NFL Discussion Thread: Pats win SB XLIX. Offseason begins

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She could have posted it on his IG. Didn't that happen to the TE from Tennessee? His girl posted all his dirty laundry on his account. That was classic :smokin :rollin
That's what I mean by hacked, like when someone used to write a status from someone else's account they were "hacked".
 
the thing is he might have hit her but those pics seemed to be saved and now she is using them because he went pro and broke it off

both are wrong in this situation the way I am seeing it as of now, she stuck around for that money I assume and now it's gone so beating her is NOW a problem
 
the thing is he might have hit her but those pics seemed to be saved and now she is using them because he went pro and broke it off

both are wrong in this situation the way I am seeing it as of now, she stuck around for that money I assume and now it's gone so beating her is NOW a problem
i'm sure it's always a problem. no point in belittling it like that - gold digger so getting beat isn't a big deal - like all things in life, it is more complicated than what should be casually discussed. and look if it was really just a completely random hacker that decided to pull this prank on an unassuming dude - believe whatever you want to believe. i'm sure that's a possibility too.
 
Ref Bill Leavy moving to supervisory role in officiating department

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Referee Bill Leavy, maybe best remembered for his admission of making major mistakes at a critical juncture of Super Bowl XL, will have a new role in 2015 as a supervisor within the league's officiating department. He'll be replaced as a referee by Bill Hussey, a former line judge, the NFL announced Friday.

Bill Leavy will no longer serve as an on-field referee as he is moving to a supervisory role in the NFL's officiating department.

Hussey is one of four new referees named in the past two yearsamid a significant shake-up  of NFL officials. In total, the NFL has added 23 new officials over that time period and subtracted 20 via retirement, promotion or non-renewal, based on an unofficial accounting. In 2015, for the first time, the league will have three "swing" officials to help fill in for scheduling conflicts or performance issues.

NFL officials rarely draw attention for good calls, and Leavy is perhaps best known for admitting he "kicked" two decisions  in the fourth quarter of Super Bowl XL, a 21-10 Pittsburgh Steelers  victory over theSeattle Seahawks. Leavy didn't specify the calls, but speculation has centered around a holding call on Seahawks offensive lineman Sean Locklear and later a low block penalty on Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck.

The Seahawks trailed by four points at the time and would have had the ball at the Steelers' 1-yard line following a completed pass, but the call against Locklear nullified the gain. Hasselbeck would throw an interception on the next play.

Levy waited four years after that Super Bowl to acknowledge his impact on the game.

"It was a tough thing for me. I kicked two calls in the fourth quarter and I impacted the game and as an official, you never want to do that," he was quoted as saying in 2010. "It left me with a lot of sleepless nights. I think about it constantly. I'll go to my grave wishing that I'd been better.

"I know that I did my best at that time, but it wasn't good enough."

In 2013, the NFL downgraded Leavy  for mistakes his crew made in an early September game between the Green Bay Packers  and San Francisco 49ers.

Also notable among Friday's announcement is that Sarah Thomas, the first permanent female official  in league history, will be a line judge on referee Pete Morelli's crew.
@100027

@dmxfury

What do you think of this new development?

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So, if it turns out these pics are really 3 years old, then what?
 
Have the police been involved at this point now that the post was made? Or is this just being handled via social media?
 
Once helped by Al Davis, Jim Caldwell pays it forward

Posted by Michael David Smith on June 5, 2015, 2:33 PM EDT

In 1981, Jim Caldwell was a 26-year-old assistant coach on a Northwestern team in the midst of a Big Ten record losing streak. Eager to gather knowledge that would help his team and boost his career, he began looking for a pro team that would let him observe a practice.

When he reached out to the Oakland Raiders, owner Al Davis said he’d let Caldwell do a lot more than just watch a practice.

“Some pro teams wouldn’t let you in. One team that I had heard would let me in was the Oakland Raiders,” Caldwell said this week. “Coach Davis let me come in, and he spent three days with me. He walked around with me personally. He took time with me, walked me around at practice. He never left my side at practice. We’d walk over there with drill work, go through it, and at night time he’d come back in at night and he and I would watch film from 10 o’clock at night until the wee hours of the morning. Three days in a row, and this was a guy who was running the whole operation.”

Caldwell has never forgotten the kindness Davis showed him. So now that Caldwell is the Lions’ head coach, the team has an open-door policy to high school and college coaches. At Organized Team Activities this week, several coaches came to watch and learn from the Lions.

“Obviously there are no pro coaches here, but colleges, high schools — I think it’s incumbent upon us to give these guys an opportunity to come in and kind of see how we do it, what we do,” Caldwell said “So, from that experience I really believe in allowing guys to come in and see what we do. I think that’s the way it should be. It helped me out tremendously in my career.”

Davis died in 2011, but he’s left a lasting legacy in the NFL. That legacy now extends to young coaches who are benefitting from Caldwell’s adoption of Davis’s open-door policy.


Link: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...ped-by-al-davis-jim-caldwell-pays-it-forward/
 
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