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Stallworth v Vick – This Makes No Sense!

Donte Stallworth Sentence v Michael Vick SentenceDoes this country’s criminal justice system make any sense at all? I think not. Let’s compare the cases of the two NFL stars who have recently traveled through the criminal justice process.

First, the well documented case of Donte Stallworth. If any of you were in a third world country in the last four months, I will recap for you. Donte Stallworth was driving drunk and killed a pedestrian in Miami on March 14th of this year.

His Sentence – 30 Days in jail, 2 years on house arrest, which will allow him to play football, and he settled with the 59 year old victim’s family for an undisclosed dollar amount.

Onto Michael Vick. Vick was charged with felonies and later reached a plea agreement in December of 2007 for funding the operations of a dog fighting ring for a period of many years.

His Sentence – 23 months in Federal Prison, followed by a period of house arrest. During this time, Vick lost 16 million dollars in assets in his bankruptcy case.

Now the debate begins.

How in the hell can you kill a person, a grandfather, a father, a husband, a brother, an uncle, a freaking person, and only serve 30 days in jail. But for fighting dogs, which some still consider a sport, be jailed for 2 years? Does this make any sense at all?

I know, I know, I can hear all of the dog lovers of the world yelling, “My dog is a member of my family.” Great, so is mine. But I will not trade my wife’s, children’s, or parents’ life to save my dog, would you? These crimes do not compare on any level, and yes, Stallworth I am sure paid a ton of money; but Vick lost everything as well as serving a prison term 23 times longer than Stallworth’s.

Vick’s actions were more common than you think, and most likely experienced by him in childhood which continued into his young adult life. I am not making excuses for Vick, but clearly an example was made out of Vick for his actions.

Look at the losses in these cases. Yes, a dog lost their life, but Vick did not steal your dog and kill it. Stallworth took a life from a family which will never come back. Every time I dwell on this topic, it sickens me and disgusts me to know that if a high profile athlete drives while intoxicated and kills my family member, the criminal justice system will not hold them accountable at all.

My sympathies go out to the family and friends of the victim.

**********

Kurt Fraschetti

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* – Donte Stallworth photo credit: ROBERT E. KLEIN/FOR THE GLOBE

Report: Arrest Warrant Filed, Donte Stallworth Facing DUI Manslaughter Charges

Donte Stallworth Charged with DUI Manslaughter - Warrant IssuedThe sad story of the fatal car accident involving Donte Stallworth that killed 59-year old Mario Reyes has resulted in an arrest warrant being filed charging Stallworth with DUI manslaughter.

Based on AP and ESPN.com reports on Stallworth facing DUI manslaughter charges:

Two people told the AP that an arrest warrant charging the 28-year-old Stallworth with DUI manslaughter will be filed Wednesday in the March 14 accident that killed 59-year-old Mario Reyes. The people requested anonymity because the charges haven’t been announced.

The charge carries a possible 15-year prison sentence. Stallworth’s blood-alcohol level after the crash was .12, well above Florida’s legal limit of .08, according to results of a blood test. Stallworth will also be charged with DUI, according to the people informed about the case.

Stallworth, who is expected to surrender in court Thursday, released a statement after the incident saying, “My family and I are grief-stricken over the tragic accident which occurred Saturday on Miami Beach where Mario Reyes sadly lost his life.”

He returned to Cleveland and has been working out with the team, which Miami Beach police were aware of, according to Stallworth’s attorney, Chris Lyons

According to a report at ProFootballTalk.com, charges will not be formally entered against Stallworth for up to a month. PFT also reminds us that fellow former Tennessee Volunteer Leonard Little received only 90 days in prison following his conviction for driving drunk and killing Susan Gutweiler in 1998. Little was also arrested again a few years later for drunk driving.

For more background on the story, follow the links to MSF’s coverage and discussion of the Donte Stallworth accident:

Without question, this is a disappointing day for fans of Donte Stallworth, the Cleveland Browns, and the Tennessee Volunteers. The Browns were counting on Stalloworth to begin providing value this season for the seven-year, $35 million contract he signed last offseason. Stallworth was essentially a non-factor last year because of injuries and ineffectiveness.

The true disappointment, however, is the fact that a man with a family needlessly lost his life, and we now have confirmation that Donte Stallworth was impaired at the time of the accident. Stallworth now becomes the third Tennessee player from the successful late 90s era to be convicted of drunk/reckless driving, joining the aforementioned Little and Dwayne Goodrich, who is currently serving aDonte Stallworth DUI Manslaughter Charges - Warrant Issued multiyear prison sentence.

We have grown used to NFL players being involved in stories like this one, and it is a trend that needs to stop. As big a fan as I have always been of Donte’s, there is absolutely nothing to be said in his defense. You can say that he was unlucky, and that it could happen to lots of people on lots of nights/mornings, but any amount of “unluck” for Stallworth pales in comparison to that experienced by Mario Reyes and his family.

Whether Donte flashed his lights at Reyes or not, and whether Reyes was in a crosswalk or not, Stallworth obviously did not have the reaction time nor was he driving with the caution necessary to reduce his threat to pedestrians and other cars.

This is just a sad, sad story on so many levels. I wish there was something I could say to defend a player that I’ve always liked, but obviously there is not. And if the charges prove true once the justice system has run its course, Donte Stallworth should face the same penalty that any “normal”, non-celebrity citizen would face. And hopefully, maybe, that will send a message to NFL players and people at large: there are grave consequences for getting behind the wheel impaired. So don’t do it.

Time to get back to work.

Report: Donte Stallworth Over Legal Limit, DUI Manslaughter Charges Possible

Taking a quick break from work and NCAA Tourney monitoring for an update on the latest details in the Donte Stallworth traffic accident from this past weekend that ultimately led to the death of one Donte Stallworth - DUI Manslaughter charges possibleman.

ProFootballTalk is reporting, via CBS4.com in Miami Beach, that Donte Stallworth was in fact over the legal BAC limit (0.08 in Florida) when he hit and killed 59-year old Mario Reyes with his Bentley last weekend. It should be noted that the CBS4.com report states that neither Donte Stallworth’s attorney, nor the Miami Beach Police, have said that they can confirm the report, which was broadcast at noon on a South Florida television station (WVSN in Miami). The television report cited “unnamed sources close to the investigation”.

If true, the report that Donte Stallworth was over the legal limit would jive with other reports that have surfaced in the aftermath of the accident that DUI charges would eventually come against Stallworth.

According to PFT’s latest report on the potential DUI manslaughter charges against Donte Stallowrth, the maximum sentence for such charges in the state of Florida is 15 years. Mike Florio, a lawyer, also states on PFT that Stallworth could face “enormous civil liability” especially in light of the fact that he earned a $4.875 million roster bonus the day before the accident took place.

This week, Donte Stallworth issued a statement though the Cleveland Browns saying that he is “grief stricken” over the accident and that his “thoughts and prayers are with the Reyes family during this incredibly difficult time.” Certainly, this incident is the latest black eye for both the University of Tennessee (Stallworth’s alma mater) and the NFL.

More updates on this story will surely be forthcoming soon.

Fatal Traffic Incident Involving Donte Stallworth the Latest Black Eye for Tennessee, NFL

Last month after Terry Glenn was arrested, I posted about the litany of Ohio State WRs who had been in trouble with the law. Not surprisingly, that post received comments calling me an “idiot” and essentially saying that similar lists could probably be compiled for any major college football program in America.

Unfortunately, the post I am writing this afternoon will prove those commenters right — and the subject isDonte Stallworth Fatal Accident - former Tennessee WR my favorite college football team: the Tennessee Volunteers.

As you surely know by now, former Volunteer WR Donte Stallworth was detained yesterday after the Bentley that he was driving hit a man who died soon thereafter. No charges have been field as of yet, but reports last night cited sources close to the situation that Stallworth had been drinking prior to the accident and would ultimately face charges, pending the official results of toxicology tests.

For fans of the Tennessee Volunteers and the NFL, this story feels like deja vu all over again.

Shockingly, and sadly, if the Tennessee football teams from the late 90s and early 00s held a reunion and gave out a Black Eye Award for Vol players in the NFL shining a negative light on their alma mater, Donte Stallworth’s incident yesterday would not even be among the top two nominees.

Leonard Little

The most infamous incident involving an ex-Vol is Leonard Little. Following a party in 1998, Leonard Little crashed into and killeLeonard Little - two DUI arrests - former Tennessee LBd Susan Gutweiler in St. Louis, MO. Little’s BAC measured .19 after the accident, more than double the legal limit of 0.08. Little pled guilty to involuntary manslaughter, received 98 days in jail, four years probation, and 1000 hours of community service. He was also suspended for 8 games of the 1999 season.

Since the 1998 accident, Little has signed contracts totaling 8 years and $37 million dollars.

Then, in a disturbing coda to the 1998 story, Little was arrested for drunk driving again, plus speeding, in 2004. Because of his prior arrest this was a felony case, but Little was acquitted of driving while intoxicated and convicted of only the misdemeanor speeding charge.

Dwayne Goodrich

You might think that other former Volunteers would have learned a lesson from the horrific story of Leonard Little. Unfortunately, the empirical evidence seems to suggest that they learned no lesson at all. Donte Stallworth’s accident yesterday is a perfect example, as is the story of former Volunteer and Dallas Cowboy Dwayne Goodrich.

Goodrich was an outstanding cornerback on the Volunteers’ 1998 National Championship team. He was tagged to cover superb Florida State WR Peter Warrick in the Fiesta Bowl that year, a game in which the Vols were huge underdogs. Goodrich stifled Warrick, had an interception return for a touchdown, and was named Defensive MVP of the game. Later that year he was drafted in the 2nd round of the NFL Draft by the Cowboys.

In 2003, however, Goodrich’s life, his NFL career, and the lives of three good samaritans came crashing down in a fog of alcohol, speed, and fiery cars.Dwayne Goodrich in jail - former Tennessee Volunteers and Dallas Cowboys CB

After a night that Dwayne Goodrich, according to the Dallas Observer, has admitted included topless bars and alcohol (but not intoxication, according to Goodrich), he drove his BMW through the scene of a car accident in which pedestrians were attempting to free a man who was unconscious from a car that was on fire. Goodrich struck three of the pedestrians, killing two of them. Police reportedly believed that Goodrich was going 110 MPH at the time of the accident.

Dwyane Goodrich was arrested on charges of vehicular manslaughter and eventually convicted on two counts of criminally negligent homicide. In January of 2006, the families of the victims were successful in getting 5 years added to Goodrich’s original 7 1/2 year prison sentence. He remains in prison today.

That makes three separate traffic incidents, all involving alcohol in varying degrees, all involving former Tennessee stars and first-day NFL draft picks, and all tragically resulting in the deaths of innocent people.

I just sat here for five minutes trying to figure out what to say next, and came up with nothing. What can you say?

In the case of Donte Stallworth, he has seen a high profile alum (Little) and a former teammate (Goodrich) kill people because they were driving under the influence, or in Goodrich’s case, at a minimum driving out of control. He has also seen Little essentially get lucky making the same mistake again, being arrested for drunk driving but thankfully not injuring anyone.

I realize there there is a certain element of “bad luck” involved in tragedies such as these. But as Mike Florio said earlier today over at PFT regarding the three individual stories of former UT players killing people with their cars,”It’s most likely a coincidence. But the gravity of the consequences tells us that it would make plenty of sense for someone in Knoxville to explore the possible existence of a something other than randomness.”

Moreover, these three incidents are far from the only brushes with the law for former Tennessee stars from the late 90s and early 00s. A brief, and probably not comprehensive, rundown of the embarrassing litany of former UT player trouble:

Albert Haynesworth

Sticking with the theme of traffic trouble, new Washington Redskin Albert Haynesworth was recently indicted on two misdeAlbert Hayneworth Steps on Andre Gurodemeanor traffic charges stemming for a car accident in December 2008. This came on the heels of traffic charges in 2006 that were dismissed by a Putnam County, TN judge on the grounds that the offenses occurred outside of their jurisdiction.

Haynesworth also famously stepped on the face of Andre Gurode during a game in 2006. This is only the most highly publicized anger management issue involving Haynesworth.

He reportedly once kicked former teammate Justin Hartwig in the chest during training camp with the Tennessee Titans, and had a history of temper issues while at the University of Tennessee. One such story involved Haynesworth fighting with teammate Will Ofenheusle, leaving practice, and then returning with a long pole looking for Ofenheusle. Phil Fulmer stopped Haynesworth before he could use the pole and he was suspended for half a game.

Shaun Ellis

Shaun Ellis arrested in December 2008 for marijuana possession, driving without insurance and speeding. While at Tennessee, Ellis was charged with felony assault of a woman in April 1999 after allegedly striking a woman in the head with a glass after she threw a drink in his face at a party. Ellis agreed to pay the woman’s medical bills, undergo an assessment to see if he needs drug or alcohol treatment, and maintain a 2.5 GPA.

Former Tennessee RB Travis Henry has fathered nine kids with 9 different womenTravis Henry

A few months after being released by the Denver Broncos because “his commitment was lacking,” Travis Henry was arrested in October of 2008 on suspicion of knowingly and intentionally conspiring to distribute and posses with intent to distribute cocaine. He was eventually placed on house arrest.

Henry famously, and disturbingly, has also fathered nine children by nine different women and is currently embroiled in a series of lawsuits for back child support payments. On March 14th, Henry was jailed for falling $16,600 behind on support for one of his kids. He currently owes $170,000/year in child support payments.

Jamal Lewis

Jamal Lewis was charged with conspiring to possess with the intent to distribute five kilograms of cocaine and using a cell phone in the commission of the first count. In February of 2005, Lewis began a 4-month prison term for trying to set up the drug deal. He was also suspended 4 games in the 2004 for a repeat violation of the NFL’s substance abuse policy. He served the suspension while on IR, missing 4 game checks.

Others

Cedrick Wilson was arrested for punching his ex-girlfriend in the face while at a restaurant. He was subsequently cut by the Steelers. Travis Stephens was arrested, according to the page that contains his mugshot at the Montgomery Country Sheriffs Office website, for “drugs – simple possession/casual exchange.” Deon Grant, according to WRAL.com report from January 2004, got into enough trouble that owner Jerry Richardson reportedly told him he was either going to get his “stuff together” or the Panthers would have to let him go because they were trying to clean up the franchise in the wake of the Rae Carruth scandal.

Each of the players listed in this post helped contribute to one of the most successful eras in the storied history of Tennessee football. From 1995 through the 1998 championship season, Tennessee went 45-5. Leonard Little graduated with Peyton Manning after the 1997 season, with the rest of the players listed above either contributing to the 1998 title or to the success of the subsequent seasons. In total, from 1995 through 2001, Tennessee went 73-14 and won 4 bowl games. And each season, because of their ridiculous talent level, Tennessee entered the year with legitimate hopes of SEC and National Titles.

Just look at the draft history of that era for Tennessee football:

  • 1996: 8 players drafted (2 first day picks)
  • 1997: 3 players drafted (2 first day picks)
  • 1998: 7 players drafted (3 first day picks, including Peyton Manning #1 overall and Little in 3rd round.)
  • 1999: 6 players drafted (3 first day picks)
  • 2000: 9 players drafted (8 first day picks, including Lewis and Ellis in 1st round, Goodrich and Grant in 2nd round)
  • 2001: 5 players drafted (2 first day picks, including Henry in 2nd round)
  • 2002: 10 players drafted (4 first day picks, including Stallworth and Haynesworth in 1st round)

While it is perhaps not on the same level of the University of Miami over the same time span, it is still an impressive display of talent compiled on a yearly basis by the Volunteers. Unfortunately, once these players went into the NFL, many succeeded on the football field but proved unable to stay clean off of it.

Donte Stallworth Detained for Potential DUI in Fatal Traffic AccidentFor me personally, the story of Donte Stallworth yesterday really hit home more than any of the others. Part of the reason is because he currently plays for the Cleveland Browns and the other part is that Donte has always been one of my favorite Volunteer players ever. He was so electric as a freshman in 1998 and throughout his career in Knoxville, and he brought the same excitement to the NFL when he was healthy.

But the incident that occurred yesterday was another crushing reminder that many of the Volunteer players I grew up watching and admiring were not worth much admiration in the first place. I am not one who looks to athletes for guidance in any way, or to be role models, but I also don’t want to see lists like the one above come from the team I root for. I was an Indiana basketball fan long before I was a Tennessee football fan, so character and off-court/off-field conduct has always meant something to me.

With so much ridiculousness swirling around the Tennessee program recently because of Lane Kiffin and his clownishness, the most recent off-field tragedy involving a former Volunteer may shift the focus to the story that is even more embarrassing: the continued run-ins with the law of former Volunteer football players. And unfortunately, these run-ins have been much more egregiously severe than the usual run-of-the-mill type stuff for NFL players like marijuana possession, getting into fights, or even gun possession.

The response to my aforementioned article about Ohio State WRs getting into trouble was that a similar list could be made for any program in the country. And I will grant that point as probably correct. But can you find any other school that can claim three alums who have killed innocent people?

It has not been easy to be a Tennessee fan over the last few years, almost exclusively because of the team’s putrid on-field performance. But after hearing about Donte Stallworth yesterday, then researching this post and reflecting on the program’s seeming inability to prepare players for life after college, my Volunteer pride has a reached an all-time low.

I know that you can’t blame Tennessee or Phil Fulmer exclusively for all of the problems that have been caused by Vols in the NFL. And I know that luck and tragic circumstances have a lot to do with the frightening volume of catastrophic accidents and other legal problems involving Vol alums. Still, the fact that I could research this post for a half hour and come up with the list above is a frightening and disturbing fact.

For all of those who remember the 1998 season, Tennessee very easily could have lost three games that year. The opener against Syracuse was saved for the Vols by a phantom pass interference call that kept the game-winning drive alive. If Fred Taylor hadn’t fumbled on the 1-yard line, or if Collins Cooper wasn’t a complete choke artist, Florida probably wins that epic battle. And Clint Stoerner’s gift fumble lives on in infamy. The result of all of these gifts of fate was Tennessee’s first national championship since 1967.

In the year’s since 1998, Tennessee is just 85-41 with 3 bowl victories, and that record plummets to 38-21 over the last four years. Terrible? No. But far, far below the standards that Tennessee fans had become accustomed too. Add in the four deaths caused by former Vol players, and the litany of other issues detailed in this post that have happened since 1998, and it makes me pause to seriously wonder if a deal with the devil had to be made to bring that 1998 title home.

It is as reasonable an explanation as any for why the University of Tennessee football program has officially become Outlaw U. There is, at worst, a terrible and systemic problem on good ‘ol Rocky Top; and at best, a harrowing series of tragic coincidences has taken place that has brought disgrace to a once proud football program.

After a day in which a wife lost a husband and a daughter lost a father, considering the implications of the Donte Stallowrth accident within the context of college football probably seems insensitive and unnecessary. But at what point should an “institution of higher learning” be held accountable when so many of its highly publicized and pampered football player student-athletes continue to prove that they don’t really seem to learn anything? (Or, to be more specific, don’t seem to learn anything that prevents them from being the preventable and proximate cause of the loss of innocent human life.)

It might seem ridiculous to ask, “what former Tennessee player will kill someone next?” But it might have also seemed ridiculous to ask that after the Dwayne Goodrich tragedy. Then Donte Stallworth’s accident happened, and another man lost his life.

And it probably seemed even more ridiculous to ask that after Leonard Little’s first accident. But the Goodrich tragedy, Stallworth’s accident, and a second DUI arrest for Little have all occurred since.

So maybe asking the question, and doing something proactive as an answer, might have saved lives — making the question itself not so ridiculous at all.

The NFL deserves as much, if not more, culpability than the University of Tennessee. These incidents did not occur on Tennessee’s watch, but rather when these players were in the NFL. I know that players get educated about off-field conduct, and driving after drinking specifically, but maybe just educating them is not enough. Aggressive and often reckless behavior on the field is what got these guys D1 scholarships and then to the NFL in the first place. Since the NFL and college football programs profit off of this on-field aggression, perhaps they should be more responsible for helping to curb its negative consequences off the field.

So I will ask the question: What former Tennessee player (or NFL player in general) will kill someone next? 100% success in prevention is obviously an unreasonable goal, but I sure hope the University of Tennessee and the NFL do something proactive to increase the odds as much as possible of the answer to that question being “no one.”

Donte Stallworth Could Face Charges in Fatal Traffic Accident in Miami Beach

Browns WR Donte Stallworth Involved in Fatal Traffic Accident

(Editor’s Note: No new updates as of Sunday night on the Donte Stallworth case in Miami.  After you read the post below, follow the link to our post from earlier today, in which we discuss the unfortunate litany of vehicular homicides and other legal problems involving former Tennessee players; all are black eyes for both the university and the NFL.)

Per multiple reports today, Browns WR Donte Stallworth was involved in a fatal traffic accident early this morning in Miami Beach and could face charges. Much thanks to Barry McBride at the Orange and Brown Report for the tip on the Stallworth accident.

According to a report in the Florida Sun-Sentinel, Donte Stallworth was driving his Bentley east on the McArthur Causeway (a road KVB and I know well) toward Miami Beach when he struck a 49-year old man crossing the roadway. The victim was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

More from the Sun-Sentinel on the fatal accident involving Donte Stallworth:

According to witnesses, the victim worked at a nearby shipping company as an overnight crane operator. The man had just finished his shift and was crossing the street to catch a bus when he was struck.

Charges are pending the results of the investigation and blood tests, said Sanchez. Stallworth was cooperating with authorities and has not been charged, he said.

Mike Florio at ProFootballTalk is also reporting that Stallworth is being tested for whether or not he was under the influence at the time of the accident. According to PFT, this is the second traffic incident involving Donte Stallworth driving a Bentley, as he was also arrested in 2006 “after he refused to turn off his cell phone and shut off the engine after a traffic stop for driving with an expired license.”

It stands to reasons that Donte Stallworth was probably out celebrating the $4.875 million roster bonus that he received from the Cleveland Browns. The Browns had no real choice but to pay the bonus, since this portion of the contract Stallworth signed before last season was guaranteed. In 2008, Donte Stallworth was a disappointment in Cleveland as his injury troubles continued and he posted a paltry 17 receptions for 170 yards.

We will have to wait until the test results are back and whether charges are filed against Stallworth to make any further judgments. Either way, a difficult and tumultuous offseason for the Cleveland Browns continues. And as Florio points out, let’s not forget that an innocent man died as the result of a very preventable accident.

Update 3/14 3:40 PM: PFT has updated its report on the pending investigation into the fatal traffic accident in which Donte Stallworth hit a man early this morning while driving his Bentley. According to Florio, who spoke with Miami Beach Police Det. Juan Sanchez this afternoon, Stallworth is not being charged at this time and may not be for several days, pending the results of bloodwork to determine what, if any, substances might have been in Stallworth’s system. Per the PFT report, according to Det. Sanchez Stallworth has been cooperative with the investigation.

Jump over to PFT to read their full update on the Donte Stallworth investigation.

Update 3/14 6:38 PM: PFT has more on the Donte Stallworth story. While no charges are immediately imminent, PFT’s sources apparently believe that Stallworth will be charged with DUI manslaughter. Stallworth reportedly admitted to drinking last night, but took his last drink, according to PFT, at midnight. The accident did not occur until 7:00 this morning.

Lots more over at PFT, so jump over to their latest Donte Stallworth update.

Cleveland Browns Beat New York Giants 35-14 | Career High for Braylon Edwards

After each of the first four games of the 2008 Season of Great Expectations for the Cleveland Browns, I have sat and stared at the blank computer screen searching for positives through the dreck that had been the Browns’ play on the field. It wasn’t always easy to find the positives, and sometimes even my indefatigable optimism was challenged. It started with the preseason debacle against the New York Giants and went all the way up to tonight’s Monday Night Football kickoff.

Tonight, after witnessing a 35-14 trouncing of the New York Giants by the Cleveland Browns, I am sitting trying to sift throderek anderson braylon edwardsugh a stunning abundance of positives to pick out a few to highlights, lest I be up until 4:00 in the morning analyzing this game. I’m riding such high right now that reliving this game until 4:00 a.m. actually sounds pretty damn good.

Where do we start?

It has to be with Derek Anderson and Braylon Edwards. Coming into tonight’s game, Derek Anderson was the lowest rated QB in the league and his spot as the Browns’ unquestioned starter was in doubt. Braylon Edwards, coming off a 16-TD season, had been held to under 100 yards receiving through four games. The Giants had the best defense in the NFL coming in. So what happened? Well, this is the NFL (which now officially stands for No F-ing Logic) so exactly the opposite of what “should” happen: Derek Anderson threw for over 300 yards and 2 TDs and Braylon Edwards caught 5 passes for a career-high 154 yards, a touchdown, and a two-point conversion. They hooked up early a deep bomb in which only a shoestring tackle kept Braylon from the endzone, and the two kept rolling from there.

… Continue Reading

MNF Preview: Cleveland Browns – New York Giants

optimism

Even though the show began in Cleveland 38 years ago, Monday night marks the first time the Cleveland Browns have been featured on Monday Night Football since 2003. Even more depressing is the fact that they have not won a game on Monday night since 1993.

All of that can change however, if the New York Giants come into town as cocky as they ought to be after embarrassing the Browns in the preseason on August 18th. History has shown that any team can upset a sleeping (New York Football) Giant on ANY given day, and MNF seems to have highlighted many more these games than CBS and FOX has in the last ten years.

Lets take a closer look at what Cleveland has to do to make Tom Coughlin look (and say something) stupid after the game…

… Continue Reading

Kellen Winslow Misses Practice With Illness | Corey Williams Comments on Giants

***Update 10/17: For the most up-to-date information on Kellen Winslow, which have may changed since this posting a week ago, go to the Cleveland Browns news page. Kellen did return to practice since this article was posted***

Well, I scoured the Internet this morning for more Cleveland Browns news regarding the uncertain status of Kellen Winslow, and it looks like Tony Grossi’s column from the Plain-Dealer blog last night is still the most up-to-date information out there.

According to Grossi:

Tight end Kellen Winslow, who looked fine when the team returned from its bye weekend on Monday, visited a doctor on Thursday and missed his second practice in a row. The Browns say Winslow is out with an illness, but won’t disclose what it is

kellen winslowOn a positive note, neither the term “staph infection” nor “reckless motorcycle accident” have been included in any article written about this mysterious Kellen Winslow illness. That is a good thing. What is not a good thing is any issue that leaves the status of Kellen Winslow in doubt. The Browns face a huge battle on Monday night against the New York Giants, and needless to say they need one of their biggest emotional leaders and best players healthy.

This whole situation has really come out of the blue too, so perhaps by Monday night it will be forgotten and Kellen Winslow will be on the field catching 8 passes for 90 yards and a score or two. According to the official NFL injury report, Winslow is listed as not having participated in practice. No designations for probable, questionable, doubtful, or out have been assigned as of yet. This is definitely something to pay attention to, as the Browns need a strong performance and probably a victory to maintain any hope of a playoff run this season. 2-3 in the tough AFC North is still in the race, and obviously looks a hell of a lot better than 1-4.

… Continue Reading

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