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NFL calls Jon Gruden's lawsuit against league 'entirely meritless'
Jon Gruden thinks the NFL had it in for him. Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports

Jon Gruden filed a lawsuit against Commissioner Roger Goodell and the NFL on Thursday, and the league has wasted little time responding.

After the details of Gruden’s lawsuit surfaced on Friday, NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy issued a statement calling the allegations “entirely meritless.”

Gruden’s 21-page lawsuit accuses Goodell and the NFL of leaking damaging emails in order to force him into resigning as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. The 58-year-old’s attorneys say the NFL orchestrated a “Soviet-style character assassination” on Gruden and intentionally withheld the emails for months in order to inflict maximum damage when they were released.

The lawsuit also says the NFL leaked one email — the one in which Gruden mocked NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith over the size of his lips — and then threatened to release more if Gruden remained the coach of the Raiders. More emails leaked days later in which Gruden used a gay slur and other problematic language. That’s when he resigned.

Gruden’s emails, which came from the 2011-2018 time period, were uncovered during the NFL’s investigation into workplace misconduct allegations against the Washington Football Team. More than 650,000 emails were reviewed as part of the investigation, but the NFL has reportedly claimed Gruden’s were the only damaging ones. The lawsuit cites that as evidence that Gruden was railroaded.

Someone who spoke with Gruden more than a week ago said the former coach believes the “truth” will eventually come out.

The lawsuit is not a surprise, and it might not be the only one the NFL faces over the situation.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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