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NFL Random Thought of the Day

An NFL GM Believes Mike Vrabel’s Physical Size a Factor in Not Getting Hired As HC, per Report
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OK so here's a really weird story/explanation for Mike Vrabel's inability to land another HC job after the Titans canned him at the end of this past season.
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"Speaking on The Athletic Football Show on Monday, NFL insider Dianna Russini said she was told at the Senior Bowl that Vrabel’s large physical build played a factor in him not finding a new head coaching position."
 
Why do you think injuries will go up? Not because of playing surface, right?
Right.

Jet lag reflects the fact that there are lots of clocks inside our body that regulate a lot of functions, and they all want to be in rhythm. Despite a myriad of jet lag "cures," the body has a very difficult time compensating. Sleep disruption is universal. Studies have shown this disruption results in distinct cognitive and athletic performance These negative effects (such as muscle fatigue and discoordination) are mostly the result of central nervous system function disruption. The more clock hours that have changed in the travel, the greater the negative effects. Classically, jet lag is said to be "adjusted" within ~48 hours. However, studies have shown that jet lag effects can maintain for weeks. So going one way can affect a player for anywhere from days to weeks.................and coming back, these effects can overlap the jet lag caused by the return trip. In other words, more than 1 game could be affected.
 
You don't want to mess up in Tyler Tx! :toropalm:

Terrible timing for his son.
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Patrick Mahomes declines to discuss father’s arrest
By Charean Williams
Published February 6, 2024 01:36 AM

Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes said his father is “doing good” after his arrest Saturday night on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

Mahomes, though, otherwise declined to discuss Patrick Mahomes Sr.'s third DUI arrest.

“It’s a family matter, so I’ll keep it to the family,” Mahomes told reporters during Super Bowl opening night. “That’s all I have to say.”

Mahomes Sr., 54, was released from Smith County Jail in Texas on Sunday afternoon after posting $10,000 bond. The former Major League Baseball pitcher faces two to 10 years in prison, under Texas law, given it’s his third DUI offense.

It is unknown whether Mahomes Sr. will travel to the Super Bowl to see his son try to win his third Super Bowl title.
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Right.

Jet lag reflects the fact that there are lots of clocks inside our body that regulate a lot of functions, and they all want to be in rhythm. Despite a myriad of jet lag "cures," the body has a very difficult time compensating. Sleep disruption is universal. Studies have shown this disruption results in distinct cognitive and athletic performance These negative effects (such as muscle fatigue and discoordination) are mostly the result of central nervous system function disruption. The more clock hours that have changed in the travel, the greater the negative effects. Classically, jet lag is said to be "adjusted" within ~48 hours. However, studies have shown that jet lag effects can maintain for weeks. So going one way can affect a player for anywhere from days to weeks.................and coming back, these effects can overlap the jet lag caused by the return trip. In other words, more than 1 game could be affected.
I enjoyed the Miami/KC game in Frankfurt last season. I don't recall an increase in injury, but that's not something I track.
 
Dude's mug shot looks like he had been partaking in more than just the ol booze.
wJoM0b.gif
 
I'm sure it took a great deal of arm twisting for Goodell to be forced to "embrace" sports gambling.......I'm sure..........1707329615269.png

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No, the NFL was not required to “embrace” legalized sports betting
By Mike Florio
Published February 7, 2024 10:09 AM

The season began with the Commissioner blaming the Supreme Court for the NFL’s current stew of hypocrisies regarding sports betting, and it is ending that same way.

On the sideline before the Chiefs hosted the Lions in September, Roger Goodell told NBC’s Mike Tirico, “When the Supreme Court overruled [the law prohibiting states from legalizing sports wagering], we have to be in that space.”

On Monday, during his invitation-only press conference, Goodell said this when reconciling the present reality with his past warnings about the impact of legalized betting on public trust in the integrity of the games.

“We did not make the decision,” Goodell said regarding the legalization of sports wagering. “Ultimately, the decision was a decision by the Supreme Court, when they legalized sports betting. We have to adapt. We have to embrace it.”

The first is true; they did indeed have to adapt to a world in which legal sports wagering has mushroomed. However, they did not have to “embrace” it.

They chose to embrace it, because it’s an easy revenue stream. More money for nothing. Hold out a hand and take millions from a sportsbook company that aspires to be the exclusive sports betting partner of the NFL. Hell, have more than only one exclusive sports betting partner. Have seven of them (which the NFL had at one point).

If you can pay the fee, you too can be a partner.

The NFL could have shunned it. Indeed, just because something is legal doesn’t mean you have to do it.

Mustard is legal, and I hate mustard. Sports betting is legal, and the NFL could have continued to hate it as much as the NFL did before it became legal.

If the NFL had said, “We will work strenuously to protect our game against the influences of sports betting, but we refuse to ever profit from it,” that would have made it so much easier for the NFL to have the moral authority to prohibit all players and team and league employees from having any association with gambling. And that would have allowed the NFL to avoid the creation of a “do as we say, not as we do” environment characterized by convoluted, nonsensical mandates — such as the rule that the players on the 49ers and Chiefs can’t gamble at casinos until after the confetti falls on Sunday night.

Or how about the rule that a player can place bets on his phone while standing outside the door to the team facility, but that once he steps inside it’s forbidden? That’s like God telling Adam and Eve to go ahead and eat the fruit, but just make sure you stand over there when you do.

Goodell knows he’s being hypocritical. He doesn’t care. Goodell set a revenue goal of $25 billion in annual revenue by 2027 and, just like he once set a goal to be NFL Commissioner, nothing is going to stop him from getting there.

And the last thing that’s going to slow that horse down is the possibility that, as to gambling, the Emperor’s new clothes (bought and paid for by gambling money) are flapping in the breeze.
 
LAS VEGAS -- A vast majority of players in the union want to play on natural grass fields, NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell said Tuesday, adding that there is a certain "hypocrisy" with some NFL stadiums agreeing to adhere to FIFA regulations by installing grass for upcoming soccer matches in the 2026 World Cup but reverting to artificial turf for football games.
 
LAS VEGAS -- A vast majority of players in the union want to play on natural grass fields, NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell said Tuesday, adding that there is a certain "hypocrisy" with some NFL stadiums agreeing to adhere to FIFA regulations by installing grass for upcoming soccer matches in the 2026 World Cup but reverting to artificial turf for football games.
Decisions by the NFL is always soley about $$$$$$$$$$$$$
 
Tomas is the GOAT of grounds keepers. Last years SB field fiasco was totally on Goodell and the NFL refusing to follow common sense. There is just so much trauma a field can take.

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Groundskeeper George Toma’s streak of 57 Super Bowls comes to an end
By Michael David Smith

Published February 8, 2024 12:00 PM

George Toma has worked as a groundskeeper at all 57 Super Bowls. This week, his streak comes to an end.

Toma confirmed to KCUR in Kansas City that he won’t be in Las Vegas for Super Bowl LVIII.

That means Toma’s last Super Bowl will be last year’s debacle in which players on both the Chiefs and Eagles slipped repeatedly on a poorly maintained field. But Toma insists that he wasn’t to blame for that, and that the field was in terrible shape when he arrived in Arizona for the game.

“I laid everything out for them,” Toma said. “So what happens to Super Bowl 57? It’s the worst game field I’ve ever seen before an NFL groundskeeper stepped on.”

Toma said that after a rehearsal for the halftime show before last year’s Super Bowl, he was shocked at what he saw when they pulled up the protective mat that was underneath the halftime show stage.

“When we pulled it up after practice, it was mud. Retracted mud,” said Toma. “And it was wet, wet, wet.”

Toma says he wishes NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell would talk to him about field conditions.

“I still love Roger Goodell, but he hasn’t given me 30 seconds. That’s all I want to this day,” Toma said.

It’s an unceremonious exit from Super Bowl groundskeeping for a man known as the Sodfather.
 
Tom Brady discussed the unexpected unemployment of Bill Belichick on the latest episode of Brady’s podcast, Let’s Go!, on SiriusXM.

“I’m not one to hire, you know, I don’t know the criteria for hiring these guys, for hiring coaches,” Brady said. “I have never been a part of it. I mean, I’m surprised that the greatest coach ever doesn’t have a job. Absolutely. But I’m surprised at a lot of things in the NFL. I’m surprised when I was a free agent there was a lot of teams that didn’t want me.”
 
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Seems like whenever someone associates themselves with the Browns organization, they go brain dead...........

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Browns Coach Called Out Over Deshaun Watson Comment
By J.R. DeGroote
Updated Feb 6, 2024 at 5:29am

New Cleveland Browns offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey offered effusive praise for Deshaun Watson during his introductory press conference, a gesture that did not sit well with some

Dorsey said all the right things about his quarterback when it came to his play on the field and where he sees it going under his leadership. However, it was a comment he made more about Watson’s character that drew some attention.

“I can’t wait to get to work with him,” Dorsey said on Monday, February 5. “Because, again, he’s one of the premier quarterbacks in this league and from everything I’ve heard about him, a really quality human being. So I’m just excited about that opportunity.”


The Browns’ acquisition of Watson was a controversial one from the start. Watson had been accused by more than two dozen women of sexual misconduct. It resulted in an 11-game suspension and a $5 million fine for Watson during the 2022 season.

ESPN’s Sarah Spain was among those to call out Dorsey’s description of Watson.

“Would love an honest answer from [Dorsey’s] wife and two daughters about how they feel watching this. (This is rhetorical – they shouldn’t be asked, this isn’t their job, they aren’t public figures. You get my point.)” Spain tweeted.
Others delivered a similar sentiment on Dorsey’s choice of words to describe his QB.

“Come on Ken Dorsey you can’t be serious. ‘Quality human being’ and Deshaun Watson don’t belong in the same sentence. This is a bad look for Dorsey,” Chetan Rakieten wrote.
 
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"I am a little surprised. The way our team exited out of the playoffs, I am real surprised. Because to me, I look to my leaders and leaders look to players to be ready and be prepared for the situations in all situations. And unfortunately for us, I don't know if we were as prepared as we needed to be.
 
The league announced Friday at the site of the Super Bowl that its international slate of games for the 2025 season will feature a game at Real Madrid's iconic Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.
 
How 'bout dem Cowboys?????

Suprised Smith didn't mention the Tom Landry and Jimmy Johnson handling.

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Emmitt Smith blasts the Cowboys
By Mike Florio
Published February 10, 2024 10:03 AM

If PFT Live had a guest Hall of Fame, Hall of Fame running back Emmitt Smith (an annual Super Bowl-week guest) would have earned a spot with Friday’s visit alone.

The full video is attached. Emmitt was as funny and engaging as ever. He also has very pointed in his criticisms of the current Cowboys.

It started with a simple question: Were you surprised owner Jerry Jones didn’t fire head coach Mike McCarthy after a 48-32 home playoff loss to the Packers?

“I was completely surprised,” Emmitt said. “I know how disappointed I was as a player to see that product put on the football field. It is not becoming of the Dallas Cowboys’ mystique, respect, the brand. It is not the appropriate representation of the brand itself. Now, Jerry understand these kind of words. The brand, right? The star. Everything has to be pristine, but this was not that. That right there was so disappointing not only to me, but to many of our fans and including people that was like, ‘What is that?’ It wasn’t a good look.”
I asked Emmitt about my own theory that Jerry’s quest for another Super Bowl win is all talk, that he claims to want to win one more to keep the fans engaged but that his actions don’t back up his world.

“You lose credibility,” Emmitt said of Jones. “And if you’re losing credibility, you’re losing respect. You lose respect, you have no honor. At the end of the day, I agree to some level. Things have to change. I thought the reason why I was so convinced that [McCarthy] was going to get fired because last year there was a whole lot of talk about ‘OK, this might be it. If he doesn’t perform this year, OK.’ You’re gonna accept twelve wins and the playoff berth, but you’re gonna accept the way we got kicked out of the playoffs? I mean, dominated. I mean, it’s like we went out and played with our hands tied behind our backs or we left our minds up in [the team facility in] Frisco and didn’t even take it over to AT&T [Stadium] in Arlington. It was such a disappointing thing. It was just bad. It’s bad all the way around. I even hate talking about it because I feel responsible. I feel like I could have helped, and I don’t know how. But, yeah, it was bad.”

We asked Emmitt what happened next as coach, if McCarthy doesn’t make it beyond 2024. Emmitt said he initially thought Jones would hire Sean Payton. Emmitt also suggested “stealing Dan Campbell from the Detroit Lions . . . because I think his message [of grit and effort and determination] is the right message that a lot of people are missing, and a lot of kids are missing.”

What’s missing?

“Nobody wants to fight no more,” Emmitt said. “No one wants to fight hard anymore. They wanna [say], ‘Oh, we are the Cowboys. Tell me how good I am. Check out my Instagram posts. See me on my podcast? I’m doing all this stuff. I’m everything.’ Without doing anything.

“And everybody’s patting them on the back without doing anything. People wanna give them so much without doing nothing. And what they’re living off of is what happened in the past, not what’s going down right now. They’re not establishing their own legacy, let alone building off of the legacy that was established.

“When I got to the Cowboys, I knew one thing. I knew I could not disappoint Tony Dorsett as a running back. And I knew I could not disappoint Robert Newhouse as a running back. Or Calvin Hill. Or let alone ‘Bullet’ Bob Hayes. Then, I knew I could not disappoint Captain Comeback, Roger Staubach. Ed ‘Too Tall’ Jones. I embraced the history of who we were because I loved them as a Cowboy when I was a kid myself.

“So when I got there, it’s like, ‘Shoot, we ain’t gonna be 1-15.’ My mind was already on that, and I knew Michael [Irvin’s] mind was on it. Jimmy [Johnson’s] mind had to be on it. Amen. Don’t put up with no B.S. At the end of the day, when you see a legendary defensive end like Charles Haley who’s a Hall of Famer working with Leon Lett, Tony Tolbert, Tony Casillas, and Chad Hennings, Jimmy Jones and other players. Working with them, teaching them [the] swim [technique]. He’s working with them to make them better, so he becomes better. He’s not worrying about competing against them. But when you see that, you see greatness and that’s why that team was so good defensively. Then we see Deion [Sanders] come in. He could have came in as ‘Neon Deion,’ but he didn’t. He came in playing ping pong with everybody. Whoever wanted to play ping pong, he played. Bring it on. It was competition. Dominos was being played between James Washington and myself. Defensive players, offensive players and they’re getting to know each other. Things that brought us together are things that I think is missing within the locker room.”

The bottom line for Emmitt is that he’s had enough of the hype.
“I’m tired of being sold on what the Cowboys could be,” he said. “I’m tired. I’ve had enough of it because I’m more about what the Cowboys really are.

And who we really are and who we were. That’s where I’m at. That’s where everyone else is at. How do you allow this to happen? Yeah. And so, for me it’s like, ‘Hey, I know the prism which I look at the team through and eyes. I go all the way back to Staubach. I go all the way back to those days with Lee Roy Jordan. I go all the way back to those days and then I come up to where we were at and I’m like, ‘OK. We honored them. We respected them. We respected the history of the game. We love the game.’ I respect the history of the game like no other. Whether it’s Jim Brown, Walter Payton, Dorsett, Gale Sayers, you name them. All the way up to where Barry Sanders and I sitting side to side. Thurman Thomas is in the mix, right? I respect my players. I respect their play and I honor who they are because I’m honoring this position and I’m honoring the game. These motherbrothers. . . .”

He almost didn’t say, “Motherbrothers.” Regardless, everyone’s mother and brother is now aware that Emmitt Smith is mad about where the Cowboys are, about what they’ve become, about what they’re not doing, and about the absence of any apparently overwhelming desire to get there.

There’s a strong message in Emmitt’s words for the players. If Jones truly wants to win, he’d try to find a way to embrace it and to use it and to help the current players adopt the same mindset that fueled the Dallas team that won three Super Bowls in four years.
 
It is not becoming of the Dallas Cowboys’ mystique, respect, the brand. It is not the appropriate representation of the brand itself.
Poor Emmitt, it's been 25 years. The 'brand" has been re-imagined. This is exactly what everyone expects from the Cowboys now.

The Cowboys are the only ones who haven't accepted that reality.
 
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