NFL notes: NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith calls a work stoppage in 2021 'a virtual certainty' – Los Angeles Times


The NFL is four seasons away from an almost certain work stoppage, the executive director of the league’s players association calmly predicted during an interview with Sports Illustrated released this week.

“I think that the likelihood of either a strike or a lockout in ’21 is almost a virtual certainty,” DeMaurice Smith said, referring to the year that the NFL’s collective bargaining agreement with its players expires.

Smith then rattled off a bunch of grievances the NFLPA has with the current agreement.

“If it doesn’t get fixed,” he said, “you head into a certain small-a Armageddon.”

— The Cleveland Browns announced Thursday that they have partnered with the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton and Greater Cleveland Sports Commission to potentially host the annual three-day NFL draft, which has swelled into a made-for-TV spectacle and showcase for the league — a virtual football-palooza. The group delivered its application to league headquarters in New York last week, and as luck would have it, Commissioner Roger Goodell visited the team’s headquarters on Thursday.

— The New England Patriots said former nose tackle Lester Williams, who started in the franchise’s first Super Bowl appearance during the 1985 season, has died. He was 58. The team says Williams died at home on Wednesday in Birmingham, Ala. It did not give other details. The 27th overall pick in the 1982 NFL draft, Williams played in 40 games for the Patriots from 1982 to 1985. He also played one season for San Diego (1986) and Seattle (1987). Before joining the Patriots, Williams played for the University of Miami. He was inducted into the Miami Sports Hall of Fame in 1999.

Associated Press contributed to this report.

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