MaceotheCat
Maceo the Cat
MaceotheCat

Been eating shit for years.

Ha, NC boy. Try again.

They sure can. He’s just not a douche. (Neither is Watt or Rodgers.) He’s a good, happy guy who enjoys playing the game. Shit, nearly every WR in the game celebrates a first down like they just threepeated. No one seems to care about that anymore. Nope, just Cam.

So true, my man. I’ve noticed how often people are talking about JJ Watt’s sack dances and Aaron Rodgers’s discount double checks with such disdain. They totally get the same treatment as Cam.

I don’t quite understand this. You’re saying that he saw that an official was right in front of him, yet went ahead and cross-checked him anyway? But that the cross-check had no vicious intent? I mean, when you blind-side someone with a hard object, I’m not sure what other type of intent there is.

But linesmen can assist referees in calling major penalties, so it wouldn’t have had to have been icing/offsides.

Think again!

Gonna assume the athlete is a champion dead-lifter.

Just what kinds of daily fantasies will you fulfill?

They owned that end zone on the first play of SB 48!

Hmm, it does say that concussion risks are increased for HS kids (never disputed that), but it doesn’t say that they’re more at risk for CTE:

Can you send link?

Check the link I provided to a couple others.

Question: How close to the viewing area do the satellite speakers need to be?

Question: How close to the viewing area do the satellite speakers need to be?

Check out the link I provided to two others in this thread.

That’s fair. I’m not trying to tell anyone they should allow their sons to play. There’s risk involved, for sure.

Now you're assuming that the .01 percent I'm talking about automatically suffer CTE. Even the people who hate the NFL and would like football banned know that's not true.

While it’s true that we don’t know yet what effects today’s bigger, stronger, faster players may suffer down the road, there haven't been problems with older men who only played through high school.

Yes, but for the 99.9 percent of males who play football for only several years, there’s only a minuscule risk of lasting brain injury.