became the first NFL head coach in the Super Bowl era to be suspended by the league for any reason.
Coaches and front office staff On March 21, 2012, the NFL issued sanctions to Saints coaches and front-office personnel for their roles in the scandal. • Williams was suspended indefinitely, and was banned from applying for reinstatement until the end of the 2012 season at the earliest. • Payton was suspended for the entire 2012 season, effective April 1. • Loomis was suspended for the first eight games of the 2012 season. • Vitt, who had been tabbed as a possible candidate to serve as interim coach in Payton's absence, was suspended for the first six games of the 2012 season. (This did not automatically disqualify Vitt from serving as interim head coach
per se, as his suspension was not effective until the regular season; the suspension terms allowed him to coach the team through training camp and the preseason, then return during Week 7. The Saints announced they would implement this scenario for 2012.) The Saints were also fined $500,000—the maximum fine permitted under the league constitution, and had to forfeit their second-round draft picks in 2012 and 2013 (their first-round pick in 2012 had already been traded to the
New England Patriots, and therefore could not be forfeited; after the penalty, the Saints' first pick in the
2012 NFL draft was
a third-rounder). In a statement, Goodell said that the NFL would not tolerate "conduct or a culture" that put player safety at risk. He also said that the fact that the scheme went on for three years demanded that "a strong and lasting message must be sent that such conduct is totally unacceptable and has no place in the game." He reiterated this in an interview later that day with ESPN's Adam Schefter, saying that the fact those involved "continued to mislead" the league about it was a significant factor in the sanctions. "You have to be accountable and responsible in the NFL," Goodell said. He also implied that Payton would have faced significant punishment in any event, since his contractual obligation to supervise his assistants meant that he at least should have known about the scheme. Goodell added that there would be zero tolerance of payments for in-game performance in the future, saying that payments for good play eventually escalate to bounties for deliberately injuring players. Later, Schefter said on ESPN's
SportsCenter that league officials felt Payton was at least as guilty as Williams, despite initial focus on Williams's role as the mastermind in the scheme. On March 30, Payton, Vitt and Loomis appealed their suspensions, and the Saints also appealed the fine and loss of draft picks. Payton, Vitt and Loomis met with Goodell on April 5. After that meeting, Vitt's lawyer David Cornwell, said that Payton and Loomis met with Williams before the divisional playoff game and ordered him to shut down the bounty program immediately. Cornwell contended that Williams was a "rogue coach", and the recently released audio of his meeting with the defense only proved it. Goodell denied the appeals on April 9, meaning that Payton's suspension began as of April 16. However, depending on the Saints' cooperation and that of the individuals involved, Goodell could restore the Saints' second-round pick in 2013 (though the Saints would still lose a lower-round pick), as well as reduce the fine on the Saints and restore Payton, Vitt and Loomis's lost pay. However, all appeals were denied.
Players was suspended for the entire 2012 season, but this would later be overturned on appeal. The NFLPA requested that the league should hold off on any punishments for the players until it conducts its own investigation. The NFL initially claimed that Fujita, who left the team for the
Cleveland Browns immediately after the Saints won
Super Bowl XLIV, pledged "a significant amount of money" into the bounty program, but later determined that Fujita in fact had not pledged any money into the alleged bounty program. The NFLPA released a statement calling the suspensions unjustified, claiming that Goodell had not furnished them with any evidence supporting the sanctions. Goodell issued the suspensions as part of his power to sanction any "conduct detrimental to the integrity and public confidence in the NFL," a violation of Article 46 of the CBA. This provision is normally used to sanction off-field conduct. However, a league source told
CBSSports.coms Clark Judge that it also gives Goodell the power to rule on in-game conduct if he feels that it runs counter to the integrity of the game. All four players appealed their suspensions. On September 7, 2012, the Burbank appeals panel vacated the suspensions imposed on the four, and the NFL confirmed that the ruling reinstated them in time for their first games of the 2012 season two days later. Two days after the fifth game of the season, on October 9, 2012, the league re-issued the suspensions without any changes or reductions; the players' appeals continued. On October 27, 2012, former league commissioner
Paul Tagliabue postponed the bounty appeals hearing, expecting to set a new schedule on October 29, 2012. On December 11, with three games left in the regular season, Tagliabue vacated the players' suspensions, saying in his ruling, "I affirm Commissioner Goodell's factual findings as to the four players. I conclude that Hargrove, Smith and Vilma—but not Fujita—engaged in conduct detrimental to the integrity of, and public confidence in, the game of professional football ..." He laid primary responsibility for the scandal on Williams and Payton. Had the suspensions of Vilma and Hargrove been upheld, they would have been the longest for an on-field incident in the Super Bowl era, topping the previous record set in
2006, when then-Titans defensive end
Albert Haynesworth was given a five-game suspension for stomping on the head of
Dallas Cowboys center
Andre Gurode. In vacating Hargrove's suspension, Tagliabue described the seven-game suspension Goodell had levied on Hargrove as "unprecedented and unwarranted". Hargrove, signed as a free agent by the
Green Bay Packers in March 2012, but was released before the 2012 regular season began. ==Media reaction==