Jeff Fisher reacts to aide's ban
ST. LOUIS -- When Gregg Williams was hired as St. Louis Rams' defensive coordinator in January, he was answering the call from not just a longtime associate, but one of his best friends.
Coach Jeff Fisher says he had no idea Williams had been running a bounty pool in New Orleans.
Fisher delivered the news to Williams on Wednesday the franchise would be cutting ties for at least the 2012 season, under the assistant's indefinite suspension from the NFL for the bounty payments that he handed out with the Saints.
More On Gregg Williams' Punishment
With Gregg Williams suspended indefinitely, Mike Sando looks at what the penalty means for Williams and his current team, the Rams. Blog
• Sando: Could Williams return?
• Merrill: Who is Gregg Williams?
Fisher betrayed no emotion at a news conference at which he said the punishment was "warranted."
"The severity of the suspension does not surprise us," Fisher said. "We, as best you can, have been preparing for that."
Fisher said Williams will be eligible for reinstatement after the 2012 season, but gave no guarantee that he'd want Williams back saying, "You know, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it." He did, however, lavish praise on a man who consistently has produced top-10 defenses.
"I don't mean to be insensitive to this, but we have to move on," Fisher said. "Our job's to win games and Gregg's got to learn from his mistakes, and he's paying dearly for them.
"He's going to do his best to do whatever it takes to get reinstated."
In a statement issued by the Rams, Williams apologized to the NFL, to Fisher, the Rams organization and football fans in general for operating the bounty pool. The Rams said Williams would make no further public comment.
Williams did not argue with the terms of the suspension and said, "I accept full responsibility for my actions." He said he pledged to cooperate with the league in its ongoing investigation, and said he would serve as an advocate for player safety and sportsmanship.
Williams added he'll do anything he can to earn back the respect he has lost, and wants to return to coaching.
Before meeting with media, Fisher watched commissioner Roger Goodell being interviewed on TV, and began his news conference by saying: "Not an easy day for him. Not a good day for the National Football League."
Fisher seemed to offer as much support as he could when asked why he thought one of his close friends would act this way.
"There's a great deal of information out there that we will never know, so I can't really comment on the specifics of that and place blame on anybody," Fisher said. "Never, at any time, as far as I've been with him, has he disrespected this game from the standpoint of you try to hurt somebody on purpose.
“” -- Rams coach Jeff Fisher
The severity of the suspension does not surprise us. We, as best you can, have been preparing for that.
on Gregg Williams' suspension
"He has a passion for this game and a passion for playing hard-nosed, aggressive defense. I think there's a lot out there that will probably be locked up in a drawer some place."
Fisher said he'd be part of a committee of coaches replacing Williams and likely wouldn't hire another assistant. Fisher is a former defensive coordinator, pointing out he's the originator of the Rams' playbook and he has two other people with experience at that position on his staff, assistant head coach Dave McGinnis and defensive backs coach Chuck Cecil.
"So I have a pretty good feel for the defense," Fisher said. "At this point, I'm not at liberty to say who's going to make the calls and the decisions, but it'll get done and it'll get done effectively."
Fisher was adamant the franchise, and Williams, had been unaware of the NFL investigation.
"I know Gregg and I know him well," Fisher said. "Gregg would not have put this organization in this position, accepted this job, only to be suspended, and put us behind the 8-ball, if you will."
The suspension was a jolt to Fisher's rebuilding efforts in St. Louis, which has totaled just 10 victories the past three seasons. Williams was a head coach for three years -- in Buffalo -- and a defensive coordinator for 13, regularly producing defensive numbers among the NFL's best, and was Titans defensive coordinator under Fisher when Tennessee lost to the Rams in the 2000 Super Bowl.
While some players who played for Williams elsewhere said he oversaw bounty systems there, too, the league said its interviews didn't find evidence that "programs at other clubs involved targeting opposing players or rewarding players for injuring an opponent." But Goodell could re-open the case if new information emerges.
Williams arrived in St. Louis promising a culture change for a franchise that ranked near the bottom of the NFL against the run and often folded late. He remained on the job after the bounty scandal surfaced on March 2.
Said Fisher: "I would say he's somewhat surprised, shocked, disappointed, but also remorseful."
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.
SPONSORED HEADLINES
MORE NFL HEADLINES
- Report: Hernandez questioned on homicide
- Gleason accepts fired radio DJs' apologies
- Falcons' Gonzalez back due to son's wishes
- Pats' Gronkowski undergoes back surgery
MOST SENT STORIES ON ESPN.COM
The NFL on ESPN.com

NFL DRAFT ON ESPN
- Round 1: 3 hours
- Day 2: 7 p.m. ET, ESPN & WatchESPN
- Day 3: 12 p.m. ET, ESPN & WatchESPN
NFL DRAFT PROFILES
- Merrill: How dad molded Andrew Luck
- The Mag: Burfict fighting perception
- Mag: Griffin III is no ordinary QB
- Chadiha: Kuechly looks like a sure thing
- Fox: DT Poe races up the board
- Chadiha: Jenkins trying to rebuild image
HOT BUTTON: KIPER-MCSHAY DEBATES
- Who's the second-best RB in the draft?
- Which player is getting too much hype?
- Which team has toughest call in top 10?
- Which probable 2nd-rounder belongs in 1st?
- Which Day 2 QB will have best career?
NFL DRAFT TEAM NEEDS
- Horton: NFC East needs | W | N | S

- Horton: AFC East needs | W | N | S

MORE NFL COVERAGE
- Fox: Skins create another QB controversy
- Clayton: Players control Pro Bowl's fate
- Clayton: Draft drama starts at No. 3
- Fox: The draft is just the beginning
- Brandt: A peek inside a draft war room
- Joyner: Five overrated draft prospects

- TMQ: Annual mock draft mockery
- Scouts Inc.: The secondary QB market

- NFL Blog Network: Mock draft 2.0
- Clayton mailbag: Jags, Fins in tough spots
- Fox: Vikings could shake up draft, more
- Williamson: Plenty of draft intrigue here

- Fox: Reaching in draft is a mistake
- Walker: Dolphins are no easy fix
- Polian: Ranking best-drafting teams

- Next Level: Risk of drafting a top-10 QB
- Mag: Stanford four could make history
MORE NFL DRAFT
- Mocks: Kiper 5.0
| McShay 6.0
- Ranks:
McShay top 32 | Kiper Big Board - Cheat Sheets:
QB | RB | WR | TE | OL - More Cheat Sheets:
DL | LB | DB - Kiper's 'Grade A' drafts:
AFC | NFC - McShay: Stacking the 2012 draft board

-
McShay: Seven tiers of draft talent

- Gallery: Top offensive prospects
- Gallery: Top 10 defenders
- Complete draft order | Draft home
- Outsiders: Packers run woes done?
- Bowen: How to stop Adrian Peterson
- Schefter: What New York Jets will do at QB
- Kiper: The 5 best offseasons of 2013
- Offseason Grades: AFC | NFC | Kiper on draft
The severity of the suspension does not surprise us. We, as best you can, have been preparing for that.

