Lane Kiffin's grievance denied
Lane Kiffin's two-year-old grievance seeking unpaid salary he felt he was owed after being fired by the Oakland Raiders was denied by an NFL arbitrator Monday.
The Raiders' countergrievance for lawyer and arbitration fees was also denied, the source said.
Raiders executive John Herrera issued a statement to The Associated Press on Monday stating the ruling was an overwhelming victory for the Raiders.
In the statement, Herrera said the league stated that Kiffin showed "a stunning lack of concern" for the terms of his contract and for the rules of the club.
Kiffin's grievance was filed through the NFL Coaches Association. He had been seeking about $2.6 million when the grievance was initially filed. But that was reduced to a demand for $333,000 after accounting for a salary offset from his previous job as coach for the Tennessee Volunteers, the source said.
Kiffin was hired before this season to coach the USC Trojans after one season at Tennessee.
Raiders owner Al Davis fired Kiffin on Sept. 30, 2008, after the Raiders' fourth game of the season "for cause."
AFC West blog
ESPN.com's Bill Williamson writes about all things AFC West in his division blog.
The Raiders were 1-3 under Kiffin that season. He was 5-15 overall.
The source said that because it was such an unusual case, the ruling shouldn't raise concern among the league's coaches.
Davis claimed Kiffin made comments against the organization, which he considered a violation of his three-year, $6 million contract. Most NFL coaching contracts are guaranteed.
Bill Williamson covers the AFC West for ESPN.com. Information from ESPN.com senior writer John Clayton and The Associated Press was used in this report.
- ESPN AFC West Blogger
- Spent four seasons covering the Broncos for the Denver Post
- Previously covered Vikings, Packers, Seahawks
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