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Asked Tuesday why he sent that letter, Goodell replied: "What the ownership wanted to make sure is that the players knew what their leadership had walked away from in the mediation process. So we sent that directly to the players. As you know, they're claiming not to be a union, but we think it was important to send that so the players understood what the owners had offered."
The NFL hasn't lost games to a work stoppage since 1987, when a strike shortened the season and some games included nonunion replacement players.
Goodell said owners want to have a complete 2011 season, and repeated his hope that negotiations will resume -- perhaps before the draft begins April 28.
The "primary focus" of the two days of meetings in New Orleans, Goodell said, was "our labor dispute and our planning and preparation on that."
"We are certainly planning on having a full season," he said. "That's our objective, and we're going to work as hard as we can to make that become a reality."
[Associated Press;
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