Cowboys owner Jerry Jones proudly admits he negotiated directly with Micah Parsons, so why won’t the NFL and NFLPA punish him for that?

These rules are put in place because a negotiation between a billionaire businessman and a young NFL player like Parsons is just about as fair as an Oklahoma drill between the 82-year-old Jones and the four-time Pro Bowler Parsons would be.
NFL players have business-savvy agents represent them for a reason. It’s so they can focus on what they do best, football, and someone skilled in negotiation can represent them against owners and executives whose biggest skill is their business acumen.
The fact that the NFL hasn’t punished Jerry Jones for flagrantly flouting the collective bargaining agreement isn’t surprising. Commissioner Roger Goodell ultimately works for the owners, so he’s not really in the business of biting the hand that feeds him to the tune of $64 million a year.
However, the NFLPA not going after Jones is nothing short of complete incompetence and a failure to do its biggest job, which is to protect the players from overreaching owners.
That said, it is unfortunately not surprising. The NFLPA is in turmoil now, reeling from a scandal unearthed by Florio and Pablo Torre. Former Executive Director Lloyd Howell Jr. allegedly had financial ties to the league and is now being investigated for financial mismanagement and having an undisclosed conflict of interest. This all stems from Florio and Torre’s reporting on the NFL and NFLPA working together to keep a collusion settlement secret from the players and the public.