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Mobile users can view the interactive chart .
The number, and length, of suspensions handed out by the NFL this offseason has raised many questions about the league and its policies, especially after . The Ravens’ running back was suspended two games for domestic violence, while other players were given much longer bans for substance abuse or other seemingly less severe infractions.
The NFL has since for those convicted of domestic violence charges, and commissioner to all NFL personnel apologizing for allowing “our standards to fall below where they should be” on the Rice ruling. (San Francisco 49ers defensive end .)
But on Tuesday, the league’s list of suspensions for 2014 grew much longer: for the first six games of the season and fined $500,000 for violating the NFL’s personal-conduct policy, Broncos receiver Wes Welker for violating the league’s performance-enhancement drug policy, and Cowboys tackle for the first 10 games for intoxication manslaughter.
So who else will have to sit out his team’s season opener, and longer, this year? And how does this year’s list of bans compare to 2013? We crunched the numbers to find out.
Note: Washington’s Fred Davis and Tanard Jackson were suspended indefinitely for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy, which is why their bans are left blank.




