Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › non-football news from around the league
- This topic has 3 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 6 years, 10 months ago by
zn.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 5, 2019 at 1:19 am #102693
znModeratorMiami Dolphins’ Kendrick Norton had his arm amputated after a car wreck
https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/04/sport/miami-dolphins-kendrick-norton-arm-amputated-trnd/index.html
(CNN)Kendrick Norton, a 22-year-old defensive lineman for the Miami Dolphins, had an arm amputation after a car wreck early Thursday in Miami, his agent says.
“With sadness, I can confirm that Kendrick Norton was in a car accident last night and suffered multiple injuries, including the amputation of his arm,” Norton’s agent, Malki Kawa, tweeted. “We ask that you continue to pray for him. His family also asks that the public respect Kendrick’s privacy.”
The Florida Highway Patrol said Norton had “severe injuries to his left arm.”
Lt. Alex Camacho said Norton was driving in the early morning hours of July 4 on State Road 836, also called the Dolphin Expressway, a 15-mile stretch of highway that cuts across Miami.
Norton’s Ford pickup ran into a concrete barrier wall for “unknown reasons,” Camacho said. The vehicle flipped, coming to a stop on its roof.
“We were made aware this morning of a serious car accident involving Kendrick Norton,” the Miami Dolphins said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with Kendrick and his family during this time.”
The Florida native played football for the University of Miami Hurricanes. In 2017, during his junior year, he appeared in each of the team’s 13 games, making 12 starts, and earned All-ACC honorable mention.
The Dolphins announced that they’d signed Norton on December 19 after he was drafted by the Carolina Panthers earlier in the year.
The defensive lineman has not played in a regular-season NFL game.July 5, 2019 at 3:02 pm #102710
znModeratorFormer #Patriots LB Tedy Bruschi suffered a stroke yesterday afternoon. He is “recovering well,” his team said. pic.twitter.com/bYQGD4iWnm
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) July 5, 2019
July 5, 2019 at 3:13 pm #102711
znModerator— Jason La Canfora (@JasonLaCanfora) July 5, 2019
July 5, 2019 at 3:17 pm #102712
znModeratorFootball screws Ken Stabler, again
Football screws Ken Stabler, again
First, he had to wait way too long to get to the Hall of Fame. Next, because he didn’t make it to the Hall of Fame during his lifetime, Stabler’s family didn’t get the gold jacket or the ring that goes along with it. (And apparently still won’t, thanks the the Hall of Fame’s clumsy carving of an exception for Broncos owner Pat Bowlen.)
Now, even though Stabler died with advanced CTE, he won’t get a penny from the NFL’s concussion settlement.
Dom Cosentino of Deadspin.com explains the legal technicalities that prevent Stabler from receiving payment. His death with CTE came less than three months after the agreed window closed for compensation based on death with CTE. And Stabler’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis came after he died, contrary to language of the settlement that requires the diagnosis to come during the player’s lifetime.
The NFL fought the efforts of Stabler’s estate to get compenstion for the brain trauma he suffered while playing football, because of course the NFL did. That’s the problem with having an unlimited fund to pay claims under the concusion settlement; removing the cap created a strong incentive for the NFL to fight any and every claim, on any basis at its disposal.
In most cases involving opposition to a claim, the NFL fights by challenging whether the player has or had a health condition that qualifies for compensation. In this case, the NFL simply connected the dots to the plain language of the court-approved settlement in order to escape doing the right thing.
The NFL fought Stabler’s claim by, among other things, challenging the veracity of the notion that he didn’t seek an Alzheimer’s diagnosis before he died because he was fighting colon cancer by pointing out that he had “extensive dental work” performed and that he was planning to have knee-replacement surgery. In other words, the NFL suggested that the contention was an embellishment at best, a lie at worst.
Although the NFL’s argument could be easily dismissed as overlawyering, it was unnecessary, unrealistic, and unkind. Getting an Alzheimer’s diagnosis in the hopes of eventually getting a sliver of the concussion settlement surely took a backseat to more pressing matters for Stabler like, you know, having a mouthful of functioning teeth and eliminating the pain of a knee that was wrecked by a lifetime of football. Not to mention the colon cancer.
Put simply, Stabler wasn’t motivated by greed. If the NFL would like to convince anyone that it isn’t motivated by greed, it will pay Stabler’s claim.
As with Stabler’s nonexistent (for now) gold jacket and ring, all it would take is one phone call from the Commissioner to fix the situation.
No one is counting on that happening, including Kim Bush, who was Stabler’s partner during the final 16 years of his life.
“I guess in some weird, kind of crazy way, we can close the book, you know?” told Cosentino. “At least now you know definitively, okay, everybody has screwed him that can screw him. Let him rest in peace, put it behind us, and move on.”
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

