Jon Gruden apologizes after racist email toward NFLPA head leaks

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004

Jon Gruden apologizes after racist email toward NFLPA head leaks​



By
Jeremy Layton


October 8, 2021 5:14pm
Updated










Las Vegas Raiders head coach Jon Gruden apologized Friday after a leaked email from 2011 came to light in which he referred to NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith using a racial stereotype.
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Gruden sent the email during the 2011 NFL lockout to Bruce Allen, who was the GM of the Washington Redskins at the time.
“Dumboriss Smith has lips the size of michellin [sic] tires,” the email read.
Gruden apologized to the WSJ, saying he is “really sorry” and that he refers to liars as “rubber lips.” He also said, however, he doesn’t think Smith is a liar.
“I don’t think he’s dumb,” Gruden told the Journal. “I don’t think he’s a liar. I don’t have a racial bone in my body, and I’ve proven that for 58 years.”
Smith, who could be voted out of the leadership position at the NFLPA, released a statement in response.
“This is not the first racist comment that I’ve heard and it probably will not be the last,” the statement read. “Racism like this comes from the fact that I’m at the same table as they are and they don’t think someone who looks like me belongs.”
The NFL denounced Gruden’s comment in a statement on Friday.
Jon Gruden during the Raiders' game against the SteelersJon Gruden during the Raiders’ game against the SteelersGetty Images
“The email from Jon Gruden denigrating DeMaurice Smith is appalling, abhorrent and wholly contrary to the NFL’s values. We condemn the statement and regret any harm that its publication may inflict on Mr. Smith or anyone else.”
The Raiders also responded to news of the email, saying the team is addressing the matter with Gruden.
NFL Players Association Executive director DeMaurice Smith speaks at the annual state of the union news conference in Miami Beach, Fla. The NFL and the NFLPA haven’t come to an agreement on all protocols for training camp and the preseason as the report date for teams draws closer. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)NFL Players Association Executive director DeMaurice Smith AP Photo
“The content of an email regarding DeMaurice Smith from Jon Gruden when he worked at ESPN 10 years ago is disturbing and now what the Raiders stand for,” owner Mark Davis said in a statement. “We were first made aware of the email late yesterday by a reporter and are reviewing it along with other materials provided to us today by the NFL.”
Gruden is in the middle of his fourth season as the head coach of the Raiders. He has gotten off to a strong 3-1 start, and faces the Bears (2-2) this Sunday afternoon in Las Vegas.
 



Former Eagles OC Jon Gruden Resigns As Raiders Head Coach After Reports He Used Racist, Homophobic Language In Emails​



By CBS3 Staff
October 12, 2021 at 12:03 pm


PHILADELPHIA (CBS/AP) — Las Vegas Raiders head coach Jon Gruden is out of a job. The former Eagles offensive coordinator resigned late Monday night following reports from the New York Times and The Wall Street Journal that he used racist, homophobic and misogynistic language in emails dating as far back as 10 years.
Gruden spent three seasons as the offensive coordinator for the Philadelphia Eagles from 1995-97. The Birds head to Las Vegas to play the Raiders in two weeks.
He apologized in a statement saying he did not want to be a distraction to the team:
“I have resigned as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. I love the Raiders and do not want to be a distraction. Thank you to all the players, coaches, staff, and fans of Raider Nation. I’m sorry, I never meant to hurt anyone.”


Gruden was in the fourth season of a 10-year contract with the Raiders.
Special teams and assistant head coach Rich Bisaccia will take over on an interim basis.
It was a rapid downfall for Gruden, who is in the fourth year of a 10-year, $100 million contract he signed with the Raiders in 2018. It started on Friday when the Wall Street Journal reported that Gruden used a racist term to describe NFL union chief DeMaurice Smith in a 2011 email to former Washington executive Bruce Allen.
The emails were discovered in a workplace misconduct investigation into the Washington Football Team but ended up costing Gruden his job when they also showed Gruden denounced the drafting of a gay player and the tolerance of players protesting during the playing of the national anthem among other issues.
Gruden apologized for his “insensitive remarks” about Smith, saying they were made out of frustration over the 2011 lockout. But the latest emails sent from between 2011-18 when Gruden was an analyst for ESPN show his use of derogatory language went well beyond that.
A league source confirms the accuracy of the emails and said they were sent to the Raiders last week. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league hasn’t made the emails public.
Raiders owner Mark Davis said last week that the email about Smith was “disturbing and not what the Raiders stand for” and said the team was reviewing the additional emails. Davis issued a statement Monday saying only that he accepted Gruden’s resignation.
The Times reported that Gruden used a gay slur to insult Goodell and said he was “clueless” and “anti-football.” He also said Goodell shouldn’t have pressured the Rams to draft “queers,” a reference to Michael Sam, who was the first openly gay player drafted by an NFL team.
Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib came out as gay in June and is the first openly gay player to appear in an NFL game.
In a 2017 email, the Times said Gruden responded to a sexist meme of a female official by saying: “Nice job roger.”
The paper also said Gruden criticized Goodell and the NFL league for trying to reduce concussions, and said that Eric Reid, a player who had demonstrated during the playing of the national anthem, should be fired.
The newspaper said Gruden also mocked an article in 2017 about players calling on Goodell to support their efforts promoting racial equality and criminal justice reform.
“He needs to hide in his concussion protocol tent,” Gruden wrote.
Gruden and Allen have a long relationship, having worked together in Oakland and Tampa Bay. The emails between the two and other men included photos of women wearing only bikini bottoms, including one photo of two Washington team cheerleaders.
Gruden also criticized President Barack Obama during his re-election campaign in 2012, and then-vice president Joe Biden.
Smith said earlier Monday that he appreciates that Gruden reached out to him following the initial report, but that the email is evidence that the fight against racism is ongoing.
“But make no mistake, the news is not about what is said in our private conversation, but what else is said by people who never thought they would be exposed and how they are going to be held to account,” Smith wrote in a Twitter thread.
Gruden’s comments to Allen about Smith came during the 2011 lockout of the players by the NFL. Gruden told the Wall Street Journal he was angry about the lockout during labor negotiations and he didn’t trust the direction the union was taking.
“Dumboriss Smith has lips the size of michellin tires,” Gruden wrote in the email reviewed by the newspaper.
Davis had been trying to hire Gruden almost since he took charge following the death of his father, Al, in 2011. He finally got his prize in 2018 when Gruden agreed to leave ESPN and return to the sideline with a 10-year contract. Gruden had revived the Raiders in is first stint in 1998-2001 and then beat them in the Super Bowl the following season after he was traded to Tampa Bay for a boatload of draft picks.
Gruden has a 117-112 career record but hasn’t won a playoff game since the Super Bowl victory over the Raiders in the 2002 season.
His second tenure with the team started with a pep rally introductory news conference but provided few reasons for celebration as Gruden had a 22-31 record, failing to reach a winning record or make the playoffs.
He traded away stars Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper in his first season to start a rebuild, which has showed only minor progress. After the Raiders went 4-12 in his first season, Gruden tried to make a push in 2019 in the team’s final season in Oakland by spending heavily in free agency and trading for star receiver Antonio Brown. But Brown was cut before the season after a series of run-ins with management, and the Raiders went 7-9.
They improved to 8-8 last season and got off to a promising 3-0 start this year before losing the past two games.
Bisaccia has been a special teams coordinator in the NFL for 19 seasons with the Raiders, Chargers, Dallas and Tampa Bay. He has no head coaching experience but his elevation will allow other assistants such as defensive coordinator Gus Bradley to stay in their current roles.
 

Jon Gruden suing NFL, Roger Goodell for orchestrating his Raiders resignation​



By
Ryan Glasspiegel


November 12, 2021 3:45pm
Updated







Jon Gruden resigned from the Las Vegas Raiders but he is not resigned to go away quietly.
Friday, Gruden filed a suit against the NFL and commissioner Roger Goodell, accusing them of “selectively leaking” the racist, homophobic and sexist emails he sent to former Washington Football Team president Bruce Allen.
The emails, which were published in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal in October, directly led to his resignation.
“Jon Gruden has filed suit agains the National Football League and Commissioner Goodell in the Eighth Judicial District Court in Clark County, Nevada,” Gruden’s attorney Adam Hosmer-Henner wrote in a statement. “The complaint alleges that the defendants selectively leaked Gruden’s private correspondence to the Wall Street Journal and New York Times in order to harm Gruden’s reputation and force him out of his job.
“There is no explanation or justification for why Gruden’s emails were the only ones made public out of the 650,000 emails collected in the NFL’s investigation of the Washington Football Team or for why the emails were held for months before being released in the middle of the Raiders’ season.”
Las Vegas Raiders head coach Jon GrudenLas Vegas Raiders head coach Jon GrudenGetty Images
The league denied the allegations.
“The allegations are entirely meritless and the NFL will vigorously defend against these claims,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said in a statement.



see also​



Raiders owner Mark Davis at the NFL Owners Meetings in New York.

Raiders’ Mark Davis wants to see NFL report on WFT released​





Gruden’s emails were part of an NFL investigation into the workplace culture of the Washington franchise. The team was fined $10 million, and team owner Dan Snyder’s wife, Tanya Snyder, was installed as co-CEO.
The messages were sent before he became coach of the Raiders and was an ESPN analyst. They included calling Goodell a “f—-t” who shouldn’t have pressured former Rams head coach Jeff Fisher into drafting “queers,” a reference to their seventh round selection of Michael Sam.
Gruden also used racial stereotypes to describe NFLPA director DeMaurice Smith. “Dumboriss Smith has lips the size of michellin [sic] tires,” and responded to a meme of a female referee with “nice job roger.” He wrote that Panthers defensive back Eric Reid should have been fired for kneeling during the national anthem.
NFL Commissioner Roger GoodellNFL Commissioner Roger GoodellIcon Sportswire via Getty Images
A day after the emails were published, Gruden resigned as coach of the Raiders.
“I love the Raiders and do not want to be a distraction,” he said on Oct. 11. “Thank you to all the players, coaches, staff, and fans of Raider Nation. I’m sorry, I never meant to hurt anyone.”
 
Back
Top