#1 Draft Choices of Crash Dummies League
Defenders on the Defensive: "This Ain't No Cupcake League"
The NFL says its goal is to protect players (except when it's making
money from photos of them hurting one another), but there are plenty of
players who don't want the protection. Following news that the NFL will
crack down on players who make dangerous hits with fines and
suspensions, Washington Redskin Phillip Daniels lambasted the league for
what he considers an over-reaction to a series of hard hits Sunday. He
started the conversation with a barrage of tweets: "There has been a
warning sticker on the back of every helmet since pee wee league. When u
put that helmet on you know you will hit or be hit. We still choose to
play." In a radio interview later, Daniels expanded on his views: "When
I hear guys getting fined that much money for a game in which we're
taught to be physical and hit people, I think it's ridiculous," he said.
"When this game started, from way back, your dream is to go out there
and hit somebody and bring some excitement to the game. You're talking
about taking that away. Guys are gonna get hurt. This is football. This
ain't no cupcake league. You're gonna go out and play football, you're
gonna get hit. Offensive players know they're gonna get hit, and
defensive players go out to hit. Nothing's changed."
From Wash Post
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Hey, in the off-season, football players can volunteer as crash-test
dummies, and actually do something that benefits society.
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Guns Don't Kill People -- Fundamentalist Religion Kills People!
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