Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 26 to 34 of 34
  1. #26
    He can fight it till he's blue in the face and it won't make a bit of difference.

    And don't think the NFLPA is going to back his ass up either. Gene Upshaw and Goodell have met with players in Feb and again last week and all agreed the league needed a stronger disciplinary policy.
    They already said that they would back him if he wanted to fight the suspension

  2. #27
    Updated: April 14, 2007, 6:15 AM ET
    Pacman says NFL is making him a poster boyAssociated Press


    NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- ans cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones said Friday night he will appeal his season-long suspension and thinks NFL commissioner Roger Goodell made him the league's poster boy for disciplining players.

    Jones has not talked to reporters since the suspension for conduct detrimental to the NFL was announced Tuesday. Jones' attorneys had said they were discussing his options and have not returned telephone messages since Tuesday.

    But Jones was in Tunica, Miss., and he talked to ESPN's Joe Tessitore while at "Friday Night Fights" about being suspended -- without pay -- for the 2007 season. His case will be reviewed after the ans' 10th game, leaving the chance for a return.

    "I think it was a little bit harsh," Jones said. "I expected the suspension, but for a whole year for a guy that hadn't been charged with nothing? I really didn't agree with it. But for the most part, I'm taking it like a man. I'm going to appeal it. We'll see what the future brings."

    Any appeal would be heard and decided by Goodell.

    Cincinnati receiver Chris Henry, a teammate of Jones at West Virginia, also was suspended. But Henry received an eight-game ban.

    Jones, the sixth pick overall in the 2005 draft and the first defensive player taken that year, has talked with police 10 times since being drafted, and arrested five times. He has not been convicted of any charge since being drafted.

    But Las Vegas police want to charge Jones for inciting a strip club fight Feb. 19 that led to a triple shooting. Jones also did not inform the ans of two arrests in Georgia last year, and a felony obstruction charge for allegedly biting a Fayetteville, Ga., police officer was delayed until May.

    Asked if he was being used as an example with the severe punishment, Jones agreed.

    "Clearly -- you know, for a guy that hadn't been charged -- I'm clearly made to be the poster boy," Jones said.

    Jones said his teammates have been calling him every day since news of the suspension. He said defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch has been a close friend over the past few days.

    "What I'm going to do, I'm going to work out every day and make sure I'm in top-tip shape. But come Week 11, I plan on being back on the field," Jones told ESPN.

    ans owner Bud Adams said Tuesday the team wasn't sure if it wanted Jones back unless he changes his behavior and avoids controversy off the field.

    Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

  3. #28
    I hope he loses. It's about damned time that a league said that it wouldn't put up with jackass behavior by players. Goodell did the right thing here and it would be shameful for that effort to be undermined.

  4. #29
    The Last Good Sport samikeyp's Avatar
    Post Count
    28,298
    Pac-Man needs to go to jail and become Ms. Pac-Man.

  5. #30
    Pac-Man needs to go to jail and become Ms. Pac-Man.
    You have to be convicted of something to go to Jail and he has never been convicted of anything?

  6. #31
    I'm not sure why a conviction should be a prerequisite to a long suspension.

  7. #32
    The Last Good Sport samikeyp's Avatar
    Post Count
    28,298
    You have to be convicted of something to go to Jail and he has never been convicted of anything?
    Easy there, Johnnie Cochran....it was a joke. I was going for the whole Pac-Man/Ms. Pac-Man punchline.

  8. #33
    Easy there, Johnnie Cochran....it was a joke. I was going for the whole Pac-Man/Ms. Pac-Man punchline.
    My question wasn't aimed at you. I don't understand the notion that a player is somehow above receiving a long suspension for off-the-field conduct until he is convicted of a crime. I don't buy the argument that Pacman's suspension is somehow unwarranted just because he hasn't been convicted for a crime. Pacman has gotten himself involved in a whole bunch of negative situations in a very short period of time. The NFL has a right to suspend him just based upon the fact that he's done that.

    I don't think it should matter whether local prosecutors can make a criminal case against him and prove it to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. The NFL is partly in the PR business and players who are repeatedly arrested for serious offenses don't do much for the league's PR.

    So, mikey, my point was aimed mostly at the Pacman apologists whose sole argument is that the charges against him have been dismissed in a number of instances and that he hasn't been convicted (yet) of anything. I think those arguments are patently ridiculous.

    The NFL should have higher standards for its players than the local prosecutor has for deciding whether to proceed with a case or not. I'm glad to see that Roger Goodell sees it that way, too.

  9. #34
    The Last Good Sport samikeyp's Avatar
    Post Count
    28,298
    My question wasn't aimed at you
    I know bro...my response wasn't aimed at you. I quoted greenroom.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •