That's more like a typo, IMO. It's an inevitable part of the new world of real-time journalism -- in the past, Bedard (or an editor or proofreader) would have had a chance to look the piece over another time before publishing and catch the slip.
Personally, I liked reading his close look at a pivotal play. It was a rare football article with actual football content.
That's a typo. This is poor sentence construction:
Edelman ran hard at safety Dion Bailey, who was in the game because starter Calvin Pryor (ankle) was out and was claimed off waivers from the Seahawks less than a month ago.
That's more like a typo, IMO. It's an inevitable part of the new world of real-time journalism -- in the past, Bedard (or an editor or proofreader) would have had a chance to look the piece over another time before publishing and catch the slip.
Personally, I liked reading his close look at a pivotal play. It was a rare football article with actual football content.