Goodell tries to set record straight on whether teams were told to warm up
to re-start the game, but really doesn’t.
Still seems to me that lower level league officials did give the 5 min
warning, and tell ESPN they had done it, while upper level management was
still trying to figure things out.
And here's a league page where you can choose the long or short version,
depending on whether you care about comments from the Commissioner and
others:
https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-owners-approve-resolution-to-adjust-afc-postseason-including-potential-neutr
(link)
B
On Thursday, January 5,
Associated Press NFL writer Rob Maaddi tweeted this afternoon
I did not allow my son to play football in HS ten years ago, and several of
my friends with kids that age were the same, but even so there were a
couple hundred kids cut from the varsity football team. My brother in law
let his two sons play football in HS, over my measured objections, and I
I suspect if it ever occurs, it will be a change from the bottom up as
opposed to from the top down. The playground game of Dodge Ball has been
almost entirely eliminated from schools over the last 20 years without any
substantive legislation or even school board declaration. But local
educators
You have to forget the idea that football is going to go away. No
legislator, either federal or state, would risk their seat by proposing a
bill. And football is like a pyramid with the NFL at the tippy-top and tons
of college and high school programs and Pop Warner and youth leagues below
that.
>From what I saw I would give major kudos to the medical team. They had him
defibrillated on the field, and was at a first class trauma center within
10 minutes from leaving the field. Can’t imagine getting better or faster
care.
My guess on the 5 minute warning is that some mid level league
On the return to play question, something fishy is going on. The NFL is
trying to walk that back now, but the ESPN broadcast mentioned four times
that teams had been told they had five minutes to warm up, and footage of
Joe Burrow warming up was shown. I also saw indications that ESPN Deportes
and
I am on my lunch break from work, and tried to review any breaking news on
this story, though may have missed something. I hope we can still say that
referring to him as a “Dying man” is inaccurate. A lot depends on the
specifics of his case, but we do know of athletes in similar situations who
Correction to the Post article: Not New York, Bristol. That should be a
given by now.
And this wasn't the only incident like this yesterday on ESPN/ABC. In the
fourth quarter of yesterday's Cheese-Flavored Crackers Citrus Bowl, Purdue
wide receiver Deion Burks was knocked unconscious late in
There was also the effort in 1905-1906 to tamp down the number of deaths in
college football (this was pre-NFL and pre-NCAA) by President Theodore
Roosevelt facilitating negotiations between the major college programs. 19
people died in college games in 1905, compared to 45 in the five years
To add to your opinion: during a game on August 16, 1920, Ray Chapman of the
Cleveland baseball team was hit in the head by a pitch, collapsed, and died in
the hospital 12 hours later -- and you may notice that professional baseball
still exists. That said, that incident did prompt the major
My brother is the biggest pro football fan I’ve ever encountered; he said
the events of last night were the beginning of the end of football. I’d
like to think he is correct, however we are a nation that experiences a
mass shooting nearly every day, but does nothing to limit guns. America
simply
I am no cheerleader for the NFL, ESPN, or Joe Buck, but I give Buck, Aikman
and ESPN generally positive marks for how they handled an unprecedented
medical emergency during last night’s MNF telecast.
As the severity of the incident became clear they were respectful and
restrained, and avoided
14 matches
Mail list logo