Minnesota super lawyer Michael Ciresi successfully took on Big Tobacco and is now looking to slay another giant: the National Football League.
In a case that could affect every former NFL player from Brett Favre to Carl Eller, Ciresi has entered a complicated legal fight to reject a $50 million proposed settlement over the NFL's longtime commercial use of player names and images without compensation to those players. Part of the fight has centered on NFL Films, which owns more than 100 million feet of game film featuring grainy images of the league's most iconic players and memorable games such as the 1967 "Ice Bowl" at Green Bay's Lambeau Field.
While a federal judge has tentatively endorsed the settlement — and the NFL and a number of legendary players such as running back Jim Brown have agreed to help implement it — some former players are arguing that the $9.5 billion-a-year professional football industry should pay more. The lawsuit's six original plaintiffs, including former Minnesota Vikings Jim Marshall, Joe Senser and Ed White, are following Ciresi, a former U.S. Senate candidate from Minnesota who was a lead counsel in the tobacco industry's landmark $6 billion settlement in the late 1990s with the state of Minnesota and a major insurance company.
"Much of what [we have] talked about today — about the difficulty of succeeding, about the NFL isn't going to pay any more -- [was] true of the tobacco industry," Ciresi told a conference of former players in Las Vegas in May. The tobacco industry "offered us $4 billion to settle, and we turned it down," he added.
But others involved in the case, which has a number of Minnesotans playing key roles, said the settlement is fair and would push the NFL to help former players now struggling with their personal lives.
The proposed settlement has two goals. One would funnel $42 million to a special panel of retired players, who would in turn give the money to groups that would help players with everything from medical screening and career transition advice to housing and health and dental coverage.
Sitting in the downtown Minneapolis office of his lawyer, former NFL player Irv Cross began crying as he described the now-destitute former players that the settlement would aid. "I get emotionally tied up in this thing," said Cross, who retired in 1969 after playing for the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles. He was a longtime a co-anchor for CBS' "NFL Today" show and the athletic director at Macalester College in St. Paul.
The settlement's second goal would have the NFL help create and promote licensing agreements for former players — a move that could help market throwback jerseys with the players' names on them. As part of the settlement, the NFL has agreed to help promote apparel for at least 100 retired players. In addition, if an advertiser used game footage that had 20 identifiable players, all of them under the settlement would split the money.