ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Saturday, February 10, 1996            TAG: 9602120073
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: B-1  EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Associated Press
CHICAGO


NFL OKS MODELL'S MOVE CLEVELAND, TAGLIABUE STRESS HEALING

Art Modell got NFL approval to move his team to Baltimore on Friday, then joined the league and the city of Cleveland in asking that the bitterness of the past three months be forgotten.

Approval came by a vote of 25-2 with three abstentions. Pittsburgh and Buffalo voted against Modell's move, and abstentions came from the Raiders, Rams and Cardinals, three teams that have moved in the past.

``It's discriminatory and selective as to who gets what in this league,'' said Al Davis of the Raiders, who has moved his team twice and who won the lawsuit that the league cites as an obstacle to prevent movement.

But the emphasis was on healing.

``What has been done has been done,'' said Cleveland mayor Michael R. White, who on Thursday got the promise of a new team within three years; $48 million toward construction of a new stadium; and the guarantee that the name ``Browns'' and the orange, brown and white colors would remain in Cleveland.

``These past 90 days have been emotional and trying,'' said commissioner Paul Tagliabue. ``We now have a win-win situation that should satisfy both Cleveland and Baltimore.''

Tagliabue had a totally different reaction - primarily negative - to Kenneth Behring's announcement that he wants to move the Seattle Seahawks to southern California.

``I think there is a very serious concern on my part, on the Seattle situation,'' Tagliabue said. ``We will have to see what will happen. But the Seahawks have to know that they are the league presence in the Pacific Northwest. They represent the league there.''

In other business, the owners also approved extension of the collective bargaining agreement through 2002. It moves the uncapped year from 1999 to 2000 in time for the free-agent signing period, which begins Thursday.

Modell also said the new Baltimore team, yet to be named, will essentially build from the bottom up, pursuing no free agents and perhaps divesting itself of its more expensive players.

``We're starting from scratch,'' he said at one point.

``Scratch'' is unlikely to include coach Bill Belichick but could include Don Shula, whose 33-year NFL coaching career began in Baltimore before ending in Miami a month ago.

Modell said Belichick remains the coach, but added ``I don't know what the future holds. I haven't had time to address the situation.''


LENGTH: Medium:   53 lines
KEYWORDS: FOOTBALL 












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