Antonio Brown has caused quite the stir at the Raiders facility. Let's recap what the fool has done.
1) Fails to show up to practice or preseason games because he doesn't like his helmet. 2) Messes up his feet in a cryogenics chamber by not wearing appropriate footwear. 3) Gets mad at the team for fining him $50k for not showing up to practice or preseason games. 4) Has to be restrained when yelling at the GM and reportedly calling the GM a "cracker" while punting a football. 5) Posting about the team on his social media. I hope he gets suspended from the team and gets blackballed by the rest of the NFL. The guy is a lunatic. He should be kept in a room with padded walls. I used to blame Mike Tomlin for not reigning in AB. If Jon Gruden can't reign the guy in, nobody can. He's reportedly apologized to his team for this escapade. I wouldn't forgive him. What does everyone else think of this?
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Football is here. Real, competitive professional football with stakes is back in our lives, starting this Thursday night.
And what a way to start. Kicking off the National Football League's 100th season is not the reigning Super Bowl champion New England Patriots but two of the league's oldest franchises engaging in an age-old rivalry: the 199th edition of Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers. The two NFC stalwarts opened last season on Sunday Night Football, when Green Bay came back to defeat Chicago at Lambeau Field in a 24-23 instant classic. This year, the Packers will take on the Bears at Soldier Field on Thursday night to kick-start their campaigns. Green Bay enters with a 97-95-6 advantage in their all-time series. Thursday's events will either pull the Bears one game closer to tying the rivalry record and gaining one leg up in the division race or distance the Packers' all-time lead and give Green Bay its first road victory of the year, matching last season's total. We've been looking forward to this opener for months, hashing out every matchup and detail to the extreme. But there's still one more day to anticipate and one more preview to read. Here's what to watch for during Thursday evening's season opener at 8:20 p.m. ET on NBC: 1. How will Aaron Rodgers and Green Bay's offense perform in their first game under Matt LaFleur? On Thursday night, Rodgers will suit up for the very first time without Mike McCarthy calling shots from the sideline. Mike has been replaced with Matt. The first-time head coach comes by way of assisting Sean McVay in Los Angeles and running Mike Vrabel's offense in Tennessee. At 39 years old, he is four years Rodgers' senior. Who the senior voice at the line of scrimmage will be Thursday night and throughout the season was a point of discussion and, reportedly, contention this offseason. Rodgers and LaFleur spoke to NFL.com's Michael Silver this summer and both expressed there was a disconnect regarding Rodgers' freedom to audible LaFleur's play calls. The storyline was picked at over and again throughout the summer, and despite LaFleur's best wishes, it has not resolved itself because Rodgers has yet to see the field; he was supposed to play in Green Bay's second and third preseason games but was held out both times for precautionary reasons. All this has continued to build anticipation for Thursday night when we will surely get our first look at Rodgers in LaFleur's system, though what that look looks like remains to be seen. Will there be more pre-snap movement? Will Aaron Jones shoulder a larger workload? How long will the honeymoon last? Those questions will start to be answered on Thursday evening. 2. Will the Bears' defense pick up where it left off without Vic Fangio? There are few holes on Chicago's roster on either side of the ball, but especially on defense. The Bears lost just one starter from last year's top scoring defense to the Packers (Adrian Amos) and replaced him a former Packers starter (Ha Ha Clinton-Dix). Their biggest loss on the defensive side of the ball, in fact, came on the sidelines where Fangio was replaced by Chuck Pagano at defensive coordinator. Chicago is expected to experience a regression in the turnover department from last year's outsize performance and there might be some growing pains with a new defensive playcaller, who hasn't held a DC position in eight seasons. But the Bears are also returning an impenetrable front seven led by Akiem Hicks, Roquan Smith and of course Khalil Mack. The Bears linebacker has been a menace off the edges over the past three seasons, recording 162 QB pressures (2nd) and forcing 12 turnovers (T-4th) in that span. In his first game as a Bear, Mack recorded a strip sack and a pick-six at Lambeau before sitting out the second half during Rodgers' miraculous comeback. Expect Mack to play the whole game Thursday barring injury and being the focal point of a Bears defense adjusting to new management. 3. Is David Montgomery the real deal? Chicago's biggest mystery on offense is likely whether Mitchell Trubisky can take The Next Step, but that won't be resolved in one evening of late-summer football. Instead, Bears fans should be looking forward to the debut of Montgomery, their third-round running back out of Iowa State entering the league with hype and expectations galore. Replacing Jordan Howard, whom Chicago traded to Philadelphia before the draft, Montgomery will be paired with the speedy Tarik Cohen in the backfield and should take a large share of carries out of the gate. Montgomery played just one game in the preseason, totaling six touches for 46 yards and a touchdown. But it was enough to set the fantasy football-industrial complex and Bears chat forums ablaze with anticipation. Against a refurbished Packers front seven (Rashan Gary, Preston Smith, 4. Is Chicago's kicker situation really resolved (and will the Bears fans be patient with Eddy Pineiro)? It's been 242 days since the "double doink," the second-to-last play of Chicago's loss to the Eagles in the wild-card round. Two-hundred-and-forty-two days with a nagging need at the kicker position. Let's recap Chicago's crazy kicking competition: Out went Cody Parkey, in came nine tryouts for rookie minicamp, out went most of them, in came Pineiro via trade, out went Chris Blewitt and then finally out went Elliott Fry. The last man standing in Chicago's quest to find a kicker averse to launching pigskins into goalposts, Pineiro enters Thursday night's opener as the Bears' starting kicker ... for now. He closed the preseason by hitting three of three field goals, but also shanking an extra point juuuuuuuust a bit outside and earning boos from the Soldier Field faithful. If or when Pineiro misses a kick against the Packers, be it in the first quarter or the dying embers of the fourth, will Chicago's fans, after toiling in offseason-long agony over the state of their place-kickers, give him a break? Or will Pineiro crumble under the regular-season scrutiny and force the Bears to go back to the drawing board, again? www.theringer.com/nfl-preview/2019/9/4/20848519/matthew-stafford-unique-quarterback-nfl-detroit-lions The Franchise: A Better Way to Understand Matthew Stafford’s Decade in the NFL Stafford has been one of the most productive passers in an era defined by more famous and accomplished quarterbacks. In a wide-ranging interview, he discussed his career and caring for his wife Kelly, who underwent surgery to remove a brain tumor this spring. You think I’m tough?” Matthew Stafford asks me.
I was interviewing Stafford about nearly every facet of his 10-year career with the Detroit Lions. I had mentioned that several people close to him told me stories about how he plays through injuries. His former quarterbacks coach, Brian Callahan, said Stafford is one of the toughest players who has ever played the sport. Stafford spoke about those injuries, and how he tries to play in every game, but moments later the conversation turned to his wife, Kelly, who underwent surgery to remove a brain tumor in April. Stafford makes it clear that Kelly is the tough one. “I drew a lot of inspiration from her. Just seeing her in the state she was in right after [the surgery] and to where she is now three months out. It is incredible. It is crazy what she is able to do, and taking care of three kids,” Stafford says while sitting on a bench on the team’s practice field. “The [Lions] were amazing, but I also knew I had a huge responsibility, too. I was here as early as I could be and I’d catch guys as they were going to a team meeting and I was going to the hospital. It put a lot in perspective, and it was inspiring to watch her because it was wild for a little bit.” First: Los Angeles Rams QB Jared Goff just got a 4-year contract extension worth $134 million, with $110 million guaranteed.
Second: Dallas Cowboys RB Ezekiel Elliott just got a 6-year contract extension worth $90 million, with $50 million guaranteed. What it breaks down to, is Goff is going to be making $33.5 million a season on average, and Elliott will be making $15 million. Less than 24 hours after making a blockbuster trade on cutdown day, the Miami Dolphins have made yet another move.
Linebacker Kiko Alonso has been traded to the Saints in exchange for linebacker Vince Biegel, per NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport and NFL Network's Tom Pelissero. The teams later confirmed the trade. Alonso, 29, spent the past three seasons in Miami and amassed 355 tackles, six forced fumbles, 11 pass deflections, five interceptions and one sack in that span. Solid numbers for a player at his position but perhaps more impressive is the fact that Alonso started 46 of a possible 48 regular season games. A second-round draft pick by the Bills in 2013, Alonso put together an impressive rookie campaign -- 159 tackles, two sacks, four pass deflections, four interceptions -- before being sidelined all of the 2014 season after tearing his ACL in the offseason. He was traded to the Eagles for LeSean McCoy the following year and played in only 11 games before being dealt to the Dolphins in 2016. Biegel, 26, was drafted in the fourth round by the Packers in 2017 and played nine games that season after dealing with a foot injury. He was waived prior to the start of last season and claimed by the Saintswhere he joined the practice squad before eventually being promoted to the active roster. Biegel appeared in 14 games in 2018 and contributed four tackles. If you're expecting Bruce Arians to take Jameis Winston's game to the next level this season -- resuscitating the young quarterback's career in a crucial contract year -- you could be in for a bumpy ride.
The marriage of coach and quarterback in Tampa Bay will almost certainly lead to more yards, more touchdowns and thus more points for the Buccaneers. And, if all goes just right, maybe even a second Pro Bowl nod and a fat new contract for the fifth-year passer. But it could also very well lead to Winston committing an even greater number of turnovers and running for his life. The two-time Coach of the Year has made his living throwing caution to the wind and taking shots downfield, eschewing the old mantra of three yards and a cloud of dust for "no risk it, no biscuit." His love of chunk-yardage plays meshes well with Winston's propensity to air it out on intermediate and deep routes. In fact, the 2015 No. 1 overall pick has thrown 93(!) more passes of 10-plus air yards than any other quarterback since entering the league, per Pro Football Focus, and that's despite missing eight games over the past two seasons. Although he hasn't been incredibly efficient on these passes, with Next Gen Stats showing he ranks 26th in yards per attempt (9.2 -- just behind Eli Manning) and 21st in passer rating (82.4 -- seven points below Case Keenum) over the past three seasons, that's where B.A.'s QB magic is supposed to make the difference. Sprinkle a bit of fairy biscuit crumbles on Jameis' right arm, and watch his 44:34 TD-to-INT ratio on deep throws suddenly transform into something far more appetizing. There's no question that Arians-led offenses rack up yards and points and help propel quarterbacks into the limelight. He's worked with, and elicited incredible production from, some of the best to ever do it: future Hall of Famers Peyton Manning and Ben Roethlisberger, as well as multi-time Pro Bowlers Andrew Luck and Carson Palmer. The concern stems from whether the ultra-aggressive coach's unwavering commitment to his scheme, irrespective of personnel, potentially compounds already-problematic areas on a roster. Because Arians is relentless in his aim to put pressure on opposing defenses, he regularly uses five-step drops to give his quarterback better sightlines and to buy more time for his receivers to run downfield. Palmer ranked sixth in the league in five-step drops and second in passes of 10-plus air yards from 2015 through '16. And the success was evident: The signal-caller was a legitimate MVP candidate in 2015, as the Cardinals boasted the NFL's top-ranked offense and earned a trip to the NFC conference championship. But there's a painful flipside to Arians' system. Because it often exchanges pass protectors for additional route runners, it also requires the five guys up front to win one-on-one battles. This approach works well when you have quick-hitting route concepts or a rock-solid offensive line. However, we know short passes are anathema to the Kangol-wearing coach, and the offensive lines he had in Indy and Arizona were questionable at best -- a truth that's certainly not lost on Luck or Palmer. The recently retired ColtsQB had 45 more dropbacks under pressure than the next-closest passer in 2012, when Arians served as interim head coach. Similarly, the Cardinals veteran was hit more in 60 games under B.A. than in 122 total games with the Bengals and Raiders (400 hits to 398). His sacks-per-game figure also soared in Arizona, increasing from 1.7 during his nine-year run in Cincinnati and Oakland to 2.3 in his five seasons in the desert. And here-in lies the potential issue for Winston: The O-line Arians inherited in Tampa is, to put it simply, not good. The head coach went so far as to lambast the unit's performance after the Preseason Week 3 tilt against the Browns when the quintet was manhandled consistently by Cleveland's defensive front. Anyone expecting Arians' attacking philosophy to change -- even with offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich calling the plays -- is misguided. Buccaneers QB2 Ryan Griffin ranked second across the league in five-step drops during the preseason, while 17 of Winston's 39 total dropbacks were five-step drops, per PFF. Both finished the exhibition period in the top 10 in sacks taken (Winston, T-9; Griffin T-2). Let's be honest: Arians is set in his ways. I mean, does the guy in the following video sound like someone who would suddenly transition to a horizontal passing game for the sake of his lackluster offensive line? The sliver of silver lining in all of this is that Winston has been far more effective at evading pressure in his young career (ranks ninth since 2016, per Next Gen Stats) than late-30s Palmer was with the Cardinals (ranked 27th over his final two seasons of 2016 and '17). So there's a possibility Winston might be able to mitigate the extra heat he'll face operating in Arians' deep-drop scheme. That said, when the 2013 Heisman Trophy winner has been under pressure during the past three seasons, he's produced the fourth-worst passer rating (59.8) and sixth-lowest yards per attempt (5.9). Arians has, of course, earned the benefit of the doubt that he can fix Winston's shortcomings, but past precedent works both ways. To ignore the warning signs -- B.A.'s slow-developing offense, the Bucs' questionable O-line, Winston's league-leading turnover total since making his rookie debut -- and only focus on the duo's predilection for pushing the ball down field, would paint an incomplete picture. Sure, they may connect on a ton of chunk plays that set off a cacophony of cannon fire at Raymond James Stadium. But it's the potential for repeated misfires -- the sacks, stalled drives, giveaways -- that should have Bucs fans tempering their expectations. Saturday’s whirlwind of transactions provided the first real test for Houston’s new-look, no-G.M. front office. The grade for the “flatter” management structure: A big, fat F.
Through not just one but two disastrous trades, the Texans not only botched their divorce from Jadeveon Clowney but also authored a mini-Herschel Walker fiasco that mortgages the future and complicates the process of hiring any G.M. who has real options in 2020. The blame lands nowhere but on the desk of Cal McNair, who is now running the franchise following the passing of team founder of his father, Bob McNair. Cal McNair signed off on that clumsy plan to fire G.M. Brian Gaine and lure Nick Caserio from the Patriots, as if taking from the Patriots an employee they are intent on keeping ever works. Along the way, the Texans frustrating the Fritz Pollard Alliance by interviewing a pair of minority G.M. candidates for the job (Martin Mayhew and Ray Farmer) before deciding not to hire anyone. The situation went sideways once the Texans hired from the Patriots an employee they definitely didn’t want to keep: Jack Easterby. He’s a former chaplain turned, well, something other than a chaplain but lacking the chops to do the job he now has, whatever it may be. It utimately entails significant influence with minimal accountability, since he can always claim (after one of the decisions he influences goes poorly) that he’s not a “football guy.” At a time when some think that Sunday’s doubleheader of deals that may rip out the heart of the franchise are the result of coach Bill O’Brien operating without the balance that comes from having another strong voice in the organization, others believe that this isn’t simply Easterby failing to be O’Brien’s foil but Easterby subtly taking charge and imposing via whispers to McNair a vision for the roster that Easterby has crafted without having, you know, the skills, abilities, or experience to do so. Let’s start with the trade that sent Jadeveon Clowney to Seattle. The failure of the Texans to trade him before July 15, the deadline for signing Clowney to a long-term deal, made Clowney less attractive to a new team, since the new team was getting, as a practical matter, a one-year rental. So the Seahawks wisely viewed Clowney as a one-year rental, and they negotiated with the Texans accordingly. The initial terms — a third-round pick, linebacker Jacob Martin, and pass-rusher Barkevious Mingo — seemed a little rich, even though Mingo probably would have been cut, anyway. Sunday’s news that the Texans are paying $7 million of Clowney’s franchise tender of nearly $16 million makes it a great deal for the Seahawks. They get Clowney for one season at nearly $9 million, dibs at signing him to a new deal after the season (they’ve agreed not to restrict him with the franchise tag), and they’ll be eligible for a compensatory draft pick in 2021 that could climb as high as the third-round pick they sent to Houston for 2020. So the Texans are buying a 2020 third-round pick and two players (one that probably could have been signed as a free agent) for $7 million. If the Texans simply hadn’t tagged Clowney in the first place, they could have gotten a 2020 third-round compensatory pick, without paying the $7 million. (If they’d simply rescinded the tender, there’s a chance they still would have been eligible for a compensatory pick in 2020. The answer to this isn’t completely clear; different people from different teams have different views on whether a compensatory pick would have been available.) Thus, the Texans shouldn’t have applied the tender in the first place, and they should have rescinded the tender in lieu of doing the deal that was done on Saturday (even if they wouldn’t have gotten a compensatory pick by rescinding the tender in late August). Then there’s the trade that made everyone quickly forget the Clowney debacle, and not in a good way. To get tackle Laremy Tunsil and receiver Kenny Stills from Miami (along with a 2020 fourth-round pick and a 2021 sixth-rounder), the Texans gave up their 2020 first-round pick, their 2021 first-round pick, their 2021 second-round pick, tackle Julien Davenport, and cornerback Johnson Bademosi. Even if there’s any way to defend the value the Texans got in exchange for the picks they surrendered (there isn’t), the fact that they did the deal without a long-term extension for Laremy Tunsil boggles the mind. Given what the Texans surrendered to get Tunsil, Tunsil and his agents will have the bulls by the balls (and then some) when it’s time to negotiate a new deal. The league is buzzing about the level of ineptitude that these deals demonstrate. But few are surprised. The General Manager is gone, the coach (who has shown that he is a very good coach) isn’t a personnel specialist, and the guy who has finagled a path from chaplain to inner circle lacks the capacity to even begin to understand how the job is supposed to work. Cal McNair boasted in July that the team will have “flatter organization with a faster management style” and that the “organization is totally re-energized with a team-based approach and new leadership based on sub programs with each sub program being fully optimized as a goal.” It was a confusing talking point when it was articulated by McNair, and it’s more confusing now. Given the long-term impact of Saturday’s moves (along with the lingering presence of Easterby), it will be incredibly difficult for the Texans to hire the kind of G.M. they need in 2020. Whoever that G.M. is will surely have a chance to be a G.M. somewhere else next year, or to wait for another opportunity in 2021. 1. The Philadelphia Eagles have waived running back Josh Adams. Adams rushed for 511 yards and three touchdowns in 2018.
Wendell Smallwood, like Adams, was another notable backfield casualty on deadline day. A member of the Super LII-winning team two seasons ago, Smallwood racked up career totals of 850 rushing yards (211 carries) and five touchdowns during his three-year tenure with the team. He played in all 16 games (six starts) in 2018. The team also said goodbye to offensive lineman Stefen Wisniewski. The 30-year-old lineman won a ring with the Eagles in 2018. 2. The Carolina Panthers announced their final wave of cuts ahead of the deadline, among them are defensive end Bryan Cox Jr. and linebacker Jared Norris. Cox appeared in 11 games last season -- 18 combined during his two-year stint -- and Norris was a member since 2016 and played in 28 combined games (three in 2018). 3. The New England Patriots are waiving slot receiver Braxton Berrios, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported. A 2018 6th-round pick, Berrios missed his entire rookie season on injured reserve. In a deadline day shocker, Demaryius Thomas joined his fellow wideout on the list of cuts. Thomas made his preseason debut in the team's finale against the Giants after working his way back from tearing his Achilles last December. The Patriots are also releasing Tom Brady's backup Brian Hoyer and trading CB Keion Crossen to the Texans, per Rapoport. The team will move RB Duke Dawson Jr. to the Broncos, as well. 4. The Green Bay Packers cut kicker Sam Ficken. The move has positioned 13-year vet Mason Crosby to be the Week 1 starter. 5. The Buffalo Bills waived rookie quarterback Tyree Jackson. The undrafted free agent out of Buffalo played in all four preseason tilts, completing 52.6 percent of his 57 pass attempts with one passing TD, one INT, and added 110 rushing yards on 25 attempts with a rushing score. Jackson could be a practice squad candidate. The Bills also waived WR Ray-Ray McCloud. McCloud played in 10 games last season, but the offseason upgrades at the position pushed him off the roster in 2019. Fan favorite RB Christian Wade, the latest rugby-turned-NFL player, was among the wave of cuts, as well. In addition, the Bills released corner Captain Munnerlyn. The 31-year-old defensive back was brought in as a veteran with experience in Sean McDermott's defense. Munnerlyn's stay on the roster didn't last the month, however. Joining Munnerlyn on the list of secondary cuts (for now) is safety Kurt Coleman. After the Bills placed TE Jason Croom on IR, Coleman's chances of re-joining the team greatly increased. 11. The Indianapolis Colts released linebacker Carroll Phillipsand quarterback Phillip Walker. Jacoby Brissett is the only active QB on the roster Week 1 with Chad Kelly suspended. Don't be surprised if there is a Brian Hoyer sighting in Indy shortly. 6. The San Francisco 49ers released G Joshua Garnett and WR Jordan Matthews. Matthews, 27, never appeared in a game for the Niners (he was signed in March) and will continue to rehab his career just three seasons removed from his standout first stint with the Eagles. 7. The Chicago Bears released defensive lineman Jonathan Bullard. The 2016 third-round pick compiled 62 tackles and two sacks in three seasons in the Windy City, including five starts. The Bearsalso cut 6-foot-7 undrafted free agent tight end Ian Bunting. The team also waived WR Thomas Ives. 8. Washington Redskins running back Samaje Perine has been waived. Perine, 23, had eight carries for 32 yards in five appearances last season. He was drafted in the fourth round in 2017. 9. The Kansas City Chiefs sent cornerback Mark Fields to the Minnesota Vikings. The team also acquired RB Carlos Hyde from the Texans in exchange for offensive tackle Martinas Rankins. 10. The Cincinnati Bengals have cut OL John Jerry. Quarterback Jeff Driskel (hamstring) is being placed on injured reserve and could eventually work out an injury settlement with the team. The move indicates that rookie Ryan Finley will back up Andy Dalton to begin the regular season. 12. The Cleveland Browns released safety J.T. Hassell. The Browns also swung a few trades, acquiring Tennessee Titans WR Taywan Taylor, a third-round selection in 2017, in exchange for a 2020 seventh-round draft pick and swapped 2020 seventh-round picks with the Green Bay Packers in a deal for guard Justin McCray, NFL Network's Tom Pelissero confirmed. Punter Britton Colquitt and WR Damon Sheehy-Guiseppi were named among the final wave of cuts once the deadline passed. Colquitt, 34, has been in the league since 2009 and was a member of the Browns since 2016. He won a ring with the Broncos in 2016. Sheehy-Guiseppi was mostly used as a return specialist, but it's his inspiring story that instantly made him a fan and team favorite. He is best known for his captivating 86-yard punt return TD in the team's preseason opener against the Redskins. 13. The Miami Dolphins have waived quarterback Jake Rudock. The 26-year-old played in three preseason games (one start) for the Dolphins and totaled 366 passing yards, three TDs and one interception. The Dolphins also cut defensive end Cornellius "Tank" Carradine. Carradine, 29, spent all of OTAs and training camp in Miami; in 2018, he appeared in one game for the Raiders. 14. The Seattle Seahawks released defensive tackle Earl Mitchell and defensive end Cassius Marsh. Slot corner Jamar Taylor is also being released, according to Pelissero. Taylor will become a free agent after being in the running for the job for much of training camp. Starting WR Jaron Brown will be waived in a move as a result of the blockbuster trade that landed Jadeveon Clowney in Seattle. Brown, a seven-year vet, played in all 16 games (two starts) last season and accrued 166 yards and five TDs. He has 14 starts in a 87 career games played. 15. The Denver Broncos are parting ways with backup quarterback Kevin Hogan. 16. The New Orleans Saints released safety Chris Banjo. Banjo, 29, had been with the Saints since 2016 and was an integral part of their special teams unit. 17. The New York Giants have cut backup quarterback Kyle Lauletta. 18. The Pittsburgh Steelers have agreed to trade OT Jerald Hawkins and a 2021 seventh-round pick to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in exchange for a 2021 sixth-round pick. Wideout Eli Rogers, who had just signed a two-year extension in March, was a notable name among today's cuts. Throughout his four-year career, Rogers has showed promise despite being overshadowed at times by struggles that have kept him off the field. The Bucs have also opted to release outside linebacker Noah Spence, who was drafted by the team 39th overall in 2016. Spence has had a quiet past two seasons -- he spent much of 2017 on IR with a shoulder injury -- after putting up 22 tackles, 5.5 sacks and 12 QB hits his rookie year. 19. The Arizona Cardinals cut tight end Ricky Seals-Jones on Saturday following two seasons in the desert. 20. Rumor is that Shady McCoy is heading out to the Chiefs were he'll bring his dead legs to a team that lives on speed. This should work out pretty well. |
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