Current:Home > FinanceNFL’s newest owner joins the club of taking stock of low grades on NFLPA report card -Global Finance Compass
NFL’s newest owner joins the club of taking stock of low grades on NFLPA report card
View
Date:2025-04-14 04:49:07
ORLANDO, Fla. — Josh Harris, the NFL’s newest owner, certainly feels the sting from the low grades given to the Washington Commanders on the most recent report card from the NFL Players Association.
“I’m not an F-minus guy,” Harris said at the conclusion of the NFL owners meetings this week.
He knows. It’s nothing personal. That the Commanders ranked dead last overall among NFL teams in the league-wide survey of players that rated workplace conditions and support from key figures in the organization was something else he inherited from his embattled predecessor, Dan Snyder.
The Commanders were marked with “F-minus” grades in five categories — treatment of families, the locker room, the training room, the training staff and team travel — in a survey taken not long after Harris led the group that paid a record $6.05 billion for the franchise in late July.
“Obviously, we jumped all over that,” Harris, speaking to a small media group that included USA TODAY Sports, said of the survey.
NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.
He added that his new general manager, Adam Peters, and new coach, Dan Quinn, left the meetings briefly for a discussion with architects involved with designs for upgrading the team’s small, outdated training facility in suburban Ashburn, Virginia.
“We’re trying to make a lot of changes very quickly,” Harris said. “Obviously, it starts with the NFL player community is a small community. The NFL coach community is a small community. We want to be a place where everyone says, ‘That’s a great place to be.’ Therefore, we need to upgrade that facility.”
Harris, who earned a “B” on the survey for willingness to invest in facilities, said that priorities include renovating the players lounge and “refinishing a bunch of things.”
“There’s only so much we can do by the start of training camp,” he added. “We have a lot more planned, in terms of looking at the playing surface itself, looking at the locker room, looking at the bathroom facilities. So, everything we can do right now to make our players feel great about coming to work, feel comfortable, we’re going to do.”
Ultimately, the Commanders will build new headquarters. The location and timing for that will depend on the much bigger issue of striking a deal for a new stadium, which could happen in Washington, D.C., Virginia or Maryland. It’s possible, if not probable, that the team will land in a stadium in one jurisdiction while training in another, as it does now.
“You kind of want to look at it holistically,” Harris said.
Of course, the Commanders were hardly the only team put on blast by the second annual NFLPA survey. The Kansas City Chiefs ranked 31st — despite winning back-to-back Super Bowls — and were criticized for not following through on promised renovations at their training facility.
Getting shamed hasn’t hurt. Chiefs owner Clark Hunt (given an “F-minus”) told The Athletic that the team is upgrading with an air conditioning system and larger cafeteria at their training facility.
“We are making some pretty significant investments,” Hunt said. “We’ve outgrown that building in a number of ways.”
Similarly, New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft is reinvesting more than $50 million on a new workout facility.
“I must tell you, I was unaware of how bad it was,” Kraft told reporters, via Boston.com.
Then again, not every owner was moved by the NFLPA’s Report Card. Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II said that a renovation of the weight room at the team’s South Side headquarters was already in the works when the survey was released in late February. The Steelers ranked 28th overall.
Rooney, who received an “F-minus” for willingness to invest in the facilities, maintained that the criticism would be more constructive if it came with dialogue.
“We have an open door,” Rooney told USA TODAY Sports. “If players want to talk about their needs, that’s fine.”
Interestingly, while Rooney received one of the lowest grades for an owner, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin received one of the highest marks in the league with an “A.” That’s similar to the contrast in Kansas City, with Andy Reid graded the highest of any coach in the league.
No, Rooney hardly sees himself as an “F-minus” guy.
“The most important thing for me, and I think our veteran players know this: If they need something, they can come in and talk about it,” Rooney said. “And we do the best we can. We do have limitations, square footage issues that we’re dealing with. But it’s not that we’re sitting here and won’t change anything. Let’s improve every year if we can.”
Rest assured, they are keeping score.
veryGood! (29)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Inside the secular churches that fill a need for some nonreligious Americans
- Have you heard of 'relation-shopping'? It might be why you're still single.
- Kali Uchis Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Don Toliver
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Search underway for 3 people missing after avalanche hits Idaho back country
- Ariana Madix Details Rollercoaster Journey From Scandoval to Broadway Debut
- How Arie Luyendyk and Lauren Burnham Became One of The Bachelor’s Most Surprising Success Stories
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Australian Open 2024: Here’s how to watch on TV, betting odds and a look at upcoming matches
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Lawsuit filed against Harvard, accusing it of violating the civil rights of Jewish students
- Murder trial begins months after young woman driven into wrong driveway shot in upstate New York
- Mayor says Texas closed park without permission in border city where migrant crossings had climbed
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Stock market today: World shares are mixed, while Tokyo’s benchmark extends its New Year rally
- Iowa community recalls 11-year-old boy with ‘vibrant soul’ killed in school shooting
- FAA says it is investigating Boeing over Alaska Airlines' mid-air blowout
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
A Danish appeals court upholds prison sentences for Iranian separatists convicted of terror charges
Larsa Pippen and Marcus Jordan's Sex Confession Proves Their Endurance
'Change doesn’t happen with the same voices': All-female St. Paul city council makes history
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Pay raises and higher education spending headline Gov. Brian Kemp’s proposed budget in Georgia
Patriots agree to hire Jerod Mayo has next head coach, Bill Belichick’s successor
Apple announces release date for Vision Pro: What it costs, how to buy and more