the browns owner, jimmy haslem told the knoxville newspaper in response, unequivocally, hue jackson was never paid to lose games. that is an absolute falsehood. coach, he s saying you re not telling the truth here. your response. well, i hope that jimmy has an opportunity to answer some very pointed questions. it s very easy to stand in front of the people of knoxville and say, hey, i wasn t paid to lose games or win games, but we need to very specifically ask him about his four-year plan, exactly what was in it, and why have a plan of four years and every category that was in it other than, like i said, year three and four talked about winning, why not talk about winning in year one and two. why have things that really don t matter to coaches, i don t care about how old our team is or how young the team is, how many draft picks i may have, those things are not what s important in a bonus structure.
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30 seconds. but the league heads into its biggest game of the year under a cloud of controversy with claims of racism and game fixing. cleveland browns owner jimmy haslem denying accusations made by a former coach, hue jackson, who alleges he was offered bonuses for losses so the team would get higher draft picks after the 2016 and twelfth seasons. he said, unequivocally hue jackson was never paid to lose games. that is an absolute falsehood. this comes after brian flores said he was offered money to lose, an allegations the dolphins have called false and malicious. since the nfl instituted the rooney rule in 2003, the rule that encourages hiring of minority candidates, of 127 overall coaching positions that have come open, just 27 have gone to minority coaches, and in
Two players whose behavior makes a mockery of Roger Goodell's "important values" received $355 million. Let's stop the pretense. The league, its owners, the front offices and the coaches don't really care about standards and responsibilities. They care about football and the money that football generates.