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Obama considered scrapping ObamaCare website, says top aide

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 28 Februari 2014 | 17.08

Obama considered scrapping ObamaCare website, says top aide | New York Post
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By S.A. Miller

February 28, 2014 | 4:38am

WASHINGTON — President Obama considered scrapping the ObamaCare Web site in the weeks after its glitch-plagued Oct. 1 launch, says White House chief of staff Denis McDonough.

"Can it be patched and improved to work, or does it need to be scrapped to start over? He wanted to know if this thing is salvageable," McDonough tells Time magazine.

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17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Softer sales slam Sears with fourth-quarter loss

Sears CEO Eddie Lampert admitted the retailer had a "tough-to-terrible" holiday season, but insisted the company's strategy was a model for other chains.

"I believe the entire retail industry is headed to where we already are," Lampert wrote in a Thursday letter to shareholders — a message that many might find chilling, given Sears' increasingly disastrous results.

Sears was slammed by a fourth-quarter loss of $358 million as revenue sank 14 percent, to $10.6 billion.

The company narrowed the loss from $489 million a year earlier, but did so by selling off assets.

This year, the owner of Sears and Kmart aims to raise $1 billion in cash by selling off still more of its properties, including Lands' End. Sears said Thursday it expects to complete the Lands' End spinoff in May, and that it will reap a $500 million dividend from the transaction.

The trouble with that plan, critics say, is that Lands' End is the company's most profitable remaining unit, generating about $150 million in Ebitda, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.

"As we have asked on previous occasions and will ask again, what is the longer term game plan[?]" Credit Suisse analyst Gary Balter asked in a Thursday research note. "Sears is a long way from being cash flow positive."

Sears continues to hemorrhage cash as the company's stores nationwide have steadily lost shoppers. Critics note that the stores have become increasingly dilapidated, as Lampert refuses to inject cash on remodeling.

In his Thursday letter, Lampert pooh-poohed the idea that "what our stores need most are hundreds of millions of dollars more in décor and fixtures."

Instead, Lampert insisted that the company focus on its e-commerce strategy and rewards program, despite the fact that they still comprise a tiny fraction of Sears's business.

Sears shares on Thursday rose 6.5 percent to $43.01, goosed partly by signals from the company that February sales have taken a rare step into positive territory following the fourth-quarter drops.

"It is hard to fathom why the stock should rise from very overvalued levels to even higher overvalued levels," Balter said. "However, markets reflect supply and demand," he added, noting that supply has been constricted by short selling.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Blackstone takes 20 percent stake in Versace

Blackstone boss Stephen Schwarzman is cozying up with Donatella Versace — and giving her a little cash to play with too.

The buyout king's private-equity firm has scooped up a 20 percent stake in the Italian fashion label in exchange for a cash infusion of about $205 million, plus an $82 million payout to the Versace family.

The deal, which values Versace at $1.4 billion, will fuel a fresh growth spurt for the brand, whose fortunes have been up and down since the murder of founder Gianni Versace in 1997.
Donatella Versace, who has been creative director since her brother's death, said in a statement that Schwarzman "shares the family's vision" for the brand.

"I am very pleased to work with Blackstone and, in particular, with Stephen Schwarzman, whom I admire for his achievements," she said in the statement.

Schwarzman, who met with Donatella in December to hammer out the deal, said, "It is a great pleasure to be working with a true icon in Donatella Versace."

Versace is Blackstone's first luxury investment and signals sizzling demand among private-equity shops looking to capitalize on growth in Asia.

Other suitors for Versace included Investcorp, a Bahrain-based buyout firm that previously owned Gucci.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

How Dave, Jimmy, Craig et al. are faring in late-night competition

With all the attention heaped on the launches of "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" and "Late Night with Seth Meyers," it's easy to forget that the rest of the late-night landscape has kept churning along.

And while the talkers across the dial on ABC and CBS have taken an expected dip — as viewers sample the new offerings — their ratings are off just slightly from when Jay Leno was still the reigning late-night champ.

It's no surprise that Fallon is leading his competition by a large margin, averaging 7.5 million viewers since his premiere — which was boosted by initial sampling and an Olympics lead-in his first week (meaning that ABC and CBS were running repeats in prime time).

Against the new competition, CBS' David Letterman — by far now the oldest host in late night at 66 — has held up best.

Since the 39-year-old Fallon's debut, "Late Show" is averaging 2.6 million viewers through Feb. 26, down 10 percent compared to its 2.9 million season average.

"Jimmy Kimmel Live," hosted by the 46-year-old Kimmel, is down slightly more. Through Wednesday, "JKL" was averaging 2.3 million viewers since Fallon's premiere — down 12 percent from its season-to-date average.

Among younger viewers (adults 18-49), Kimmel is down more significantly — 24 percent — since Fallon's debut, with "JKL" averaging a 0.54 (Feb. 17-26) in that demo, compared to a 0.71 for the season.

Fallon, meanwhile, is averaging a 1.9 rating in adults 18-49 in his second week — though he's declined each night. Still, that's up 90 percent from Leno's average (1.0).

In three nights going head-to-head against Meyers at 12:35 a.m., "The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson" was down 12 percent in total viewers from its season average (1.3 million vs. 1.5 million). NBC, for now, is still basking in the post-premiere glow: After averaging 8.5 million viewers in his first week, Fallon's second week is drawing 5.8 million viewers through three nights at 11:35 p.m. — still tracking 45 percent above what "Tonight" averaged with Leno.

Meanwhile, Meyers' viewership is up 45 percent for his first three nights (2.9 million viewers) over Fallon's "Late Night" average.

It's still early, of course, for NBC's new late-night duo. In total viewers, Fallon is down 29 percent from his first week to his second week-to-date, while Meyers slipped 21 percent from his first-to-third night.

Expect that settling trend to continue in the coming weeks, with a much closer margin separating the competition months from now.

"I'm not Nostradamus, but probably we'll open up, follow the Olympics, have crazy-awesome ratings. Then the Olympics will go away, our ratings will drop down [and] that will be a story," Fallon told The Post last November. "But Seth will start, so maybe it could be the same. And then at the end it will all be fine, we'll figure it all out and in the end it's either you watch me, Kimmel or Dave."

At a glance

Late Show With David Letterman: 2.6 million viewers (-10%)

Jimmy Kimmel Live: 2.3 million viewers (-12%)

The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: 1.3 million viewers (-12%)

Late Night With Seth Meyers: 2.9 million viewers (+45%)


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

‘Game of Thrones’ promo hints at future doom

Death to all men! This latest promo image for the new season of "Game of Thrones" may make it look like the HBO hit will be dabbling in misandry — but it's actually a hint of a portentous doom for all humans of the realm.

It's a reference to the phrase "Valar Morghulis," a saying in the language high Valyrian translating to "All men must die." Astute "Thrones" fans will remember that Jaqen H'gha gave Arya Stark a coin in Season 2, and told her to use the phrase "Valar Morghulis" if she ever needed to find him.

With Arya's mounting ruthlessness, it seems to mean she's about to get into some heavy character development this season, premiering April 6.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dish CEO compared to Nixon by LightSquared’s Falcone

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Februari 2014 | 17.08

Satellite-TV mogul Charlie Ergen is just like Richard Nixon, according to billionaire investor Phil Falcone.

Ergen's "non-denial denials" of his Dish Network's intent to buy debt in Falcone's bankrupt LightSquared reminded the hedge-fund investor of the Nixon White House, according to papers filed in Manhattan bankruptcy court.

Ergen had testified that he bought debt in bankrupt wireless startup LightSquared for himself — and not on behalf of Dish.

However, the only reason Ergen used his own money to buy a controlling debt position in LightSquared was that Dish was legally barred from doing so, Falcone said in the filing.

Ergen testified in January that he bought the debt as a "personal investment," which only later became an investment target for Dish.

Falcone slammed the explanation in the filing as "the type of 'non-denial denials' the Nixon White House offered when confronted by the Watergate break-in."

"Ergen's plan all along … was to sow confusion and have the bankruptcy process collapse, so that he could swoop in and pick up the pieces" for Dish, Falcone's lawyers argued.

The joint filing by Falcone and LightSquared is part of their last-ditch effort to persuade Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman to rule that Ergen's purchases were improper.

Chapman is expected to decide the case by March 31.

If Falcone wins, he could seek to block or severely slow repayment to Ergen when LightSquared emerges from bankruptcy under a new $2.65 billion restructuring proposal.

The highly charged accusations are just the latest in a months-long bitter battle between the two hard-hitting billionaires over LightSquared, which owns assets that could be worth billions amid forecasts of a spectrum shortage.

Ergen paved the way for Falcone's Harbinger Capital to take the reins of LightSquared's restructuring in January, when Dish dropped its $2.2 billion stalking-horse bid to buy the company's spectrum out of bankruptcy.

A confirmation hearing on the $2.65 billion restructuring plan, in which Harbinger Capital maintains an equity stake, is slated for March 17.

Back in 2012, when LightSquared was trying to stave off bankruptcy, Dish was blocked from purchasing the wireless company's debt because it was considered a rival.

Falcone has charged that Ergen got around that rule by buying the debt through his pal Stephen Ketchum.
Ketchum bought his first batch of debt in 2012 from billionaire Carl Icahn — yet another deep-pocketed investor to have taken a shine to LightSquared.

After agreeing to buy $247 million worth of Icahn's debt, Ergen directed Icahn, through Ketchum, to vote against an agreement with LightSquared's creditors that would have saved the company from bankruptcy, Falcone has alleged.

LightSquared was forced into Chapter 11 after regulators nixed the company's plan to build its network.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

New eyes at SAC Capital after guilty plea to insider trading

Steve Cohen, the multibillionaire hedge fund legend whose firm became synonymous with illegal trading, will soon have another person looking over his shoulder.

SAC Capital Advisors, which has pled guilty to insider trading and is awaiting sentencing on March 14, is hiring a new "chief surveillance officer" who will report directly to president Tom Conheeney, according to a Tuesday employee memo, a copy of which was obtained by The Post.

The new trading monitor, according to the memo, signed by Conheeney and Cohen, "will broaden and elevate our surveillance capabilities."

The newly created position will be filled in the spring, the memo said.

SAC's chief compliance officer, Steve Kessler, resigned after the failures of its compliance practices were on display at two lengthy insider trading trials of SAC execs Michael Steinberg and Mathew Martoma.

Both men were found guilty.

Six other former SAC employees pled guilty to insider trading, as did the firm. It agreed to pay $1.8 billion in fines, including about $600 million to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The move to beef up SAC's compliance comes as the firm prepares to be sentenced by Manhattan federal court Judge Laura Taylor Swain.

As part of the deal it struck with US Attorney Preet Bharara, SAC has also accepted a probationary period of five years and has to pay for an independent compliance consultant.

The memo also said that SAC had redeemed almost all outside investor money as of Jan. 31 and has gone from 1,000 employees to 850. It plans to reinvent itself as a family office on May 1 that will manage about $9 billion of Cohen's money.

The new firm will be composed of two new entities whose names will be announced in April, the memo said.

"We have been through a few challenging years, but the changes we have announced and will be announcing will make us a stronger firm as we move forward together," Conheeney and Cohen concluded.

Cohen had said he hopes to reopen his fund to outside investors at the end of the probationary period. But the SEC still has a case pending against him over his failure to supervise the firm and could bar him from managing other people's money for life.

An SAC spokesman declined to comment.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Veteran DJ Scott Shannon lands at WCBS FM

Well, that didn't take long.

Veteran DJ Scott Shannon, who announced his exit from WPLJ's popular and long-running "Scott & Todd" morning show on Feb. 7, has landed at WCBS FM (101.1) as the oldies station's morning-drive guy. Shannon kicks off "Scott Shannon in the Morning" this Monday, March 3 (6-10 a.m.). He'll be joined by Mr. G. (weather) and traffic reporter Joe Nolan.

Dan Taylor, who's been anchoring the morning-drive slot, will move to 10 a.m.

I asked Shannon about his sudden announcement to leave 'PLJ after 23 years — which caught outsiders by surprise.

"It was time. Todd is very qualified to do the show on his own and so am I," he told me. "We worked together longer than most teams even think about working together and it was just time for me to leave. He's the younger guy and he's felt like he could do [the show] alone for a couple of years now . . . I learned from him and he learned from me.

"I really needed to reboot my career and do something else."

Shannon says he "never" considered leaving New York after ending his run at 'PLJ. "I'm a New Yorker. I didn't retire from radio, I only retired from 'PLJ," he said. And what about competing directly now, starting Monday, against his old partner, Todd Pettengill?

"We'll both be on the air at the same time. Will there be some looky-loos back and forth? Yeah," he said. "But the music [on the two stations] is so different and there are a lot of great morning shows in this market. There's something for everyone."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

‘The Voice’ finalist Caroline Pennell records five-track EP

Caroline Pennell, a finalist last season on "The Voice," has recorded a version of Badfinger's classic tune, "Come and Get It," for a five-track EP CD called "Music for Linda" that will accompany a calendar featuring Alan Aldridge's iconic Beatles lyric art. The calendar will go on sale in May and will raise funds for the Women And Cancer Fund. All five tracks on the EP CD (including "Come and Get It," which was used in the Peter Sellers/Ringo Starr movie "The Magic Christian") were written or co-written by Paul McCartney. Pennell's track was recorded last week at Universal Sound in Hackensack, NJ with producer Robert Johnson behind the mixing board.

Last, but not least . . .

The third season of "Dallas" launched to 2.7 million viewers Monday night on TNT, in line with its two-season average. Patrick Duffy, Josh Henderson star . . . Jonathan Silverman guest-stars on Wednesday night's episode of "Law & Order: SVU" (10 p.m./Ch. 4) . . . That was Bianca del Rio and Milan ("RuPaul's Drag Race") joining drag diva Lady Bunny at the 2nd Anniversary of their "Hot Mess Drag Revue" at the new 42West (514 West 42nd).

Any chance of getting an item regarding the following — the TV link is that it's modeled after TV's Dancing With the Stars

For the fourth year in a row, Fieldstone Middle School in the Rockland County town of Thiells will be holding its Dancing with the Teachers (DWTT) event to benefit Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C). The fundraiser, modeled after the popular ABC TV show "Dancing with the Stars," will be held in the school's auditorium on Friday, February 28 and Saturday, March 1 at 7 pm.

DWTT features 10 Fieldstone faculty members who will be paired with professional dancers from NY DanceSport in nearby New City. The contestants will compete in a dance-off on both nights where audience members and judges will vote to decide the winner. The teachers and dancers have spent several months preparing and rehearsing the routines that they will perform.

All proceeds from DWTT will go directly to funding SU2C's groundbreaking research. SU2C enables collaboration among leading scientists and doctors in the cancer research community, focused on getting new therapies to patients quickly.

As you know, I do PR for Stand Up To Cancer.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

All that jazz and good food meet at Minton’s Harlem revival

A surprised look stole over my guest at Minton's when the house jazz sextet launched into the opening chords of the night's closing number.

" 'Rikki Don't Lose That Number'?" she puzzled. In the ancestral house of bebop? Before I could alert her not to expect Steely Dan, the crew had proceeded to the rest of Horace Silver's earlier "Song for My Father," from which Donald Fagen borrowed the bass riffs.

It's a famous tangent point between jazz and rock. Saucy new supper club Minton's marks a tangent point in the perception of Harlem's history — a lone spot on the map where 2014 peers wistfully back on a distant golden age. It's a triumph for its owner, media and banking mogul Richard Parsons, who made an impossible dream real.

While Parsons' less expensive, next-door restaurant The Cecil has been widely praised, Minton's might turn off those who resent Harlem's "Disneyfication" or regard Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane as quaintly as techno fans look upon doo-wop.

To those who think Harlem is "edgy," or should be, the new Minton's can seem almost square. It occupies the site of Minton's Playhouse, which in its 1940s and '50s heyday was a seminal birthplace of bop and hard bop. It closed in the early '70s and mostly stayed that way until now.

Music that once was revolutionary can today seem no more cutting-edge than old Broadway — and nitpickers might find a ­Lowcountry-inspired menu too suavely comforting. But even they should be enchanted by the long, pretty, narrow room graced by white tablecloths and nightclub-style golden chairs and banquettes. Customers cheerfully dress up, thanks to a jackets-required rule for men.

Walls are hung with fabrics and vintage jazz-artist photos. In the rear behind the bandstand reposes the only surviving part of the old Minton's: a radiantly restored, 1948 mural by Charles Graham of jazzmen playing astride a slumped-over Billie Holiday.

The wonderful live musicians, several of whom played here 50 years ago, go all night except for a break or two. Acoustics are so finely balanced, you hear every note even over conversation that well-drilled waiters know when, and when not, to interrupt.

Amazingly, there's no cover charge. A la carte prices (apps $18 to $26, soups/salads $14 to $18, and entrees $25 to $46) are peanuts for a meal serenaded (if that's the word for the occasional prolonged drum solo) by a sound increasingly rare in Manhattan.

The menu by executive chef Alexander Smalls and chef de cuisine Banks White is just as well calibrated — a well-executed romp through "Southern revival." Not quite three-star, it merges with the music into a three-star night.

One night, a smiling Ivanka Trump popped up from her seat to photograph the raging sextet. I was tempted myself, but my culinary responsibilities glued me to the table — as did starters like North African-spiced grilled shrimp and sherry-tinted she-crab soup given a ­skillet-cornbread crackle. (Pass up an oddly uninspired sampler plate.)

Dreamy cheese grits rivaled Charleston's finest. Hoppin' John pilau blissfully marries Carolina brown rice to tasso ham, mascarpone cheese and black-eyed peas.

Mildly African-inflected Southern riffs work especially well with fish. Among them: crisp-skinned brook trout fortified with cured bacon and lilted with gullah peanut sauce. Soon, soft-shell crabs, please!

On an early visit, deconstructed vanilla pound cake tasted like a burnt cigar after a waiter failed to ignite rum sauce with a lighter.

But pastry chef Mame Sow's confections, like pineapple upside-down cake, now make a proper closing note to this seductively sweet, 21st-century Harlem nocturne.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mom, daughter slap condo with $1M bias suit

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 01 Februari 2014 | 17.08

The board president of a luxury East 53rd Street condominium blocked a mother and daughter from landscaping their penthouse terrace because he didn't approve of their "lifestyle," according to a $1 million discrimination lawsuit.

International antiques dealer Ariane Dandois, 70, and her daughter, ­Ondine de Rothschild, 35, scooped up the duplex penthouse at 310 E. 53rd St. in 2006 for $12.9 million.

The condo developer approved plans to turn their 3,500 square feet of outdoor space into an urban oasis with plantings, sculptures and patios.

But when the new board president, David Goss, took over in 2009, he halted the project.

"He first asked my mother and I whether we were married," Roths­child says in the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

"We replied that we were single women. He then asked, 'Why do two single women need such a large apartment?' "

Rothschild said Goss, 65, an asset manager at UOB Global Capital, "then derogatorily and rhetorically questioned my mother asking, 'You are one of those types of women who works?' "

She replied that it is because she works that she can afford the unit.

Dandois auctioned off her antiques collection at Sotheby's in 2007 for an estimated $16 million.

"Both the board and Mr. Goss strenuously deny the allegations being made and will vigorously defend this matter," asserted Steven Sladkus, the attorney for the 30-unit building.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

British, French bulldogs most popular in city

Americans may love Labrador retrievers but New Yorkers prefer bulldogs and French bulldogs.

And the city's favorite hounds vary from neighborhood to neighborhood, the American Kennel Club found.

French bulldogs, the new celebrity faves, are the most popular breed on the Upper West Side, Financial District, Williamsburg and Washington Heights.

But German shepherds are tops in Astoria, beagles in Chelsea, pugs in Park Slope, golden retrievers in Murray Hill, poodles in Riverdale, Havanese on the Upper East Side, bulldogs in the East Village — and Portuguese water dogs in Tribeca.

The kennel club released its latest national and local rankings Friday and found that Labrador retrievers were the country's most popular breed for the 23rd year in a row.

"They're such a versatile breed," said kennel club spokesperson Lisa Peterson. "They do so many things so well and they come in three colors. They're America's dog."

But not New York's.

Labs were dethroned as the city's favorite breed and fell to No. 3, behind bulldogs and French bulldogs, but ahead of German shepherds and golden retrievers.

Peterson said city dwellers like English bulldogs and French bulldogs because "they require minimal grooming and exercise."

"Also, people are seeing celebrities like Martha Stewart and Mario Lopez with their Frenchies. There's one on 'Modern Family.' This could all add to their popularity," she said.

Labrador owner and breeder Michael Weist of upstate Warren said, "People have less room in the city but Labs are great because they are so adaptable."

Pete Festa, president of the Long Island Bulldog Club, said there were solid reasons why New Yorkers would like bulldogs.

"They're great apartment dwellers. They are low activity, non-barking and very low-key," said Festa, a breeder for 17 years.

But Cindy Miller, a German shepherd breeder from Sterling, Mass., made her pitch to New Yorkers.

"German shepherds are great for city life because they adapt quickly to any environment," she said. "They're also great for the city because anyone can feel safe walking down the street with a German shepherd. It's just their presence. They don;t have to take it any further."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Donald’s split decision in battle vs. AG

Donald Trump declared victory in the bitter court battle with Attorney General Eric Schneiderman Friday, calling out the state's top lawman on Twitter as a "lightweight" who "just got his ass kicked."

But a Manhattan Supreme Court judge's ruling in the AG's $40 million fraud suit against Trump for allegedly ripping off students at a scam real-estate school handed Trump only a partial win.

Justice Cynthia Kern's ruling tossed out claims against Trump that he broke education law by calling his "school" Trump University — even though it was not licensed with the state — because they were barred by a statute of limitations.

The unaccredited, for profit school changed its name to The Trump Entrepreneur Initiative after a state Education Department complaint in 2010.

The judge did agree to let Schneiderman continue his fight to block Trump from reopening the shuttered school.

She also allowed the AG to pursue fraud claims.

The AG accuses Trump of deceiving students who paid $35,000 into thinking they would be taught by real-estate experts handpicked by Trump, when not a single instructor had been.

Schneiderman, through a spokesman, took a shot at Trump: "No one, no matter how rich or popular they are, has a right to scam working families."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Super Bowl tickets still cheaper than normal

Ticket sales for Super Bowl XLVIII improved with the weather forecast this week but are still expected to end up with the cheapest resale value for a Super Bowl in more than a decade, according to experts.

Despite a prediction from The Weather Channel that the high temperature Sunday could reach 49 degrees at MetLife Stadium, ticket aggregator seatgeek.com reported the average resale price for the game between the Broncos and Seahawks was just $1,767 on Friday.

That was down significantly from the average price of $2,015, and puts the game on track to be the cheapest in terms of resale price since the Patriots' 2002 Super Bowl win over the Rams in New Orleans.

Tickets were available on the secondary market for as low as $1,310 — just $510 over face value — on Friday night.

A SeatGeek spokesman said the company expects activity to pick up again Saturday and especially Sunday, but that prices are likely to continue dropping.

That's in part because of concerns about the weather, as well as the fact both teams are at least 1,700 miles from New York and their fans haven't traveled well.

"Historically, the last 48 hours prior to kickoff on Sunday is the period of the most activity and volatility in the Super Bowl ticket market, and each year, more tickets are sold on secondary markets on Super Bowl Sunday than on any other day leading up to the game," the company said in a statement.

The cheapest seat available for resale had a face value of $800, while the most expensive was $2,500 — a new Super Bowl record. The NFL sold out the 82,500-seat stadium long ago, so all eyes are on the resale market.

Ticket sales on the secondary market were extremely slow early in the week but picked up Friday morning, when popular site StubHub reported half as many seats available — roughly 2,200 — as were left just two days before.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

NFL may expand playoffs to 14 teams

Roger Goodell on Friday offered hope for London and an expanded NFL playoff field and bad news to detractors of the Redskins' nickname and any players hoping marijuana would be taken off the banned list.

Those were among the various topics the commissioner addressed Friday morning in his annual state-of-the-league Super Bowl press conference, held at the Time Warner Center.

Goodell continued his recent press to expand the playoff field by one team per conference while shortening the preseason, though that would have to be approved by a majority vote of the owners and likely require the NFL Players Association to sign off on it.

"We are looking at the idea of expanding that by two teams to 14," Goodell said. "There's a lot of benefits to doing that. We think we can make the league more competitive. We think we can make the matchups more competitive towards the end of the season.

"There will be more excitement, more memorable moments for our fans. That's something that attracts us. We think we can do it properly from a competitive standpoint. This will continue to get very serious consideration."

Though it was revealed this week Rams owner Stan Kroenke recently purchased 60 acres near Hollywood Park in Los Angeles, fueling speculation of a move back, Goodell said London — home to three regular-season NFL games this year and next — is the leader in any race to change the league's franchise makeup.

"I believe [London is] further down the road because [the city is] now three games into it," he said. "What our next step is, I don't know. That's something we're going to have to evaluate.We believe that we will continue to grow there and that's going to take work."

Goodell was much more stern on taking marijuana off the league's list of banned substance. That has become a hot topic since the states of Washington and Colorado legalized it, and Goodell recently said it is possible medical marijuana might be allowed to help with concussions.

But recreational use by players that wouldn't be penalized? Not happening anytime soon.

"Our experts right now are not indicating that we should change our policy in any way," said Goodell, who is also subject to random drug tests just like his own players. "We are not actively considering that at this point in time. But down the road sometime that is something we would never take off the table if it could benefit our players."

Among the other topics addressed by Goodell:

  • He praised the work done by the New York-New Jersey Super Bowl Committee and said he expects Super Bowl XLVIII to come off flawlessly Sunday at MetLife Stadium, but he put a damper on the committee's expressed hope of getting into the game's "rotation" once every 10 years.

"There's such a demand for Super Bowls right now," he said. "The number of cities that are going to get multiple Super Bowls at one time, I think are incredibly limited."

  • The Redskins' nickname: "This is the name of a football team that has had that name for 80 years, and has presented the name in a way that has honored Native Americans. We are being respectful of people who disagree, but let's not forget this is the name of a football team."
  • 49ers tight end Vernon Davis attended the press conference and asked Goodell why the NFL doesn't provide players free medical care for life after their careers are over, but Goodell avoided the question by saying that issue is part of continued talks with the union.
  • Goodell said the league is considering going to a centralized system for instant replay where decisions would be made from NFL headquarters, much like the National Hockey League already does.
  • Goodell said the NFL is considering the formulation of a league-wide player code of conduct in response to the Dolphins' bullying controversy.

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