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NFL Random Thought of the Day

For this to change, the NFL would have to entirely change how Draft order is determined (worst teams, highest picks).
While considering the Tepper situation, I have to ask why Haslam has escaped the same scrutiny over the years.

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

The next quarterback class should collectively refuse to play for David Tepper
By Mike Florio
Published September 18, 2024 06:31 AM

Nearly eight years ago, 49ers CEO Jed York made a depressingly accurate comment about pro football.

“I own this football team,” York said after firing his third coach in three years. “You don’t dismiss owners. I’m sorry but that’s the facts, and that’s the case. That’s the fact.”

It’s a sad fact for fans of the most dysfunctional teams. Currently, the NFL’s most dysfunctional team is run by a drink-throwing, hat-removing, Veruca Salt multi-billionaire who thinks there’s a button he can press that will instantly turn his team from a train wreck into a contender.

So, no, you don’t dismiss David Tepper. There’s nothing Panthers fans can do, short of launching a sustained, multi-year boycott creating sufficient financial pressure to get him to sell the team.

Good luck with that. People don’t like to deprive themselves of things they like, even when that thing drives them to agony. Currently, Tepper’s team might drive its fans to something even worse than that — apathy.

And with Tepper, who (in my opinion, based on the available evidence and the application of common sense) forced Bryce Young onto his last coaching staff before forcing the new coaching staff to bench him, firmly in control of the team and likely looking for another incoming rookie quarterback to fall in love with (before falling out of love with him), it’s high time for college players who are finally making money to prepare to take a stand.

It happens rarely. It should happen often. For quarterbacks, that first team shapes much of the career. And that first team can ruin, or dramatically delay, the quarterback’s chance to realize his potential.

Look at the Jets. From Geno Smith to Christian Hackenberg to Sam Darnold to Zach Wilson, they’ve ruined one rookie quarterback after another. The Panthers are on that same track.

And the incoming quarterbacks have more power than ever before. Their money is the source of it. They have earned plenty.

They have (or should have) banked a lot of it. They can make it clear to the Panthers, privately or if need be publicly, that they won’t sign a contract with the Panthers. That whoever is drafted by Tepper’s team will sit out for a year, live off his NIL money (and possibly earn more of it), and re-enter the draft the next time around.

That’s how it works. If a player is drafted and doesn’t sign a contract, he re-enters the next draft. If he does it again, he can pick whichever team he wants after the next draft.

The biggest challenge comes from the potential P.R. consequences. Media and fans have been so brainwashed about the honor and privilege of being drafted that few will acknowledge the very real difference between being drafted by the best organizations and the worst ones.

Look at Patrick Mahomes. He could have been drafted by a team that might have made it harder for him to fully blossom and thrive (like, you know, the Jets). Instead, he fell to the bottom of the top 10, the Chiefs jumped up 18 spots to get him, and the rest is the history that we all continue to witness.

At the other end of the spectrum, it’s the Jets and the Panthers. Quarterback whimperers, not whisperers. Teams that will keep Geno Smith from becoming Geno Smith and Sam Darnold from becoming Sam Darnold and, maybe, Zach Wilson from becoming Zach Wilson and Bryce Young from becoming Bryce Young.

Many believe that the Texans would have taken Young if they’d had the first pick in the 2023 draft, which would have sent C.J. Stroud to the Panthers. Who’s to say that, if this had happened, Young would be doing fine and Stroud would have just gotten benched?

Think back to 1999. If Akili Smith lands with the Eagles and Donovan McNabb goes to Cincinnati, maybe Smith ends up being a fringe Hall of Famer with Andy Reid, and McNabb starts 17 career regular-season games, winning only three.

It’s high time for incoming quarterbacks to take a stand when it comes to being forced to play for an inept organization. And there’s always strength in numbers. The Panthers should be the first target for a collective “no thanks” by the top prospects.

Panthers fans won’t like to hear that. But if Tepper can’t be fired or otherwise held accountable (short of something that would prompt the NFL to deploy Mary Jo White to Charlotte), something like an organized effort by the top quarterbacks to refuse to play for Tepper’s team could be the only thing to get him to shape up — or even better for Panthers fans sell out.
 
For this to change, the NFL would have to entirely change how Draft order is determined (worst teams, highest picks).
While considering the Tepper situation, I have to ask why Haslam has escaped the same scrutiny over the years.

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

The next quarterback class should collectively refuse to play for David Tepper
By Mike Florio
Published September 18, 2024 06:31 AM

Nearly eight years ago, 49ers CEO Jed York made a depressingly accurate comment about pro football.

“I own this football team,” York said after firing his third coach in three years. “You don’t dismiss owners. I’m sorry but that’s the facts, and that’s the case. That’s the fact.”

It’s a sad fact for fans of the most dysfunctional teams. Currently, the NFL’s most dysfunctional team is run by a drink-throwing, hat-removing, Veruca Salt multi-billionaire who thinks there’s a button he can press that will instantly turn his team from a train wreck into a contender.

So, no, you don’t dismiss David Tepper. There’s nothing Panthers fans can do, short of launching a sustained, multi-year boycott creating sufficient financial pressure to get him to sell the team.

Good luck with that. People don’t like to deprive themselves of things they like, even when that thing drives them to agony. Currently, Tepper’s team might drive its fans to something even worse than that — apathy.

And with Tepper, who (in my opinion, based on the available evidence and the application of common sense) forced Bryce Young onto his last coaching staff before forcing the new coaching staff to bench him, firmly in control of the team and likely looking for another incoming rookie quarterback to fall in love with (before falling out of love with him), it’s high time for college players who are finally making money to prepare to take a stand.

It happens rarely. It should happen often. For quarterbacks, that first team shapes much of the career. And that first team can ruin, or dramatically delay, the quarterback’s chance to realize his potential.

Look at the Jets. From Geno Smith to Christian Hackenberg to Sam Darnold to Zach Wilson, they’ve ruined one rookie quarterback after another. The Panthers are on that same track.

And the incoming quarterbacks have more power than ever before. Their money is the source of it. They have earned plenty.

They have (or should have) banked a lot of it. They can make it clear to the Panthers, privately or if need be publicly, that they won’t sign a contract with the Panthers. That whoever is drafted by Tepper’s team will sit out for a year, live off his NIL money (and possibly earn more of it), and re-enter the draft the next time around.

That’s how it works. If a player is drafted and doesn’t sign a contract, he re-enters the next draft. If he does it again, he can pick whichever team he wants after the next draft.

The biggest challenge comes from the potential P.R. consequences. Media and fans have been so brainwashed about the honor and privilege of being drafted that few will acknowledge the very real difference between being drafted by the best organizations and the worst ones.

Look at Patrick Mahomes. He could have been drafted by a team that might have made it harder for him to fully blossom and thrive (like, you know, the Jets). Instead, he fell to the bottom of the top 10, the Chiefs jumped up 18 spots to get him, and the rest is the history that we all continue to witness.

At the other end of the spectrum, it’s the Jets and the Panthers. Quarterback whimperers, not whisperers. Teams that will keep Geno Smith from becoming Geno Smith and Sam Darnold from becoming Sam Darnold and, maybe, Zach Wilson from becoming Zach Wilson and Bryce Young from becoming Bryce Young.

Many believe that the Texans would have taken Young if they’d had the first pick in the 2023 draft, which would have sent C.J. Stroud to the Panthers. Who’s to say that, if this had happened, Young would be doing fine and Stroud would have just gotten benched?

Think back to 1999. If Akili Smith lands with the Eagles and Donovan McNabb goes to Cincinnati, maybe Smith ends up being a fringe Hall of Famer with Andy Reid, and McNabb starts 17 career regular-season games, winning only three.

It’s high time for incoming quarterbacks to take a stand when it comes to being forced to play for an inept organization. And there’s always strength in numbers. The Panthers should be the first target for a collective “no thanks” by the top prospects.

Panthers fans won’t like to hear that. But if Tepper can’t be fired or otherwise held accountable (short of something that would prompt the NFL to deploy Mary Jo White to Charlotte), something like an organized effort by the top quarterbacks to refuse to play for Tepper’s team could be the only thing to get him to shape up — or even better for Panthers fans sell out.
Let's see, this should happen because Tepper chose a midget with an avg arm at best. Looks like this writer is a Young fan and is butthurt. If what the writer want to happen were to happen the NFL would change the one yr rule to a lifetime rule.
 
There are facts that can't be ignored Two of Tua's concussion have resulted in the fencers pose. The fencers pose is what happens when there is significant trauma to the midbrain. About 2/3rds of concussions that result in unconsciousness have a fencing response. This is because the midbrain controls, in addition to many other important functions, the ability for you to breath spontaneously and for your heart to beat. Any of us who have treated such injuries do not have to be told that this response is a sign of the severity of the concussion.

******************
Injured reserve designation raises questions about Tua Tagovailoa returning in 2024
 
Four inch shoe lifts would certainly make that task a lot more successful. At 5'10, he cannot see over his own OL.................he doesn't pick up blitzes because he can't see them coming.................he can't see his receivers or the DBs defending them...............he can't find his receivers when they are further than 10 yds from the LOS because his angle line of sight is sorely limited by the height discrepancy between him and those in front of him.

View attachment 14519
I don’t know. Go put on a pair of platform shoes and run a 40 or a cone drill and get back to us with the results.
 
For this to change, the NFL would have to entirely change how Draft order is determined (worst teams, highest picks).
While considering the Tepper situation, I have to ask why Haslam has escaped the same scrutiny over the years.

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

The next quarterback class should collectively refuse to play for David Tepper
By Mike Florio
Published September 18, 2024 06:31 AM

Nearly eight years ago, 49ers CEO Jed York made a depressingly accurate comment about pro football.

“I own this football team,” York said after firing his third coach in three years. “You don’t dismiss owners. I’m sorry but that’s the facts, and that’s the case. That’s the fact.”

It’s a sad fact for fans of the most dysfunctional teams. Currently, the NFL’s most dysfunctional team is run by a drink-throwing, hat-removing, Veruca Salt multi-billionaire who thinks there’s a button he can press that will instantly turn his team from a train wreck into a contender.

So, no, you don’t dismiss David Tepper. There’s nothing Panthers fans can do, short of launching a sustained, multi-year boycott creating sufficient financial pressure to get him to sell the team.

Good luck with that. People don’t like to deprive themselves of things they like, even when that thing drives them to agony. Currently, Tepper’s team might drive its fans to something even worse than that — apathy.

And with Tepper, who (in my opinion, based on the available evidence and the application of common sense) forced Bryce Young onto his last coaching staff before forcing the new coaching staff to bench him, firmly in control of the team and likely looking for another incoming rookie quarterback to fall in love with (before falling out of love with him), it’s high time for college players who are finally making money to prepare to take a stand.

It happens rarely. It should happen often. For quarterbacks, that first team shapes much of the career. And that first team can ruin, or dramatically delay, the quarterback’s chance to realize his potential.

Look at the Jets. From Geno Smith to Christian Hackenberg to Sam Darnold to Zach Wilson, they’ve ruined one rookie quarterback after another. The Panthers are on that same track.

And the incoming quarterbacks have more power than ever before. Their money is the source of it. They have earned plenty.

They have (or should have) banked a lot of it. They can make it clear to the Panthers, privately or if need be publicly, that they won’t sign a contract with the Panthers. That whoever is drafted by Tepper’s team will sit out for a year, live off his NIL money (and possibly earn more of it), and re-enter the draft the next time around.

That’s how it works. If a player is drafted and doesn’t sign a contract, he re-enters the next draft. If he does it again, he can pick whichever team he wants after the next draft.

The biggest challenge comes from the potential P.R. consequences. Media and fans have been so brainwashed about the honor and privilege of being drafted that few will acknowledge the very real difference between being drafted by the best organizations and the worst ones.

Look at Patrick Mahomes. He could have been drafted by a team that might have made it harder for him to fully blossom and thrive (like, you know, the Jets). Instead, he fell to the bottom of the top 10, the Chiefs jumped up 18 spots to get him, and the rest is the history that we all continue to witness.

At the other end of the spectrum, it’s the Jets and the Panthers. Quarterback whimperers, not whisperers. Teams that will keep Geno Smith from becoming Geno Smith and Sam Darnold from becoming Sam Darnold and, maybe, Zach Wilson from becoming Zach Wilson and Bryce Young from becoming Bryce Young.

Many believe that the Texans would have taken Young if they’d had the first pick in the 2023 draft, which would have sent C.J. Stroud to the Panthers. Who’s to say that, if this had happened, Young would be doing fine and Stroud would have just gotten benched?

Think back to 1999. If Akili Smith lands with the Eagles and Donovan McNabb goes to Cincinnati, maybe Smith ends up being a fringe Hall of Famer with Andy Reid, and McNabb starts 17 career regular-season games, winning only three.

It’s high time for incoming quarterbacks to take a stand when it comes to being forced to play for an inept organization. And there’s always strength in numbers. The Panthers should be the first target for a collective “no thanks” by the top prospects.

Panthers fans won’t like to hear that. But if Tepper can’t be fired or otherwise held accountable (short of something that would prompt the NFL to deploy Mary Jo White to Charlotte), something like an organized effort by the top quarterbacks to refuse to play for Tepper’s team could be the only thing to get him to shape up — or even better for Panthers fans sell out.
Another stupid article written by Mike Florio.. He writes about stuff that doesn't have a shot in hell at happening. Players aren't going to sit out a entire season and risk free falling in the the next year's draft. It simply is never going to happen. He comes up with dumbass ideas and then runs straight to his computer to post about them. Also I don't care where Young was drafted, I think he was always destined to bust. He simply isn't built and doesn't have the ability to play in this league.

However just for argument sake, let's say his idea actually becomes a thing, it won't, but let's assume it does. No way in hell are NFL owners going to allow college football players to dictate the entire draft selection process. I don't care how much infighting some owners might have, this is one issue the owners would stand in solidarity on. If players start sitting out of their draft year.. all owners have to do is mandate that if that happens they have to wait 2 full years to re-enter the draft process (or some other type of deterrent). No player would give up 2 years of earning potential, I don't care how much "NIL money" they made.. But they're not going to give up one year either, so it's a moot point.

College players can continue to use the media (and now social media) to try to get out a certain destination though.
 
Can Bryce Young be fixed? Is he that terrible or is it the team around him?
We heard it both ways so far. BUT if it’s the team you’d still think his skill set would have showed enough promise to make it a no brainer. But I believe his first pass of the season was an interception. He threw for 84 yards in his next game. But the S2 was supposed to measure processing speed and control under duress. It can’t be on him 🙄. So IMO the height argument seems the most likely along with an inability to forget your last play which an S2 doesn’t measure.
 
This is the 3rd 2022 concussion which the NFL has not counted. It should have been obvious, but after a brief exit from the game, he was allowed to return in the 2nd half. I would love to know which physician(s) made the decisions that day.


Just saw this. Man that is so painful to watch it almost breaks your heart. It reminds of a deer that gets hit by a car yet still tries to get to safety.
 

Browns DT Mike Hall Jr. pleads no contest to disorderly conduct
By Josh Alper
Published September 19, 2024 10:13 AM

Browns rookie defensive tackle Mike Hall Jr. entered a plea to resolve charges stemming from his August arrest on domestic violence charges.

Hall pleaded no contest to a reduced charge of disorderly conduct in Avon, Ohio on Thursday. He received a 30-day suspended jail sentence, two years probation and a $250 fine.

Per Fox8.com, Hall told the judge that he is going to counseling after the incident with his fiancee, who filed a motion to remove a protection order against Hall last week.

The NFL put Hall on the Commissioner’s Exempt list as a result of the initial charge and he remains on paid leave now. With the case resolved, the league could move to discipline him under the Personal Conduct Policy.
 
Malik Willis: Josh Myers did an “awesome” job blocking after throwing up on the football
By Michael David Smith
Published September 19, 2024 07:14 AM

Packers center Josh Myers threw up on the football an instant before snapping it to quarterback Malik Willis on Sunday, forcing Willis to hold onto the football and run when he was supposed to pass. But Willis says no one should criticize Myers for that.

Willis said he saw Myers puke right in front of him and didn’t think he’d be able to keep playing, but instead Myers immediately snapped the vomit-covered ball and carried out his blocking assignment.

“I didn’t know whether it would get snapped or not,” Willis said. “He jumped straight into blocking. He did a great job. I was surprised he got the ball off, and then he started blocking. It was awesome.”

Willis said he never would have talked about it if he had known that people would take it as Myers’ fault that the play broke down.

“I told him sorry a bunch of times because I think he’s getting a lot of flak. He was working so hard, he threw up,” Willis said.

“A lot of stuff is going through your mind when you’re throwing up and one of them’s not football.”

Still, Willis says, vomit on a football prevents a quarterback from doing his job.

“I couldn’t throw it,” Willis said. “I just couldn’t. It was wet.”

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

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

Priceless video!!

 
"There's plenty of space, it's on 2 acres, the home is beautiful," Campbell told Crain's Detroit Business. "It's just that people figured out where we lived when we lost."

He didn't elaborate, but Fox 2 in Detroit reported that Campbell's home address was leaked to the public and he and his family became the victim of pranks and harassment after tough Lions losses, including in the NFC Championship Game. The Campbell family has filed police reports, Fox 2 reported.
 
Somebody from this MB, and I won't name names, has slipped Rich Eisen some of their
koolaid because on his daily show today Eisen just named the KC Chiefs as the only team with a higher rating in his weekly power ratings than the NFL franchise in Houston, TX.
 
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

Former NFL Exec Makes Bold Statement About Browns QB Deshaun Watson

An former NFL executive spoke to Cleveland Browns on SI with a bold statement about Deshaun Watson.

Evan Massey | Sep 18, 2024​



The Cleveland Browns were able to pull out a win in Week 2 over the Jacksonville Jaguars by a final score of 18-13. It wasn't a pretty win, but it ended up being a win that moved the team to 1-1 on the season.

Deshaun Watson had another mediocre performance. He completed 22 of his 34 pass attempts for 186 yards, no touchdowns, and no interceptions. On the ground, he did pick up 20 yards and a touchdown.

Throughout the first two weeks of the season, there haven't been many signs of the big bounce-back season that Watson was targeting. It has been more of the same from what the Browns saw throughout his first two years with the franchise.

At this point in time, fans and the media are starting to speculate that Cleveland will end up needing to look for a quarterback of the future next offseason.

One former NFL executive, who spoke with Browns on SI, dropped a bold statement about Watson.

"I don't think he (Watson) is going to be able to turn it around in Cleveland. I don't think he's going to be able to turn it around anywhere. It's disappointing after what he showed in Houston and the talent and potential he was showing, but that version of Deshaun I believe is gone."

He continued forward, explaining more of his reasoning.

"His confidence is completely gone. He doesn't even look to have the same arm. Whether it's the off the field stuff or his injury history, I just don't think we're ever going to see that same Houston version of Deshaun again."


Depending on how the season goes, the former executive offered his opinion on a couple of young quarterbacks that Cleveland could consider targeting to replace Watson in the future.

"There are a couple of guys out there I would think about. Quinn Ewers would be the perfect option, but I think Garrett Nussmeier has big-time potential as well. I think they should take a long look at both of those guys."

While targeting a change could be on the horizon, the Browns are just two games into the 2024 season. There is still a chance that Watson could figure things out and get his career back on track.

However, if we see more of the same throughout the rest of the year, Cleveland needs to start looking at options.

Hopefully for the Browns, Watson can avoid making them consider pursuing a quarterback. The ideal scenario would be for him to catch fire in the near future and lead the team to a sucessful season.

Unfortunately, that isn't looking likely to be the case from what has been seen through the first two games.
 
In the pursuit of more money, the NFL's future will become more unpredictable.

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

Report: Private-equity consortium can hold interest in up to 12 teams
By Mike Florio
Published September 19, 2024 08:26 PM

When the NFL adopted a revolutionary new private-equity rule last month, it authorized individual funds to hold up to 10 percent of up to six teams.

One group of funds can hold interest in more than that.

According to Ben Fischer of Sports Business Journal, the consortium of funds involving Hall of Fame running back Curtis Martin has been approved to invest in up to TWELVE teams.

That group of funds includes Blackstone, Carlyle, CVC, Dynasty Equity, and Ludis.

The other approved funds (Arctos Partners, Ares Management, and Sixth Street) are limited to six teams each.

The ability of the fund consortium, which per Fischer is sometimes referenced to as “The Avengers,” is significant. If the group exercises the full extent of its ability to buy up to 10 percent of 12 teams, it will collectively own, as a practical matter, 1.2 teams.

Thus, while as to each team the group will hold a minority position, it collectively will have more NFL team equity than any majority owner in the entire league.

And with that distinction will come, as a practical matter, plenty of influence over NFL business.
 
In the pursuit of more money, the NFL's future will become more unpredictable.

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

Report: Private-equity consortium can hold interest in up to 12 teams
By Mike Florio
Published September 19, 2024 08:26 PM

When the NFL adopted a revolutionary new private-equity rule last month, it authorized individual funds to hold up to 10 percent of up to six teams.

One group of funds can hold interest in more than that.

According to Ben Fischer of Sports Business Journal, the consortium of funds involving Hall of Fame running back Curtis Martin has been approved to invest in up to TWELVE teams.

That group of funds includes Blackstone, Carlyle, CVC, Dynasty Equity, and Ludis.

The other approved funds (Arctos Partners, Ares Management, and Sixth Street) are limited to six teams each.

The ability of the fund consortium, which per Fischer is sometimes referenced to as “The Avengers,” is significant. If the group exercises the full extent of its ability to buy up to 10 percent of 12 teams, it will collectively own, as a practical matter, 1.2 teams.

Thus, while as to each team the group will hold a minority position, it collectively will have more NFL team equity than any majority owner in the entire league.

And with that distinction will come, as a practical matter, plenty of influence over NFL business.
Mark Cuban predicted a few years ago that the NFL will get too greedy for its own good. As a fan of the sport and the league, I hope they realize that the billions they have is more than enough...
 
Last edited:
Proposed federal law targets gambling ads, in-game betting
By Mike Florio
Published September 20, 2024 01:01 PM

More than six years after the Supreme Court opened the floodgates for legalized gambling, Congress is looking at dropping some logs in the river.

A bill recently proposed by two members of Congress would, if passed and signed into law, restrict gambling advertisements and eliminate live, in-game betting.

The article from David Purdum of ESPN.com characterizes the NFL (and NBA) as seeing “positives and negatives” in the law. Getting rid of live, in-game betting is surely regarded as a negative.

The law also would prohibit sports book ads from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. and during live sports broadcasts. Likewise, it would end prop bets for college players.

The bill was proposed by a pair of Democratic legislators. Whether the bill makes its way through the legislative process depends on many things — starting with an election to be held in 46 days.

Even then, the same Constitutional principles that allowed all states to launch sports betting operations might keep Congress from putting restrictions on the bets that can be taken by the states.

While the NFL isn’t taking a pubic stance for now, it’s a safe bet that the league will oppose any attempt to eliminate in-game betting. That’s the holy grail for pro football, transforming every game into a mini-casino, injecting ongoing relevance into the contests even when the broader outcome has been decided.
 
Another stupid article written by Mike Florio.. He writes about stuff that doesn't have a shot in hell at happening. Players aren't going to sit out a entire season and risk free falling in the the next year's draft. It simply is never going to happen. He comes up with dumbass ideas and then runs straight to his computer to post about them. Also I don't care where Young was drafted, I think he was always destined to bust. He simply isn't built and doesn't have the ability to play in this league.

However just for argument sake, let's say his idea actually becomes a thing, it won't, but let's assume it does. No way in hell are NFL owners going to allow college football players to dictate the entire draft selection process. I don't care how much infighting some owners might have, this is one issue the owners would stand in solidarity on. If players start sitting out of their draft year.. all owners have to do is mandate that if that happens they have to wait 2 full years to re-enter the draft process (or some other type of deterrent). No player would give up 2 years of earning potential, I don't care how much "NIL money" they made.. But they're not going to give up one year either, so it's a moot point.

College players can continue to use the media (and now social media) to try to get out a certain destination though.

It’s happened before…sort of. Elway refused to be drafted by Baltimore who ended up trading him Denver. Eli Manning refused to play for SD and they made a swap with the Giants. If a guy doesn’t want to be ruined by a crappy org, who is to say that sitting out isn’t his best move?

There’s also alternative leagues. Warren Moon played in the CFL before signing with the Oilers. Granted..a different situation. But you have both UFL and CFL, who would love to take a young buck for a year or two and turn him into a star before he can become an NFL FA and choose his spot. Jim Kelly and Steve Young are prime examples of this back during the USFL heydays of the 80’s.
 
Respect for Bryce. I wouldn’t give up on him…but he needs a change of scenery. If Tua hangs it up…Miami should send a low rd pick give him a shot. McDaniel and a stacked offense would give him a real chance to show what he can do.
 
Respect for Bryce. I wouldn’t give up on him…but he needs a change of scenery. If Tua hangs it up…Miami should send a low rd pick give him a shot. McDaniel and a stacked offense would give him a real chance to show what he can do.
A change of scenery might help him out. But I still believe that he will always be significantly hindered by his height.
 
It’s happened before…sort of. Elway refused to be drafted by Baltimore who ended up trading him Denver. Eli Manning refused to play for SD and they made a swap with the Giants. If a guy doesn’t want to be ruined by a crappy org, who is to say that sitting out isn’t his best move?

There’s also alternative leagues. Warren Moon played in the CFL before signing with the Oilers. Granted..a different situation. But you have both UFL and CFL, who would love to take a young buck for a year or two and turn him into a star before he can become an NFL FA and choose his spot. Jim Kelly and Steve Young are prime examples of this back during the USFL heydays of the 80’s.

And it’s a whole lot easier to sit out now with the NIL money they’re banking.
 
Myles Garrett revealed it's both feet that are bothering him. Surgeons have discussed a possible need for a procedure somewhere down the road. Possibly related to double foot surgery he had as a boy. He has admitted that he has had foot pain for most of his life.

The picture that fits is bilateral congenital club foot deformity with corrective surgery as a child. Most of these patient continue to ha.ve foot pain problems into and throughout their adult lives, but tend to do well with normal activities. When you talk about an athlete, especially a huge football player and the stresses on the feet playing the game, the problems can be quite augmented.............and may eventually require further ligament and/or tendon release procedures.
 
It’s happened before…sort of. Elway refused to be drafted by Baltimore who ended up trading him Denver. Eli Manning refused to play for SD and they made a swap with the Giants. If a guy doesn’t want to be ruined by a crappy org, who is to say that sitting out isn’t his best move?
Don't forget Jim Everett refusing to sign with the Oilers after being drafted 3rd overall
 
It’s happened before…sort of. Elway refused to be drafted by Baltimore who ended up trading him Denver. Eli Manning refused to play for SD and they made a swap with the Giants. If a guy doesn’t want to be ruined by a crappy org, who is to say that sitting out isn’t his best move?

There’s also alternative leagues. Warren Moon played in the CFL before signing with the Oilers. Granted..a different situation. But you have both UFL and CFL, who would love to take a young buck for a year or two and turn him into a star before he can become an NFL FA and choose his spot. Jim Kelly and Steve Young are prime examples of this back during the USFL heydays of the 80’s.
Elway had leverage, Manning had leverage just by his name..

Like I said, They can manipulate public opinions, but outright sitting out of a draft (collage eligibility withstanding) is never going to happen and if it does ownership Will NOT allow it, Florio is just click baiting like usual.
 
I caught the last part of an interview of one of Tua's coaches at Alabama (didn't catch his name) who related that Tua had sustained TWO (not one) concussions in college. That would make at least 6 concussions for Tua.
 
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