unclestevoordougiew
unclestevoordougiew
unclestevoordougiew

Maybe I'm in the minority here but... defenders always get a bad rap for leading head first on big hits all the time, but that's all I see running backs doing these days and they always come out as the victims. I understand the importance to score on this play, but I can't sympathize with Leveon Bell, especially

I do too, but its unfair to his teamates trying their beat because they actually have pride and unfair to the fans who paid his salary with the belief that the players are trying. From the fan's perspective, this is really no different than guys throwing games for gamblers.

You know what? More power to Albert Haynesworth.

One problem with establishing liability for the NFL would seem to be the exact scenario this guy is laying out: players who took the vast majority of hits in high school and college, who played only a year or two in the league.

I definitely see, and my wife sees, a huge difference in my behavior over the past five years. I'm definitely more anxious. I've never been an anxious guy. I'm definitely more depressed, definitely more worried about stuff. One of my major symptoms is definitely I'm very anxious and I'm very forgetful. And I know I'm

With the understanding that this litigation is on its way to settlement, does anyone else find it slightly unnerving that a plaintiff in the case is saying something like "obviously we should've known, but it seems like there was a like a blind eye to it at the time it was happening?" In theory, if the settlement

Paul Konerko took a fastball to the fact two years back and smushed his face in - looked like his entire face was shattered. He convinced the White Sox to let him stay in the game, and then in his next at bat he hit a home run. We never hear about it because it didn't happen to one of baseball's marquee franchises,