Updated
Updated · NBC Sports · Jun 24
NFLPA Weighs Brendan Sorsby Draft Fight as 1 Roster Spot Could Cost a Member Job
Updated
Updated · NBC Sports · Jun 24

NFLPA Weighs Brendan Sorsby Draft Fight as 1 Roster Spot Could Cost a Member Job

3 articles · Updated · NBC Sports · Jun 24

Summary

  • Brendan Sorsby still has no union-backed path into the NFL supplemental draft because the NFLPA would be defending a non-member against the interests of current players.
  • One roster opening is the union’s core dilemma: if Sorsby were drafted onto a 90-man roster, a current NFLPA member could lose his job, with another cut possible at the 53-man deadline.
  • A 2004 appeals ruling in Maurice Clarett’s case supports that tension, saying NFL entry limits can protect veteran players by reducing competition for capped team spots.
  • Sorsby can still sue the NFL on his own, but no filing has been announced and the window for winning a court order forcing a supplemental draft is shrinking by the day.

Insights

Does Sorsby's case reveal a flaw in the NFL's absolute control over who gets a chance to play professionally?
Is the NFL's harsh stance on Sorsby's gambling a necessary defense of integrity or an arbitrary use of its power?
Should a players' union protect current jobs by preventing a talented non-member from entering the league?