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Athletes - Paul Tagliabue


Paul John Tagliabue (born November 24, 1940 in Jersey City, New Jersey) is the outgoing Commissioner of the National Football League. He took the position in 1989 and is expected to leave office in July 2006. He had previously served as a lawyer for the NFL.

Personal life

The Tagliabue family is Italian American. Tagliabue's forebears originate from the vicinity of Como in Lombardy (Lombardia). ("Tagliabue" is roughly translated from Italian as "cut the steer"). Tagliabue was the third of four children in a working-class family and grew up in Jersey City, New Jersey. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1962, where he played basketball for the Hoyas before the school became a major basketball power. He held the school's career rebounding record for over 20 years until it was broken by Patrick Ewing
. Tagliabue earned a law degree from New York University School of Law in 1965. In the same year, Tagliabue married Chandler (Chan) Minter of Milledgeville, Georgia. They were married in Washington, D.C., and lived there from 1965 until he became NFL Commissioner in 1989. Tagliabue has two children: a son, Andrew Philip, born in 1969, and a daughter, Emily Elizabeth, born in 1972. In 1996, his daughter Emily joined the prominent Rockefeller family by marrying Jamie Rockefeller, the son of Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-WV).

National Football League

After serving as a lawyer for the NFL, Tagliabue was selected by NFL owners to succeed Pete Rozelle as Commissioner of the NFL in 1989.

Response to September 11 attacks

After the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Tagliabue took the unprecedented action of calling off all football games the weekend following the attacks, doing so because the players felt that no one could have a stadium of people having fun after having seen so much death and destruction on television. There were also concerns about the security needed to have so many events so soon after the attacks. This was the first time the NFL had postponed all its games. Because of the attacks, all Super Bowl games starting in 2002 have been designated National Special Security Events (NSSE).

Retirement

On March 20, 2006, Paul Tagliabue announced that he will retire in July, after serving as NFL commissioner for more than 16 years. Tagliabue has said that he would be willing to defer his retirement temporarily if a new commissioner has not been elected by his retirement date.

Legacy

Praise
Tagliabue is widely regarded to have done an outstanding job as commissioner, with some sports writers going so far as to call him the greatest commissioner in the history of North American professional sport. Proponents of this claim point to such accomplishments as:

  • No players' strikes or lockouts during Tagliabue's term, an accomplishment unmatched by any of the other current commissioners. Furthermore, Tagliabue ended his tenure as commissioner by negotiating a new agreement with the NFL players union that will ensure labor peace until the end of the 2011 NFL season.
  • 17 new stadiums built during Tagliabue's tenure. More than half of the league is playing in stadiums that did not exist when Tagliabue took office. In most cases Tagliabue was able to help secure government financing to cover the cost of these expensive structues. The improved atmosphere of the new stadiums led to increased attendances, especially by women and children.
  • The strictest substance abuse policy of any professional league. Tagliabue's hard line against drug abuse has led to increased respect for NFL players and even been complimented by members of the U.S. Congress.
  • The institution of revenue sharing that is far more extensive than any other major league, and the negotiation of a salary cap system that is the strictest of any of the major leagues. Both revenue sharing and the salary cap were successfully introduced without recourse to work stoppages.
  • A separation in the popularity between the NFL compared to the other North American major sports leagues which took place over his 16-year tenure. Although the NFL was undoubtedly already a major league when Tagliabue took office, he will leave the NFL as the world's most lucrative sports league with annual revenues that tower over its three main rivals - despite the fact that the NFL plays a much shorter schedule and only a fraction of the games played by Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association or the National Hockey League.
Criticism
The accomplishments listed above have all contributed to franchise stability that is unmatched by any North American league. Under Tagliabue's tenure, even the Green Bay Packers, who play in relatively tiny Green Bay, Wisconsin have successfully competed both on and off the field with teams from the larger U.S. cities.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Paul Tagliabue ]



Some related entries: Robin Fraser | Bob Orton, Jr. | Paul Byrd | Virgil Runnels III | Del Wilkes | Greg Eslinger | Qasim Mitchell | Frank Isbell | Jeff Halpern | Wilfredo Rodríguez | Jamey Carroll

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Paul Tagliabue; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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