
The Jacksonville Jaguars are under investigation by the NFLPA for possibly violating the league's collective bargaining agreement, according to The Florida Times-Union.
New Jaguars executive vice president of football operations Tom Coughlin sent out a letter to several players asking them to appear in Jacksonville to undergo physicals. The NFLPA is investigating whether or not that is a violation of the CBA.
Related: The NFL could be making a change that should concern football fans at all levels
The NFL's CBA maintains that players are not required to participate in any offseason workout prior to April 10, though they can work out on their own.
So the players are free to return to Jacksonville for the physical, but they are not required to do so. Teams can technically ask players to return for physicals before April 10, but it's essentially an unwritten rule that teams shouldn't ask them to do that during the offseason.
If the NFLPA decides the Jaguars and Coughlin violated the CBA, they could potentially lose one of their 10 organized team activities during the offseason. Those 10 organized activities are a part of phase three of the NFL's offseason workout schedule, and it's the only phase where players are allowed to wear helmets.
The violation doesn't seem too serious, but the Jaguars could face at least a small punishment for asking players to return early.
(h/t ESPN)
You Might Also Like
NFL
Jaguars LB Makes Bold Choice to Sit Out 2019 NFL Season
By John DuffleyNFL
No. 4 overall pick Leonard Fournette gets brutal news ahead of Sunday's game
By Jason HallNFL
Report: Jaguars set to interview a coaching candidate, and it shows everything wrong with the team
By Brad RowlandNFL
Former first-round pick has been suspended 10 games by the NFL
By Andrew KulhancG1vNJzZmiekaOvtsbZZ5qopV%2Bjs617zZ%2BjZqyVlrputc2vnKysmZyutbXOp2SvoZ%2BhrrW1zaBkpZ2RnMKmecKbmGg%3D