NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, shown here greeting game officials before the Super Bowl, is retiring after 16 years on the job.
Amy Sancetta, Associated Press
NEW YORK Paul Tagliabue is leaving the NFL, and he's leaving it both peaceful and prosperous.
The 65-year-old commissioner will step down in July after 16 years, his tenure marked by labor harmony and unprecedented riches through television deals.
Tagliabue has been in charge since 1989, when he succeeded Pete Rozelle, and agreed last March to stay to complete the TV deal and a long-term contract with players.
He finally got that done 12 days ago, finishing the most arduous labor negotiations since the league and union agreed on a free agency-salary cap deal in 1992.
"I really want to emphasize how much of a privilege it is to spend most of your adult life with the NFL. This is not an easy decision for me," Tagliabue said on a conference call Monday.
"As difficult as this decision is, I also know it's the right decision. Right for me. Right for the league," he said.
Roger Goodell, the NFL's chief operating officer, and Atlanta general manager Rich McKay are the two leading candidates to succeed Tagliabue. Baltimore Ravens president Dick Cass also is considered to have an outside chance and Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice has said she would like the job.
"Ask her," Tagliabue said when quizzed about Rice's candidacy.
Condoleezza Rice, a bona fide football fan, said she is not applying for the newly opened post of NFL commissioner not now, anyhow, her spokesman said carefully on Monday.
"She thinks football is the greatest sport on earth, but even if she were approached for the job which she has not been she would have to decline," Sean McCormack said.
Tagliabue said the search is wide open and that he will stay on beyond July to avoid the kind of seven-month deadlock that occurred between him and the late Jim Finks after Rozelle stepped down in March 1989.
Owners will begin to look for a new commissioner at their meetings next week in Orlando, Fla.
As for his own tenure, Tagliabue said, "Building a strong relationship with the NFL Players Association is the thing I'm most proud of."
"Everyone involved in the NFL in the '80s saw that as a negative," he said.
More than anything else, Tagliabue took over a league that already had become America's game under Rozelle and took it to the next level, enriching it and restoring labor peace.
- BYU football: Cougars land massive defensive...
- Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to church, a...
- Jerry Sloan interviews for Bobcats coaching...
- Dick Harmon: John Beck gets a new start in...
- BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding Sabbath...
- Blue roundup: Jabari Parker tells ESPN.com he...
- 5A high school baseball playoffs: American...
- 4A high school baseball playoffs: Skyline...
- Blue roundup: Philadelphia Inquirer...
64 - BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding...
49 - BYU football: Cougars land massive...
44 - Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
29 - Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to...
19 - High school baseball: Alta manhandles...
13 - Brad Rock: Jerry Sloan would be happier...
11 - Utah Utes basketball: Jordan Loveridge...
10






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments