Fingers crossed. Never thought I'd live to see the day that Snyder would be shown the door.
Jeff Bezos didn't place a bid on the Commanders. Scuttlebutt is he's waiting to buy a team with a good stadium and without a tarnished reputation, possibly the Seahawks.
It may be a Pyrrhic victory, yes, but a victory nonetheless.
Yep. The new ownership can start by basically doing the opposite of what Snyder has done since he bought the team. Let the GM and coaches do their jobs without meddling interference.
It became clear to anyone paying attention to Snyder’s antics that he didn’t know fuck-all about football. His doubling and tripling down on fielding flash-in-the-pan RGIII over Shanahan’s choice of Kirk Cousins (arguably a better QB at the time) was the last straw for most fans. He then continued the petty bullshit after RGIII had long-since flamed out and refused to sign Cousins on as a full-time franchise quarterback. Such tugs of war are bad for team morale and bad for publicity.
He also apparently hid the severity of an old college injury from 2009 (torn ACL) from everyone that, had Shanahan or anyone known about it, would likely have handled things differently. This was discovered shortly after he blew out his knee on one fateful playoff game against Seattle that many of us in Washington at the time remember seeing. I remember every morning sports show was talking about it during Monday commute. You could hear the collective gasp in the city when it happened. This article gives a nice breakdown of his injury history.
I think maybe they knew about it but it was heavily downplayed. I do recall there being some surprise on the part of a number of team staffers when they realized that Griffin’s injuries were far more severe than originally thought. The fact that he assured everyone that he was good to play so soon after the corrective surgery (and exacerbated by Andrews’ flowery post-op assessment) gives credibility to the notion that Griffin may have simply been in denial over the depth of his injuries.
So, this sounds more to me like an unfortunate set of circumstances and miscommunications that led to an even more unfortunate result."Coach Shanahan didn't lie about it, and I didn't lie," Andrews said. "I didn't get to examine (Griffin's knee) because he came out for one play, didn't let us look at him and on the next play, he ran through all the players and back out onto the field. Coach Shanahan looks at me like, 'Is he OK?' and I give him the 'Hi' sign as in, 'He's running around, so I guess he's OK.' But I didn't get to check him out until after the game. It was just a communication problem. Heat of battle. I didn't get to tell him I didn't get to examine the knee. Mike Shanahan would never have put him out there at risk just to win a game."
When Washington Redskins rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III injured his knee on a gruesome collision in the fourth quarter of a 31-28 victory against the Baltimore Ravens on Dec. 9, he limped off the field for one play, then hobbled back into the huddle as fans and teammates held their breath.
Griffin, clearly injured and in pain, remained in the game for four plays before removing himself.
The following day, when the team revealed Griffin had suffered a sprained lateral collateral ligament, coach Mike Shanahan was asked why he had risked the health of his franchise quarterback by putting him back into the game.
Shanahan said he let Griffin return with the blessing of James Andrews, the renowned orthopedic surgeon, who was on the sideline.
Andrews, however, told USA TODAY Sports on Saturday that he never cleared Griffin to go back into the game, because he never even examined him.
...
Yet when asked by news reporters, Shanahan described a conversation with Andrews this way:
"He's on the sidelines with Dr. Andrews. He had a chance to look at him and he said he could go back in," Shanahan said Dec. 10. "(I said) 'Hey, Dr. Andrews, can Robert go back in?'
'Yeah, he can go back in.'
'Robert, go back in.'
"That was it," Shanahan said.
Only that's not the way it happened, Andrews said. What's more, Andrews remains worried about Griffin's health as the Redskins play the Seattle Seahawks in an NFC wild-card game at FedEx Field today.
The Philadelphia Eagles and quarterback Jalen Hurts have reached agreement on a five-year, $255 million extension, including $179.304 million guaranteed, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Monday.
Hurts' deal is the biggest contract in terms of average annual value in NFL history. Deshaun Watson's $230 million contract signed last year with the Cleveland Browns, which is fully guaranteed, still is biggest in terms of guaranteed money.
Hurts' extension includes a no-trade clause -- a first in Eagles history, a source told Schefter.
It pays to have a legitimate agent.
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