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Vonnie Holliday: 'We got tricked, duped, led astray, hoodwinked, bamboozled!'

Players feel like owners are trying to pressure them Aaron Wilson

Print This July 22, 2011, 08:21 AM EST

Channeling words from Malcolm X, Washington Redskins veteran defensive end and union player representative Vonnie Holliday reacted angrily to NFL owners' ratification of a proposed new collective bargaining agreement while the players have yet to vote on the potential labor deal.

"Look guys I have no reason to lie!" Holliday wrote on his Twitter account. "The truth of the matter is we got tricked, duped, led astray, hoodwinked, bamboozled!"

That sentiment was echoed by several other NFL players who feel like they are being rushed into accepting the deal and want to carefully review the language line by line.

"Everything that happened is a prime example of the NFL PR machine being pushed to full throttle," Bills safety and union representative George Wilson said. "This is nothing more than an attempt to break the spirits of our men and to fracture the solidarity that we've exemplified up and to this point. This is nothing more than an attempt to get the fans to turn on the players and add even more pressure to the situation and an attempt to force-feed us the deal."

Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker Kirk Morrison was more even-handed in his comments.

"Right now, we're moving," Morrison said. "We're on the fast track to getting the deal done, but there's still some issues out there that need to be heard. Today was a proposal that was agreed on by the owners, not the players. They reached an agreement among themselves and they basically said, 'Hey, this is what we agreed upon.' As players, we still have to look over it and make sure what's in the proposal is something we can agree to and move forward."

Added former NFL fullback Heath Evans: "The verbiage I got was that the CBA the owners voted on had some language in it that was never agreed on in the previous days where we kind of got our hopes up thinking we were going to get a CBA done. I wasn't surprised, but the language obviously wasn't what we agreed to and from what I've heard they're not going to sign it."

Saying they refuse to be bullied into a hasty decision, no vote has been scheduled or recertification of the union.

"They want to make a situation where they feel like they're making us get it done," Baltimore Ravens safety Haruki Nakamura said in a telephone interview "They act like we need to get it done right now at this time. Our player reps are going to go through it with a fine-tooth comb. We need to cross every ‘T' and dot every ‘I.' We want to make sure it's as good a deal for us as possible.

"This is kind of like the power move they made at the beginning of the negotiations. They're trying to do it without saying it's a power move, but it is. We don't want to let a pressure situation force us to overlook something. If you're a good businessman, you would never sign a deal you don't truly understand."

Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth has been involved in every aspect of this negotiation as a member of the NFLPA executive committee.

He expressed frustration in a message to Ravens fullback Le'Ron McClain via his Twitter account.

"Man, they don't make anything easy," Foxworth wrote.

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Aaron Wilson covers the Ravens for the Carroll County Times.