Jim Irsay hints at major structural change to league management, post-Roger Goodell

NFL: APR 28 2023 Draft
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Commissioner Roger Goodell is poised to sign a new contract that will take him through March 2027. At that point, Goodell apparently will move on.

After he does, the NFL could undergo a major overhaul of the manner in which the league office is managed.

“It could be where we have a CEO of business and of the league and you have a commissioner of football,” Colts owner Jim Irsay said Tuesday, via Jori Epstein of Yahoo Sports. “I think we are looking to grow our business model significantly.”

It’s a concept mentioned in one of the final chapters of Playmakers. As the league grows and grows, it needs a leader who is skilled in managing high-level business, regardless of industry. There’s a skill set unique to CEOs, and the various challenges that the NFL encounters as it gets bigger and bigger may require someone like that, along with a football lifer who can handle the specifics of the game itself. But the CEO would run the overall show.

That approach would dramatically change the current collection of usual suspects whose names are mentioned whenever Goodell’s inevitable departure is discussed. Whether Brian Rolapp or Troy Vincent or whichever current executive lands on the radar screen, searching for a traditional CEO unlocks a new universe of potential leaders of the National Football League.

Regardless of who it is and how they do it, the clock is ticking toward 2027. Irsay said Goodell’s time “apparently” will end then.

Of course, that’s what former NFL spokesman Joe Lockhart said after Goodell signed his current contract. Goodell quickly corrected Lockhart, and before too long Lockhart was long gone.

25 responses to “Jim Irsay hints at major structural change to league management, post-Roger Goodell

  1. 2027 cannot come soon enough. Will be amazing to see some professionals running the show and addressing the long-term impacts of a series of dreadful strategic errors under the current regime.

  2. the game of football is nearly unrecognizable under goddell, 4 more years= no special teams, more offense, more obfuscation of rules, (what is a catch?)- , complete disregard for fans and players alike, yeah, the dilution process is nearly complete, and the result is a whole new sport called rogeyball and the nfl will become Rogey’s fun time game. motto: integrity and professionalism- sad but true 😉

  3. They already have all that. They might switch around some name plates on office doors, but they’ll basically be doing the same thing they’re doing now. It would actually be a smart move. Nobody will really know who’s doing what. There will be a lot of guys “in charge”. It’s just smart politics. They fooled us again.

  4. Not a fan of Goodell but structuring the NFL headshed into a typical corporate pyramid will get the NFL further away from the fans best interests…but as the years go by…it doesn’t look like they care much about that.

  5. Smart move. The NFL will become so big that they will need someone outside of football operations running it.

  6. Wouldn’t trust anyone’s business plan who never started a business

  7. Now we know why Bezos didn’t buy the Commanders. If anyone can grow a business it is he.

  8. As fans we lay things at the feet of Goodell but he really is doing what the owners want him to do. They are the real scums and money hungry ones.

  9. Goodell should have already retired – it’s hardly like he needs the money & he could pursue loads of hobbies with the fortune that he’s amassed over the years. That said, a CEO of business will have one job & one job only to focus on & that can only be a bad thing for fans as they’ll try to justify their role by finding new ways of maximising profits even more than they do now at the cost of the fans as they won’t have to ballance football with money.

  10. Brady’s part ownership stake in the Raiders should squash speculation about him playing for the Niners or any other team. His playing for another NFL team would be considered a conflict of interest by the NFL.

  11. The arrangement suggested by Irsay makes a lot of sense. As the league continues to grow it is essential that someone be obtained that has the skills to run a multi-billionaire dollar business. There is most likely no one in the football world that has those skills.

  12. If God spares our lives, I’ll like to be a fly on the wall in Mike Florio’s beautiful man cave the day Roger Goodell ceases to be commish. That day the dog will catch up with the car it has been chasing.

  13. “It could be where we have a CEO of business and of the league and you have a commissioner of football,” Colts owner Jim Irsay said Tuesday, via Jori Epstein of Yahoo Sports. “I think we are looking to grow our business model significantly.”
    ——————————————–

    Roughly 10 years ago Goodell stated that the NFL wanted to grow its revenues to $25 billion annually by 2025. This is one of the reasons there’s all the talk about expanding the league internationally. And every time a teams sells and the price has increased by billions, all the owners are happy, but they just want more and more. It will never be enough, no matter how much they have.

  14. jmscooby says:
    May 23, 2023 at 9:51 pm
    Commissioner Jeff Saturday? – – – No more comments, please, We have a winner!

  15. canadaraider says:
    May 23, 2023 at 9:55 pm
    Big difference this time it’s an owner.
    Then again it is Irsay

    goodellthegrifter says:
    May 23, 2023 at 10:14 pm
    This guy needs to shut his mouth and sell his team

    greedyjimfromtonhicken says:
    May 24, 2023 at 3:29 am
    Hopefully the NFL forces Irsay to sell next.
    ________________

    The great thing about Irsay is that he doesn’t care one bit about what anonymous internet commenters think of him. Irsay is living his best life while you guys have nothing.

  16. I can see Jimmy is already done with his hourly fifth of Jack Daniels.

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