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Hall of Famers demand insurance, NFL rev share

ByReuters

Published 18/09/2018 at 21:13 GMT

The newly formed players-only Hall of Fame Board, made up of Pro Football Hall of Fame players, are threatening a boycott of induction ceremonies unless Hall of Fame members receive health insurance and an annual salary that includes a share of NFL revenues.

Eurosport

Image credit: Eurosport

ESPN obtained a copy of the memo sent to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, NFLPA
executive director DeMaurice Smith and Pro Football Hall of Fame president
David Baker. ESPN shared the text to Twitter on Tuesday morning.
Former Rams running back Eric Dickerson is the chairman of the board created
to represent the pursuit of health care and a piece of the NFL's massive
revenue pie.
The Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, has undergone an enormous construction
project in recent years -- Hall of Fame Village, aided by a giant sponsorship
deal with Johnson Controls -- that includes a retirement center for players,
who would receive healthcare on the premises. The project also included a new
stadium and will bring multiple football fields for youth participation
initiatives.
The letter claims the Hall of Fame Board also includes Marcus Allen, Mel
Blount, Derrick Brooks, Jim Brown, Earl Campbell, Richard Dent, Carl Ellard,
Marshall Faulk, Mike Haynes, Rickey Jackson, Ronnie Lott, Curtis Martin, Joe
Namath, John Randle, Deion Sanders, Bruce Smith, Jackie Smith, Lawrence Taylor
and Reggie White's widow, Sarah White.
However, it also listed retired quarterback Kurt Warner (St. Louis Rams, New
York Giants, Arizona Cardinals) and San Francisco 49ers and Oakland Raiders
great Jerry Rice, who denied he was in any way associated with the effort.
Rice said he supports the message of lifetime health benefits.
"I plan to support the Pro Football Hall of Fame and look forward to attending
the 100th anniversary in 2020," Rice said via Twitter.
In the letter published by ESPN, players reference Major League Baseball's
lifetime health coverage afforded any player who serves a single day on a
big-league roster, and point to the established $620 million "Legacy Fund" as
one of the NFL's "cynical public relations ploys that fail to help those who
desperately need it."
--Field Level Media
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