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NFL Random Thought of the Day

NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell: Just can’t have what happened to Kyle Van Noy
By Josh Alper
Published September 12, 2024 05:31 PM

NFL Players Association executive director Lloyd Howell was at the Ravens facility on Thursday and shared his reaction to the medical attention given to Ravens linebacker Kyle Van Noy during last Thursday’s game in Kansas City.

Van Noy called that attention “super unprofessional” after he waited an extended period of time to see an ophthalmologist after fracturing his orbital bone during the game. On Thursday, Howell said the Collective Bargaining Agreement calls for players to be seen “as quickly as possible” and that he felt the response fell short of the standard in this case.

“I think this was an unfortunate situation where that did not occur,” Howell said, via Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com. “Thank God for Kyle’s situation [that] it wasn’t worse. But here we are with the first game of the season; we got many more games to play. We just can’t have that.”

Howell said that the union “made the necessary parties aware of how we’ve got to improve, and I’m sure we will improve.” Van Noy remained out of practice as the Ravens prepared for this Sunday’s game against the Raiders.
 
Tua sustained another severe concussion, after a 4th down run. After lowering his head to pick up the 1st down, his head jammed into Bills defensive back Damar Hamlin. With no doubt, he immediately demonstrated the fencer's pose. This is not a good outcome, when in 2022, he suffered 3 (not 2) significant concussions....................and he was debating whether to hang it up or not. I never thought that his return was a good idea.
No amount of money is worth the health consequences. Time to hang 'em up...
 
NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell: Just can’t have what happened to Kyle Van Noy
By Josh Alper
Published September 12, 2024 05:31 PM

NFL Players Association executive director Lloyd Howell was at the Ravens facility on Thursday and shared his reaction to the medical attention given to Ravens linebacker Kyle Van Noy during last Thursday’s game in Kansas City.

Van Noy called that attention “super unprofessional” after he waited an extended period of time to see an ophthalmologist after fracturing his orbital bone during the game. On Thursday, Howell said the Collective Bargaining Agreement calls for players to be seen “as quickly as possible” and that he felt the response fell short of the standard in this case.

“I think this was an unfortunate situation where that did not occur,” Howell said, via Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com. “Thank God for Kyle’s situation [that] it wasn’t worse. But here we are with the first game of the season; we got many more games to play. We just can’t have that.”

Howell said that the union “made the necessary parties aware of how we’ve got to improve, and I’m sure we will improve.” Van Noy remained out of practice as the Ravens prepared for this Sunday’s game against the Raiders.
So how long is an extended period of time? If he is upset about the time, why doesn't he say how long the time was?
 
So how long is an extended period of time? If he is upset about the time, why doesn't he say how long the time was?
It took an entire quarter of play for the Chiefs' in-house ophthalmologist to reach him in the locker room. Totally unacceptable, especially for an injury like this where swelling in the orbital socket under certain circumstances could quickly cut off blood supply to the optic artery that supplies the eyeball.....................potentially resulting in loss of sight.
 
It took an entire quarter of play for the Chiefs' in-house ophthalmologist to reach him in the locker room. Totally unacceptable, especially for an injury like this where swelling in the orbital socket under certain circumstances could quickly cut off blood supply to the optic artery that supplies the eyeball.....................potentially resulting in loss of sight.
I did not realize that various physicians specialists were kept in the locker room for the purpose of examining players. I was under the understanding that it was basically just a general practitioner type position who made the decision for the player to go to the hospital if necessary.
If an ophthalmologist is on hand, does that mean a cardiologist, neurologist, orthopedic, etc is on hand? I am not being flipping or sarcastic but asking a serious question.
 
Tua sustained another severe concussion, after a 4th down run. After lowering his head to pick up the 1st down, his head jammed into Bills defensive back Damar Hamlin. With no doubt, he immediately demonstrated the fencer's pose. This is not a good outcome, when in 2022, he suffered 3 (not 2) significant concussions....................and he was debating whether to hang it up or not. I never thought that his return was a good idea.
Reminds me of Steve Young at the end of his career. Young had several concussions, including one I witnessed at the Astrodome in 1996, the Oilers last season in Houston. Michael Barrow laid Young out on a blitz and it looked like Young was out cold. Pretty sure it was helmet to helmet. Unbelievably, Young played the next week.
 
I did not realize that various physicians specialists were kept in the locker room for the purpose of examining players. I was under the understanding that it was basically just a general practitioner type position who made the decision for the player to go to the hospital if necessary.
If an ophthalmologist is on hand, does that mean a cardiologist, neurologist, orthopedic, etc is on hand? I am not being flipping or sarcastic but asking a serious question.
Here is the NFL procedure:

CARING FOR PLAYERS ON GAME DAY

On average, there are 30 healthcare providers at a stadium on game day to provide immediate care to players, including:

» Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant: Three credentialed neurotrauma consultants, who are unaffiliated with either team, staff the sidelines, monitor the broadcast of the game, and work with the team medical staffs to identify, screen for and diagnose concussions.

» Booth ATC Spotters and the Medical Timeout: For all NFL games, two certified athletic trainers — retained by the league and unaffiliated with any NFL teams — observe the game from a booth above the field and monitor all camera views to identify potential injuries, especially concussions and other head and neck injuries. The booth ATC spotter has the authority to call a medical timeout to permit the medical evaluation of a player who may have suffered a concussion or head injury.

» Emergency Response Physicians: In addition to each club's primary physician and trainers, the NFL and NFLPA require every NFL club to identify and retain at least two Emergency Response Physicians (ERPs) to be available to attend each of its home games. Each club must have one ERP present at every home game available to treat home and visiting team players.

************************************************************************

Specialty physicians are retained on an on-call basis to be able to quickly respond to respective emergencies. In the past I have served as a trauma surgeon specialist for NFL games. As an emergency specialty on-call, you must be close to the stadium...........being able to respond on site within 10 minutes. Of course, a player may be transported in that same time frame if possible to a hospital facility having a waiting specialist.

The average NFL game lasts ~3 1/4 hours [195 minutes] (including commercials, timeouts, etc). Half time accounts for ~15 minutes. The average 15 minute quarter actually lasts ~45 minutes. Forty-five minute medical specialty emergency response time is absolutely unacceptable.
 
Here is the NFL procedure:

CARING FOR PLAYERS ON GAME DAY

On average, there are 30 healthcare providers at a stadium on game day to provide immediate care to players, including:

» Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant: Three credentialed neurotrauma consultants, who are unaffiliated with either team, staff the sidelines, monitor the broadcast of the game, and work with the team medical staffs to identify, screen for and diagnose concussions.

» Booth ATC Spotters and the Medical Timeout: For all NFL games, two certified athletic trainers — retained by the league and unaffiliated with any NFL teams — observe the game from a booth above the field and monitor all camera views to identify potential injuries, especially concussions and other head and neck injuries. The booth ATC spotter has the authority to call a medical timeout to permit the medical evaluation of a player who may have suffered a concussion or head injury.

» Emergency Response Physicians: In addition to each club's primary physician and trainers, the NFL and NFLPA require every NFL club to identify and retain at least two Emergency Response Physicians (ERPs) to be available to attend each of its home games. Each club must have one ERP present at every home game available to treat home and visiting team players.

************************************************************************

Specialty physicians are retained on an on-call basis to be able to quickly respond to respective emergencies. In the past I have served as a trauma surgeon specialist for NFL games. As an emergency specialty on-call, you must be close to the stadium...........being able to respond on site within 10 minutes. Of course, a player may be transported in that same time frame if possible to a hospital facility having a waiting specialist.

The average NFL game lasts ~3 1/4 hours [195 minutes] (including commercials, timeouts, etc). Half time accounts for ~15 minutes. The average 15 minute quarter actually lasts ~45 minutes. Forty-five minute medical specialty emergency response time is absolutely unacceptable.
Very enlightening information and thank you!
 
Tua Tagovailoa’s contract has no concussion clauses, exceptions, or waivers
By Mike Florio
Published September 13, 2024 04:01 PM

In the aftermath of the latest concussion suffered by Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, many have chimed in with an opinion that he should retire. Those advising retirement include Amazon Prime’s Tony Gonzalez and Raiders head coach Antonio Pierce.

As explained last night, the decision to retire would come only after he is cleared to play and decides not to. Before he can retire, doctors would have to decide that he can and should be cleared, despite officially three (and unofficially at least four) concussions — including at least two that were serious enough to spark the fencing posture.

On one hand, it’s not the time to talk about money. On the other hand, the money is too big to ignore. We’ve obtained a copy of his contract to confirm that it contains the usual, standard language that would put him in the usual, standard situation if he were to retire from the game only two games into it.

The contract contains no clauses or exceptions or waivers regarding concussions. The word “concussion” isn’t even mentioned in it. Thus, all injury guarantees apply even if the injuries in question are concussions. Likewise, the same consequences would arise as for any other player if Tua were to choose to retire only two games into a five-year contract.

As noted last night, the contract carries more than $167 million in injury guarantees. He also earned a $42 million signing bonus upon execution of the deal. (The contract requires $15 million to be paid before August 31, 2024, $15 million to be paid before October 15, 2024, and the remaining $12 million to be paid out as part of his 18 weekly game checks.)

If Tua retires — after being cleared to play — Tua would lose the balance of the guarantees. Also, if the Dolphins were inclined to exercise their right to recover paid but unearned signing bonus money, they could seek $8.4 million for each year remaining on the contract (through 2028), along with $466,667 for each game left in 2024 after he’s cleared.

Those numbers are important to consider when looking at the broader question of whether he should retire. Two years ago, retirement wouldn’t have come with massive, nine-figure financial consequences. When pondering his best path forward, Tua will have to consider this.

The Dolphins meanwhile face the prospect of paying more than $167 million over the next three years, if Tua isn’t cleared to play. The real dollars also become cap dollars that the Dolphins wouldn’t have for other players.
It sets up an awkward dance. In the end, there could be a negotiated compromise, with for example Tua retiring and Miami retaining half of the $167 million.

However it plays out, everyone knew that Tua was one snap away during any given game from a concussion that would call his playing career into question. The contract negotiated and signed by the Dolphins and Tua nevertheless has no language affording any special rights to the player or the team in the event that he can’t be cleared to play or that he chooses to stop playing, even if cleared.
 
When I was first asked about Hollywood Brown, said that for his type of injury, he was discharged much earlier that I have with my patients that have sustained a similar injury. Then when the Chiefs said they expected him back for the season opener, I said that that was unrealistic and too soon..............and this is after the Chiefs from the beginning stated that he would not require surgery.................now 1 month later, he needs surgery. When these injuries require surgery, that surgery should be performed as close to the time of injury as possible. You don't need an MRI to detect movement at this fracture site. Lots of questions!

**************************************

Andy Reid: “Months, not weeks” before Hollywood Brown can return
By Josh Alper
Published September 13, 2024 02:29 PM

Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said early this week that wide receiver Hollywood Brown was getting close to returning from his shoulder injury, but the word from the team is very different on Friday.

The Chiefs confirmed that Brown will be placed on injured reserve and have surgery to repair his injury. Chiefs vice president of sports medicine and performance Rick Burkholder said, via Nate Taylor of TheAthletic.com, that Brown went for an MRI earlier this week as a final step toward returning to play and it showed the injured bone had moved. Brown consulted several doctors who recommended surgery before returning to play.

Burkholder said that there’s no timeline in place for Brown to return, but Reid said, via multiple reporters, it will be “months, not weeks” before the receiver will play again.

The Chiefs will have an open roster spot once Brown is on injured reserve and Reid indicated the team is comfortable with their current receiver options as they head into Week Two against the Bengals.
 
Tua Tagovailoa’s contract has no concussion clauses, exceptions, or waivers
By Mike Florio
Published September 13, 2024 04:01 PM

In the aftermath of the latest concussion suffered by Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, many have chimed in with an opinion that he should retire. Those advising retirement include Amazon Prime’s Tony Gonzalez and Raiders head coach Antonio Pierce.

As explained last night, the decision to retire would come only after he is cleared to play and decides not to. Before he can retire, doctors would have to decide that he can and should be cleared, despite officially three (and unofficially at least four) concussions — including at least two that were serious enough to spark the fencing posture.

On one hand, it’s not the time to talk about money. On the other hand, the money is too big to ignore. We’ve obtained a copy of his contract to confirm that it contains the usual, standard language that would put him in the usual, standard situation if he were to retire from the game only two games into it.

The contract contains no clauses or exceptions or waivers regarding concussions. The word “concussion” isn’t even mentioned in it. Thus, all injury guarantees apply even if the injuries in question are concussions. Likewise, the same consequences would arise as for any other player if Tua were to choose to retire only two games into a five-year contract.

As noted last night, the contract carries more than $167 million in injury guarantees. He also earned a $42 million signing bonus upon execution of the deal. (The contract requires $15 million to be paid before August 31, 2024, $15 million to be paid before October 15, 2024, and the remaining $12 million to be paid out as part of his 18 weekly game checks.)

If Tua retires — after being cleared to play — Tua would lose the balance of the guarantees. Also, if the Dolphins were inclined to exercise their right to recover paid but unearned signing bonus money, they could seek $8.4 million for each year remaining on the contract (through 2028), along with $466,667 for each game left in 2024 after he’s cleared.

Those numbers are important to consider when looking at the broader question of whether he should retire. Two years ago, retirement wouldn’t have come with massive, nine-figure financial consequences. When pondering his best path forward, Tua will have to consider this.

The Dolphins meanwhile face the prospect of paying more than $167 million over the next three years, if Tua isn’t cleared to play. The real dollars also become cap dollars that the Dolphins wouldn’t have for other players.
It sets up an awkward dance. In the end, there could be a negotiated compromise, with for example Tua retiring and Miami retaining half of the $167 million.

However it plays out, everyone knew that Tua was one snap away during any given game from a concussion that would call his playing career into question. The contract negotiated and signed by the Dolphins and Tua nevertheless has no language affording any special rights to the player or the team in the event that he can’t be cleared to play or that he chooses to stop playing, even if cleared.
I think this is BS. If a player is forced to medically retire as in the doctors will not clear him, it shouldn't count against the cap.
 

After his 3 concussions in 2022, last offseason Tua was advised to gain weight/muscle mass to sustain trauma better. He was taught how to fall and took up JuJitsu. This past offseason, because he was felt to have been too much a statue pocket passer, he was advised to lose weight...................he went from 235 lbs to 220 lbs.................his college playing weight was 218.​

Whoever is giving him weight advise has no idea what they are doing, especially for his particular situation. His career if it is even to continue is not going be helped trying to evolve him into a running QB.​


***************************************************************


Has Tua Tagovailoa lost weight during the 2024 offseason?

The Dolphins have one of the most potent offenses in the NFL and at the center of it, is a very talented QB. Now that he’s lost weight, can they go further?​

Paul RudderPaul RudderEnglish_AS
Update: Sep 12th, 2024 17:48 EDT
 

After his 3 concussions in 2022, last offseason Tua was advised to gain weight/muscle mass to sustain trauma better. He was taught how to fall and took up JuJitsu. This past offseason, because he was felt to have been too much a statue pocket passer, he was advised to lose weight...................he went from 235 lbs to 220 lbs.................his college playing weight was 218.​

Whoever is giving him weight advise has no idea what they are doing, especially for his particular situation. His career if it is even to continue is not going be helped trying to evolve him into a running QB.​


***************************************************************


Has Tua Tagovailoa lost weight during the 2024 offseason?

The Dolphins have one of the most potent offenses in the NFL and at the center of it, is a very talented QB. Now that he’s lost weight, can they go further?​

Paul RudderPaul RudderEnglish_AS
Update: Sep 12th, 2024 17:48 EDT
Tua also came out with a new clothing line this summer. How much did looking slim in his new clothes have to do with the weight loss?
 
The Jiu Jitsu training did not help in this scenario. This article gives insight into his contract's guaranteed money if he is forced to retire. It also says no guaranteed money other than what he's already received if he retires after being medically approved to continue to play.
 
The Jiu Jitsu training did not help in this scenario. This article gives insight into his contract's guaranteed money if he is forced to retire. It also says no guaranteed money other than what he's already received if he retires after being medically approved to continue to play.
It will take care of itself. He almost assuredly will be cleared to play at some point. So at this point, he again will be faced to make a decision as to retirement. If he wants to end up with more than a couple of Betz cells to carry on with the rest of his life, he needs to retire from football before football retires him.
 
Here is the NFL procedure:

CARING FOR PLAYERS ON GAME DAY

On average, there are 30 healthcare providers at a stadium on game day to provide immediate care to players, including:

» Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant: Three credentialed neurotrauma consultants, who are unaffiliated with either team, staff the sidelines, monitor the broadcast of the game, and work with the team medical staffs to identify, screen for and diagnose concussions.

» Booth ATC Spotters and the Medical Timeout: For all NFL games, two certified athletic trainers — retained by the league and unaffiliated with any NFL teams — observe the game from a booth above the field and monitor all camera views to identify potential injuries, especially concussions and other head and neck injuries. The booth ATC spotter has the authority to call a medical timeout to permit the medical evaluation of a player who may have suffered a concussion or head injury.

» Emergency Response Physicians: In addition to each club's primary physician and trainers, the NFL and NFLPA require every NFL club to identify and retain at least two Emergency Response Physicians (ERPs) to be available to attend each of its home games. Each club must have one ERP present at every home game available to treat home and visiting team players.

************************************************************************

Specialty physicians are retained on an on-call basis to be able to quickly respond to respective emergencies. In the past I have served as a trauma surgeon specialist for NFL games. As an emergency specialty on-call, you must be close to the stadium...........being able to respond on site within 10 minutes. Of course, a player may be transported in that same time frame if possible to a hospital facility having a waiting specialist.

The average NFL game lasts ~3 1/4 hours [195 minutes] (including commercials, timeouts, etc). Half time accounts for ~15 minutes. The average 15 minute quarter actually lasts ~45 minutes. Forty-five minute medical specialty emergency response time is absolutely unacceptable.
 
I read that when it came out. Something is a little screwy. The wording, if you notice, as to the total time frame from injury to evaluation to request for the ophthalmologist to his appearance is not really clear. From a friend of mine in KC who was indirectly involved, I was told that from the time of injury to when examined by the specialist was over 30 minutes.
 
Like I previously posted, Achilles tendonitis must be taken very seriously since there is significant risk of Achilles rupture. Shanahan says McCaffrey will be day-to-day..............it should be more like week-to-week.
 
It will take care of itself. He almost assuredly will be cleared to play at some point. So at this point, he again will be faced to make a decision as to retirement. If he wants to end up with more than a couple of Betz cells to carry on with the rest of his life, he needs to retire from football before football retires him.
I just don't see him making that decision as I think he will crawl out on the field if he has to. I expect him to be cleared medically and continue to play ; for how long who knows?

You probably remember a conversation that we had about his ankles years ago.
 
I just don't see him making that decision as I think he will crawl out on the field if he has to. I expect him to be cleared medically and continue to play ; for how long who knows?

You probably remember a conversation that we had about his ankles years ago.
Crazy…wrong word…but unless Tua wants to look like Biden boarding the team plane he needs to get some real good advice from those around him who love him.
 
I just don't see him making that decision as I think he will crawl out on the field if he has to. I expect him to be cleared medically and continue to play ; for how long who knows?

You probably remember a conversation that we had about his ankles years ago.
Sorry, I don't remember.
 

Like I previously posted, Achilles tendonitis must be taken very seriously since there is significant risk of Achilles rupture. Shanahan says McCaffrey will be day-to-day..............it should be more like week-to-week.
McCaffrey has just been placed on IR.
 
Tua Tagovailoa’s contract gave Dolphins the right to purchase up to $49.3 million in insurance
Published September 14, 2024 02:31 PM

If Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa ultimately isn’t cleared to play after suffering his latest concussion, the Dolphins have a path to recovering some of the $167 million in injury guarantees payable to Tua.

Paragraph 42 of the Tua contract, a copy of which PFT has obtained, authorizes the Dolphins to purchase one or more insurance policies that would pay the team up to $49.3 million in the event of a football-related injury that prevents him from playing.

The full $49.3 million applies to any injury happening from the signing of the contract through the start of the offseason workout program in 2025. After that, the maximum insurance is $36.975 million.

The available insurance continues to drop each year. In each case, it depends on an injury that prevents him from playing.
Which takes us back to the core question that Tua and the Dolphins currently face. Will he be cleared to play? If not, he gets his injury guarantees and the Dolphins can collect the insurance.

If he’s cleared to play and chooses not to, an entirely different analysis applies. One that will keep the Dolphins from collecting insurance money. And one that would entitle the Dolphins to cut off future payments and to pursue the bulk of his $42 million signing bonus.

Even if the Dolphins collect $49.3 million in insurance, they’ll still be out nearly $120 million if Tua isn’t cleared to play following his latest concussion.
 
Jordan Love has been on yesterday's Injury Reports as QUESTIONABLE. There is no way with the Grade II MCL he was going to ever be able to play. He has now been downgraded to DOUBTFULL. The NFL should investigate this.............for submitting false Injury ReportS...................for an injury that is more likely to require IR.
 
Coincidentally, this just came which explains the Love Injury Report "dishonesty"....................... what bunch of BS courtesy of the NFL.

**************************************
Game-time decision loophole helps teams avoid having to downgrade players from questionable
Published September 14, 2024 07:04 PM

The 49ers managed to avoid punishment for the apparent concealment of running back Christian McCaffrey’s true injury status on Monday, in large part because the NFL doesn’t need to be telling the world that teams are violating the letter or spirit of the injury-reporting rules.

The specific question as to McCaffrey was whether the 49ers should have downgraded him from questionable to doubtful or out before putting him on the list of inactive players 90 minutes before kickoff.

So we asked the league the question of whether a team has an obligation to downgrade a player the moment they know the player’s status has changed.

“If after the team arrives at the stadium on game day, a club conducts a workout for a player to determine if the player will be able to start or play in the game, the club is not required to update its Game Status Report if the club determines that the player will not start or will not play,” the league said in an email to PFT. “In this situation, the club is permitted to wait until the 90-minute meeting to list the player on its Inactive List.”

That creates a very significant loophole, allowing teams to keep the information secret until 90 minutes before kickoff — even if the team knows otherwise.

The message is clear: Characterize every questionable player as a game-time decision. And then just keep his true status a secret until 90 minutes before kickoff.
 

You got to be kidding, after what he did to those women!!!!!!!!!!!!!!​


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Ex-NFL star Kellen Winslow II expresses remorse from prison, seeks reduced sentence

Portrait of Brent SchrotenboerBrent Schrotenboer
USA TODAY

SAN DIEGO – Former Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Winslow II has expressed remorse for his actions and declared that he is committed to being a “productive person” as part of his latest bid to get his prison sentence reduced according to new state criminal justice reform laws.

The former NFL first-round draft pick also described his life in prison and cited previous trauma he suffered, including sexual abuse as a youth, an estimated 100 concussions in his football career dating to high school and a motorcycle accident in 2005 that led to depression.

He put this in writing to go along with a new petition filed last week with a state appeals court in California, a copy of which was obtained by USA TODAY Sports. He also has hired a new lawyer to work on it after being denied by a Superior Court judge in 2023, when Winslow didn’t have counsel and submitted his arguments in handwriting.

“I am committed to being a productive person when released, and I will always feel remorse for what I did to the victims in my case,” Winslow said in a signed declaration attached to his new habeas corpus petition.

What did Kellen Winslow II do?​


Winslow, 41, was sentenced to 14 years in prison in 2021 after being convicted of horrific sex crimes against five women in San Diego County, including the rape of a woman who was unconscious in 2003 and the rape of a homeless woman in 2018. All of the crimes for which he was convicted came against women who were disadvantaged, incapacitated or in their mid-50s or older. One victim was a hitchhiker he picked up in 2018. Another was a 77-year-old woman at a local gym.
His new petition cites state laws that would have changed the sentencing analysis in his case, leading to a more favorable sentence, according to his petition.

“Petitioner (Winslow) is not asking to be released from prison at this time, but he does meet the criteria for relief under AB 124, given the trauma (brain damage) he received in his life of football, physical and sexual abuse he was subjected to as a child, and the impact of his debilitating motorcycle accident,” said his new petition submitted by Patrick Morgan Ford in San Diego.

What is Kellen Winslow II’s goal here?​

Winslow, who also starred at the University of Miami, has been incarcerated since March 2019 and currently resides at a state prison in Norco, Calif. He is not eligible for parole until September 2028, according to state records.

Winslow “asks this court to grant his writ and return the case to the trial court so that he may be sentenced in accordance with the new laws,” his new petition states. “He now presents his arguments (with facts not available originally) to this court by way of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.”

The petition cites AB 124, which became law in 2021. It is intended to help criminal defendants who previously experienced “psychological, physical, or childhood trauma, including, but not limited to, abuse, neglect, exploitation, or sexual violence.”
AB 124 requires the court to impose a lower term of sentencing if the defendant has experienced such trauma, unless there are aggravating circumstances. The petition also argues that plea agreements are not insulated from legislative changes designed to lower sentences.

In February 2021, Winslow had agreed to his 14-year sentence in a negotiated plea deal with prosecutors at the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office. That office declined comment on Winslow’s new petition.
What trauma did Winslow cite?

To establish the law’s relevance to his own case, Winslow cited various forms of trauma he’s experienced going back to childhood.

He mentioned his football career, during which he earned about $40 million. He played high school football in San Diego, where his father Kellen Winslow Sr. was a star tight end for the San Diego Chargers before also citing issues with brain injuries.

"I probably suffered 100 concussions during that time, but I knew not to report them because a reported concussion would show you were 'damaged goods' and that could be held against a player when negotiating a contract,” Winslow II said in his declaration.

He said each collision was “like a small car accident” that led to migraine headaches and depression.

He said his motorcycle accident in 2005 led to depression.

“I started to become a different, and less caring person during that time,” he wrote.

He then described childhood issues that affected him and said he was sexually abused by two relatives.

“I feel this somehow played a role in my own sex crimes in the present case,” he wrote.

What does Winslow say about life in prison?​

Winslow previously had been reluctant to express guilt or remorse. When USA TODAY Sports asked him last year about the victims, he said he couldn't “speak to my innocence right now.” After previously insisting he was innocent, he also hesitated to plead guilty in 2019 but did so to avoid the risk of life in prison.

In his new declaration, he said his prison life includes reading the Bible and self-help books, receiving counseling and also running and training for marathons with other inmates.

“My goal was to become a better man and one day reunite with my wife, who stood by me for a long time, and my two children,” Winslow wrote.

His wife filed for divorce in 2019 after a jury first convicted him of some charges.

His petition notes that other inmates have sent letters expressing their gratitude to him for his help. One called him a “positive light in this place.” Another credits Winslow II with his drug addiction recovery and wrote that “the Creator sent him to me to better myself.”

“He is actively programming in prison and is described by the director of his Anger Management class as a role model to other participants in the group,” his petition states.

It’s not clear when the court will take up his case.
 
Rams WR Puka Nacua Has been placed on IR. During TC, he suffered a "knee injury" for which he was to be out for a short time...........for a reported "bursa injury." He returned in week 1 just to re-injure his knee and be carted off the field. The IR is for a re-injury of his PCL. The Rams didn't misdiagnose the injury initially. An MRI which was undoubtedly taking in August would have told them that the injury was in fact a PCL, not a bursa injury. They chose to keep that to themselves...............hopefully not from Nacua. A PCL tear depending on its severity will keep him out 6-8 weeks.........especially since it is a re-injury.
 
The NFL cannot force a player to retire based on concussions. Neurologists will typically advise the concussion patient of the risks of continuing playing..................few would strongly advise retirement vs continuing playing. In my career, I have strongly advised several players to retire after their history of concussions............without regret. Two did not take that advise. One went on to another concussion and stopped playing football because of its very prolonged symptoms. The other later retired and ~1 year later began experiencing significant cognition difficulties, memory problems and headaches.

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Tua Tagovailoa will meet with neurologists this week as he assesses his future
By Michael David Smith
Published September 15, 2024 05:41 AM

Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is seeking expert opinions as he weighs what his future is in football.

Tagovailoa is meeting with neurologists early this week and will seek their opinions about both the severity of the concussion he suffered on Thursday night, and and the cumulative effect on his brain of the multiple concussions he has suffered in his career, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN.

Tagovailoa left Thursday night’s game after his head was hit hard on a legal tackle by Bills safety Damar Hamlin. It was particularly troubling with Tagovailoa’s history of concussions, including a disturbing scene on national television when he was knocked unconscious in 2022.

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said he talked to Tagovailoa and urged him to think more about his health and his family than his football career as he seeks medical opinions.

The 26-year-old Tagovailoa has played well enough during his time in Miami that the Dolphins signed him to a four-year, $212 million contract this offseason. The Dolphins want him to be their franchise quarterback for years to come, but his concussion history is putting that into question.
 
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