NFL FINES COWBOYS Malik Jerry Jones $ 250,000 for “unintended” obscene gesture to fans | Dallas Copules
The US Football Association fined the owner of Dallas Koboz Jerry Jones $ 250,000 for what it claims to be an “unintended” obscene gesture towards fans at the New York Gates Stadium at Metlife Stadium on Sunday.
The arrest of Jones virus clips It seems that his middle finger in Jets fans during the Cowboys 37-22 victory. Jones claimed that he was actually trying to give cow’s shell fans on the field, while his team was heading towards victory late in the fourth quarter.
“This was unfortunate. This was a kind of exchange with our fans in front of us.” “There was a group of Cowboys fans in the foreground – not Jets fans, and Cowboys fans.
“[The gesture] It was unintended on my part because that was immediately after we achieved the last of us, and we were all enthusiastic about that. There was no hostile problem or anything like that. I just put the wrong offer at my hand. This was not inadvertently. I am not joking. If you want to call it accidentally, you can call it cross. But it was evaluated very quickly. I had the opportunity to look at it. It was evaluated very quickly, but the intention was “thumb”, and mainly refers to our fans because everyone was jumping up and down. “
Jones should not face any problems with a fine – with a net value of about $ 16 billion. His colleagues of billionaire have been fined by the US Football Association in recent years. The league league imposed the owner of Carolina Panthers David Tiber $ 300,000 to expel a drink on the fans during a match in January 2024, while the owner of Tennessee Titans Bod Adams was fined at $ 250,000 in 2009 due to an obscene gesture on Bells fans after defeating his team Bouvalo.
Jones, who had a taste for advertising, was suffering from a crowded season as he criticized large parts of the Cowboys fans base when the team traded his best player, the fall of the fallen Micah Persons, to Green Bay Packers. He was also a central figure in a documentary in Netflix, exploring how cow shepherds were built in the most valuable sports privilege – albeit not success – in the world.