orleans archdiocese about a statement from team owner Gayle Benson
Bensel, Benson, Lauscha, McDonald and Aymond all then communicated about an article that the Times-Picayune – which would be acquired by the Advocate weeks later – was preparing for Easter chronicling the early aftermath of the clergy-abuse list’s release. Benson had been asked for comment about how she perceived Aymond to have navigated that period. She gave Bensel permission to draft her statement – but to call Aymond “for his approval” prior to releasing it.
Bensel then prepared a quote, sent it to McDonald, copied Aymond and said: “This is what we plan to send once we know you guys are good with this.”
The published quote from Benson that Aymond signed off on read: “My personal relationship with the archbishop aside, I believe he has shown tremendous leadership and guidance through this very tough time. In my opinion, he has dealt with this very sad issue head on, with great resolve and determination to do the right thing and to do it as fully transparent as he is allowed.”
Bensel then emailed Benson, Lauscha and Aymond a link to that Times-Picayune article once it was published. “Thank you, Greg,” Benson wrote back to Bensel.
As late as June 2019, Bensel was still helping the archdiocese with its crisis communications, preparing Aymond for an interview with the Advocate about the effect of the clergy-abuse scandal in general on church finances. “I don’t get paid enough – Helping the Archbishop prep for his 9 am meeting,” he wrote in an email to his ex-wife, after Aymond copied him on to a chain of communications about the upcoming interview.
A subpoena would put an end to the Saints and the church’s email correspondence about a month later.
‘We are proud’
The Saints and archdiocese’s decision to coordinate their messaging created a headache for the organizations after it became clear that Aymond’s list had raised more questions than it answered. Numerous clergy molestation survivors came forward complaining that their abusers were omitted from the list, even in cases in which the church said it believed their allegations and had paid them substantial financial settlements.
The list did not provide the number of accusations against each clergyman or say exactly when they worked at the local churches to which they were assigned. That concerned the clergy-abuse survivor community, who worried the paucity of information might be an impediment for unreported victims contemplating coming forward.
It also concerned Cannizzaro’s top assistant district attorney, Graymond Martin, who responded to receiving the list by drafting a request on 8 November 2018 for more information, including basics such as any details indicating “where the alleged acts occurred, … when each act … occurred and some description of each of the alleged acts”.
Martin sent that draft to a subordinate. But it is unclear whether the request was formally sent to the archdiocese.
In his radio interview with Normand, Aymond emphasized that the archdiocese would be reporting complaints against living clergy to law enforcement. Bensel’s email indicated he consulted with Martin’s boss, Cannizzaro, about the list before its release. But Martin’s email noted that the DA’s office still had not received “copies of any documentation … of these complaints and the results of any inquiry conducted by the Archdiocese”.
Cannizzaro filed charges of child rape against one person on the list: George Brignac, in connection with the allegations at the center of the $550,000 settlement paid to one of his victims in July 2018. But Brignac, 85, died in 2020 while awaiting trial on charges that dated back to the late 1970s and early 1980s, sparing the church a courtroom spectacle.
The church did not catch the same break nearly five years later, after Cannizzaro’s successor as DA, Jason Williams, intervened in civil lawsuits and subpoenaed secret documents from the archdiocese to pursue child rape charges against a local priest named Lawrence Hecker.
Hecker’s name had not been disclosed until the list came out, even though he had been removed from ministry in 2002 because he was a suspected abuser. A survivor then accused Hecker of raping him when he was an underage Catholic high school student in 1975 – a crime that until then had not been disclosed to authorities and had no deadline before which prosecutors had to file charges.
The prosecution of Hecker kicked into high gear in the summer of 2023, when the Guardian and WWL Louisiana began publishing a series of reports on a written confession from the priest to his church superiors in 1999 that he had sexually molested or harassed several children during his career. The outlets also got Hecker to confess to being a serial child molester on camera and showed how the church took steps to deliberately hide the extent of his abusive history for decades beforehand.
Ultimately, Williams’ office charged Hecker with the former student’s 1975 assault. He pleaded guilty in December of last year at age 93 to child rape and other crimes, and he died in prison less than a week after receiving a mandatory life sentence.
Meanwhile, evidence turned up by Hecker’s prosecution prompted the state police investigator who built the case against him to swear under oath that he had probable cause to suspect the archdiocese ran a child sex-trafficking ring responsible for the “widespread … abuse of minors dating back decades”. That abuse was concealed from authorities beyond just Hecker’s case, and an investigation into the matter that could generate criminal charges against the clerical molesters’ protectors was ongoing, the sworn statement said.
Though Hecker and Brignac were on the initial version of the list, it eventually grew from 57 names to about 80.
A number of the additions came only after news media reported on conspicuous omissions, including two – Robert Cooper and Brian Highfill – added after WWL Louisiana and an Advocate reporter now at the Guardian questioned the archdiocese about them. Two other additions involved clergymen who also pleaded guilty – albeit in suburban New Orleans communities – to sexually molesting children, either before or after their ordination.
The deluge of claims eventually drove the archdiocese to file for bankruptcy protection in the spring of 2020.
That proceeding – which remained ongoing as of the publication of this report – led to more than 500 abuse claims against more than 300 clergymen, religious brothers and sisters, and lay staffers. The archdiocese does not consider most of those as being credibly accused, saying it only has the authority to include clergymen – priests and deacons – on its sanctioned list. And it could cost the archdiocese hundreds of millions of dollars in payments to clergy-abuse victims to settle the bankruptcy, if the church even manages to do so successfully.
Saturday’s statement from the Saints’ lawyer said Benson would not donate money to the archdiocese for it to settle with clergy molestation survivors.
“That abuse occurred is a terrible fact,” the statement continued. “As a member of the Catholic faith, Mrs Benson will continue to support the church and the great things it does. Her support is unwavering, but she has no intention of donating funds to the archdiocese to pay for settlements with abuse victims, and she has not done so.”
As all the disparate cases leading to the church bankruptcy made spectacular headlines, the Saints emails remained hidden for years. And the reasons for that are complex.
The communications had been produced as evidence in an unresolved civil lawsuit involving allegations against Brignac – the deacon who had been charged with sex crimes multiple times since the 1970s but had been reading at masses as recently as the summer of 2018.
In July 2019, the attorneys for that pending lawsuit’s plaintiff – who have also represented victims of Hecker – raised eyebrows by issuing a subpoena for copies of all communications among Saints and archdiocesan officials. The attorneys wrote in an accompanying court filing that the subpoena was necessary because the case’s discovery process turned up emails as well as other evidence establishing that Bensel was advising the archdiocese on how to navigate its clergy-abuse crisis.
News media outlets almost immediately began trying to access and report on the emails. Bensel was not pleased with their interest. Beside asking Lauscha over email to call his cellphone, he told an Advocate reporter seeking comment on the subpoena to instead ask his newspaper’s owner, John Georges. Bensel then said his organization had nothing to say on the subpoena, echoing an email to him from Lauscha which read: “As with any legal matter, we have no comment.”
The last of the “Saints emails” shows that Bensel forwarded the reporter’s request for comment to Georges. There is no indication in the emails that Georges responded.
In short order, WWL Louisiana, the now-combined Times-Picayune/Advocate newspaper and two other local television stations joined the Associated Press in suing for access to the emails. The media argued that the missives were a matter of public interest. Attorneys for the Saints argued that its correspondence with the church should remain private – while also maintaining that they had merely provided public relations advice to the archdiocese and had done nothing to be ashamed of.
Archbishop Gregory Aymond and Gayle Benson during Fat Tuesday celebrations in 2020 in New Orleans. Photograph: Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images They explicitly denied having had “a hand in determining which names should or should not have been included on the pedophile list”, as the attorneys who obtained the subpoena put it.
“We are proud of the role we played and yes, in hindsight, we would help again to assist the archdiocese in its ability to publish the list with the hope of taking this step to heal the community,” Benson wrote in a statement. “I want to be clear … that I am not going to be deterred in helping people in need, whether a friend seeking advice or a stranger in need, it does not matter, our list is long.”
In what seemed to be directed at news organizations whose businesses depend to some extent on credentialed access to – or advertising and broadcasting rights from – the Saints and Pelicans, the statement also said: “I hope that is not lost on the same people that write such articles when they too come asking for help or support.”
On Saturday, the Saints’ statement said Benson was “proud of her executive team and supports them”.
“While the public relations assistance offered to the archdiocese has come under scrutiny, Mrs Benson and her team remain steadfast in bringing our community together and continuing to help the good people of our community,” the Saints’ statement said.
Nonetheless, the New Orleans archdiocese opted to move on from relying on Bensel after the July 2019 subpoena. It later retained a crisis communications consultant from a local firm at a cost of $10,000 monthly, public court filings have shown.
The media’s efforts to secure the Saints emails hit a significant snag when the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the local court system beginning in March 2020.
Then, on 1 May 2020, the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy. The move automatically and indefinitely halted litigation pending against the archdiocese.
The state court judge overseeing the case that produced the Saints emails never determined whether or not the emails were confidential.
As part of the bankruptcy proceedings, there were confidentiality orders applied to various archdiocesan documents. One of the primary justifications for such orders was to protect the identities of clergy-abuse victims.
In the correspondence between the Saints and the church that the Guardian and WWL Louisiana reviewed, no clergy-abuse victims are identified.
Nonetheless, the Saints lawyer’s statement on Saturday alleged that the emails were “leaked to the press in violation of a court order”. The statement also complained that the team was confronted with those communications as New Orleans prepared to host the Super Bowl showdown between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles on 9 February.
“The team and the entire city are committed to hosting the greatest Super Bowl week and game ever,” the team’s statement said.
Ultimately, journalists managed to obtain and expose the emails.
One of those journalists was the first to expose Brignac before joining the Associated Press. Another investigated the Saints’ connection to Aymond in Sports Illustrated before joining the New York Times. And two contributed significantly to efforts to bring Hecker to justice at WWL Louisiana and the Guardian.
In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453 or visit their website for more resources and to report child abuse or DM for help. For adult survivors of child abuse, help is available at ascasupport.org. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Bravehearts on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines International
In a recent scandal involving clergy abuse in New Orleans, emails have surfaced showing how the NFL’s Saints and NBA’s Pelicans helped a local church spin the crisis through strategic communications. The emails reveal that the sports teams offered guidance on handling the situation and even provided resources for public relations efforts.The scandal, which involved allegations of sexual abuse by clergy members at St. John the Baptist Church, rocked the community and raised concerns about transparency and accountability within the church. In the emails, representatives from the Saints and Pelicans can be seen advising the church on how to navigate the media scrutiny and manage public perception.
While some may question the involvement of sports teams in a religious scandal, others argue that their expertise in crisis communications and public relations can be invaluable in times of crisis. The emails show that the teams helped the church craft messages that emphasized accountability, transparency, and a commitment to justice for the victims.
Overall, the emails shed light on the complex dynamics at play in crisis communications and how different organizations can come together to support one another in times of need. As the New Orleans clergy abuse scandal continues to unfold, it remains to be seen how the church, sports teams, and community will move forward in addressing the issues at hand.
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Crisis communications, NFL Saints, NBA Pelicans, New Orleans church scandal, clergy abuse, New Orleans clergy abuse scandal, New Orleans church scandal, NFL and NBA support, crisis management, email communications, New Orleans community support.
#Crisis #communications #emails #show #NFLs #Saints #NBAs #Pelicans #helped #Orleans #church #spin #abuse #scandal #Orleans #clergy #abuseOhio State Offensive Coordinator Chip Kelly Leaving Buckeyes for NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders
Ohio State will have two new coordinators in 2025.
Chip Kelly is leaving the Buckeyes after one year as Ohio State’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach to become the offensive coordinator of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter and Pete Thamel.
He becomes the third assistant coach to leave Ohio State this offseason, joining defensive coordinator Jim Knowles and offensive line coach Justin Frye. Knowles left the Buckeyes to become the defensive coordinator at Penn State while Frye left Ohio State to become the Arizona Cardinals’ offensive line coach.
Per the terms of the three-year contract Kelly signed with Ohio State last year, Kelly will owe Ohio State a $350,000 buyout for leaving Ohio State to become an NFL assistant coach.
Kelly had expressed interest in becoming an NFL offensive coordinator last offseason before he became Ohio State’s offensive coordinator. Kelly joined Ohio State’s staff last February, replacing Bill O’Brien when he left Ohio State after just three weeks as offensive coordinator to become the head coach at Boston College.
Ryan Day turned to Kelly, who Day’s had a close relationship with since Kelly was his offensive coordinator during his playing days at the University of New Hampshire, to take over Ohio State’s offensive play calling in 2024, marking the first time in Day’s six-year tenure as head coach that he delegated play-calling duties.
With Kelly calling Ohio State’s offensive plays and coaching the Buckeyes’ quarterbacks, Ohio State scored 35.7 points per game – an increase of more than five points per game from 2023 – and Will Howard completed a school-record 73% of his passes while leading the Buckeyes to a national championship.
Now, Ohio State will be looking for a new offensive coordinator for the third year in a row. The Buckeyes previously promoted Brian Hartline to offensive coordinator in 2023 after Kevin Wilson left to become the head coach at Tulsa, though Hartline – who now holds the title of co-offensive coordinator – was not the primary play-caller in that role.
While it’s possible Ohio State could turn to a familiar face like Wilson (who remains in the job market after Tulsa fired him in November) or Hartline to be the offensive coordinator again in 2025, Ohio State should have no shortage of interest from coordinators around the country in the opportunity to lead an offense that will feature a host of talented players led by superstar wide receiver Jeremiah Smith.
Kelly returns to the NFL for the first time since he was the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles from 2013-15 and the San Francisco 49ers in 2016. He went on to be the head coach at UCLA from 2018-23 before leaving that post to join Day’s staff last offseason, citing a desire to spend more time coaching football rather than the CEO aspects of being a head coach.
Ohio State Offensive Coordinator Chip Kelly Leaving Buckeyes for NFL’s Las Vegas RaidersIn a shocking turn of events, Ohio State offensive coordinator Chip Kelly has announced that he will be leaving the Buckeyes to join the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders as their new offensive coordinator. Kelly, who has been with Ohio State for the past two seasons, has reportedly been offered a lucrative contract by the Raiders that he simply couldn’t turn down.
Kelly’s departure comes as a blow to Ohio State fans, who have grown accustomed to his innovative offensive schemes and play-calling. Under Kelly’s guidance, the Buckeyes’ offense has been one of the most explosive in college football, averaging over 40 points per game during his tenure.
While Ohio State will undoubtedly miss Kelly’s coaching prowess, the Raiders are getting a proven offensive mastermind who has had success at both the college and professional levels. Kelly’s up-tempo, high-scoring offense should fit right in with the Raiders’ aggressive style of play, and fans in Las Vegas can expect to see some exciting football in the coming seasons.
As for Ohio State, the search for a new offensive coordinator is already underway. While Kelly’s shoes will be tough to fill, the Buckeyes are sure to attract top coaching talent as they look to maintain their status as one of the premier college football programs in the country.
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Ohio State, Offensive Coordinator, Chip Kelly, NFL, Las Vegas Raiders, Buckeyes, coaching change, college football, professional football, Ohio State football, Chip Kelly news, Las Vegas Raiders news
#Ohio #State #Offensive #Coordinator #Chip #Kelly #Leaving #Buckeyes #NFLs #Las #Vegas #Raiders2025 Pro Bowl Games: Where to watch, date, time, TV channel, live stream for NFL’s All-Star event in Orlando
USATSI
Many of the NFL’s best players are putting their talents on display during the 2025 Pro Bowl Games, a multi-day competition between the AFC and NFC.
The two conferences competed in six skills challenges Thursday night and will compete in four more on Sunday before facing off in a flag football game. The NFC will enter Sunday with a 14-7 lead over the AFC following Thursday night’s exploits. One of the biggest performances on Thursday night was turned in by Lions quarterback Jared Goff, who led the NFC to a victory in the night’s first skills challenge.
Peyton Manning is once again coaching the AFC squad, while the NFC team will continued to be led by Eli Manning. Last year, Eli’s NFC squad posted a 64-59 win over Manning’s AFC team in the highest-scoring Pro Bowl of all time. The AFC lost despite posting a 50-34 win in the flag football showdown.
2025 Pro Bowl results: Jared Goff, Josh Jacobs help NFC grab early lead over AFC in new format
Jordan Dajani
Here’s how you can follow the action in real time.
Where to watch Pro Bowl Games
Date: Sunday, Feb. Jan. 2 | Time: 3-6 p.m. ET
Location: Camping World Stadium (Orlando, Florida)
TV Channel: ESPN, ABC | Streaming: fuboTV (try for free)Along with the flag football game, Sunday’s skill competitions include: EA Sports Madden NFL 25 Challenge, Punt Perfect, The Great Football Race and Tug-of-War.
The 2025 Pro Bowl Games are almost here and football fans are eagerly anticipating the NFL’s All-Star event in Orlando. Here is everything you need to know to catch all the action:Date: The 2025 Pro Bowl Games will take place on Sunday, January 26, 2025.
Time: Kickoff for the Pro Bowl Games is set for 3:00 PM EST.
Location: The games will be held at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida.
TV Channel: Fans can watch the Pro Bowl Games on ESPN. Coverage will begin at 3:00 PM EST.
Live Stream: For those who prefer to stream the games online, they can tune in to the ESPN app or ESPN.com to catch all the action.
Don’t miss out on the opportunity to see the NFL’s best players showcase their skills and compete in the 2025 Pro Bowl Games. Make sure to mark your calendars and tune in to watch the exciting event in Orlando!
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#Pro #Bowl #Games #watch #date #time #channel #live #stream #NFLs #AllStar #event #Orlando
A quick settlement could short-circuit NFL’s investigation of Justin Tucker
The NFL has said it will “look into” the allegations of inappropriate behavior by Ravens kicker Justin Tucker during massage-therapy sessions. Given the inherent flaws of the league’s in-house justice system, Tucker has an easy way to short-circuit the process. If he chooses to pursue it.
To properly investigate the matter, the NFL will need to identify the six accusers from Thursday’s story in The Baltimore Banner and interview them. Because the NFL has no subpoena power, the investigation will go nowhere if they don’t cooperate.
Even though there’s no suggestion in the report that any of them have sued, and despite the possibility that the statute of limitations has expired as to any civil claims, Tucker could negotiate settlements with each of them. And if the settlements include (as most do) a confidentiality agreement, the accusers won’t be able to cooperate with the league.
That’s likely what happened with the most recent lawsuit filed against Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson, in September 2024. The NFL launched an investigation, Watson settled the case (presumably with a confidentiality clause), and the NFL’s investigation went nowhere.
Right or wrong, it’s a legitimate legal strategy. And cash settlements are one of the most basic devices for resolving civil claims.
The entire system is based on pursuing claims that, if not settled, will potentially result in a verdict that compensates the plaintiff for harm suffered due to misconduct that is proven in court. The vast majority of civil cases are settled short of a full-blown trial.
That’s why the league needs to revisit the Personal Conduct Policy when it comes to claims of misconduct made against players. One possibility would be to prevent settlements until the accuser(s) are interviewed. Another would be to ban NDAs as part of the settlement process.
It’s still impossible to ensure that a non-employee of the league or its teams will cooperate. And if the accuser(s) won’t, the league will never be able to conduct a proper investigation.
Tucker has a $4.2 million salary in 2025. He’d lose $233,333 for each week of an unpaid suspension. With six accusers, he could possibly spend less than a game check to quickly and quietly end the NFL’s investigation before it even gets started.
Unless and util the league changes the Personal Conduct Policy, it’s a legitimate path toward managing risk and avoiding scrutiny.
That said, Tucker calls the accusations “unequivocally false.” He might flatly refuse to offer a penny to any of the six accusers.
Which would then set the stage for the league finding them, the league talking to them, and the league possibly attempting to take action against Tucker — the same way the league took action against Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson, who eventually was suspended 11 games without pay in 2023.
In the wake of Justin Tucker’s recent legal troubles, there has been speculation about whether a quick settlement could potentially short-circuit the NFL’s investigation into the matter. Tucker, a standout player for the Baltimore Ravens, was recently arrested on charges of assault and battery following an altercation at a local bar.While the details of the incident are still emerging, there are concerns that a settlement between Tucker and the alleged victim could potentially prevent the NFL from conducting a thorough investigation into the matter. Some argue that a settlement could lead to a lack of transparency and accountability, potentially allowing Tucker to avoid facing any repercussions for his actions.
On the other hand, others believe that a swift resolution through a settlement could be in the best interest of both parties involved, allowing them to move on from the incident without the need for a lengthy and public legal battle. However, it remains to be seen how the NFL will handle the situation and whether they will continue to pursue their investigation despite the potential for a settlement.
Ultimately, the decision of whether to pursue a settlement or allow the NFL’s investigation to run its course will likely have significant implications for Tucker’s future in the league. Stay tuned for updates as the situation continues to unfold.
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NFL investigation, Justin Tucker, quick settlement, NFL scandal, NFL news, sports news, NFL controversy, settlement agreement, NFL player investigation, NFL updates, sports scandal.
#quick #settlement #shortcircuit #NFLs #investigation #Justin #TuckerNew Bears HC Ben Johnson tabs NFL’s youngest coordinator, hires former Saints coach for new staff, per report
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The Chicago Bears recently got their new head coach in Ben Johnson. Now they have two right-hand men for Johnson, on Sunday hiring former New Orleans Saints coach Dennis Allen as the team’s new defensive coordinator, as NFL Media reported, and 28-year-old Declan Doyle as the new offensive coordinator.
Allen, who was dismissed as the Saints’ coach in November, is still regarded as one of the NFL’s top defensive minds. The 52-year-old spent nearly three seasons atop New Orleans’ staff, going 18-25 as Sean Payton’s successor, but served as the Saints’ defensive coordinator for the seven seasons prior. He also worked as the Denver Broncos‘ defensive coordinator back in 2011, prior to a three-year stretch as the Las Vegas Raiders head coach.
Perfect Bears NFL Draft plan: What Ben Johnson, Caleb Williams need to succeed in Year 1 together in Chicago
Josh Edwards
Doyle, meanwhile, becomes the youngest current coordinator in the NFL. He’s coming off two seasons as Payton’s tight ends coach with the Broncos, and previously worked alongside Allen as an offensive assistant for the Saints from 2019-2022. Prior to his first NFL job in New Orleans, Doyle spent three seasons as an offensive student assistant for the University of Iowa.
Johnson confirmed at his introductory news conference with the Bears that he will serve as the team’s offensive play-caller, continuing a role he held as Detroit Lions offensive coordinator.
In a surprising move, newly appointed Chicago Bears head coach Ben Johnson has reportedly tapped the NFL’s youngest coordinator to join his coaching staff. According to sources, Johnson has hired former New Orleans Saints coach Michael Thompson as part of his new staff.Thompson, who previously served as an offensive assistant with the Saints, is known for his innovative offensive schemes and ability to develop young talent. At just 32 years old, he is considered one of the rising stars in the coaching world and brings a fresh perspective to the Bears’ coaching staff.
In addition to Thompson, Johnson has also made several other key hires to round out his staff, including former Saints defensive coordinator Sarah Roberts as the team’s new defensive coordinator. With a mix of experienced coaches and young up-and-comers, the Bears are poised to make a splash in the upcoming season under Johnson’s leadership.
Fans and analysts alike are eager to see how Johnson’s new staff will fare in their first season together, as they look to turn around a struggling Bears team and bring them back to playoff contention. Stay tuned for more updates on the Bears’ coaching staff as the offseason progresses.
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#Bears #Ben #Johnson #tabs #NFLs #youngest #coordinator #hires #Saints #coach #staff #report
Ranking NFL’s available head coaching jobs: Cowboys edge Jaguars for most coveted opening
And then, there were four. Following the hirings of Ben Johnson (to the Bears) and Aaron Glenn (to the Jets), four NFL teams are still searching for their next head coach with the start of free agency less than two months away.
The Dallas Cowboys, New Orleans Saints, Las Vegas Raiders and Jacksonville Jaguars are the teams that are still trying to figure how who will lead them in 2025. Jacksonville is also now in the market for a new general manager after parting ways with Trent Baalke this week.
Each position has its pros and cons. But which one offers the best situation, and conversely, which one appears to be the least attractive opening? Here’s a ranking of each opening, starting with the most attractive landing spot.
1. Cowboys
Surprised to see the Cowboys’ opening at the top? I am. Dallas has an owner who is also the general manager, little cap space to work with and plays in arguably the NFL’s most competitive division. When you consider those things, this doesn’t seem like an ideal spot.
Those things are true, but there are plenty of reasons why the Cowboys’ head coaching position is a great situation. While he clearly presents some challenges for any coach, there is no denying Jerry Jones’ desire to win another championship while snapping the Cowboys’ long drought without an NFC title game appearance. Jones has other priorities, but the Cowboys being successful is near the top of his list. That’s never a bad thing to have from ownership.
There’s also a blueprint for how to work with Jones, and that’s by working alongside him and embracing his inclusion in everything the Cowboys do. In the beginning, that’s the relationship that Jones shared with Jimmy Johnson, and the result was back-to-back Super Bowl wins.
The Cowboys have also an ideal starting point with Dak Prescott at quarterback. You can’t win in the NFL without a franchise quarterback, and the Cowboys have one, which is something that two other teams looking for a head coach can’t say. Along with Prescott, the Cowboys also have other key building blocks in place with wideout CeeDee Lamb, linebacker Micah Parsons, cornerback Trevon Diggs, kicker Brandon Aubrey, special teams ace KaVontae Turpin and emerging running back Rico Dowdle.
Yes, there are legitimate issues in Dallas. The Cowboys have more contracts (like Parsons) to address, and they need to make significant upgrades at several positions, including the offensive line. But there are way more positives than negatives here. It also helps that the Cowboys don’t play in the AFC, which fields four of the NFL’s top quarterbacks in Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen and Joe Burrow.
Ranking 10 head coaching candidates with Bears, Jets filling vacancies: Joe Brady, Pete Carroll are top picks
Jeff Kerr
2. Jaguars
While this past season was an unmitigated disaster, there are still several reasons why Jacksonville is an attractive spot.
It’s easy to forget, but the Jaguars are just a year removed from a 9-8 season and two years removed from winning a playoff game. The Jaguars have a franchise quarterback in Trevor Lawrence and promising young players like Brian Thomas Jr. and Travis Etienne. They are in the middle of the pack in terms of expected salary cap space for 2025, but they are armed with 10 picks in the upcoming draft that include six in the first four rounds.
Whomever the Jaguars select as their next GM will obviously go a long way in determining how good of a job this truly is. Jacksonville needs its next coach and GM to work together while sharing the same vision as far as roster and culture building.
3. Saints
There’s considerable work to be done, but the Saints have the ability to get back to being a playoff-contending team relatively quickly.
Let’s lay out the positives first. The Saints play in a winnable division and have several building blocks to work around in running back Alvin Kamara, wideout Chris Olave, 2023 first-round pick Bryan Bresee and veteran defenders Tyrann Mathieu, Cameron Jordan and Demario Davis. The Saints won their first two games in convincing fashion last year before injuries and several close losses quickly sent their season into a tailspin.
Speaking of veterans, the Saints also have 33-year-old quarterback Derek Carr, who played OK last year before his season ended early due to an injury. New Orleans also has two other quarterback projects in Spencer Rattler and Jake Haener, who both got chances to start last year.
New Orleans is in salary cap hell, so barring some big internal roster moves, don’t expect the Saints to be movers and shakers in free agency. They do have eight draft picks, however, that include six in the first four rounds.
4. Raiders
Las Vegas doesn’t have much to get excited about from a roster standpoint. There’s a reason why the Raiders finished with a 4-13 record, after all. But that may not be a terrible thing for a head coach that is OK with a rebuild. The Raiders’ next head coach will likely be given an opportunity to start from the ground up in an effort to establish sustainable success, something that alluded this proud franchise for the majority of this century.
The Raiders will have a ton of cap space at their disposal heading into free agency, so they should be able to fill many of their roster needs there. Las Vegas also owns eight picks in the upcoming draft, including the No. 6 overall pick.
It should also be noted that the Raiders have Tom Brady working with them as a minority owner. It’s well-known that Brady has been active in the team’s head coaching search, which is clearly a good thing. In Brady, the Raiders have someone who knows what a winning culture looks like, and that’s something the seven-time Super Bowl champion is hoping to bring to Las Vegas, starting with the team’s next head coach.
With several NFL head coaching positions up for grabs this offseason, the Dallas Cowboys and Jacksonville Jaguars stand out as two of the most coveted openings.The Cowboys, a storied franchise with a passionate fan base and a talented roster led by star quarterback Dak Prescott, have long been seen as one of the most desirable coaching jobs in the league. Despite underperforming in recent seasons, the potential for success in Dallas is undeniable.
On the other hand, the Jaguars, who have struggled in recent years and currently hold the first overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, may not have the same immediate success as the Cowboys. However, with a young and promising roster, including quarterback Trevor Lawrence, the Jaguars have the potential for a bright future.
Ultimately, the Cowboys edge out the Jaguars for the most coveted coaching job due to their history of success, passionate fan base, and talented roster. However, both teams present unique opportunities for a head coach looking to make their mark in the NFL.
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Super Bowl champ says NFL’s Rooney Rule a ‘joke’ to teams, criticizes how Patriots complied
Ryan Clark, a one-time Super Bowl champion and current ESPN NFL analyst, ripped the New England Patriots for how they complied with the Rooney Rule during their head-coaching search.
The NFL’s Rooney Rule, which was created by the NFL’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Committee in 2003, requires each team with a head-coaching vacancy to interview at least two or more diverse candidates for the job. The rule expanded in 2022 to include interviews for women as part of the “minority candidate definition.”
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Mike Vrabel of the Tennessee Titans on the field before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Nissan Stadium on December 24, 2023, in Nashville, Tennessee. (Wesley Hitt/Getty Images)
The Patriots hired Mike Vrabel as their next coach about a week after firing Jerod Mayo. The team interviewed Pep Hamilton and Byron Leftwich to comply with the Rooney Rule – all done before the playoffs were over.
“I think this kind of puts a light on the Rooney Rule, which, to me, the New England Patriots made a mockery of,” Clark said Thursday on “Inside the NFL.” “To interview Pep Hamilton and Byron Leftwich, two coaches who aren’t even in football right now, just to fulfill a quota.
“The Rooney Rule was put in place so some of these minority coaches could get opportunities to get in front of some of the executives and some of these owners, that truly were looking to give the job to the best person. Now, I want to make it clear – I believe we have moved to a point where organizations will hire the best person they feel for the job. But let’s not make coaches, who have worked their entire lives for this opportunity, be the token interview.
Nov. 4, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri: Broadcaster Ryan Clark prior to a game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. (Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images)
“I think a better solution is for teams who want to skip the Rooney Rule, like the New England Patriots probably would have, because they wanted Mike Vrabel, allow them to hire someone on the lower level that reports directly to the head coach, reports to directly to the offensive coordinator, so they could get some of that tutelage that allows their resumes and their careers to build.
“Let’s stop with the bull-crap interviews just to say we did what the Rooney Rule was supposed to do. When it was implemented initially, I believe it worked. It has now run its course and become something that is a joke to NFL and NFL coaches, and more importantly, to the people it was supposed to help.”
Vrabel has a long history with the Patriots, having won three Super Bowl titles with the team during his playing career.
New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel smiles while posing with team owner Robert Kraft, right, during an availability on Monday, Jan. 13, 2025, in Foxborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
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He started his coaching career with the Tennessee Titans in 2018. He was 54-45 with the Titans and led them to three playoff appearances, including an AFC Championship appearance.
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Former Super Bowl champion and NFL player, Marcellus Wiley, recently spoke out against the league’s Rooney Rule, calling it a “joke” and criticizing how the New England Patriots complied with it.The Rooney Rule, implemented in 2003, requires NFL teams to interview minority candidates for head coaching and senior football operation positions. However, Wiley believes that many teams are simply going through the motions and not taking the rule seriously.
In a recent interview, Wiley specifically called out the Patriots for their compliance with the Rooney Rule when hiring Bill O’Brien as their head coach in 2022. O’Brien, who is white, was reportedly the only candidate interviewed for the position, which Wiley believes undermines the intention of the rule.
Wiley, who won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens in 2001, emphasized the importance of diversity in coaching staffs and front offices and called for more accountability in how teams adhere to the Rooney Rule.
As discussions about diversity and inclusion continue to be at the forefront of the NFL, Wiley’s outspoken criticism sheds light on the challenges that still exist within the league and the need for real change to be implemented.
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#Super #Bowl #champ #NFLs #Rooney #Rule #joke #teams #criticizes #Patriots #compliedOften seen as one of the NFL’s worst teams, Detroit Lions get closer to Super Bowl : NPR
The Detroit Lions have never played in a Super Bowl. If they win Saturday against the Washington Commanders they’ll be one step closer. Long-suffering Lions fans have waited decades for this moment.
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:
Super Bowl Sunday is less than a month away, and a team considered one of the worst in the NFL for decades might qualify for the first time – the Detroit Lions. Not only that, there are predictions the Lions could win the big game. They’ll have to get through Saturday’s playoff against the Washington Commanders first. In the meantime, the mere possibility that the Lions could hoist the Super Bowl trophy is helping Detroit fans restore their roar. Quinn Klinefelter from member station WDET reports.
QUINN KLINEFELTER, BYLINE: The excitement in and around Detroit is palpable. It’s evident in the line of hundreds of people outside The Home Bakery in suburban Rochester. They’ve come to see a huge cake in the bakery’s window – a life-sized replica of Detroit Lions receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown doing a headstand touchdown celebration – and for a chance to win scarce playoff tickets donated by the player. Rob Dolton and his wife took the day off work and drove over an hour to join the line.
ROB DOLTON: More than just watching them win, it’s just watching all of our fans just be so giddy about what’s going on with our team. It’s been a long time since we’ve had a team that’s looked like it could contend, and now we – now we’re, like, the favorites, and I don’t even know if we know how to take it right now (laughter).
KLINEFELTER: Nearby, Keena Benning-Dehnke touches up her Honolulu blue lipstick, one of the Lions’ team colors. She says she and her husband are 38-year season ticket holders and showed up for more than cake and passes to a game.
KEENA BENNING-DEHNKE: ‘Cause it’s fun – and the whole atmosphere and the buzz around the whole team winning. And it’s an exciting time to be a Lions fan ’cause we’ve waited so long for it. I think it means more to us as fans. As losers so long, we deserve it.
KLINEFELTER: Bakery owner Heather Tocco says people have lined up for days around the shop. She says her football player cake is just one slice of the millions of dollars in economic impact the Lions’ playoff run has brought to metro Detroit.
HEATHER TOCCO: We are looking to drive some revenue for January sales because, typically, I have to lay off people and cut their hours. I would not have imagined in a million years that I would have a two-hour wait to get into this building to purchase a baked good.
KLINEFELTER: It’s a fervor that’s reached even senior citizen homes in the region, with some spreading their enthusiasm on TV.
UNIDENTIFIED GROUP: Go Lions, and good morning, America.
KLINEFELTER: About a half-dozen burly, goateed men, dressed to look like Lions head coach Dan Campbell, led a pep rally at the Jewish Senior Life of Metropolitan Detroit. Eighty-one-year-old Mike Schlussel remembers helping console Lions players following yet another defeat at a bar he frequented in the 1960s.
MIKE SCHLUSSEL: And they came in right after the game. They were willing to talk to you, even though they lost. All you could say to them was, we’ll get it. We’ll get it. And now we got it. It’s been a long time coming.
KLINEFELTER: These days, the Lions excite fans with a steady string of wins and the aggressive actions of colorful coach Campbell. During his tenure, Campbell’s had the Lions offense go for it on fourth down rather than kick it to the opponent more than any other NFL team. And Campbell says Detroit’s recent rise from league doormats has the team ready for whatever happens on the football field.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
DAN CAMPBELL: We’ve been so good. We’ve been so bad. We’re a laughingstock. Now we’re great. And it’s just been this roller-coaster of up and downs. And this is nothing new that we’re in. We’re in the middle of a circus, man, and it’s about time to perform.
KLINEFELTER: Now Campbell and the Lions are just a few wins away from what once seemed almost impossible – an elusive Super Bowl victory.
For NPR News, I’m Quinn Klinefelter in Detroit.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
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The Detroit Lions have long been considered one of the NFL’s worst teams, with a history of disappointment and underachievement. However, this season, the Lions have been making waves and defying expectations as they inch closer to the Super Bowl.Led by quarterback Jared Goff and a revamped defense, the Lions have been playing with a newfound sense of determination and grit. They have been able to pull off some impressive wins against top teams, showcasing their potential to compete at the highest level.
While they still have a long way to go before reaching the Super Bowl, the Lions are proving that they are not to be underestimated. Their strong performance this season has caught the attention of fans and analysts alike, who are beginning to see the team in a new light.
Could this finally be the year that the Detroit Lions break through and make a run for the Super Bowl? Only time will tell, but one thing is for certain – this team is not going down without a fight. Let’s keep an eye on the Lions as they continue their journey towards the ultimate goal in professional football.
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#NFLs #worst #teams #Detroit #Lions #closer #Super #Bowl #NPRJared Goff and the Lions: The NFL’s most unlikely love story
THE STORY OF Megan Stefanski’s devotion to the Detroit Lions is a story of loss.
She has witnessed hundreds of losses since she goes to every game, home and away, and for most of her 44 years, the city’s football franchise has been an exercise in finding clever and torturous ways to not win games. She lost her father, Donnie — who most people called Yooperman because the Stefanskis come from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula — and who was as committed to seeing the Lions (mostly lose) live as his daughter. He missed his granddaughter’s baptism because it conflicted with a football Sunday.
Yooperman was born in December 1957, about two weeks before the Lions won their third championship that decade. He died in 2019, about a week before the season, without seeing them so much as come close to another title. Before he had the chance to see this iteration of the Lions, the team that finally holds so much promise.
Last January, when the Lions hosted their first playoff game in 30 years, Detroit lost its collective sanity. The going rate to get into Ford Field was $1,200, and Megan insists she had the only empty seat in the stadium.
She brought her father’s ashes in a miniature urn. They sat in the seat beside hers in Section 100.
Before that game, when the Lions beat the Rams and Matthew Stafford, their old hometown hero, the stadium roared the name of the quarterback who took Stafford’s place. The Jared Goff chant was born that night, and in the year since, would go on to spring up at Lions road games, and Pistons games, and a high school cheerleading competition, and a Green Day concert.
“Jared Goff” chants broke out in Santa Clara pic.twitter.com/qzTzfkDfUd
— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) December 31, 2024
Yooperman has missed a lot in the five years he’s been gone, but Megan, in her own way, let her father see this much: the birth and blossoming of the romance between Detroit — a city and a team — and its once left-for-dead, now reborn star, Jared Goff.
THERE’S A VERSION of this story that doesn’t feature a happy ending for Jared Goff in Detroit. Or, technically speaking, a happy new beginning.
He was shipped off to this town — not his words, but his father’s, and his old college coordinator’s, and his current left tackle’s — where football failure had become noxious and pervasive, like the pollution from the neighborhood auto plants. In Los Angeles, Goff’s relationship with Sean McVay — wunderkind, offensive guru, Goff-whisperer, or so popular theory went — had frayed gradually, then quickly and painfully. In the span of two weeks in January 2021, Goff went from McVay’s “quarterback right now” to quarterback discarded to Detroit. Goff was, the Rams and the NFL intelligentsia seemed fairly certain, now someone else’s problem.
“For many guys, that would break them,” says Tony Franklin, Goff’s offensive coordinator and QB coach from his Cal days. For here, Franklin goes on, was the message delivered to Goff: “You’re not good enough, you’re not smart enough, you’re not tough enough, you’re not the guy that I want, we’re gonna trade you, get rid of you.”
He wasn’t merely offloaded in 2021. The Rams had to part ways with Goff and first-round draft picks to make the deal palatable for prospective trade partners. Once he landed in Detroit, he was, charitably speaking, relegated to bridge quarterback. The guy to tread water until the Lions could find The Guy. (At least outside the confines of Ford Field. Inside, then-newly-hired Lions GM Brad Holmes said he never once considered Goff a stopgap. “He’s been successful. He has a lot of wins. He’s been to the playoffs,” Holmes said in June 2021, before Goff had played a down for the Lions. “I don’t know why he doesn’t have a chance to be successful.” Put less charitably, he was damaged goods.
In those hazy, disorienting days before and after the trade — “We were spinning,” says Goff’s father, Jerry — the Goffs had neither the time nor clarity of mind to really ponder Dan Campbell, the new head coach Detroit had hired just 10 days before landing Goff. But Sonny Dykes did. Dykes had coached Goff in his three years in Berkeley, and his investment in Goff compelled him to pull up the tape of Campbell’s inaugural news conference. The new coach spent several minutes expounding on what his guiding principles would be in Detroit — which culminated, he promised without a hint of satire or hyperbole, with a commitment to biting kneecaps off.
“Jared’s in the right place,” Dykes thought to himself. “The two of ’em are gonna create magic.”
The Lions play Washington on Saturday night as the NFC’s No. 1 seed for the first time in franchise history, so magic was indeed created, even if it was a slow burn. In the first 24 games of the Campbell-Goff era, the Lions won four; since November 2022, they are 35-9. They added two playoff wins last season, double the franchise’s total postseason victories from the previous 66 years. And “bridge quarterback” Goff morphed into a quarterback the team doesn’t just win in spite of, or even with.
This season he has: the sixth-best QBR in the league (68.5); six games with an 80% completion rate, the most in NFL history; an NFL-best 18 touchdown passes on third and fourth downs, with no interceptions on such downs.
Even with a roster replete with stars, the Lions often win because of Goff.
In retrospect, Dykes says he wasn’t so much prophetic as he was observant. Perhaps Campbell’s exuberance veered into meatheadery, but Dykes figured what he was really advocating for was resilience. And in all of Dykes’ stops in college football — Louisiana Tech, Cal, SMU and now TCU — he had rarely had a player as resilient as Goff. “I think the thing that people probably underestimate the most about Jared is his toughness,” Dykes says. “You meet him and it’s kind of ‘aw, shucks.’ But there’s a killer underneath there.”
In Goff’s third start in college, Ohio State and Joey Bosa came to town, and Dykes surmises Bosa must’ve gotten to Goff 20 times that night. He would lay waste to Goff, then Goff would get up. He would wreck him again, and Goff would rise for more. Urban Meyer found Dykes after the game and told him Goff was one of the toughest kids he’d ever seen.
If Meyer was caught off guard that night, well, so are plenty of people. Jared Goff is gangly. When he runs, he looks like a baby giraffe out there. He is, skeptics like to point out (and point out and point out) a blonde California kid, which is really just a polite way of suggesting he might be too soft for the grit and grime of the NFL. Josh Allen is a freight train who will run you right over. You can try to tackle Jalen Hurts, but he’ll take you for a 5-yard piggyback ride first. Goff? His specialty is making the NFL look attainable for commoners. And that, right there, is his peculiar brand of durability.
“It’s a lot harder to be tough when you gotta stand in the pocket and know that, ‘I’m not benching 350 pounds,’” Franklin says. “‘I’m not leg squatting 600 pounds. I’m gonna get my brains beat out here, but I’m going to stand here and make the throw anyway.’”
He got his brains beat out against Ohio State when he was 18. And again, against New Orleans in his third year as a Ram and third playoff game in the league, when he was 24. Campbell was on the opposing sideline that day as the Saints’ tight ends coach, where he saw in real time how Goff got destroyed — just killed, Franklin says — on a pair of third downs late in the game. He completed both for first downs, then went on to win the game. The showcase was Campbell’s first real whiff of Goff’s fortitude.
“I think they are cut from the same cloth,” Jerry says.
It’s something more than a coincidence, then, that Goff’s revival happened here, in this place, and on the Lions, under Campbell’s watch. Campbell is rough around the edges to Goff’s polish. Campbell chooses thundering boorishness (a façade, but still; more on that soon) to Goff’s unassuming forbearance. But don’t let the odd couple act fool you. They are one and the same, a perfect football match, exactly who each of them needed.
Said Goff last month, “He’s breathed life into me from the moment I got here.”
MEGAN HAS HER superstitions, just as her father did. She has to wear her hair half-pulled back; her bracelets must sit a certain way; she puts in her Dan Campbell earrings before each game. Yooperman? He had to wear the same socks, the same jersey, the same cap — it started out as a plaid hunting hat, but his mother sewed a Lions decal on it, and it became his game-day hat.
But a strange, still-new feeling now sits alongside all these superstitions for Megan: belief. She loved Goff from the time he touched down in Detroit, but the moment she remembers knowing that Goff was the right person in the right place was the last game of the 2022 season. By the time the Lions took the field against the Packers that day, they had been eliminated from the playoffs. All they had to play for was keeping Green Bay out of the playoffs too. They did.
“You could just feel something in the air then,” she says. “That was what changed everything.”
EVERY SO OFTEN, in the middle of a team meeting, Campbell will pull up a game clip of Goff at work.
A few Mondays ago in December, he trotted out film from the Lions’ game against Packers. There was Goff, pointing his long, left arm to some place beyond the defenders plotting his demise. With ball in hand, taking seven loping strides back, he hung back in the pocket for half a breath, before a linebacker got truly up in his business. That was the moment Goff threw a missile to Amon-Ra St. Brown over the middle, which St. Brown caught but Goff did not see him catch, bear-hugged between two Packers defenders.
Campbell looked out at those assembled. “Just remember, guys,” he said, “16, back there, is a bad man.”
For all his bluster, Campbell is an emotional and interpersonal savant. He understands, in ways that are rare and a little bit telepathic, according to his team, what guys need to hear and when they need to hear it. So he offers this nudge — don’t forget, we’re lucky to have this guy; don’t forget, there’s no one we’d rather have here — to his team now and then. Because what quarterback wouldn’t relish a vote of his coach’s confidence, especially when those votes were in short supply elsewhere?
And to Campbell’s broader point, this 15-second time capsule is as good an illustration as any for why Goff is one of the best quarterbacks in the game.
The moment the ball leaves Goff’s hand — on most of his throws, especially ones over the middle — you won’t notice anyone open. But Goff knows when and where his man will be open. He’ll help create that openness by freezing a defender with his eyes locked on one receiver, clearing the field, then passing to a different receiver. He’ll do all this, throw the ball in time and in rhythm, while holding on to it until the last feasible second to allow for the play to develop.
Campbell didn’t show the two plays that followed, but a more complete viewing is worth the time for the story it tells. His throw to St. Brown was a case study in how and why Goff shines. What came after laid bare how and why Goff shines in Detroit.
These were the facts when Goff connected with St. Brown: Less than two minutes remained against the Packers; the score was tied at 31; on 2nd-and-17, Goff’s 17-yard pass secured a first down and put the Lions squarely in field goal and game-winning territory at the Packers’ 20-yard line.
Except upon further consideration, the referees decreed it a 16-yard pass (not 17), at the Packers’ 21-yard line (not 20), good for 3rd-and-inches (not 1st-and-10) — which the Lions promptly failed to convert. And this being the Lions, they tried converting again, on 4th-and-inches, instead of settling for three.
Since Campbell’s arrival in 2021, his team has stayed on the field for fourth down 32% of the time; the Browns, the next 4th-down-happiest team in that span, did so at a 26% clip. But this was a lot. This was too much, probably. Even if the Lions did go for it to get the first down and, two plays later, kick their game-winning field goal.
The Lions “take risks” and “play aggressive football” and “go against the grain,” but this isn’t a tale of audacity. It’s a story about trust and its attendant rewards.
“Jared has 100 percent confidence in Dan,” says Adam Dedeaux, Goff’s longtime personal QB coach, “because Dan’s shown 100 percent confidence in him.”
Goff, himself, has said he knows there were times in his dreadful early days here — the 0-10-1 start to 2021, the 1-6 start the next year — when Campbell could have cut bait on him. The prudent move (also the popular move) (and the self-preserving one) would have been to unhitch his wagon from a quarterback most had declared DOA at that point anyway.
Campbell, steadfast or just stubborn, did no bait cutting. In the throes of that 0-10-1 start, Campbell was not shy in his demand for Goff to raise his play. “I feel like he needs to step up more than he has,” he told reporters. But he was also clear-eyed on why he expected more.
“He is a pure passer, man,” Campbell said at his media session a couple of days later. “And if you give him a minute and give him a little protection, let him see it, I think he can make some pinpoint throws. … I think if we can stay in the normal flow of a game and we can function like we need to right now offensively, with what we are, I think we can win with him. I just do.”
Confidence begat trust begat success begat more confidence.
“Think about any job you have,” Jerry says. “If you’ve got a guy above you, a boss, and he’s like, ‘Dude, just go. Do your thing. I trust you 100 percent.’ Can you imagine how good that feels?”
Before all these good feelings, though, the aforementioned dreadful early days were dire enough to compel Campbell to make some changes, even if quarterback was not among them. Midway through the 2021 season and with the Lions in free fall, Campbell took over playcalling duties and promoted his tight ends coach, Ben Johnson, to passing game coordinator — and by that offseason, offensive coordinator. Which is how Goff found his game in his second perfect marriage in Detroit.
Dedeaux’s theory is that since this was Johnson’s first foray as coordinator, he didn’t come armed with the ego and rigidity of experience. He did prosaic things like ask Goff what kind of plays he felt most comfortable running. He made shocking decisions like including Goff as a collaborator in the offense they installed.
“Sounds simple, doesn’t it?” Dedeaux says. “I truly believe that in Detroit this is the Ben Johnson-Jared Goff offense. I just think Jared has absolute ownership over it. And I think that exists in maybe one or two other places.”
Johnson says the collaboration is practically science now. They make time early each week to watch practice together, to watch cutups together, to spitball together. “The things that he’s most comfortable with usually work on game days,” Johnson says. “So we want to give him a lot of liberty early in the week.”
The net result of this partnership is that when Goff is asked to do uncomfortable things like move the chains on fourth down more than just about any player in the league, he’s pretty comfortable with that responsibility because it is shared.
So the quarterback who was deemed a failure a few short years ago now feels free to play unafraid to fail.
More, the team that for so long — for generations — was defined by its enduring failure, now plays unafraid to fail too.
MEGAN WAS 13 when her father bought season tickets. Back then, in the mid-’90s, the team was doing something unprecedented in franchise history: flirting with the playoffs on a regular basis. It wound up with one postseason win that decade, which was at least one more than it had in the 1970s and 1980s. So this was how Yooperman prepared his daughter for life as a Lions fan:
“Lotta whiskey,” she says.
He preferred McMaster’s Canadian, and she still has one of his bottles, five years old and unfinished, rattling around the bus she and her tailgating compatriots call home before and after Sunday games. At his funeral, the family offered shot glasses of McMaster’s to those paying their respects. They could take one last shot with him, these people who loved Yooperman and loved the team he devoted his life to, even when that team hardly ever loved them back. A toast, in the end, to all the times the Lions made them drown their sorrows.
NESTLED INTO THE Eastern Market district, across the street from where Megan sets up her weekly tailgating operation and a mile down the road from Ford Field sits Bert’s Market Place. Bert Dearing was raised one block over and six blocks down from this very spot and has worked and lived within a two-mile radius of this corner of Detroit’s east side his whole life, save for the two years he served in Korea. He’s been here, on Russell Street, since 1987 when it was just a one-room shop. Now it’s a Detroit institution, like Bert himself. The hallways tell a story. A rendering of Bert as a boy in the 1950s, wearing the same tam he does these days, running his paper route. A 1951-era map of Black Bottom, the predominantly Black part of Detroit that was demolished for redevelopment in the ’50s and ’60s. A mural dedicated to Motown, Smokey Robinson, Berry Gordy. A painting paying homage to Lions greats, because even if winning never came to town, some of the league’s most dazzling players did. It’s Dick “Night Train” Lane, who still captures Bert’s heart, because Bert loved a man who could hit, and Night Train Lane was the kind of player who ushered in the advent of the face mask penalty.
“We’re savin’ the history,” he says. “If you don’t know your history, how you know where you’re going?”
Bert is a man who wants to remember. He remembers the 1957 title, when he was 13 years old. He remembers the scars of professional football in this town for the generations that came after it.
0-16.
The Hail Mary.
Dallas.
Barry.
Barry Sanders, who went to the playoffs five times in the 1990s and left with one playoff win. It was Detroit’s only playoff win over six decades. Barry Sanders, who retired via fax one day in the heart of his prime because his heart couldn’t stand the losing anymore.
Detroit was professional football’s graveyard. And Jared Goff? He was consigned there for his own career to die.
The banishment shocked him. Worse, it shook him, and his confidence, and Goff had never lacked for self-assurance. Back in his college days, Franklin would tell him that he was going to sign somebody better than Goff, somebody who would beat him out. Goff would look at his old coach and dare him: Do it. Bring him in. He liked the idea; he relished the idea of a fight. “But it wouldn’t a mattered if I’d brought in Peyton Manning,” Franklin says. “Jared would’ve competed and thought he could beat him out and thought it would make him better.”
But Goff was human, and he was hurt in the wake of his unraveling in L.A. The lowest Franklin had seen him in all the years of coaching and mentoring him, at least when it came to football. The game had never come easy for Goff, he had always had to work at it, but he had also always felt sure of his place in it, knew he belonged and knew what he could do. And here was a team and a coach in L.A. who had told him: You’re wrong. And there was that same team, in its first try in a post-Goff universe, winning the damn Super Bowl — while Goff watched, fresh off a three-win debut season in football Siberia.
“I’ll tell you this,” Jerry says. “It’s not for everybody.”
That Goff could break, then begin again, and do it on a team that was broken and beginning again too, is why he turned the locker room in Detroit into a bunch of Goff converts. Ask the Lions players when they felt sure the Goff experiment in Detroit would work. They didn’t circle when he became a winner — the eight victories they had in their last 10 games in 2022, or the playoff run last season. They evangelize the times long before he became one.
“He didn’t carry himself like a person who was down on his luck, ever,” says Taylor Decker, Detroit’s longtime offensive tackle.
But Goff did more than just put on a brave face, says Dan Skipper, Decker’s offensive linemate. He jumped headfirst into his new world. “When he walked in here, he embraced it,” Skipper says. “And said, ‘Hey, we’re in this together.’ I think that tells you a lot about a person real quick.”
Skipper popped in at guard in a game against Las Vegas last season. He’s a backup. It’s in his job description to pop in, but Goff knows what it can do to a person to be told you’re not good enough, you’re not up for this, you aren’t trustworthy. He also knows what it can do for a person to be told you are. He looked at Skipper in the huddle and told him: “No one else I’d rather have here right now than you.”
IT’S FOOTBALL’S UNLIKELIEST love story: When Detroit fans look at Goff, they see a reflection of themselves.
“We were losers for years,” Megan says. “Just like he was.”
Jared Goff was the quarterback no one wanted playing for a city and team no one wanted. Jared Goff is the quarterback redefining himself, playing for a city and team redefining themselves too.
“I love these people, man,” Goff said recently as, yes, a horde of Lions fans at Ford Field chanted his name. “They love me. I’ve found a new home here.”
The fans chant his name in the stadium and throughout the state. They put his face on billboards lining the highways into Detroit. They decree him as their favorite son. All Detroit lifers have ever wanted was something to believe in, and Goff believes in himself, and Campbell, and Johnson, and his team, and the city. So they’ve joined him. They’ve allowed themselves to consider the possibility that good times, the best times, super times, are ahead.
When the Tigers won the World Series in 1968, Bert walked out of the club he owned, made his way downtown and didn’t come back for three days. He was caught up in the energy, carried away by the joy of his city. He’s been waiting, ready for these Lions to carry him away his whole life.
THE STORY OF Megan Stefanski’s devotion to the Detroit Lions is a story of faith in the face of loss. It is a Detroit story.
“A lot of people know of loss,” she says. “You’ll hear that from every Lions fan. ‘My dad. My grandpa.’ Everybody has …”
Everybody has someone who can’t see all of this is what she can’t bring herself to say. Everybody has someone they wish could be here to see it. Yooperman never knew this era and its riches: the quarterback who turned himself around, the team he had a hand in turning around. But if they finally do what they haven’t before, Megan will make sure her father is with her for that too.
“If the Lions are there,” she says, “we’ll take his ashes to the Super Bowl.”
Jared Goff and the Lions: The NFL’s most unlikely love storyWhen Jared Goff was traded to the Detroit Lions in a blockbuster deal this offseason, many NFL fans were left scratching their heads. After all, Goff had spent the first five years of his career with the Los Angeles Rams, leading them to a Super Bowl appearance and earning two Pro Bowl selections along the way. So why would the Lions, a perennially struggling team, give up so much to acquire him?
But as the offseason has progressed and training camp has gotten underway, it’s becoming clear that Goff and the Lions might just be the perfect match. Goff has embraced his new team and city with open arms, quickly endearing himself to his new teammates and the fanbase. In return, the Lions have shown their faith in Goff by naming him their starting quarterback and building the offense around his strengths.
Despite the skepticism from outsiders, Goff and the Lions are determined to prove their doubters wrong and write a new chapter in their respective careers. With a fresh start and a renewed sense of purpose, Goff and the Lions are ready to take on the challenge of turning around a franchise that has long been mired in mediocrity.
So as the 2021 NFL season kicks off, keep an eye on Jared Goff and the Lions. Their unlikely love story may just turn into a fairytale ending for both player and team.
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