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NFL Fine That Made Jerry Jones Snap

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Publication by EssentiallySports

April 14, 2026 | Edition #370

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Jerry Jones has never been one to play it safe. The billionaire owner has long made bold, often controversial moves that keep him in the spotlight. But one high-stakes decision didn’t just spark debate; it backfired, shifting the league’s power dynamics and dragging Jones into yet another intense legal battle with the NFL.

A quiet league decision that escalated into a situation that put the Cowboys owner at odds with the NFL.





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  • "This was not something that was exactly a secret; it was a very public accident": NFL insider Ian Rapoport said, as teams look past Rueben Bain Jr.’s 2024 incident and focus on his tape.

  • Over the weekend, Kansas City Chiefs Defensive Coordinator Steve Spagnuolo was inducted into the Springfield College Athletic Hall of Fame. It was a recognition for his collegiate achievements and decades-long NFL career.

  • The NFL community is mourning Dave McGinnis, the former Cardinals head coach and Titans analyst, who passed away at age 74.

  • John Harbaugh is already facing his first major locker room hurdle with the Dexter Lawrence trade request as the Giants' program begins.

The NFL wasn’t born in a boardroom but in a humid Hupmobile showroom in Canton, Ohio. In September 1920, legendary figures like George Halas and Jim Thorpe sat on the running boards of cars, drinking beer and hammering out a plan to save professional football. The sport was a ‘Wild West’ of broken contracts and bankrupt teams; the new American Professional Football Association was their desperate attempt to bring order to the chaos.

They set an entry fee of just $100, a fee so nominal that records suggest no one actually paid it. Leveraging Jim Thorpe’s global fame to gain legitimacy, they laid a foundation built on stabilizing player movement rather than chasing profits. What began as a quiet handshake among men sitting on car fenders effectively birthed a multi-billion-dollar global empire.

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