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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge the other, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.
I never understood how the religions prohibition against judging works. What about actual judges, it's in their job title.You know, for an evangelical Christian, Saint Dungy sure passes judgement on a lot of people. Guess he forgot to read Romans chp 2 verse 1
Dillon actually had multiple arrests dating back to his youth, and a reputation as one of the league's worst locker room malcontents. There were also some episodes of bad behavior toward his home town fans, like throwing his uniform into the stands after a game.
One thing I have never really quite understood is why so many people keep repeating that Corey Dillon had a bad attitude and was a troublemaker, like Dungy implies in the accompanying article. Perhaps it's just one of those things that gets repeated so often that it eventually became accepted as fact.
That's not to say Dillon was a choir boy, because he was not. He was arrested in 2000 on a domestic battery charge. I'm not condoning that; far from it. But stop and think of how many NFL players have been arrested over the years. Does every one of them have the same label pinned on them that Dillon did? Hardly.
The Cincinnati Bengals are one of the NFL's worst run franchises, and because Dillon wanted to win and for the team to improve, somehow that got twisted around as him having a me-first attitude and not being a team player.
Perhaps people look at Moss and say he had a bad attitude before coming to Foxboro, and then when they want to make a point about Belichick having a history of doing this they feel compelled to find a second example - and Dillon, for right or wrong, becomes Exhibit B.
Which would be fine, except that the evidence doesn't back up the accusation.
One thing I have never really quite understood is why so many people keep repeating that Corey Dillon had a bad attitude and was a troublemaker, like Dungy implies in the accompanying article. Perhaps it's just one of those things that gets repeated so often that it eventually became accepted as fact.
I never understood how the religions prohibition against judging works. What about actual judges, it's in their job title.
You know, for an evangelical Christian, Saint Dungy sure passes judgement on a lot of people. Guess he forgot to read Romans chp 2 verse 1
Tony Dungy wouldn’t touch Albert Haynesworth | ProFootballTalk
Saint Tony knows he could only thrive in a low adversity environment.
The Cincinnati Bengals are one of the NFL's worst run franchises, and because Dillon wanted to win and for the team to improve, somehow that got twisted around as him having a me-first attitude and not being a team player.
Tony Dungy wouldn’t touch Albert Haynesworth | ProFootballTalk
Saint Tony knows he could only thrive in a low adversity environment.
Probably because he picks and chooses reclamation products rather than casting a loving eye across all of those who have offended or are in need of guidance.I'm curious as to why Dungy generates so much dislike on this board. As a coach, he's won in two different cities. Outside of football, he does a lot of civic work in the community and in prisons. He clearly feels very strongly about trying to mentor young people. President Bush appointed him to his Council on Service and Civic Participation.
I'm curious as to why Dungy generates so much dislike on this board. As a coach, he's won in two different cities. Outside of football, he does a lot of civic work in the community and in prisons. He clearly feels very strongly about trying to mentor young people. President Bush appointed him to his Council on Service and Civic Participation.