- Joined
- May 14, 2002
- Posts
- 104,305
- Reaction score
- 57,178
After reading Skorp's practice story, and watching Dateline NBC last night can't help but have mixed emotions. I'm thrilled we have a coach who coaches, works hard and demands his players work hard, no more coach trying to be buddies stuff.
But if you saw Dateline last night you can't help but hope that Green and his staff are doing things a little differently this time around in regards to players safety? The story last night was specifically about the tragic death of Korey Stringer, and the series of lawsuits brought by his widow against the team, the coaches(Green at the time) and now the NFL. So far all of her suits have been thrown out, the one against the NFL is pending.
The claim is that Green worked the team so hard during a heatwave, that Stringer was throwing up repeatedly and being ridiculed by Green and his staff for being so out of shape. One day later he collapsed on the field, was helped off by an assistant trainer who gave him some liquids, never took his temperature, and then left him alone for nearly an hour. When they finally realized Stringer was in trouble they rushed him to a hospital, but he died. The official take is he died from heatstroke in part due to Ephedra because he was using "ripped fuel". Problem is they apparently found no traces of ephedra in his system, just the can of ripped fuel in his locker. His wife all but accused the Vikings of planting the can as a coverup, she didn't say this but said repeatedly he wasn't using the stuff.
hard to say what really happened and what's being fabricated by his wife in an effort to win her huge lawsuit with the NFL, but it was a little sobering to compare that to Skorp's story.
Rip away, I'm glad we hired Green and I think he'll make the team better, I guess I'm just hoping that the past tragedy taught the whole NFL a lesson about working players too hard in extreme heat.
But if you saw Dateline last night you can't help but hope that Green and his staff are doing things a little differently this time around in regards to players safety? The story last night was specifically about the tragic death of Korey Stringer, and the series of lawsuits brought by his widow against the team, the coaches(Green at the time) and now the NFL. So far all of her suits have been thrown out, the one against the NFL is pending.
The claim is that Green worked the team so hard during a heatwave, that Stringer was throwing up repeatedly and being ridiculed by Green and his staff for being so out of shape. One day later he collapsed on the field, was helped off by an assistant trainer who gave him some liquids, never took his temperature, and then left him alone for nearly an hour. When they finally realized Stringer was in trouble they rushed him to a hospital, but he died. The official take is he died from heatstroke in part due to Ephedra because he was using "ripped fuel". Problem is they apparently found no traces of ephedra in his system, just the can of ripped fuel in his locker. His wife all but accused the Vikings of planting the can as a coverup, she didn't say this but said repeatedly he wasn't using the stuff.
hard to say what really happened and what's being fabricated by his wife in an effort to win her huge lawsuit with the NFL, but it was a little sobering to compare that to Skorp's story.
Rip away, I'm glad we hired Green and I think he'll make the team better, I guess I'm just hoping that the past tragedy taught the whole NFL a lesson about working players too hard in extreme heat.
