NFL investigating roughness of 'Skins practices

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  • Gunzlingr
    Registered User
    • Jul 2002
    • 45976

    NFL investigating roughness of 'Skins practices

    The league and the players' union said Thursday they are investigating the Redskins offseason practices. At issue are the team's one-on-one drills between offensive and defensive linemen, which the union says are forbidden, and whether those drills violate a prohibition against "live contact."

    The players' union was first alerted of the possible infractions after the team posted video from the drills on the Internet. The practices are closed to reporters.

    "Do you know how we caught them?" NFL Players Association executive director Gene Upshaw said. "We saw it on their Web site."

    Coach Joe Gibbs said the team has turned over tapes of its practices to the league for review. If the team is found in violation, it could lose part of its allotted number of offseason practice days.

    "We think we're doing what we need to be doing, trying to get everybody ready," Gibbs said. "And if it fits within the rules, we'll just have to see."

    The practices — called OTAs or "organized team activities" — are essentially practices without pads. The collective bargaining agreement forbids "live contact drills between offensive and defensive linemen" during the practices.

    Of course, "live contact" can be open to interpretation. Asked to describe the one-on-one drills, tackle Chris Samuels said: "We're locking up, just working our hand placement and technique, but we're not, like, finishing guys or driving guys to the ground."

    NFLPA spokesman Carl Francis said the team shouldn't be doing one-on-one drills in the first place.

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    You think you're hot **** in a champagne glass, but you're really cold diarrhea in a Dixie cup!
  • Jan Reimers
    Thank You, Terry and Kim, for Saving the Bills. Now, Work on the Sabres.
    • May 2003
    • 17353

    #2
    I'm kind of surprised at Gibbs, who is generally not known as a guy who breaks the rules. I guess he's frustrated and under a lot of pressure to get things turned around this year.
    Should have known, way back in 1960 when we drafted Richie Lucas Number 1, that this would be a long, hard ride. But who could have known it would be THIS bad?

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