Armchair Bronco
New member
I wasn't surprised to see Richard Sherman get injured in the NFC Championship game, and I wasn't surprised to see who caused the injury:
It was Kam Chancellor, and it was a classic case of "Friendly Fire".
Dating back to early last year, I've been complaining (to my flat screen TV) that two Seahawks players in particular need to eliminate "Friendly Fire" from their arsenal. The two offenders are Kam Chancellor and Earl Thomas.
On numerous occasions, these guys have been so amped up that they've crashed into piles of bodies to "lay down the law" only to take down one of their team mates.
I've watched the play on which Sherman was injured, and it's clear that Richard was blindsided by Chancellor who, in my opinion, totally unnecessarily smashed into Sherman's arm when #25 had already driven his guy to within inches of the sideline. In fact, when I play it back slowly, it almost seems as if Chancellor was trying to tackle Sherman, not the dude dressed in yellow and green.
Earl Thomas does the same thing, too. On many occasions, I've seen him try to spear a guy on the ground (who had already been tackled by Byron Maxwell) only to end up crashing into Maxwell full force.
I'm all in favor of setting the tone early, but the LOB needs to put a higher priority on avoiding "Friendly Fire".
It was Kam Chancellor, and it was a classic case of "Friendly Fire".
Dating back to early last year, I've been complaining (to my flat screen TV) that two Seahawks players in particular need to eliminate "Friendly Fire" from their arsenal. The two offenders are Kam Chancellor and Earl Thomas.
On numerous occasions, these guys have been so amped up that they've crashed into piles of bodies to "lay down the law" only to take down one of their team mates.
I've watched the play on which Sherman was injured, and it's clear that Richard was blindsided by Chancellor who, in my opinion, totally unnecessarily smashed into Sherman's arm when #25 had already driven his guy to within inches of the sideline. In fact, when I play it back slowly, it almost seems as if Chancellor was trying to tackle Sherman, not the dude dressed in yellow and green.
Earl Thomas does the same thing, too. On many occasions, I've seen him try to spear a guy on the ground (who had already been tackled by Byron Maxwell) only to end up crashing into Maxwell full force.
I'm all in favor of setting the tone early, but the LOB needs to put a higher priority on avoiding "Friendly Fire".