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Roger Goodell vs. Jerry Jones is latest sign of NFL's political problems

The NFL’s most powerful team owner is at odds with its commissioner.

Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, is seeking to block his fellow owners from approving a contract extension for Commissioner Roger Goodell — an extension Jones himself already voted to approve earlier this year.

ESPN calls the situation, “an unprecedented, all-out civil war.”

Just as the term ‘civil war’ signals, this is an internal conflict, one that shouldn’t, in theory, mean much to football fans. But this football season, in which almost all the headlines out of the NFL are negative and political, the conflict between Jones and Goodell amounts to yet another public ding to the “shield.”

The NFL is having its season undermined by politics, and the problem doesn’t look likely to go away in time for Super Bowl LII in February.

Television ratings are down about 7% compared to the same point last season, and nearly 20% compared to 2015, and many blame the distraction of player political protests. The reality is that there are a number of headwinds against the NFL converging at once: cord-cutting; more alternate viewing options than ever before from the likes of Netflix, Amazon, and HBO; concerns over head injuries; less exciting games overall; and possible football fatigue. But the political protests certainly aren’t helping, nor is President Trump’s public attack on the NFL. Advertisers are “nervous” as they look on. The number of Americans who identify as NFL fans has gone down in the past five years, Gallup says, while the number has gone up for the NBA and NHL.

And now the league has infighting, and it’s playing out publicly.

You might think that a contract dispute between the commissioner and one owner isn’t political. But the basis for Jones’s animus toward Goodell is reportedly twofold: the six-game suspension of Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott for a domestic abuse accusation from 2016, and his handling of the political demonstrations that Colin Kaepernick began last season.

In a related story, Jones is a Papa John’s franchisee, and Papa John’s CEO John Schnatter, earlier this month, blamed the NFL’s declining ratings for his company’s flat sales. Schnatter said the player protests “should have been nipped in the bud” by the NFL last season when they first began. That matches up with an ESPN report from October that Jones was “angry with 49ers owner Jed York” and “felt that if he had forced quarterback Kaepernick to stand a year ago, the national anthem crisis could have been averted.” As a result, some believe Jones was behind Schnatter’s comments.