Sunday, 10 November 2013

Vikings" Simpson arrested on DWI suspicion




Updated: November 10, 2013, 1:48 AM ET

By Ben Goessling | ESPN.com






MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jerome Simpson was arrested early Saturday morning on suspicion of drunken driving, and was booked into a Hennepin County jail.


Simpson, who is in his second year with the Vikings, was arrested by the Minnesota State Patrol and booked at 5:39 on Saturday morning, according to the Hennepin County Sherriff’s jail roster.


According to a Minnesota State Patrol arrest report, a state trooper responded to a report of a stalled vehicle on Interstate-394 leaving Minneapolis.


Simpson, who had blurry eyes and slurred speech, said he was coming from the Pour House in downtown Minneapolis, but denied having been drinking. He failed a field sobriety test, was arrested and transported to the jail, where he refused a breath test.


He posted bail of $ 12,000 on Saturday afternoon, though formal charges from prosecutors are still pending.


Simpson was suspended for the first three games of the 2012 after pleading guilty to a drug-related charge in March 2012.


The Vikings signed Simpson shortly after the NFL suspended him, and his DWI occurred during the first year of the three-year probation sentence ordered by a Kentucky judge.


It remains to be seen how the arrest will affect Simpson’s probation, or if he will face additional discipline from the league.


The Vikings said in a statement on Saturday morning that they “are aware of the matter involving Jerome Simpson. We are continuing to gather information and will have further comment at the appropriate time.”


Simpson, who was plagued by a back injury after returning from his suspension in 2012, had been in the middle of a rebound season with the Vikings. He had caught 33 passes for a team-high 491 yards in nine games after re-signing with the team on a one-year deal in March.


This spring, Simpson talked about having a big year and earning a long-term deal with the Vikings.







ESPN.com – NFL



Vikings" Simpson arrested on DWI suspicion

Saturday, 9 November 2013

Dolphins players deny locker room violence




Updated: November 9, 2013, 8:33 PM ET

By James Walker | ESPN.com






DAVIE, Fla. — The back and forth claims between the Miami Dolphins and offensive tackle Jonathan Martin continued Saturday.


Less than 48 hours after Martin’s attorney, David Cornwell, released a scathing statement that included accusations of a “malicious physical attack” toward Martin, several Dolphins players denied such claims.



“Since I’ve been here, I haven’t seen anything like that,” Dolphins offensive tackle Tyson Clabo said of physical violence against Martin.


“I never really seen anything like that,” defensive end Olivier Vernon added. “Most of the time, I thought it was joking. I don’t know how he felt. Everybody was just having fun.”


Other players such as tight end Michael Egnew and cornerback Nolan Carroll denied that the Dolphins have a violent locker room.


Martin left the team on Oct. 28 following a lunchroom incident and has not returned to the Dolphins, who suspended fellow offensive lineman Richie Incognito indefinitely for conduct detrimental to the team.


Cornwell’s statement, which was released Thursday, read, “The issue is Jonathan’s treatment by his teammates. Jonathan endured harassment that went far beyond the traditional locker room hazing.”


There seems to be a large gray area between the locker-room environment described by Martin’s representatives and the one portrayed by Miami’s current players.


“I haven’t heard anything about that stuff,” Carroll said. “For me, I was never close to Jonathan Martin to really talk to him.


“So I couldn’t tell you what he was going through or what type of allegations there was.”


The NFL is holding a full investigation to get to the bottom of the issue.


The Dolphins (4-4) will look to put aside their distractions when they travel to face the winless Tampa Bay Buccaneers (0-8) on “Monday Night Football.”







ESPN.com – NFL



Dolphins players deny locker room violence

Schefter: Few can withstand loss of QB


Commentary


Originally Published: November 8, 2013

By Adam Schefter | ESPN.com




ESPN.com – NFL



Schefter: Few can withstand loss of QB

Schefter: Few can withstand loss of QB


Commentary


Originally Published: November 8, 2013

By Adam Schefter | ESPN.com




ESPN.com – NFL



Schefter: Few can withstand loss of QB

Clayton: Backup QBs step to the fore


Commentary


Originally Published: November 8, 2013

By John Clayton | ESPN.com




ESPN.com – NFL



Clayton: Backup QBs step to the fore

Philbin confirms Incognito 2012 investigation




Updated: November 9, 2013, 3:35 PM ET

By James Walker | ESPN.com






DAVIE, Fla. — Miami Dolphins head coach Joe Philbin confirmed that suspended guard Richie Incognito was investigated last year for allegedly molesting a female volunteer at the team’s golf tournament.



“That incident occurred a year and a half ago,” Philbin said Saturday. “We were made aware of the incident and we took immediate action.”


Philbin declined to elaborate on what kind of actions were taken against Incognito. Philbin also did not reveal whether the NFL was alerted.


Incognito played all 16 games in 2012 and was eventually voted onto Miami’s leadership counsel by his teammates in 2013.


No charges were filed against Incognito following the incident at the team’s golf tournament, which took place in Aventura, Fla.


However, the police report states that the volunteer told police that Incognito “used his golf club to touch her by rubbing it up against her vagina, then up her stomach then to her chest. He then used the club to knock a pair of sunglasses off the top of her head.”


The story was first reported Thursday by WPLG-ABC in Miami.


The woman, who is black, told several media outlets she has declined to talk because she had signed a confidentiality agreement.


The Dolphins suspended Incognito indefinitely last Sunday due to alleged harassment and misconduct toward teammate Jonathan Martin, who left the team due to emotional issues.


The story caused a national media firestorm, prompting the NFL to investigate the Dolphins, Incognito and Martin.







ESPN.com – NFL



Philbin confirms Incognito 2012 investigation

Merrill: Who is Richie Incognito?


He is delightful in this photo, baby-faced with a double chin, smiling near his proud pop. What red-blooded American man doesn’t have a photo like this sitting in an old drawer, of a boy in a baseball uniform, posing awkwardly under a backdrop of trees, standing one with his team? Here, Richie Incognito is harmless. Vulnerable, almost.


It might not look like it, because he’s bigger than the kids in this photo, but he’s also two years younger than they are, a constant theme for Incognito back then — too big to play with kids his own age, too young to handle the boys around him. What isn’t captured in this shot are the tears. Or the fits he threw when he struck out. Or the heckling he took when he arrived back in the dugout and was called “idiot” or “fatso.”


These days, it’s not easy tracking down people willing to talk freely about Incognito, the biggest story in sports right now because he could become the first man punished — perhaps even banished — by the NFL for bullying. So it’s surprising how quickly Kerry Deutsch came up with this rare photo of Incognito. He sent it from his cellphone. Deutsch, a longtime youth coach in New Jersey who’s now retired, has worked with hundreds of kids but distinctly remembers this little big man.


Incognito was 8, maybe 9 years old, and already was boiling with passion and intensity. His dad, Richie Sr., was an assistant coach and equally riveted. “Big Richie” and “Little Richie.” That’s what they called them in the Bogota (N.J.) baseball association.


“He used to be a tile installer,” Deutsch said of Incognito’s dad. “He was a hardworking guy, but he pushed Richie. He wanted him to be the best. I think he was probably upset when he didn’t do well, and the kid was probably upset that his father wasn’t happy with him at that point, too, you know?”


Deutsch paused. He doesn’t know what to make of the controversy involving Incognito. Jonathan Martin abruptly left the Miami Dolphins last week and reportedly checked himself into a hospital to be treated for emotional distress, Incognito was fingered as a main source of the young lineman’s distress, and now everyone who knows or knew Incognito is being asked why. Is he a racist, as voice mail and texts provided by Martin’s representatives suggest? Is he a bully?


Every day, the pendulum of the story seems to swing in the opposite direction. He’s a monster; he’s a great teammate and an “honorary black man.” He’s Martin’s enemy; he’s his friend. He’ll never play in the league again; he’ll get another chance because this stuff happens all the time inside locker rooms and Incognito represents what every team needs.


For now, there are just a few certainties. That Incognito is suspended and that the NFL is investigating allegations of harassment and hazing in the Dolphins’ locker room. That, for much of his life, Incognito has crossed numerous lines, and, because he plays professional football, his actions have been received as both humorous and villainous.


“I really don’t know. I’m not Dr. Phil,” Deutsch said. “I don’t think he was a very mature kid at a young age. And I guess that’s what’s going on right now, is a little immaturity, too.”



•   •   •

Offensive linemen aren’t supposed to be noticed unless they’ve made a big mistake. Two weeks ago, most of the world didn’t know who Jonathan Martin was, that he was a second-year NFL lineman who protected Andrew Luck at Stanford, that he’s soft-spoken, smart and has lawyer parents who matriculated at Harvard.


But nearly everyone had heard of Incognito. He’s been voted the league’s dirtiest player; he’s been the recipient of the “Good Guy” award from the local media in South Florida. He was the funny guy in HBO’s “Hard Knocks” series last year who figured out a teammate’s password and posted on the guy’s Facebook account.


People who play with Incognito generally like him, and people who play against him generally hate him.


Here’s how famous and infamous he was at the University of Nebraska — he was often talked about more than the starting quarterback.


He played to the whistle and through the whistle. He was a tough guy, and Nebraska fans liked that. When the Arizona prep star committed to Nebraska, it was considered a fairly big coup. But eventually, Incognito’s act has grown tired just about everywhere he’s been. He spat on a Troy State player; he picked a fight and was ejected in a blowout loss at Penn State. This happened in the span of four weeks of his redshirt freshman season.



“He cost us a couple games,” recalled one former NU assistant who declined to be named. “He’s been a problem all along.”


Incognito was suspended for undisclosed reasons in the spring of 2003 and was sent to the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., to be treated for anger management. Inside the Nebraska football offices, there were serious discussions over what should be done with him. Some saw him as a time bomb and fretted over what might happen if that aggression seeped off the field.


In February 2004, Incognito got into a fight at a party, and he eventually was found guilty of misdemeanor assault and fined. A few months later, under new coach Bill Callahan, Incognito was suspended indefinitely for a repeated violation of team rules. One of those violations was believed to center on a fight with teammate and friend Grant Mulkey, a fight that Incognito reportedly provoked and that required numerous teammates to break up. Incognito was released from his scholarship in September 2004 and left Lincoln.


He went to Oregon, signed a code of conduct contract … and lasted about a week. Former Ducks coach Mike Bellotti, an ESPN analyst now, said Incognito violated the contract but wouldn’t say how.


“I did get the feeling that he felt bad about what happened,” Bellotti said. “He wanted another chance. He was willing to work really hard to change who he was so he could go on and play football.”



•   •   •

This was no Neanderthal jock. He could be loud and obnoxious, sure, but he was also charming and smooth. In those meetings in which Nebraska coaches tried to figure out what made Incognito tick, and what to do with him, Incognito could come across so calm, so intelligent, in stating his case.



Former NFL teammate Jacob Bell, a good friend of Incognito’s, affectionately compared him to Eddie Haskell, the funny, smart-mouthed sycophant from the 1950s show “Leave It to Beaver.” He could say “yes sir” and “no sir” to an authority figure, polite as punch, then turn around and engage in another act of tomfoolery that would bring levity to a long and hard practice.


Wherever he went, Incognito made a strong impression with his peers. You don’t forget a name like Richie Incognito. In 2000, he attended the Big Red Football School camp, a place where most 16-year-olds would want to mind their p’s and q’s and leave a positive vibe for coaches. Incognito, according to two campers that year, was bored on his first night in Lincoln and decided to mix things up.


“He got this brilliant idea that, ‘Hey, let’s try to get some girls to come over and strip for us,’” said Chris Manning, who at the time was a 130-pound JV player from Kirtland Central High School in New Mexico. “He got money from all the guys, and at some point he called [the service]. The R.A. [resident assistant] obviously stopped the girls at the door and sent them packing.”


Cody Wheeler, a former prep teammate of Manning’s, remembers the hundreds of dollars Incognito collected, and the stern chewing-out the boys received the next morning from Nebraska’s coaches. They were warned that they’d be sent home if anything else happened, and it scared some of them. Their parents had spent good money to send them.


But the ringleader, Manning said, was never identified. And Incognito was undaunted.


“He was loud and outspoken, from what I can remember,” Manning said. “My best guess is he’s just an attention-getter.”



•   •   •

They tried. The Cornhuskers tried to keep him in line — because who’d want to lose an ubertalented lineman with linebacker speed? Richie Incognito Sr. tried his best to help his son succeed. He hated when those kids picked on his boy back in New Jersey. He would admonish the kids in the dugout, Deutsch said, trying to get them to stop. When Little Richie was 11 or 12, the Incognitos moved to Arizona, in part because his dad wanted him to be able to play baseball year-round, Deutsch said.


The elder Incognito, a Vietnam veteran, is described as loyal and protective and has been outspoken in defending his son in message boards over the years. In a post that is believed to have been written by Richie Sr. about 10 years ago, he told Huskers fans of their family background.


The poster wrote that Richie wasn’t raised with a silver spoon in his mouth. He shared his own background, that he grew up in a rough neighborhood in Union City, N.J., where he said he learned the ropes of life.



“You also discovered the harsh reality that you and your family were not one of the so-called chosen ones,” he wrote. “It was a community where your word was your word, it meant everything to you. It was your honor, your future, and in some instances, your life.”


Richie Incognito Sr. did not respond to an interview request for this story.


The younger Incognito attended Mountain Ridge High School, which is located in a middle-class, mostly white neighborhood in Glendale, Ariz. Jim Ewan, his football coach at Mountain Ridge, said he never saw anything that made him believe Incognito was racist — numerous people with interactions with Incognito were interviewed for this story, and none of them labeled him racist. Ewan called Incognito a “low-maintenance kid,” even though he did cause some minor trouble in those days.


He worked hard in practice, Ewan said. He became massive after many hours in the school weight room.


“I disciplined Richie a couple of times,” Ewan said. “I disciplined hundreds of players. And his dad probably had his feelings hurt more than Richie when I disciplined him.”


The younger Incognito, by this time, seemed unflappable. There were codes at Nebraska, such as respecting your elders and knowing your place, especially for a freshman on the offensive line. But Incognito was oblivious to them. He didn’t care how competitive it was, that 20 guys were fighting, ugly and violently, for five spots. Incognito was 18 years old, and, even then, he was so confident that he knew he wouldn’t earn their respect as much as he would command it.


He immediately went against the grain by talking smack to the upperclassmen. When he was told to knock it off, former NU linebacker Steve Safranek said, he generally did. But if a guy didn’t stand up to Incognito, it seemed to fuel him and the intimidation intensified.


“In my opinion,” Safranek said, “he was perceived as a young guy who was really damn good at football, who just had a certain attitude and a certain confidence about him that, yeah, if it wasn’t checked, he could get out of control. At the same time, he was viewed as a tough guy that you wanted in your corner.”



•   •   •

Incognito wowed the scouts with his immense physical skills at the 2005 NFL combine, but he stumbled during a drill and had to be carted off for a knee sprain. The injury didn’t cause him to drop in the draft; the character questions did.


He was picked in the third round by the St. Louis Rams, adding toughness to a franchise seemingly in need of some attitude. Incognito had his share of run-ins with teammates, including multiple scuffles with former Rams cornerback Dwight Anderson, who was more than 100 pounds lighter than Incognito. Anderson, contacted through his current CFL team, the Saskatchewan Roughriders, declined to comment for this story.


But there are plenty of teammates, from St. Louis to Miami, who will vouch for Incognito. Jacob Bell, who walked away from the NFL last year to educate players about the risks of football, is passionate about his respect for Incognito. “Best thing I can say is he had a lot of friends,” Bell said. St. Louis linebacker Will Witherspoon said Incognito is a guy who looks out for his teammates.


“When your quarterback is getting abused back there, he’s the first guy to step up and say something,” Witherspoon said. “In that aspect, he’s a guy you want to have on your team. In some ways, Richie is also a guy who is a little harsh and abrasive to some guys, and they don’t know how to deal with that.”


Incognito was obviously seen as an important fixture in the Dolphins’ locker room. He was voted in as a member of the team’s leadership council. And, with each day that passes in this scandal, which has mushroomed, Incognito’s teammates in Miami are louder in their support for the suspended lineman.


In a small town a planet away from South Beach, Jack Limbaugh watches it unfold and hopes for the best for Martin. Limbaugh, who works at his family’s tire business in Algona, Iowa, once had his fill of Incognito and walked out of a practice at Nebraska. Limbaugh is hesitant to talk about it now. He calls himself “a nobody” in the grand scheme of all this.


But years ago, Limbaugh was just a kid who loved football, who turned down scholarships from Iowa and Iowa State to walk on at Nebraska. He knew what being an offensive lineman meant at a place like that. He used to have the Sports Illustrated cover with Nebraska linemen Zach Wiegert and Brenden Stai hanging on his bedroom wall.


Limbaugh loved football because of the physicality, because of the camaraderie. He was a quiet guy who was Academic All-Big 12. Incognito used to push his buttons, used to taunt him, and he kept doing it because Limbaugh refused to fight back.


Anything that could get under Limbaugh’s skin, Incognito would do it. Then, one day in 2002, Incognito — just a redshirt freshman then — blindsided Limbaugh and knocked him to the ground for no reason. Limbaugh got up, took his equipment and walked out of practice. Although leaving a practice like that would normally be a punishable offense, Limbaugh said, he did not get in trouble that day. Apparently, the coaches knew he had endured enough.


So, Incognito is at the center of this controversy now, and Limbaugh was going to keep quiet. But then he thought about his boys, one of whom plays flag football. He thought he’d say something.


“You hear people say, ‘Oh, this is the culture in the locker room,’” Limbaugh said. “Well, I have two young sons, and if that’s going to still be the culture in the locker room and the way people treat each other, I don’t want to be part of that.”


Limbaugh said the culture isn’t going to change unless people stand up and say it isn’t right. And today, people are standing up.


For Incognito.


Elizabeth Merrill covered Nebraska football from 2002 to 2005.


ESPN writers Nick Wagoner and Tim Keown contributed to this story.







ESPN.com – NFL



Merrill: Who is Richie Incognito?

Friday, 8 November 2013

OTL: Ex-Fins WR Duper shows signs of CTE




Updated: November 8, 2013, 11:43 PM ET

By William Weinbaum and Steve Delsohn | ESPN.com






Former Miami Dolphins All-Pro wide receiver Mark Duper is the ninth living former NFL player to be diagnosed with signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a degenerative brain disease many scientists say is caused by head trauma and linked to depression and dementia. Duper told “Outside the Lines” he learned of his diagnosis Friday from researchers involved with the testing.


The conclusions regarding the former players, according to the researchers, are based on a brain scan that uses a radioactive marker to detect accumulations of abnormal tau, a protein that damages brain cells in areas that control memory, emotions and other functions. The researchers say the diagnoses also are based on symptoms reported by the former players and on clinical evaluations.



“It was shocking,” Duper told OTL about his reaction to hearing that he had signs of CTE. “I hoped nothing was wrong.


“I’ve had memory things where I would go to the store and forget what I went for. And I have emotional swings and panic attacks.”


Duper is one of four former stars — the others are Hall of Famers Tony Dorsett and Joe DeLamielleure, and All-Pro Leonard Marshall — who were tested over the past three months at UCLA and diagnosed with signs of CTE. UCLA announced in January that five other ex-players had been tested and received that diagnosis.


Prior to the findings in the nine living ex-players, CTE had been diagnosed only posthumously. Autopsies on more than 50 former NFL players — including on perennial All-Pro Junior Seau, who committed suicide last year, and Hall of Famer Mike Webster – found concentrations of tau indicative of CTE.


“Outside the Lines” reported Wednesday that Dorsett, DeLamielleure and Marshall all described experiencing memory loss, depression and suicidal thoughts.


“Once upon a time, everybody has thought about suicide, but I am not going to do it,” Duper said.


Doctors on the research team that administered the tests to the nine retired players say the CTE density and patterns they found correlate with CTE findings in autopsies. They say the use of the brain scan is in preliminary stages, given the small sample size, but that they are confident it will lead to previously impossible monitoring of the disease’s progress and to advancements in treatment.


The 54-year-old Duper said, “I think this test will show the damage we are doing to our bodies and how to prevent it. People have to speak up about CTE. I hope me speaking out will show that people should be tested.”


Duper played all 11 of his NFL seasons for Miami, had four 1,000-yard seasons and was half of the potent “Marks Brothers” receiving tandem with Mark Clayton. He was inducted 10 years ago next month, along with Clayton, into the Dolphins’ Honor Roll.


There is no known cure for CTE, but Duper said, “It’s not a death diagnosis. Now I know; the next step is to see what can be done. I’m not sure.”




ESPN.com – NFL



OTL: Ex-Fins WR Duper shows signs of CTE

Source: Incognito feels "betrayed" by Martin




Updated: November 8, 2013, 10:47 PM ET

By James Walker | ESPN.com






Embattled Miami Dolphins guard Richie Incognito believed he was friends with teammate Jonathan Martin and feels “shocked” and “betrayed” by Martin’s claims of harassment, a source with knowledge of the situation told ESPN.com on Friday night.


Incognito was suspended indefinitely last Sunday for conduct detrimental to the team after Martin presented evidence — including threatening voice mails and text messages — to the Dolphins, the NFL and the NFL Players Association. The Dolphins are currently under investigation by the NFL, while both Martin and Incognito are away from the team.



“It’s probably a combination of totally blindsided and a bit betrayed,” the source said of Incognito’s current state. “He’s shocked. He can’t believe this happened and thinks it probably could have been avoided.”


According to the source, Incognito viewed himself as a “tough-love older brother” to Martin. Incognito gave Martin a hard time but also was protective of the second-year player, the source said.


Multiple sources confirmed to ESPN on Monday that Incognito used racial epithets and profane language toward Martin on multiple occasions. In a transcript of a voice mail message from April, Incognito referred to Martin as a “half n—– piece of s—,” and added, “F— you, you’re still a rookie. I’ll kill you.”


Incognito received overwhelming support in Miami’s locker room following the suspension.


The reception toward Martin, meanwhile, was lukewarm. Some Dolphins veterans even expressed dislike for the way Martin handled the situation.


“I think if you have a problem with somebody — a legitimate problem with somebody — you should say, ‘I have a problem with this,’ and stand up and be a man,” Dolphins offensive tackle Tyson Clabo said. “I don’t think what happened is necessary. I don’t know why he’s doing this. And the only person who knows why is Jonathan Martin.”


Martin left the team on Oct. 28 following a lunchroom incident and hasn’t returned. Martin hired lawyer David Cornwell, who released a statement Thursday that claimed the player was the subject of harassment and verbal attacks from multiple Dolphins teammates.


“Jonathan endured harassment that went far beyond the traditional locker room hazing,” Cornwell said in the statement. “For the entire season-and-a-half that he was with the Dolphins, he attempted to befriend the same teammates who subjected him to the abuse with the hope that doing so would end the harassment. This is a textbook reaction of victims of bullying. Despite these efforts, the taunting continued.”


In an unscientific survey conducted by team reporters for ESPN.com’s NFL Nation over two days this week, Incognito does not have the same level of support from some of his NFL peers that he has received from teammates. Three players participated from each team surveyed, with 72 players in all asked three questions. The players taking part were granted anonymity.


To the question of which player, Martin or Incognito, would they rather have as a teammate, 15 of the players who responded (20.8 percent) said they would rather have Incognito as a teammate, while 34 (47.2 percent) said they would rather have Martin as a teammate.


However, 23 of those who responded (31.9 percent) said they would want neither as a teammate. In all, the results showed that 57 of those who answered (79.2 percent) would not want Incognito as a teammate.


Information from ESPN.com Broncos reporter Jeff Legwold was used in this report.







ESPN.com – NFL



Source: Incognito feels "betrayed" by Martin

Report: Incognito held meetings at strip club




Updated: November 8, 2013, 1:47 PM ET

ESPN.com news services






Recently suspended guard Richie Incognito held meetings for fellow Miami Dolphins offensive linemen at a South Florida strip club and would fine them if they didn’t attend, according to a report.



The National Football Post, citing two sources, reported that Incognito expected the linemen to attend. If they failed to show up, Incognito would fine them in the club’s kangaroo court and mock them for not being part of the group, one of the sources said.


“Richie wanted to set up Richie’s world as a way for everybody to act,” a team source told the National Football Post. “Richie thinks everybody should act that way. He doesn’t get that some guys aren’t into that behavior. Some guys don’t want to constantly explain to their wife or girlfriend why they have to go to a strip club.”


This is the latest news to surface about Incognito, who was suspended by the Dolphins on Sunday for conduct detrimental to the team amid accusations he bullied and used racially charged terms against fellow lineman Jonathan Martin, who left the Dolphins last week.


The NFL is investigating whether Incognito harassed or bullied Martin, and whether their teammates and the organization mishandled the situation. Martin will meet with Ted Wells, the NFL’s independent investigator, at the end of next week in Los Angeles, a league source told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.


Martin, a second-year player out of Stanford, is with his family in California, where he is undergoing counseling for emotional issues.


Martin’s lawyer, David Cornwell, released a statement Thursday that said Martin endured “harassment that went far beyond traditional locker room hazing.”


Also on Thursday, it was revealed that Incognito was investigated last year for harassing a volunteer at the Dolphins’ annual golf tournament by allegedly molesting her with a golf club, according to Aventura, Fla., police.


The original police report states that the alleged incident happened at the Turnberry Resort & Club in Aventura, but no charges were filed against Incognito.


The 34-year-old volunteer told police Incognito had been drinking and was “acting very inappropriate towards her,” and that she went to police after Incognito said he wouldn’t apologize.


The report states that the volunteer told police that Incognito “used his golf club to touch her by rubbing it up against her vagina, then up her stomach then to her chest. He then used the club to knock a pair of sunglasses off the top of her head” before continuing his aggression toward the woman, the report states.


Information from ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter and ESPN.com Dolphins reporter James Walker was used in this report.




ESPN.com – NFL



Report: Incognito held meetings at strip club

Jonathan Martin walked into a twisted world

Commentary


Updated: November 8, 2013, 3:20 PM ET

By Jason Whitlock | ESPN.com






Mass incarceration has turned segments of Black America so upside down that a tatted-up, N-word-tossing white goon is more respected and accepted than a soft-spoken, highly intelligent black Stanford graduate.


According to a story in the Miami Herald, black Dolphins players granted Richie Incognito “honorary” status as a black man while feeling little connection to Jonathan Martin.



Welcome to Incarceration Nation, where the mindset of the Miami Dolphins’ locker room mirrors the mentality of a maximum-security prison yard and where a wide swath of America believes the nonviolent intellectual needs to adopt the tactics of the barbarian.


I don’t blame Jonathan Martin for walking away from the Dolphins and checking himself into a hospital seeking treatment for emotional distress. The cesspool of insanity that apparently is the Miami locker room would test the mental stability of any sane man. Martin, the offspring of Harvard grads, a 24-year-old trained at some of America’s finest academic institutions, is a first-time offender callously thrown into an Attica prison cell with Incognito and Aaron Hernandez’s BFF Mike Pouncey. Dolphins warden Jeff Ireland and deputy warden Joe Philbin put zero sophisticated thought into what they were doing when they drafted Martin in the second round in 2012.


You don’t put Jonathan Martin in a cell with Incognito and Pouncey. You draft someone else, and let another team take Martin. The Dolphins don’t have the kind of environment to support someone with Martin’s background. It takes intelligence and common sense to connect with and manage Martin. Those attributes appear to be in short supply in Miami.


“Richie is honorary,” a black former Dolphins player told Miami Herald reporter Armando Salguero. “I don’t expect you to understand because you’re not black. But being a black guy, being a brother is more than just about skin color. It’s about how you carry yourself. How you play. Where you come from. What you’ve experienced. A lot of things.”


I’m black. And I totally understand the genesis of this particular brand of stupidity and self-hatred. Mass Incarceration, its bastard child, Hurricane Illegitimacy, and their marketing firm, commercial hip-hop music, have created a culture that perpetrates the idea that authentic blackness is criminal, savage, uneducated and irresponsible. The tenets of white supremacy and bigotry have been injected into popular youth culture. The blackest things a black man can do are loudly spew the N-word publicly and react violently to the slightest sign of disrespect or disagreement.



Yeah, Richie Incognito is an honorary black. And Jonathan Martin is a sellout.


“I don’t have a problem with Richie,” Dolphins receiver Mike Wallace was quoted in Salguero’s story. “I love Richie.”


Yeah, the Dolphins are circling the wagons around Incognito. I get Ryan Tannehill’s defense of his Pro Bowl left guard. He needs him. He doesn’t believe the Dolphins can protect him or win games without Incognito. There’s a popular belief you can’t consistently win football games without a few “thugs” like Incognito in your locker room. Makes you wonder how Stanford competes with USC, Oregon, UCLA, etc., every year. You wonder how Nebraska and Oregon survived after booting Incognito. You wonder why three NFL teams let him go. Maybe he’s not as essential as the myth-makers would have you believe.


But what makes me want to check into a mental hospital is Miami’s black players’ unconditional love of Incognito and indifference to Martin.


It points to our fundamental lack of knowledge of our own history in this country. We think the fake tough guy, the ex-con turned rhetoric spewer was more courageous than the educated pacifist who won our liberation standing in the streets, absorbing repeated ass-whippings, jail and a white assassin’s bullet. We fell for the okeydoke.


We think Malcolm X was blacker than Martin Luther King Jr.


I’m as guilty as anybody. I’ve read X’s autobiography a half-dozen times. I own Spike Lee’s movie about X and watch it a couple of times a year. I love Malcolm X. But I’m not an idiot. MLK liberated me. MLK blazed the proper path to respect, progress and achievement. Barack Obama stands on MLK’s shoulders. And so does Jonathan Martin.


Richie Incognito is an “honorary” bigot, standing on the shoulders of Gov. George Wallace. The fact that a group of young black men in the Dolphins’ locker room can’t see that speaks to the level of ignorance unleashed by Mass Incarceration, Hurricane Illegitimacy and commercial hip-hop.


Too many young people have grown up. There’s a difference between growing up and being raised. When you grow up, you’re left to figure things out on your own. That’s why we have a generation of young people who can’t recognize the self-hatred and damage of describing yourself as the N-word. They don’t know what they haven’t been taught. Video games, iPads and headphones can’t raise a child. But those technological advances can entertain and empower popular culture to corrupt.


I don’t know Jonathan Martin. He’s biracial. He was apparently smart enough to qualify for entry into Harvard. He’s huge and athletic. He strikes me as someone ripe to struggle with his identity.


The Dolphins tagged him the “Big Weirdo.” The Dolphins held up Richie Incognito as the ultimate role model for offensive linemen. Incognito was a Pro Bowler. He was a member of the six-man leadership council. It makes perfect sense for a kid like Martin to befriend Incognito and try to fit in. I’m sure they were best friends, for a time. I’m sure Incognito offered Martin physical protection on the football field. It’s standard operating procedure for a prison-yard bully to cultivate a relationship that is equal parts fear, love and disrespect. It’s how you turn a guy out and make him grab your belt loop.


Martin was confused. He probably thought the bullying and hazing would pass after his rookie season. He wanted to fit in and make it in the NFL. The paycheck is incredible. He tried to laugh off the abuse and disrespect. He participated in it. He coughed up $ 15,000 for a trip to Las Vegas he didn’t want to take.


Finally he snapped. He wasn’t raised to be a full-blown idiot. He was raised to think and solve problems with his mind. He was savvy enough to figure out a physical confrontation with Incognito was a no-win situation. It wouldn’t curb Incognito’s behavior or change the culture inside the Miami locker room. It would confirm it. In order to win the fight, Martin would have to physically harm Incognito. It would not be a one-punch or two-punch fight.


Martin walked. If the entry fee to being an NFL offensive lineman is adopting the mindset of Incognito and Pouncey, Martin wisely chose not to pay it. He has a developed brain and a supportive family unit. He’s not desperate. He has options. People with limited options and no family support may not understand or respect his decision. That’s on them and illustrates the vast impact of Mass Incarceration and Hurricane Illegitimacy.


It’s now time for Roger Goodell to render a verdict on wardens Ireland and Philbin and Cell Block D leader Incognito. The world is so upside down that I half expect Goodell to suspend Martin for conduct detrimental to American idiocy.



• Columnist for Fox Sports from 2010-2013 • Columnist at the Kansas City Star for 16 years • ESPN.com Page 2 columnist from 2002 to 2006




ESPN.com – NFL



Jonathan Martin walked into a twisted world

Most players in survey don"t want Incognito




Updated: November 8, 2013, 12:37 PM ET

By Jeff Legwold | ESPN.com






Recently suspended Miami Dolphins guard Richie Incognito does not have the support from NFL peers that he has received from teammates.


Incognito, who has been suspended indefinitely by the team in a bullying scandal that has swept over the league and saw Dolphins tackle Jonathan Martin leave the team, has received public support from many of his teammates in recent days, including quarterback Ryan Tannehill.



But in an unscientific survey conducted by team reporters for ESPN.com’s NFL Nation over two days this week, Incognito does not have the same level of support from some of his peers. Three players participated from each team surveyed, with 72 players in all asked three questions. The players taking part were granted anonymity.


To the question of which player, Martin or Incognito, would they rather have as a teammate, 15 of the players who responded (20.8 percent) said they would rather have Incognito as a teammate, while 34 (47.2 percent) said they would rather have Martin as a teammate.


However, 23 of those who responded, or 31.9 percent, said they would want neither as a teammate. In all, the results showed that 57 of those who answered (79.2 percent) would not want Incognito as a teammate.


The players were also asked, in true-or-false form, whether they had ever been victims of hazing during their NFL careers. Thirty-one of the players (43.1 percent) answered true, while 41 (56.9 percent) answered false.


In the third question, players were asked if they ever had to provide money as part of a hazing incident. To that, 28 players (38.9 percent) answered true, while 44 players (61.1 percent) answered false.


Those who answered true to the third question were also asked to provide the highest dollar amount they were asked to provide as part of the hazing incident. A wide range of answers were given.


Some of the answers included $ 40 for donuts, $ 100 for Chick-Fil-A and $ 2,500 and $ 5,000 for team dinners. In addition, four of the players surveyed said they spent $ 9,000, $ 10,000 (two players) and $ 18,000. Those four players did not identify how the money was used.


The NFL is investigating what happened between Incognito and Martin, with noted attorney Ted Wells appointed by the league to conduct the investigation. Wells will prepare a report for NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and league officials, and the report will be made public upon its completion. 



Incognito, a nine-year veteran, was suspended by the Dolphins on Sunday for “conduct detrimental to the team,” amid accusations that he bullied and used racially charged terms against Martin, who left the team last week. Martin, a second-year tackle from Stanford, is with his family in California and has undergone counseling for emotional issues.


During a week when coaches of several teams were addressing the Dolphins’ situation, Broncos interim coach Jack Del Rio was asked whether he spoke of the incident with Denver players.


“I did address it with the team,” Del Rio said. “And I told them hopefully they feel confident if anything was ever going on they would pick one of the channels internally here, whether it be a coach, position coach, head coach, coordinator, anybody in coaching … somebody else in the building, another player, doesn’t have to be a captain or a leader.


“If something’s going on, let us help you. We like to talk about being family, and we like to think we would be helpful to a person struggling in a particular situation.”







ESPN.com – NFL



Most players in survey don"t want Incognito

Peterson, Vikes edge Redskins; Ponder hurt



Ponder Injured In Vikings’ Win



MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Vikings found a way to stop Robert Griffin III and the Washington Redskins, showing late resolve after a series of final-minute collapses.


Adrian Peterson ran for 75 yards and two touchdowns, and the Vikings forced Griffin into three straight incompletions from the 4-yard line to hold on for a 34-27 victory Thursday night.


After losing three games this year in the final minute, the Vikings finally pulled one out.




“There were many times during the course of that game where they could’ve gone, ‘Oh, no, here we go again,’” coach Leslie Frazier said.


Christian Ponder went 17-for-21 for 174 yards with two touchdowns and an interception for Minnesota before leaving late in the third quarter with a dislocated shoulder on his non-throwing left arm. John Carlson had seven catches for 98 yards and a touchdown, and rookie Cordarrelle Patterson also had a scoring reception for the Vikings (2-7).


“We just played the way we were supposed to,” Ponder said. “We executed like an NFL team is supposed to, especially a 10-6 playoff team like we were last year. We really needed that, to help out with our confidence, and now that’s our expectation for the rest of the year.”


Griffin was 24-for-37 for 281 yards, three touchdowns and no turnovers for the Redskins (3-6), who led 27-14 early in the third quarter. He also ran seven times for 44 yards, but the Vikings took him down for four sacks for 39 yards in the second half, including 2 1/2 by Kevin Williams.


The Redskins committed eight penalties for 63 yards.


“You can’t do that,” Redskins coach Mike Shanahan said. “You’ve got to keep your poise. You make mistakes like that and so often it will cost you the game.”


With the Redskins out of timeouts, Griffin ran for 12 yards on fourth-and-1 at his own 49 right after the 2-minute warning. After a run to the 4, the Vikings stopped the clock. Wide receiver Greg Jennings was livid on the sideline, but Frazier defended the timeout to give the drained defense a rest and allow at least a few seconds for a comeback in case the Redskins scored.




But Griffin’s next two passes were incomplete, to Jordan Reed and Pierre Garcon. On fourth-and-goal with 32 seconds left, his throw to the corner of the end zone was caught by Santana Moss with only one foot inbounds.


“It felt like we were in control, and when you walk off the field with a loss, it’s very disheartening,” Griffin said, “but I don’t think anyone on this team is going to quit.”


The Vikings didn’t.


“That was an awesome feeling,” Peterson said, adding: “Through the adversity we’ve been through, guys just continued to fight.”


Blair Walsh kicked two fourth-quarter field goals for the Vikings after Peterson’s second score gave them a 28-27 lead late in the third quarter.


That drive started at the Washington 41, thanks to an unnecessary roughness call. Ponder scrambled and slung a third-and-12 laser to Jarius Wright for a first down at the sideline, and later said Wright was so wide open he laughed as he threw the ball. Then, Ponder took off for the 14-yard run that knocked him out of the game, and an official replay reversed the touchdown call after he dived at the pylon and rolled out of bounds.


“Nothing seems to faze him,” Carlson said, adding: “He showed a lot of heart.”


Ponder said he plans to be ready for the team’s next game in 10 days against the Seattle Seahawks.


“My expectations are, I’m going to be back next week,” Ponder said. “We’ve got a great athletic training staff. They’re going to do me right. I’m going to do everything I can to be back next Sunday.”


Matt Cassel came in, and Peterson scored to give the Vikings the lead on the next play.




“We can’t let a team like that score that many points. It’s totally on us. We were sleepwalking at times,” Redskins linebacker Brian Orakpo said.


The Redskins scored on their first five possessions with broken tackle after broken tackle. They converted seven of eight third downs in the first half and held the ball for more than two-thirds of the elapsed game time.


That all changed after the break.


“You always want to be able to rush the passer with the game on the line,” Williams said. “It was nice to finish it this time.”


Game notes



Carlson scored for the first time since 2010. In his first 1 1/2 seasons with the Vikings, he had a total of 19 catches for 104 yards. … Alfred Morris ran 26 times for 139 yards for the Redskins, who outgained the Vikings 433-307 in total yards. … Williams had his first multisack game for the Vikings since Oct. 18, 2009. … Garcon had his second straight 100-yard receiving game and has 803 yards this season. Garcon, Reed and Logan Paulsen had TD catches.


Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.


Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press


ESPN.com – NFL



Peterson, Vikes edge Redskins; Ponder hurt

Incognito faced 2012 harassment complaint




Updated: November 8, 2013, 1:17 AM ET

ESPN.com news services






Miami Dolphins lineman Richie Incognito was investigated last year for harassing a volunteer at the Dolphins’ annual golf tournament by allegedly molesting her with a golf club, according to Aventura, Fla., police.


The original police report states that the alleged incident happened at the Turnberry Resort & Club in Aventura, but no charges were ever filed against Incognito.



The 34-year-old volunteer told police Incognito had been drinking and was “acting very inappropriate towards her,” and that she went to police after Incognito said he wouldn’t apologize.


The report states the the female volunteer told police that Incognito “used his golf club to touch her by rubbing it up against her vagina, then up her stomach then to her chest. He then used the club to knock a pair of sunglasses off the top of her head.


“After that, he proceeded to lean up against her buttocks with his private parts as if dancing, saying ‘Let it rain! Let it rain!’” the report states. “He finally finished his inappropriate behavior by emptying bottled water in her face.”


The story was first reported Thursday by WPLG-ABC in Miami.


The woman, who is black, told several media outlets she has declined to talk because she had signed a confidentiality agreement. Incognito, who is white, was suspended by the Dolphins on Sunday for conduct detrimental to the team amid accusations he bullied and used racially charged terms against teammate Jonathan Martin, who has since left the team. Martin is biracial.


Martin, a second-year player, is with his family in California, where he is undergoing counseling for emotional issues.


The NFL is investigating whether Incognito harassed or bullied Martin, and whether their teammates and the organization mishandled the situation.




ESPN.com – NFL



Incognito faced 2012 harassment complaint

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Lawyer: Martin"s treatment went beyond hazing




Updated: November 8, 2013, 12:32 AM ET

ESPN.com news services






Jonathan Martin has endured constant harassment, daily verbal attacks and even a “malicious physical attack” from teammates during his time with the Miami Dolphins, according to a statement released Thursday on Martin’s behalf by lawyer David Cornwell.



“Jonathan Martin’s toughness is not at issue,” Cornwell said in the statement. “Jonathan has started every game with the Miami Dolphins since he was drafted in 2012. At Stanford, he was the anchor for Jim Harbaugh’s ’smash mouth’ brand of football and he protected Andrew Luck’s blind side.


“The issue is Jonathan’s treatment by his teammates. Jonathan endured harassment that went far beyond the traditional locker room hazing. For the entire season-and-a-half that he was with the Dolphins, he attempted to befriend the same teammates who subjected him to the abuse with the hope that doing so would end the harassment. This is a textbook reaction of victims of bullying. Despite these efforts, the taunting continued. Beyond the well-publicized voice mail with its racial epithet, Jonathan endured a malicious physical attack on him by a teammate, and daily vulgar comments such as the quote at the bottom. These facts are not in dispute.


“Eventually, Jonathan made a difficult choice. Despite his love for football, Jonathan left the Dolphins. Jonathan looks forward to getting back to playing football. In the meantime, he will cooperate fully with the NFL investigation.”


The statement also included an alleged vulgar quote from an anonymous teammate directed at Martin’s sister.


Martin has previously said he suffered harassment and was bullied by Richie Incognito, and handed over evidence to the Dolphins, the NFL and NFL Players Association. ESPN obtained the transcript of the voice mail allegedly left by Incognito that included racial slurs and threats of violence.


Dolphins players had mixed reactions Thursday to a potential return by Martin, just 24 hours after many players expressed support for Incognito, who was suspended indefinitely Sunday for conduct detrimental to the team.


NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith released a statement Thursday saying he’s been in contact with Dolphins players.


“I continue to be in touch with players in Miami, their representatives and player leadership, and I look forward to information that defines the full scope of the NFL’s investigation,” he said. “Every NFL player should expect safe and professional working conditions. The NFLPA has taken steps to ensure that every one of our affected members is represented. It is our duty as a union to learn the full facts, protect the interests of players involved and hold management accountable to the highest standards of fairness and transparency.”


Information from ESPN.com Dolphins reporter James Walker was used in this report.




ESPN.com – NFL



Lawyer: Martin"s treatment went beyond hazing

Vikings lose QB Ponder to left shoulder injury




Updated: November 7, 2013, 11:00 PM ET

By Ben Goessling | ESPN.com






MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder left the team’s game against the Washington Redskins Thursday night because of a left shoulder injury that occurred when the quarterback was trying to stretch for a touchdown on a 15-yard run at the end of the third quarter.



Ponder was quickly ruled out for the rest of the game.


Matt Cassel took over at quarterback for the Vikings, handing off to Adrian Peterson for a touchdown that put the Vikings up 28-27. But Ponder’s injury adds yet another twist to the Vikings’ quarterback situation, just as he was in the middle of one of his best games with the team.


After throwing an early interception on a deep ball to Greg Jennings, Ponder hit 16 of his next 20 passes for 174 yards and two touchdowns, helping the Vikings rebound from a 27-14 deficit to take the lead. He was starting his third straight game for the Vikings, who have used two other starting quarterbacks this year.







ESPN.com – NFL



Vikings lose QB Ponder to left shoulder injury

Betting: How to bet WAS-MIN


Line analysis and ATS picks from Vegas experts on the Thursday night game



Updated: November 7, 2013, 2:18 PM ET


By Evan Abrams | ESPN Insider







With last week’s “Thursday Night Football” game between the Cincinnati Bengals and Miami Dolphins ending on a safety in overtime, it will be pretty difficult for the Washington Redskins and last-place Minnesota Vikings to live up to expectations. The Redskins and Vikings are a combined 1-10 straight up against the NFC this year, while last year they were a combined 15-9 SU versus the NFC and 20-12 SU overall, finishing in first and second place in their respective divisions.


Tonight’s game will mark the first time since 1980 that two teams that have each allowed 250-plus points through eight games will meet. The Vikings (2.2) and Redskins (2.1) are ranked 32nd and 30th in the NFL in opposing passing touchdowns per game, and both are among the worst teams in the league in opposing points per game in both the first and second half of games. The total for the game, listed at the Las Vegas Hotel, opened earlier in the week at 48.5, quickly ballooned to a high of 50.5 as of Wednesday and has settled around 49.5 by early Thursday morning.


Since 2006, the Vikings lead the series over the Redskins 3-2 SU and against the spread with the current spread sitting at minus-1 at LVH in favor of the road Redskins. Since Robert Griffin III took over in Washington as the starting quarterback in 2012, the Redskins have been a road favorite only three times prior to this matchup and are 2-1 SU and ATS in those contests. Under Mike Shanahan, the Redskins are above .500 with a 3-2 SU and ATS record as a road favorite.


Adrian Peterson has played in 20 prime-time games with Minnesota, and the Vikings are 6-14 SU and 5-15 ATS in those contests. The positive news for Peterson and the Vikings is the fact that he has scored a rushing touchdown in six of their last seven prime-time games dating back to 2010.


Let’s turn to handicapping analysis from Jay Kornegay of the LVH and an ATS pick on the game from Insider’s panel of wiseguys.






Matchup: Washington Redskins at Minnesota Vikings


Spread: Opened Washington minus-2.5; now Washington minus-1
Total: Opened 48.5; now 49.5




scoreboard arrow To read more on how to bet tonight’s game between Washington and Minnesota, you must be an ESPN Insider.



Evan Abrams has been working in sports information and analytics for the past decade in New Jersey, New York, and Las Vegas. Born and raised in New York City, Abrams graduated from Indiana University.





ESPN.com – NFL



Betting: How to bet WAS-MIN

Agent: Martin"s issues with several Dolphins




Updated: November 7, 2013, 3:10 PM ET

ESPN.com news services






Miami Dolphins offensive tackle Jonathan Martin had issues with multiple players on the team, not just suspended guard Richie Incognito, his agent told ESPN’s Mark Schwarz on Thursday.


Agent Rick Smith told ESPN that Martin is doing very well but wouldn’t say when his client would return to the team.



ProFootballTalk.com, citing multiple league sources, reported Wednesday night that Smith called Dolphins general manager Jeff Ireland before his client left the team Oct. 28 and complained about the manner in which the second-year player was being treated by Incognito.


In response, Ireland suggested Martin respond to Incognito physically and specifically mentioned that he should “punch” the veteran guard, the sources told ProFootballTalk.com.


Representatives for Martin have turned over evidence of harassment to the Dolphins, the NFL and the NFL Players Association.


Commissioner Roger Goodell appointed attorney Ted Wells to direct an independent investigation into the Dolphins’ workplace conduct. That report will be made public.


Martin’s family has hired attorney David Cornwell to represent Martin’s legal interests in the issues with the Dolphins, a source has confirmed to ESPN.


The hiring was earlier reported by Fox Sports.


NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith released a statement Thursday saying he’s been in contact with Miami players.


“I continue to be in touch with players in Miami, their representatives and player leadership, and I look forward to information that defines the full scope of the NFL’s investigation,” he said. “Every NFL player should expect safe and professional working conditions. The NFLPA has taken steps to ensure that every one of our affected members is represented. It is our duty as a union to learn the full facts, protect the interests of players involved and hold management accountable to the highest standards of fairness and transparency.”



On Wednesday, veteran Dolphins players offered overwhelming support for Incognito while also displaying anger toward Martin, who left the team after claims of harassment and misconduct.


“I think if you have a problem with somebody — a legitimate problem with somebody — you should say, ‘I have a problem with this,’ and stand up and be a man,” offensive tackle Tyson Clabo said. “I don’t think what happened is necessary. I don’t know why he’s doing this, and the only person who knows why is Jonathan Martin.”


Multiple sources confirmed to ESPN on Monday that Incognito used racial epithets and profane language toward Martin on multiple occasions. In a transcript of a voice mail message from April, Incognito referred to Martin as a “half n—– piece of s—,” and added, “F— you, you’re still a rookie. I’ll kill you.”


Some Dolphins players were aware of the contents in the voice mail, but many defended Incognito against claims that he is racist and intended to harm Martin.


“If I’m not mistaken, this is the same guy [Martin] who was laughing about this voice mail at one point and time, first of all,” receiver Brian Hartline said. “Second of all, I believe that, if you go through the whole voice mail, there’s some things said that you probably shouldn’t say in general, friends or not friends. But I know for a fact that I’ve said things to my friends that I kind of wish I never said, either.


“With that being said, I never thought it was a death threat. I never thought he was actually going to do the things he said. If you can’t take validity from one part of the voice mail, how do you take validity from the whole voice mail? You can’t pick and choose what parts count and which parts don’t count.”


Asked to clarify whether Martin laughed at the voice mail, Hartline hedged.


“I just remember it was being passed around at one point as a joke. I could be mistaken.”


Dolphins players described Incognito and Martin as good friends. Quarterback Ryan Tannehill even described Martin as a protégé of Incognito.


“Richie said, ‘Jonathan is like my little brother,’” Tannehill said of a past conversation. “I think that’s an accurate depiction. He gave him a hard time. He messed with him. But he was the first one there to have his back in any situation.”


ESPN.com Dolphins reporter James Walker contributed to this report.




ESPN.com – NFL



Agent: Martin"s issues with several Dolphins

Cutler practices for first time since injury




Updated: November 7, 2013, 12:23 PM ET

By Jeff Dickerson | ESPNChicago.com






LAKE FOREST, Ill. — Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Cutler returned to the practice field Thursday, about 2½ weeks after tearing a groin muscle during an Oct. 20 game against the Washington Redskins.



The plan is for Cutler, who missed the Bears’ 27-20 victory at Green Bay on Monday night, to test the injured muscle to the point where the quarterback might be medically cleared to play Sunday against the Detroit Lions.


No. 2 quarterback Josh McCown has had great success in relief of Cutler, but Bears coach Marc Trestman said Wednesday that if Cutler receives the necessary clearance from the team’s medical staff, Cutler will be in the starting lineup against Detroit. The Bears, Lions and Packers share the NFC North lead at 5-3.





Dickerson has been the Bears beat reporter for ESPN Chicago since 2004. He also hosts weeknight radio shows on ESPN 1000.




ESPN.com – NFL



Cutler practices for first time since injury

OTL: Ex-NFL stars show CTE signs




Updated: November 7, 2013, 8:46 AM ET

By William Weinbaum and Steve Delsohn | ESPN.com






BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Pro Football Hall of Famers Tony Dorsett and Joe DeLamielleure, and former NFL All-Pro Leonard Marshall have been diagnosed as having signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative condition many scientists say is caused by head trauma and linked to depression and dementia, doctors have told “Outside the Lines.”


The three former stars underwent brain scans and clinical evaluations during the past three months at UCLA, as did an unidentified ex-player whose test results are not yet available. Last year, UCLA tested five other former players and diagnosed all five as having signs of CTE, marking the first time doctors found signs of the crippling disease in living former players.


CTE is indicated by a buildup of tau, an abnormal protein that strangles brain cells in areas that control memory, emotions and other functions. Autopsies of more than 50 ex-NFL players, including Hall of Famer Mike Webster and perennial All-Pro Junior Seau, who committed suicide last year, found such tau concentrations.


Researchers told “Outside the Lines” that they notified Dorsett by phone Monday that they had diagnosed him as having signs of the neurological disease. Dorsett, in an appearance Wednesday afternoon on ESPN’s “Dan LeBatard Is Highly Questionable” show, acknowledged he had been tested at UCLA and received results: “I’m not going to say too much more about it … I’m trying to be proactive rather than reactive.”


Two weeks ago, upon arriving in California for his evaluation and brain scan at UCLA, Dorsett described to “Outside the Lines” the symptoms that compelled him to seek testing: memory loss, depression and thoughts of suicide.


The former Cowboys running back, now 59, said that when he took his Oct. 21 flight from Dallas to Los Angeles for testing, he repeatedly struggled to remember why he was aboard the plane and where he was going. Such episodes, he said, are commonplace when he travels.


Dorsett said he also gets lost when he drives his two youngest daughters, ages 15 and 10, to their soccer and volleyball games.


“I’ve got to take them to places that I’ve been going to for many, many, many years, and then I don’t know how to get there,” he said.


The 1976 Heisman Trophy winner and eighth all-time leading NFL rusher said he has trouble controlling his emotions and is prone to outbursts at his wife and daughters.


“It’s painful, man, for my daughters to say they’re scared of me.” After a long pause, he tearfully reiterated, “It’s painful.”


Dorsett said doctors have told him he is clinically depressed.


“I’ve thought about crazy stuff, sort of like, ‘Why do I need to continue going through this?’” he said. “I’m too smart of a person, I like to think, to take my life, but it’s crossed my mind.”


CTE is a disease with no known cure, but Dorsett said he was seeking answers to explain his cognitive and emotional difficulties.


“I want to know if this is something that has come about because of playing football,” he said.


Dorsett’s 12-year playing career ended a quarter-century ago. He said he doesn’t know how many concussions he suffered, but that they were numerous and he believes their consequences are, too.


“My quality of living has changed drastically and it deteriorates every day,” he said.


Researchers involved in the UCLA testing say their brain scan uses a radioactive marker to identify the signs of CTE in the living, as was done with the eight former players. The research team, in affiliation with a company named TauMark, includes: forensic pathologist Bennet Omalu, who discovered CTE in football players; UCLA psychiatrist Gary Small and pharmacologist Jorge Barrio; and neurosurgeon Julian Bailes, co-director of the NorthShore Neurological Institute in Evanston, Ill.


Bailes acknowledged that the sample size is small and the testing is in its “very early” stages, but said, “Our preliminary data seems very strong that the areas of the brain and density of the tau signals correlates exactly with what we have found at autopsy.”


DeLamielleure, 62, said he never received a concussion diagnosis during his 13-year career as an offensive lineman for Buffalo and Cleveland, but that during games and practices he endured tens of thousands of blows to his head and believes he had at least 100 concussions.



On the day he received the news that he has signs of CTE, DeLamielleure told OTL, “I can guarantee you my CTE, my tau, came from hits, came from blows to the head.” He said he suffers from anxiety and chronic insomnia, and, like Dorsett, he recounted mood swings and suicidal thoughts.


“When I sit still for any length of time, I get depressed for no reason,” DeLamielleure said. “I have CTE. Let’s see what the heck we can do about it.”


Marshall, 52, told “Outside the Lines” that when he received his diagnosis Sunday it was “very emotional.”


“I knew there was something going on,” he added. “I’ve had short-term memory loss, erratic behavior where the least little thing would set me off, and I’ve experienced fogginess and even been in a daze at times.


“It’s been a rough road and hopefully now there’ll be a light at the end of the tunnel.”


Said Bailes: “Until we had the ability to see it in a living, breathing person, we had no chance of helping them, we had no chance of really understanding what happens to the disease. It gives us the ability to track it, to see if it gets worse, or hopefully, maybe it gets better with medication, with intervention, with new discoveries.


“There’s a lot more scientific investigation and rigor and publication and peer review that needs to be done on this, but initially, we’re optimistic and excited about the potential of the test.”


Other researchers also are developing tests to diagnose CTE in the living. Among them is Dr. Ann McKee, a Boston University neuropathologist.


No one has examined more brains of deceased NFL players than McKee, who found CTE in 47 of the 48 brains she has studied. McKee is also developing a test for the living, and said it is not yet clear if currently available scans are actually showing signs of CTE or if they are indicative of other conditions, such as Alzheimer’s disease.


Omalu, also a neuropathologist, said that it is the combination of symptoms, clinical evaluations and brain scan findings that led to his group’s diagnoses of CTE indicators in the former players and that there is a “reasonable degree of certainty that this is CTE until proven otherwise.” He said that in posthumous examinations, as well, a history of cognitive impairment and emotional problems is an important factor in diagnosing CTE.


Bailes, a former team physician for the Steelers, said he looks forward to more testing and considers his group’s scan a “game-changer.” The first tests, published in a medical journal in February, concluded that Fred McNeill, a 59-year-old former Vikings linebacker; Wayne Clark, a 64-year-old former quarterback for three teams; and three unidentified ex-players: a 73-year-old former guard; a 50-year-old former defensive lineman; and a 45-year-old former center, had CTE indicators.


The NFL, which declined to comment, has repeatedly asserted that there is not enough evidence to draw a conclusion that playing football causes CTE or other brain damage. After denying the severity of concussions for years, and disputing the research of doctors like Omalu and Bailes, the league reversed its position in 2009 and acknowledged a scientific connection between football and long-term brain damage — but has not made a similar statement since.


Dorsett, Marshall and DeLamielleure are among the 4,500-plus plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit filed against the NFL that is in the midst of being settled for $ 765 million. The plaintiffs argued that for years the NFL had concealed a link between playing football and brain damage. As part of the settlement reached in August, the NFL did not admit to wrongdoing.


In January, Dr. Richard Ellenbogen, a Seattle neurosurgeon who serves as co-chair of the NFL’s Head, Neck and Spine Committee, told Mark Fainaru-Wada and Steve Fainaru of “Outside the Lines” that the UCLA CTE study was “promising work,” adding the researchers were “honest about the limitations as well as being excited about the findings.”


“This is the holy grail if it works. This is what we’ve been waiting for, but it looks like it’s probably preliminary to say they’ve got it,” Dr. Robert Cantu, a senior adviser to the NFL’s Head, Neck and Spine Committee and co-director of Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, told ESPN in January. “But if they do have it, this is exactly what we need.”


Omalu said diagnosing CTE in the living is a promising step.


“I think we can develop a treatment for this,” he said. “Everybody should come to the table.”


His advice to the diagnosed ex-players: “Use the power of positive thinking, don’t let the disease overwhelm, this is not a diagnosis of death.”


Prior to his test, Dorsett said he drew hope from its potential benefits.


“I’m trying to slow this down or cut it off,” Dorsett said. “I’m going to be 60 years old here next year, so I’m hoping that I’ve got another good 30 years or so.”


William Weinbaum is a producer and Steve Delsohn a correspondent in ESPN’s Enterprise and Investigative Unit. Associate producer Simon Baumgart contributed to this report.




ESPN.com – NFL



OTL: Ex-NFL stars show CTE signs

Sources: Martin checked himself into hospital


Miami Dolphins offensive tackle Jonathan Martin recently checked himself into a South Florida hospital to be treated for emotional distress that led the second-year player to leave the team last week, league sources told ESPN.


Dolphins coach Joe Philbin visited Martin at the hospital, and the organization arranged for his parents to travel to South Florida, the sources said.



Martin’s hospital stay was brief before he returned to California with his parents, according to sources.


“He’s a strong man. He’s doing fine,” Martin’s father, Gus, told omg! Insider.


The specific treatment of Martin’s emotional condition was not disclosed, but sources say it was related to his belief that he had been targeted during a sustained level of harassment from teammates, including suspended guard Richie Incognito.


Martin did not disclose to Philbin any specific incident of harassment or bullying when the coach made the hospital visit, sources said.


The Dolphins suspended Incognito on Sunday night for conduct detrimental to the team after Martin’s representatives provided voice mail and text evidence from April that the team agreed was inappropriate.


Martin remains in California, preparing a detailed document for his cooperation with a league investigation into a string of alleged multiple incidents he says led to his emotional distress and exit from the team, sources said.


Some of Martin’s former teammates reacted Wednesday to what has become a national controversy.


Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, a teammate of Martin’s at Stanford, told ESPN.com that he has talked with Martin.





 I love Jon like a brother. We had a lot of fun — a lot of good times — together at Stanford. It’s obviously an incredibly unfortunate situation. But out of respect for him and what’s going on, I’d rather not talk about it.


– Colts QB Andrew Luck,
a teammate of Jonathan Martin at Stanford




“I love Jon like a brother,” Luck said. “We had a lot of fun — a lot of good times — together at Stanford.


“It’s obviously an incredibly unfortunate situation. But out of respect for him and what’s going on, I’d rather not talk about it.”


Pittsburgh Steelers guard David DeCastro, who played on the offensive line with Martin at Stanford, also said he checked in on his former teammate.


“I just wanted to make sure he was OK, and he is,” DeCastro told ESPN.com. “I just called him to make sure he was all right.”


DeCastro, a first-round draft pick last year, described Martin as a “great player” who he got along well with at Stanford.


“I could care less about football,” said DeCastro, who was drafted 19 picks before Martin last year. “I just wanted to make sure he was OK as a person, and he is. So that’s good. That’s what’s important.”


Colts tight end Coby Fleener, another Stanford teammate of Martin’s, referred to him as a “stand-up guy” and an “awesome character guy.”


Three people who know Martin and have spoken to him told ESPN that he wants to continue playing football and has never discussed leaving the sport based on simply playing the game.



Martin’s high school coach, Vic Eumont, told the Palm Beach Post that Martin’s personality did not fit in with the Dolphins crowd.


Eumont was Martin’s coach at Harvard-Westlake School, a private high school in Studio City, Calif. Both of Martin’s parents went to Harvard, but Martin passed up on a chance to go to Harvard so he could play football at Stanford.


“Before, he wasn’t around Nebraska, LSU kind of guys,” Eumont, a former Tulane offensive guard, told the Palm Beach Post. “He’s always been around Stanford, Duke, Rice kind of players.”


Eumont told the paper he hasn’t spoken with Martin since he left the Dolphins last week, but he said he could see how the team might not welcome Martin back in the locker room after Incognito’s suspension.


“In locker rooms full of Nebraska, LSU, Southern Cal players, Miami players — they’ll look at this as a weakness,” Eumont told the paper. “If he makes it through all this, and if he was encouraged to come back, he’d come back with a vengeance.”


Multiple sources confirmed to ESPN on Monday that Incognito used racial epithets and profane language toward Martin on multiple occasions. In a transcript of a voice mail message from April, Incognito referred to Martin as a “half n—– piece of s—.”


The 6-foot-3, 319-pound Incognito, a ninth-year pro, is white. The 6-5, 312-pound Martin is biracial.


The NFL is investigating the troubled relationship between Martin and Incognito. One of the pivotal questions being posed by both the league and the NFL Players Association is whether Martin reached out to Philbin as the issues were unfolding.


Sources told ESPN that the NFLPA is calling for a meeting with the agents for Martin and Incognito to discuss how the controversy is damaging both players.


ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter, ESPN.com Colts reporter Mike Wells, ESPN.com Steelers reporter Scott Brown and The Associated Press contributed to this report.







ESPN.com – NFL



Sources: Martin checked himself into hospital

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Report: GM said Martin should punch Incognito




Updated: November 7, 2013, 2:18 AM ET

ESPN.com news services






Miami Dolphins general manager Jeff Ireland suggested offensive tackle Jonathan Martin physically confront guard Richie Incognito — even saying he should “punch” him — as a means of dealing with how he was being treated, Pro Football Talk reported Wednesday night.


According to the report, which cited multiple league sources, Martin’s agent, Rick Smith, called Ireland before his client left the team Oct. 28 and complained about the manner in which the second-year player was being treated by Incognito.


In response, Ireland suggested Martin respond to Incognito physically and specifically mentioned that he should “punch” the veteran guard, the sources told Pro Football Talk.


Martin left the Dolphins last week after claims of harassment and misconduct by teammates.


Sources told ESPN on Wednesday that Martin recently checked himself into a South Florida hospital to be treated for emotional distress. The specific treatment of Martin’s emotional condition was not disclosed, but sources say it was related to his belief that he had been a target of harassment, including from Incognito.


Multiple sources confirmed to ESPN earlier this week that Incognito used racial epithets and profane language toward Martin on multiple occasions. In a transcript of a voice mail message from April, Incognito referred to Martin as a “half n—– piece of s—.”


The 6-foot-3, 319-pound Incognito, a ninth-year pro, is white. The 6-5, 312-pound Martin is biracial.


The Dolphins suspended Incognito indefinitely for conduct detrimental to the team Sunday night.


The NFL is investigating the troubled relationship between Martin and Incognito. One of the pivotal questions being posed by both the league and the NFL Players Association is whether Martin reached out to coach Joe Philbin as the issues were unfolding.


Sources told ESPN that the NFLPA is calling for a meeting with the agents for Martin and Incognito to discuss how the controversy is damaging both players.


Martin, meanwhile, remains in California, preparing a detailed document for his cooperation with the league’s investigation into a string of alleged multiple incidents he says led to his emotional distress and exit from the team, sources said.


Information from ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter, ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen and ESPN.com Dolphins reporter James Walker was used in this report.




ESPN.com – NFL



Report: GM said Martin should punch Incognito