Garrett just got his second roughing the passer penalty and the Jets QB (who is the back up because Darnold has mono) looks like he broke his ankle on the play
Mr.Infectious said:
Nope. Seimain limped off.
It's Siemian.Champ Bailey said:Mr.Infectious said:
Nope. Seimain limped off.
That's the second most unfortunate thing to ever happen to him. The first being having to go through HS with the last name Sieman.
The NFL is cracking down on defenders who see the ball released (i.e. free path to the QB) and still hit/push/breathe on them after the ball has been released.bert harbinson said:
Myles is getting hosed by the wussification of NFL football regarding QB protection. Siemian's injury was unfortunate in that his leg was caught underneath him, but the hits were not dirty and arguably, not even late. I guess you're supposed to lay the QB down gently and tuck him in for a legal sack.
Garrett heard you.Frok said:
2 roughing penalties?
Maybe he should try hitting the QB while he still has the ball
ashley said:
After tonight I really do believe Clemson and Alabama could beat the Jets.
Every year there's always some stupid ass who says this crap.ashley said:
After tonight I really do believe Clemson and Alabama could beat the Jets.
Cynic said:ashley said:
After tonight I really do believe Clemson and Alabama could beat the Jets.
You fail the test of basic sports IQ
ashley said:
After tonight I really do believe Clemson and Alabama could beat the Jets.
Almost offsets all his personal fouls this year.SoccerAg1128 said:
5 sacks through 6+ quarters...is that good?
QBUToptierag2018 said:
Mike Leach the mad pirate has back to back starting NFL QB's now?? Gardner Minshew and now Falk. Air raid is back baby
ashley said:
After tonight I really do believe Clemson and Alabama could beat the Jets.
Quote:
When we imagine what a football game between college all-stars and NFL pros might look like today, it's a kid-friendly clash. The collegians always come from the most stacked college teams in historythe 1996 Huskers, the 2004 Trojans, the SEC's flavor of the monthand they're always facing an NFL laggard. It's a pleasant enough fantasy, but it overlooks the harshness of what actually happened for a sizable chunk of the 20th century, when a hodgepodge of talented college standouts were routinely humiliated by some of the NFL's all-time greatest teams.