catent
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2013
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I think Hamlin's cardiac arrest has to rank pretty high on the list of traumatic events to happen on a football field ... certainly in recent memory. Anyone trying to trivialize the weight of what occurred is way off the mark IMO.It was sixteen minutes. This was not as bad as the Stingley incident. Ondrej Pavelec, Jordan Sigalet, Garrett Klotz - please don't pretend it's different because it's not the same sport. All of the concern and attention is great. Hard to believe Alexei Cherepanov would not be alive today if his treatment wasn't delayed if the ambulance hadn't left and had to be called back.
This was no more traumatic than any of the more than fifty incidents I've seen in football. The Bills just decided to be babies. I'm not disagreeing with your statement that 'times have changed'. I'm simply stating that it's for the worse.
I do agree that the NFL's handling of the situation, the neutral site resolution, and the way the Bills/NFL (and Hamlin himself) monetized and pivoted this event into a marketing/publicity opportunity, feels really slimy and uncomfortable.
Hamlin, for instance, began selling t-shirts reading "We All Won" less than a week after he collapsed. Granted, the proceeds are said to go to first-responders ... but would a donation not have been a much more appropriate way to achieve that, in lieu of a self-promoting t-shirt sale?












