Ed Reed reflects back on leaving the Ravens after the 2012 season, if he holds a grudge towards the Ravens, and shares his thoughts on the long term impact playing football has had on himself and others' health.
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@PiyachonYuenyongHYDE4 ай бұрын
I remember Reggie Wayne's story when he was at the U. He was hurt but he won't come out of the game cos his back up was Andre Johnson . It showed you how stacked they were and how your role can be taken anytime.
@scottdavidson99634 ай бұрын
Chris Rock said it best: "There's no money in the cure."
@heavymetallabrat4 ай бұрын
Hipicratic oath no longer means anything with medicine now so heavily corporatized. Doctors may want to provide care but the hospital wont let them touch you if you cant pay the bill or if you wont make them money.
@user-nc9pc3gr4c3 ай бұрын
Alot of these things can't be cured or treated. So they have to treat the symptoms.
@goldenbear82503 ай бұрын
@@heavymetallabrat And now the Pharmaceutical companies have made so much money they bribe the AMA and the Doctors to push their untested and unsafe "miracle vaccines"!!
@mikeheffernan47234 ай бұрын
The NFL and the NCAA both recently extended their seasons. They pretended to be concerned about their athletes but their real concern is the money.
@TL23544 ай бұрын
The players aren’t saying no to the money either
@dancleary41014 ай бұрын
@@TL2354 what does that have to do with player safety it’s a fulltext sport they should be paid you fan sound stupid
@lesgrossman94924 ай бұрын
No one has to play sports, they do it for the money
@dancleary41014 ай бұрын
@@lesgrossman9492 not the point
@lesgrossman94924 ай бұрын
@@dancleary4101 100% the point. Everyone knows the risks
@bioLarzen4 ай бұрын
Everybody in Baltimore and in Ravens Nation loves Ed to death, not just because of his contribution on the field, but also because of the person he is. Everyone will always be proud af you as a Raven and thankful for all you have done for the team and city. When Ed speeks, the whole NFL world must listen. That said, we have always known that Ed has always had this mindset of being disrespected or exploited. That's been part of his universally loved personality. And this is what pops up here. He made it clear he felt disrespected back then, when he wasn't retained by the Ravens, so it's not hindsight. So, with all the love we all have towards you Ed, there is a reality. And that reality, in 2012-13 was, that your body could no longer serve your football mind that's been second to no one. You simply couldn't make a play which involved jumping you didn't have to limp off the field from. Your knees were toast at that point. You yourself mentioning in another segment of this same interview that at the Super Bowl you had MCL on both of your knees. No matter how rilliant you still were as a football player, your body was no longer suitable for the NFL. Just see what happened after you had to leave Baltimore: you went to the Texans where you were cut mid season, spending the rest of 2013 with the Jets, where you had your brilliant moments, but were clearly no longer the Ed Reed everyone remebered. No matter how much you had done for the Ravens, I don't thzink it's fair to expect them to spend a roster spot on someone who can no longer contribute enough on the field, no matter how tremendous the guys had been. Brutal, but this is how the NFL works. Also, you yourself spent the past few off-seasons before the Super Bowl contemplating retirement. And as the NFL wisdom says, once a player even thinks of retirement, it means his mind has already started the process of retirement. Ray Lewis at least made the final courtesy to the only team he ever played for in the NFL, to retire so they don't have to cut him, when his body clearly could no longer serve him on the NFL level. Suggs had the "decency" of sparing Ravens Nation of his down-the-hill self by going to "die" in Arizona. You should have retired after the Super Bowl. You would have gone to Canton together woth Ray, of that I'm sure.
@IanSCastro3 ай бұрын
I completely agree.
@randallgee42324 ай бұрын
Absolutely 100% Well Said, Ed Reed! The NCAA and NFL needs to do so much more!
@ifheavenwashuman4 ай бұрын
What can they do? Genuinely asking. I'd love to ponder ideas and potentially build on them.
@Fish.Filet.3 ай бұрын
Other than being paid millions to run around playing football
@user-nc9pc3gr4c3 ай бұрын
Hines Ward took Reed's head off. They at least stopped that kind of hitting. Alot of these things can't be cured or treated.
@man-bagdammit22974 ай бұрын
Ed Reed! Incredible player!
@CCTH2221-lp2zj4 ай бұрын
I agree to some degree with Reed and definitely empathize with him. But even at the high school level these problems start. This is without NFL dreams I remember a few players at division 3 Montclair state discussing whether or not the sacrifice was worth it. Here in Georgia many young men are not given guidance at the high school level for academics while feeling pressure to play football. Mostly because they feel it’s their responsibility for their family and only way out…
@noeltaylor35944 ай бұрын
Dude, I had this same discussion at D2 school in my home state of Texas. I was a walk-on, bad knees coming in. Didn't play very much, made the travel squad, but . . .I recall a group of us sitting in the locker room one day having that discussion. I had no idea other teammates felt that way. I loved my time on that team and appreciate all that was done to keep me around, but there was a time that just looking at a football turned my stomach.
@mr.doctorcaptain11244 ай бұрын
This is true. But for me, it was well worth it. I never became a pro, I did have multiple concussions (3 that I know about), but it gave me so much. Friendships that lasted a lifetime, the importance of dedication and teamwork, sacrifice; so much. I loved that sport, and I still love it. Everything great in life takes sacrifice. There’s a lot more the NFL and NCAA could do for their players, but I for one am just happy we get to play such a great game.
@noeltaylor35944 ай бұрын
@@mr.doctorcaptain1124 Just happy we got to play such a great game? Three of THE best years of my life and long last friendships.
@walkerenterprise17644 ай бұрын
My 9th grade year, I was literally given grades cause I could ball. They found out I was transferring.. ALL my grades were 69.5 hahah. Like "fuk" you.. it's not a highschool, college or pro issue. It's THE BUSINESS OF FOOTBALL!!!.
@Apolitically-Correct3 ай бұрын
Life long ravens fan here. Love Ed. But this really rubs me the wrong way. Ed spent his last 4-5 off-seasons playing hard to get, pulling a Favre/Rodgers. Literally every off-season he’d say, oh idk if I’m going to play this coming season, and he’d put the team in a position of uncertainty for free agency and draft. By the end, his play wasn’t worth that uncertainty, or the contract he was asking for. That’s why he lost his starting job half way through the season with the Texans, and then cut a few weeks later, even though they had just signed him to a 3 year contract with a bunch of guarantees
@gregrichards16014 ай бұрын
Well said! Mad respect, Ed.
@DMarshall19604 ай бұрын
This is the business we have chosen.
@LK-bz9sk4 ай бұрын
I miss seeing him running around that field tackling and that nose for the ball. He was something else
@theman14124 ай бұрын
Good move by Baltimore (he was hurt the whole time with the Texans)
@nathangoode10894 ай бұрын
Do you ever increase the length of forward/backward you're hopping?
@michaelschmidt65484 ай бұрын
I'm a Chargers fan. Ed Reed is EASILY in my top 5 favorite players not a Charger. Much Respect!
@danburch88803 ай бұрын
Love this guy
@ianross8064 ай бұрын
Ed needs to be a national spokesman. "...treating the symptoms, not the core problems."
@martyvlrjr23334 ай бұрын
I love me some LJ, but I am ravens fan first and foremost cuz of Ray. Point blank, never seen a defense be a de facto offense as well.
@jeffreywhitlock48824 ай бұрын
Love Ed. It is all about the U.
@baltimorejae73973 ай бұрын
Ed is my all-time favorite Raven
@pantera29palms3 ай бұрын
Is this a Joe buck interview or Ed Reed interview? I’m confused…
@zackerymcpherson94093 ай бұрын
Ed reed is my favorite player and I have a problem with his position on this. I’m not sure of the entire context of this interview, just that it leaves me feeling bullish about his opinion.
@Dane2024Bmore4 ай бұрын
He's not lying! Love Ed....always honest. One of the best.
@k.lee283 ай бұрын
*If Baltimore Ravens wants to do right by Ed Reed, He deserves a Statue outside M&T Bank Stadium* without question. *As a former football player, Cornerback you sign up for the Rewards and Repercussions that come with playing a high impact, violent collision sport called Football* .Footfall is not for the weak and most of the rules changes negatively effect the game, inflate numbers and overvalue offensive player safety over defensive players safety. *Remember a RB, TE , WR can still legally run over "Truck" a DB or LB anytime the NFL or NCAA havent implemented any restrictions to offensive players to protect defensive players* Furthermore, *The Crack-Back or Peal Back blocks are still legal* one of the most dangerous plays in the sport that's mainly initiated on defensive players.
@mikeplumer76874 ай бұрын
Ed's not telling the whole story. He got a big contract and the minute the guaranteed money was paid he started griping and once you no longer a superstar teams lose patience with that. So for him to now complain about loyalty is funny. Nobody is loyal- players or teams. But you know that the day you drafted
@jthrillz72883 ай бұрын
Sports like Basketball and football. You shouldn’t be playing as long as many do because of the physical effects. Like basketball. These guys play 82 games a year which is insane. And then when you learn the real purpose as to why they play these games so much. That’s even more a energetic detriment that will impact every player participating.
@jakethethird15844 ай бұрын
I hear what he's saying but I guarantee he'd fall right in line if he was a head coach. It's hard to win and coaches are judged by winning. It's a cold world.
@eddiewinehosen66654 ай бұрын
They complain about injuries and later problems but so has lots and lots of people working normal jobs for peanut pay compared to these guys. You don't think a construction worker carrying and mounting sheetrock has issues after doing it for 10-15 years? And he might have earned in that time what players did for their rookie season!
@KWillo4 ай бұрын
Rookies nowadays are getting multimillion dollar deals.Construction workers doing manual labor won't make a fraction of that in a decade.
@worstcaseofcrabsever55104 ай бұрын
Spot on.
@ryaniam223 ай бұрын
Ya these guys are hypocrites. What they want is to not have to spend any of their massive wealth to treat their ailments....that they were paid massive wealth to get.
@thehaughtcorner4 ай бұрын
I have empathy for the physical and mental issues that NFL players deal with during and after their playing days. It's a violent, brutal game -- especially at their level. But I think it's wrong to lay all of the blame on the league and the doctors. Reed and others seem to think that the doctors should have all of the answers (treating the symptoms instead of the cause) but in reality there simply isn't enough knowledge yet to do anything preventive regarding CTE and other problems. So to play, you make a deal with the devil that you will probably have problems later in life and during your short playing career. If you choose to make that deal, you have to realize what the back side probably will be. And it's not just football; I played baseball and softball for many years and had concussions and broken bones, etc. I'm dealing with the effects of that to this day. But I can't complain because I made the choice to play the way I did, and I knew there would be issues later. It's risk and reward, and I don't think Reed and other elite players were duped into playing football as much as they claim to be. And make no mistake: Reed was a great player.
@lastpme4 ай бұрын
Why I support athletes getting paid and being able to transfer…the old system took advantage of the players and coaches always were able to leave for better opportunities.
@troylee41963 ай бұрын
I agree, have all these "experts" saying how bad the portal and sitting out bowl games is
@xpat733 ай бұрын
Amazing player....but likely has CTE. Was it worth it?
@ivandemko33603 ай бұрын
Yes
@worstcaseofcrabsever55104 ай бұрын
YA CAN'T FIX OLD AGE ED. Doc can't help with that. Youthful energy and health are fleeting as is your life. Football players are not the only ones who's bodies and brains break down in thier 40s,50s, 60s, and beyond. It's the natural order. I would never be so foolish to spend 15 years crashing and smashing my body for fortune and fame and then trying to blame someone else for some injuries I got from doing so. Maybe if you whine enough you can get that big paycheck from your lawsuit and get back some of those millions you childishly squandered the first time. It seems like foulplay to me.
@user-zb7tg5hi3t4 ай бұрын
The money is not worth the pain and suffering they will go through after football.
@chillsavage4 ай бұрын
Tard
@JM-cf9xy4 ай бұрын
Yes it is
@darrenedwards67054 ай бұрын
Ed reed is the TRUTH....😮
@Megahertz_124 ай бұрын
Cmon y’all. Ed played along time and he definitely played to injure people. I do believe not permanently though. CTE and bi polar/manic depression depression go hand and hand. He’s still in relatively young. I hope it doesn’t get worse. Though I truly believe it will. 😢
@chuck76353 ай бұрын
Thats the medical industry in general not just nfl
@suddeneye98364 ай бұрын
100% I want my football heroes to be given the chance to be as healthy as possible during and after their careers by virtue of rule changes, technique and tech. I want them financially sound as well. The sport is hard enough to be then taken advantage of and left in misery. I'm concerned about all the living ex-players who are suffering right now and deserve NFL assistance.
@worstcaseofcrabsever55104 ай бұрын
He was paid millions for a decade.......
@pjmendoza88714 ай бұрын
Reed ✊
@jamricsloe4 ай бұрын
He’s not a victim
@KingofMasks764 ай бұрын
It’s risk vs reward…and the NFL should make every player acutely aware of the risk and provide great root cause treatment. The risk is still the players to own.
@miltonbecker19943 ай бұрын
Way to pull back from saying racist shit Ed! It starts with you! Appreciate you Ed!
@Lyvewyre1313134 ай бұрын
Choices
@r3d5ive874 ай бұрын
Ed reed seemed like he covered more ground than anyone back there
@sylvio19804 ай бұрын
Great respect for him but he’s not saying anything new or profound. Being an NFL player is just like any other job, results oriented business. With high risk comes a great reward - generational wealth and fame. 99 % of people would jump on this opportunity in a heart beat.
@bigbanknewyork36553 ай бұрын
Everyone is a scholar after the fact. They were seeking millions all along.
@briansmad14 ай бұрын
I hear you, I do. I thought for one would absolutely 100% sign up for 10-12 years, playing a game that I love with my heart and get paid more money than I’d ever be able to spend. Verbally, physically abuse me and I would not for a moment not be grateful.
@user-io3hb2wt4x4 ай бұрын
im and ronnie lott, the best ever
@bigbanknewyork36553 ай бұрын
Everybody understands the risk but all play anyway because it beats working at WalMart.
@Neji19843 ай бұрын
You can make bank at Walmart I work at Walmart and make over $100k a year
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
Ed Reed "The League the NCAA...dey gotta do sumtin!!" - Do exactly WHAT, Ed? Restrict competition so players can't lose their place on the depth chart? Players want this to be a "job job" its not. Its an ultra competitive what-have-you-done-for-me-lately environment. If a player doesn't perform at a high level, that means teams lose games. You've worked your body to failure after years of willing abuse. Go talk to a 35 year old landscaper, welder, longshoreman, etc.... who made 1% of your earnings in life. Boo Hoo
@anthonyanderson93034 ай бұрын
Not exactly an apples to apples comparison you're making.
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
@@anthonyanderson9303 its coming from Ed Reed
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
@@anthonyanderson9303 the clip is 4 minutes. Ed Reed is so wholly inarticulate the only thing he actually said was what you replied to. He's complaining about how brutal and ultra competitive an ultra competitive and brutal sport is. If it weren't that way, you wouldn't have the product on the field
@anthonyanderson93034 ай бұрын
@hughmungus2589 yes but you're making the comparison to regular labor jobs with nowhere near the same level of physicality. And that's not being dorspectful its just a fact.
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
@@anthonyanderson9303 THAT is what Ed Reed proposed in the 'talk'. Were you not listening to him? its only four freaking minutes. THAT was his position that I commented as being juvenile
@Thinkeroutsidethebox4 ай бұрын
So choose longer health instead of the money and fame. Thought not.
@JDwJC113 ай бұрын
Joe Buck trying to explain to the audience what the hell Ed Reed is saying. Lol 😂
@jamricsloe4 ай бұрын
You don’t have to play. You love to play.
@Billy-gn6ij4 ай бұрын
use why they need you and kick you aside for life changing, generational wealth money, that 99% of us will never get a swiff of. Feel terrible for you Ed
@anthonyanderson93034 ай бұрын
Most player don't make that kind of money. In fact 98% of them don't.
@ThatFalloutGod4 ай бұрын
The issue is far less with the league than it is with the players themselves. I constantly hear the same type of shit from former and current players on the same handful of issues, yet I've literally never seen any of them take accountability and/or correctly state who's to blame, the NFLPA. If they really wanted all fields to be grass, they'd get it. If they wanted contracts to have certain guarantees, they could negotiate it. You want the refs to be held accountable? Done. Stemming off of this though, is the fact that the vast majority of people don't understand this basic fact of life: "There are no solutions, only trade-offs." I don't even know what Reed, or any player, would wanna do to about the "issue" of, "Well, if I get hurt, the guy behind me can steal my job." No shit, and? You want to prevent someone else from hypothetically taking a step in their football career? Yea, it really sucks for the guy who loses their job, but what's the alternative? You want the team to be worse? You want that guy to be prevented from playing? The hell are you asking for? Or seeing former NFL players cry about "not being taken care of" when they didn't use their money wisely in the slightest, etc., I'm not keen to just blindly sympathize with them.
@Kindafu4 ай бұрын
“Would do it again” 🤷♂️
@dameianjones66413 ай бұрын
Harbaugh wanted him and Bolden out. Too strong of personalities in the locker room. He feared the respect and control they had on the team. Shipped this Titan out in efforts to humility him. Cut Bolden when he was in Africa building schools. They wouldn’t have won that ring without this receiver that played bully ball once they started using him after week 10 that year
@GrenadeMan90004 ай бұрын
the ravens were done with Ed because he had a swollen ego and was a diva, they didn't want that toxicity and mutiny on the team anymore
@markchavarria51873 ай бұрын
So…he talks about how these institutions are all about money, do nothing to help the players when they sustain injuries that last well after their career is over but….he would do it again because it gave him an opportunity to better himself with the millions he made himself. So is he complaining or making an observation? I can’t tell because it sounds like a situation where both parties benefited from each other.
@darrenwendroff34413 ай бұрын
Ed Reed is such an insightful, aware person. He was a warrior, it's an archtype, that was his darma. But he was the divine version, an intelligent leader. Like he said his intent wasn't to hurt anybody, but to play the game as best he could, and to me he was one of the top 5 smartest players ever. Was on another level. To hear that the Ravens didn't treat him right at the end tells you about the Ravens and the NFL. Because the him and Lewis made the Ravens, not vice versa. They should honor those guys every year.
@shahidwiggins4 ай бұрын
It’s sad that greed is so prevalent in this country! It’s nothing for the NFL to set aside $1 billion fund to take care of retired players, absolutely nothing for them to do so! With all the funds that the NFL brings in doing that, for their players would be the right thing to do!
@angelmatos91434 ай бұрын
Class Act!
@alexanderrose10714 ай бұрын
Ed should have retired along with Ray. They were shells of their former selves that last year. If it weren’t for their star power, they’d have been backups on 3/4 of the teams in the league. It wasn’t disrespectful to not bring him back. His play the next year in Houston/NYC showed that. Leaving after the SB win would of been the perfect send off for a guy who obviously wasn’t the player he used to be by that point
@followeroftheway69304 ай бұрын
Ed still had it. He was better on the jets than the Texans. A lot went wrong for him at the Texans
@alexanderrose10714 ай бұрын
@@followeroftheway6930 his last year with the Ravens, he couldn’t tackle. He wasn’t able to wrap up. His neck injuries were terrible, and had clearly taken a toll. He was not good anymore. I hate that last year. Should have retired as only having played for the Ravens.
@AfrikanLifestyle4 ай бұрын
He said HOW they did it was disrespectful.
@InternetStranger101014 ай бұрын
Joe Buck is gross. He is clearly trying to steer the conversation in a way that protects the NFL from culpability
@alexandriaocasio-smollett50784 ай бұрын
2:44 The way Joe Buck refused to even have an expression on his face when Ed said we treat illnesses by drugging symptoms instead of addressing causes tho. I guarantee you his internal dialogue was.. “Don’t react Joe. We have sponsorships with Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson, Moderna, etc. Don’t react Joe. Don’t react Joe.”😂😂
@michaelconti57873 ай бұрын
Reed makes sense with his honesty. He hit the nail on the head. I never cared for players like Steelers receiver Hines Ward who would cheap shot Reed. I think Hines Ward knew that Reed was always an honest guy and didn’t like that, and so he would try and cheap shot Reed in order to shut him up. It didn’t work, thank GOD. Whenever you’re honest like Reed, be prepared to be a target, because someone out there like Ward will try and take you out. I’m from Pittsburgh and Ward always seemed to look out for himself even if it came at the expense of someone else.
@powdernitz4 ай бұрын
i was always so mad how bad my texans treated him. signed him and wade phillips wouldn't play him.
@javierdelgado15544 ай бұрын
Can't stand Joe Buck...never liked his commentating.
@skitzrv97733 ай бұрын
Did you love the money you made? Why is the NFL responsible for the decisions you made? Football is dangerous, you knew that, you accepted that risk. Now what do you want a hand out?
@lokhtar3 ай бұрын
I love the NFL and watch it religiously every sunday but you couldn't pay me enough money to let my sons play football. No way. It just sucks.
@mtadams20093 ай бұрын
I get what you’re saying but let’s be honest the game is not good for your health and brain. It’s well known . Instead of shorting the season they extend it. The problem is your union- players have no unity. Hell back in the day star players like Joe Montana crossed the picket line. He should have been called out as a scab but that is never happening. It’s never even mentioned.
@svtinker4 ай бұрын
I’ve had to work through injuries and I can no longer perform physical labor. I’ve got zero empathy for a crying millionaire.
@zeekot40644 ай бұрын
Nobody forced you to play
@chrisbancs224 ай бұрын
You will end up with severe Health issues smashing in to other Athletes thousands of times per year. That is why the Money you are paid is Astronomical compared to all other Professions. It's a choice, a lot of Money, for a lot of Pain.
@DbDb-pn4fu3 ай бұрын
Ed you were a great player definitely a hofer but You were at the end of your career
@chosen28654 ай бұрын
Graestone.
@YZdude3 ай бұрын
I've had a personal encounter with Reed and he's very entitled and arrogant how long did his career last in Texas ? He was done and wanted more money dude thinks he should be paid just to talk about football. FOH
@SubZero-pi4jr4 ай бұрын
What do you expect when you sign your body over to billionaire businessmen. You play with the devil you can get burnt. “And I would do it again” Addicted to the devil who feed you…
@noeltaylor35944 ай бұрын
I was telling a co-worker how awesome I feel when I see a football teams busses roll from DFW airport to their hotel. The last team I think I saw was The Washington Commanders. I said, wow, there's a half a billion dollars rolling down the highway. Then it hit me. NO!, that's billions rolling down the highway.
@lindebr4 ай бұрын
They make millions playing, then spend millions in retirement on medical issues.
@blackbusa74 ай бұрын
time for flag football
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
Ed Reed was a phenomenal player, but he talks like he has a 2nd grade education
@makzee194 ай бұрын
Lol. Yes he does.
@BEATSbyDGIB4 ай бұрын
He's actually intelligent
@hughmungus25894 ай бұрын
@@BEATSbyDGIB that guy mumbling for 3 minutes not saying anything? that guy is 'intelligent'? lmao
@BEATSbyDGIB4 ай бұрын
@@hughmungus2589 I understood what he said and you did too
@OaksArmorial4 ай бұрын
I love listening to these guys bitch about leagues owing them something other than the MILLIONS of dollars they made. What a joke. Go work at Target if you’re so worried about concussions.
@worstcaseofcrabsever55104 ай бұрын
tons of people have brain problems as they begin to get older. Football players can blame every heath problem on the NFL. But how then can they explain the millions of people who have the same problems who never played football?>CTE is not fully accepted in circles of medical science. Ive had three concussions myself. But there are a lot of folks out there who have Demetia or Alzheimer's who never even had a concussion. This puts a huge hole in this line of thinking.
@NickBusbeeFunkSchoolRadio4 ай бұрын
If Ed Reed or any other NFL player who has retired and now has C.T.E. symptoms or chronic pain, possibly for the rest of their lives, and would still do it all over again it just indicates that they value money over their long-term health. I've heard many of them say that earning "generational" wealth is worth losing their health and brain cells. I cannot find empathy for people who love money that much.
@joesmith38294 ай бұрын
This guy ☝️, maybe you should look into these players lives. And their life’s circumstances that led them to play the game. Not saying this is for every player, but for a lot them the game is literally a way out of poverty and circumstance you obviously never experienced. And the ones that make it are the blessed lucky ones.
@NickBusbeeFunkSchoolRadio4 ай бұрын
@@joesmith3829 I think that a steady decent paying employment can lift anyone out of poverty. If that's really the primary goal. Which I don't believe is the case for most NFL players. I think they want to get rich as quickly as possible. And there's nothing wrong with that! It's just a matter of what one is willing to sacrifice for speed. And if that's their health and ability to fully use their brains for the rest of their lives, then so be it. Especially if they would do it all over again! Rather than maybe settling for a physically safer type of employment for less than the NFL minimum wage.
@anthonyanderson93034 ай бұрын
@@NickBusbeeFunkSchoolRadio I can tell you don't come from a certain socio-economic class that is deprived of equal opportunities. I'm sure you had the support needed to make something if your life without having to resort to such measures. Good for you.
@harmonicalessonsnyc63864 ай бұрын
quit crying
@dredey19713 ай бұрын
Love Ed. But he sound like a cry baby. What are you doing to push change?
@GloriousSong244 ай бұрын
Joe Buck is the worst! That is all!
@TL23544 ай бұрын
Fascinating
@chrisschrock51174 ай бұрын
These athletes are paid a life changing amount of money to play a game. That should be enough
@benfelps4 ай бұрын
for cte - the core problem is the sport. It's extremely dangerous
@ryaniam223 ай бұрын
Every player in the league will have these symptoms. If you played college for any length of time your brain already took too much damage. Now what is the league supposed to pay for every player a salary enough for a GOOD life meanwhile the average player barely spends any time in the league? These guys no the risks. And they are paid a shit tonn. My only gripe is the NCAA should be forced to pay players the same way so they can choose to quit earlier with money. But it not like humans are going to suddenly evolve a brain mechanism so that we can take repeated head trauma like a Ram lol. And its not like the NFL should have to guarantee a high standard of living for players for life when their huge salaries apparently cannot cover their medical bills. Like gtfo here. League minimum is 450k a year to start plus signing bonuses. So half of them be making over a million to touch the NFL. Say you quit after that 1 season. If a million dollars cannot get you through life then your pathetic. Try working hard your entire life, grinding away to pay mortgages. These divas want to keep all their money and have the league pay for their lifestyles of glammor
@JHOTA52204 ай бұрын
I remember I was really mad they let Reed go. He should’ve stayed and retired a Raven. Then they drafted Matt Elam to replace him and that dude was TRASH.
@user-mx1dv3bh3q4 ай бұрын
Change your diaper, Eddie. The whole world is like that.