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I can see a meme were gase eyes are bugging out at the appearance of a ghost. or the pats defenceHe’s going to be a meme forever over it
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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.I can see a meme were gase eyes are bugging out at the appearance of a ghost. or the pats defenceHe’s going to be a meme forever over it
Yeah, it's what a broadcast analyst or commentator would say.Yeah it's a really weird thing to say out loud to anyone.
You can't fix a problem if you don't identify it. To me that sounded like a guy who was calling himself out not an admission of fear.
It's a terrible look and you'd think the NFL would want to promote their potential stars not undermine them.
I mean, it's amazing and I loved that it happened, don't get me wrong. But it's kinda crazy that NFL Films let it happen.
Language and words matter. Pedro Martinez could have said, “The Yankees have been able to hit against me, I need to do a better job working their hitters.” Instead he said, “The Yankees are my daddy.” Means the same thing, right? But one is boring corporate speak, another is language I still remember 15 years later.How is that different than a QB being miked up where he says to the OC, "They disguised that well; I totally didn't see that."?
I mean, he WAS seeing ghosts. He was a totally fooled on coverages and such. He was being honest. Yeah it looks bad but why? We all know he's a very young and inexperienced QB facing an historically good defense. The issue is only if he doesn't learn from this moving forward. But the comment itself? Who cares?
Yeah, I don't know. It was television gold. It gave insight into the feelings of a pivotal player in the middle of an historic performance. Hard to hold that one back. I'm sure it was a split-second decision from a television producer. They are probably trained to edit out the naughty bits, but not trained to consider the long-term impact of morale to young players.You can't fix a problem if you don't identify it. To me that sounded like a guy who was calling himself out not an admission of fear.
It's a terrible look and you'd think the NFL would want to promote their potential stars not undermine them.
I mean, it's amazing and I loved that it happened, don't get me wrong. But it's kinda crazy that NFL Films let it happen.
Language and words matter. Pedro Martinez could have said, “The Yankees have been able to hit against me, I need to do a better job working their hitters.” Instead he said, “The Yankees are my daddy.” Means the same thing, right? But one is boring corporate speak, another is language I still remember 15 years later.
Bill Parcells could have said, “Terry is making progress, but he needs to learn to tough things out if he wants to make it in this league.” But he didn’t; he said, “She’s making progress.” Same thing, right?
Being told you’re seeing ghosts is considered one of the biggest insults for a QBs. For a QB to just say that about himself? It’s meme-worthy. NFL Films and ESPN should have known better than to air that, but if I were a Jets player on the sideline and heard him say that, I wouldn’t have had any confidence in my QB thereafter.
He can play much better than last night.I hope this lights a fire under Darnold and he goes on to destroy the bills and win a few games to drop out of the top 10 pick.
I want both agree and disagree on this. Agree someone should lose their job, but disagree it should be an NFL films employee. Should be a Jets employee. Best candidate would be Gase.Agree. I think someone will lose their job over this. There is a common understanding that a lot of what is said on the sideline is supposed to be off limits.
What NFL films did here is risk future participation by players in the mic-up segments. It was fun though.
He’s going to forget that he’s miked up in the heat of action. And this is the result. Priceless. But exact what “miked up” is all about.He knew he was miked up. He should assume everything he says besides plays and cuss words are going to be aired.
Lots of good comments above. Glad I started the thread. Lots of good comments above. Thanks.
I have three thoughts:
1) Yeah, the NFL shouldn't have allowed those words of a bewildered, but still very young, guy go out so millions could hear them.
2) That said, a team leader doesn't talk like that on the sidelines of any sport.
3) Maybe more people will understand why we Patriots fans view ESPN as devoid of character, judgment and decency.