PonyExpress
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2006
- Messages
- 4,659
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- 78
Finding another Patriot willing to publicly blame BB for his injuries. Now Seymour denounces BB for lining him up at fullback. I believe this article was long in the making. Figures "Man-hands" would publish it the day before a playoff game. She was waiting for the perfect moment to ambush the man she most hates in NE sports.
Is this "Personal trainer" even qualified to rehab a player from injury? Maybe Seymour's "private rehab", organized by his mouthpiece, damaged the knee again after surgery and the rest of the story is just bull$hi# to cover his tracks.
This offseason, while interviewed by Pete Prisco at DisneyWorld, Seymour said "I have my own priorities, like being at home in SC" instead of going through offseason workouts to rehab his surgically repaired knee with the team. We now learn the surgery appears to have been an arthroscopy to clear out some cartilage, a common procedure from which most players recover in a month. But Seymour pursued his own rehab with his buddy, reinjured it, and showed up to camp out of shape. Did he even inform the Patriots of his problems this spring, when he was "rehabbing" in South Carolina instead of Gillette, like other injured players, or did he surprise them by showing up hobbled?
Seymour's getting paid 10 million dollars a season to perform. If he can't, then he should get off the field and let Jarvis Green play and stop making excuses to the press. He did the same thing last year, with another puff piece from his close friend Ron Borges explaining his elbow injury to the public, against team policy, and how Seymour still was better than Warren.
A finger pointing, excuse making article is not what the team needs from a team leader just prior to the most important playoff in its history. It is another illustration that Seymour is not a team player IMO. His contract extension (which coincides with his subpar play) to this point has been a big blunder. If he contributes meaningfully to a Pats SB this season, then it was well worth it. Otherwise...
"I'm sure Richard wouldn't say this, and the Patriots would probably rather not hear it, but those goal line situations they put him in on offense were what started all this.
"When Richard was the lead blocker, he had Corey Dillon literally plowing into the back of his knee on five or six occasions. It might have been effective, but it caused problems with Richard's knee.
"Richard is the biggest, fastest, most agile defender in the league. He doesn't need to be running the football or being the lead blocker for a running back."
Is this "Personal trainer" even qualified to rehab a player from injury? Maybe Seymour's "private rehab", organized by his mouthpiece, damaged the knee again after surgery and the rest of the story is just bull$hi# to cover his tracks.
This offseason, while interviewed by Pete Prisco at DisneyWorld, Seymour said "I have my own priorities, like being at home in SC" instead of going through offseason workouts to rehab his surgically repaired knee with the team. We now learn the surgery appears to have been an arthroscopy to clear out some cartilage, a common procedure from which most players recover in a month. But Seymour pursued his own rehab with his buddy, reinjured it, and showed up to camp out of shape. Did he even inform the Patriots of his problems this spring, when he was "rehabbing" in South Carolina instead of Gillette, like other injured players, or did he surprise them by showing up hobbled?
Seymour's getting paid 10 million dollars a season to perform. If he can't, then he should get off the field and let Jarvis Green play and stop making excuses to the press. He did the same thing last year, with another puff piece from his close friend Ron Borges explaining his elbow injury to the public, against team policy, and how Seymour still was better than Warren.
A finger pointing, excuse making article is not what the team needs from a team leader just prior to the most important playoff in its history. It is another illustration that Seymour is not a team player IMO. His contract extension (which coincides with his subpar play) to this point has been a big blunder. If he contributes meaningfully to a Pats SB this season, then it was well worth it. Otherwise...
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