AggieLean.;c-10070065 said:Slave master McNair got Duane Brown up outta there. One of the more outspoken Texans
He was gonna be traded anyway. Nigga held out til just a few days ago
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
AggieLean.;c-10070065 said:Slave master McNair got Duane Brown up outta there. One of the more outspoken Texans
black caesar;c-10069307 said:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZZdB5hqbTw
Shannon speaks on Tony Dungy. Starts at 2:29
Swiffness!;c-10070796 said:Lol watching these cacs increasingly lose their damn minds over at profootballtalk
![]()
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...os-expects-qb-to-sign-contract-within-10-daysMark Geragos, the attorney for Colin Kaepernick, said Tuesday he expects the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback to be signed within 10 days.
During an appearance on The Adam Carolla Show, Geragos had this response when asked to give a prediction about Kaepernick's future.
"I think within the next 10 days somebody will sign him," he said. "I think somebody's gonna sign him. I think the NFL has to come to their senses, and realize every day that goes by just proves the collusion case even more."
Kaepernick filed a collusion lawsuit against the NFL owners on Oct. 15 after he was unable to get a team to sign him during the offseason and at the start of the regular season.
Texans: Clowney costume 'not a shot' at owner
A Houston Texans spokesperson says an orange prison-jumpsuit costume worn by star defensive lineman Jadeveon Clowney was not meant as a jab at team owner Bob McNair.
Amy Palcic, the Texans' senior director of communications, told the Houston Chronicle that Clowney said there "was no hidden meaning behind his Halloween costume."
"He was not taking a 'shot' at anyone," Palcic told the Chronicle on Tuesday. "It was just that -- a costume at a Halloween party."
Clowney posted a video to Instagram that shows him wearing an orange jumpsuit at a Halloween party.
McNair angered Texans players last week after ESPN The Magazine reported that he said, "We can't have the inmates running the prison," during a meeting with other owners and league officials earlier this month.
McNair released two statements last week apologizing for his comments, stressing that he was not referring to players. An owner who was in the meeting told ESPN on Saturday, though, that, given the discussion in the room when McNair made the statement, it would be hard to conclude how he could have been referring to anyone other than players.
2stepz_ahead;c-10071758 said:dumb ass.....
oh he showed them.
they laughing at his dumb ass.
dumb ass
yellowtapesport;c-10071832 said:2stepz_ahead;c-10071758 said:dumb ass.....
oh he showed them.
they laughing at his dumb ass.
dumb ass
Nah they aint laughin..they scramblin, hence the statement.
Whole team shouldve did the same.
Offensive' Colin Kaepernick Costume Lands Police Officer In Hot Water
The police department for the University of Nevada, Reno, has issued an apology after one of its officers was called out for what many called an “offensive” Colin Kaepernick costume.
Kaepernick is the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who began kneeling during the national anthem to protest racial inequality and police brutality. Kaepernick has not found a quarterback job this season after parting ways with the 49ers last year.
Kaepernick attended the University of Nevada in Reno.
The officer, Antonio Gutierrez, dressed as the quarterback and sported a hooked nose and “will stand for food” sign last week. Over the weekend, photos of the officer popped up and spread on social media, prompting an apology from the police department.
“For those who have seen the Halloween costume of one of our officers apparently mocking a citizen who has chosen to take advantage of his constitutional right to protest, I offer my sincere apologies,” said University of Nevada Reno Police Chief Adam Garcia in a statement. “Members of our profession are held to a higher standard and denigrating another — on or off duty — is insensitive for its lack of respect and lack understanding on how others may negatively view their actions and may be impacted.”
The officer will not face disciplinary action, according to Buzzfeed Monday.
“Behavior such as this magnifies unsafe feelings and lack of trust in police, especially when that individual is responsible for the safety of all members of the University, regardless of color, ethnicity, sexual orientation or religion,” continued Garcia in a statement. “At a time when officers should be heightened in their attentiveness to the perception by our community, this act seems extremely out of touch with those sentiments and reflects poorly on all of us.”
The incident comes a month after the department was accused of mishandling a complaint about threatening behavior by one of its officers. In September a black graduate student was pulled over and body camera footage catches the officer saying I'm just going to shoot him if this goes sideways because f--- that.”
The police officer in that case is on leave pending an investigation, according to the Reno Gazette-Journal.
stringer bell;c-10071756 said:https://twitter.com/jordanheckff/status/925410648921657344
https://twitter.com/__tryfected__/status/925439315878076416
http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/...rn-jadeveon-clowney-not-shot-owner-bob-mcnair
Texans: Clowney costume 'not a shot' at owner
A Houston Texans spokesperson says an orange prison-jumpsuit costume worn by star defensive lineman Jadeveon Clowney was not meant as a jab at team owner Bob McNair.
Amy Palcic, the Texans' senior director of communications, told the Houston Chronicle that Clowney said there "was no hidden meaning behind his Halloween costume."
"He was not taking a 'shot' at anyone," Palcic told the Chronicle on Tuesday. "It was just that -- a costume at a Halloween party."
Clowney posted a video to Instagram that shows him wearing an orange jumpsuit at a Halloween party.
McNair angered Texans players last week after ESPN The Magazine reported that he said, "We can't have the inmates running the prison," during a meeting with other owners and league officials earlier this month.
McNair released two statements last week apologizing for his comments, stressing that he was not referring to players. An owner who was in the meeting told ESPN on Saturday, though, that, given the discussion in the room when McNair made the statement, it would be hard to conclude how he could have been referring to anyone other than players.
Smh...