Shameless flatterer Jon Gruden just referred to David Harris as the Jets' "All Pro linebacker," something Harris has never been selected to be in his career.
Shameless flatterer Jon Gruden just referred to David Harris as the Jets' "All Pro linebacker," something Harris has never been selected to be in his career.
I looked it up out of curiosity and he was selected in 2009.
He was named to AP's second team in '09, that's all I could find. Does that qualify him as an "All Pro"? I thought it was the players named to the Pro Bowl by the league.
The NFL isn't going to change noticeably until major college football becomes more fair, and that isn't happening. The SEC, the NFL's main farm system, is blacker than ever, and each year it seems like there are more black college quarterbacks than the year before.
There's a few White running backs finally getting a chance in college, and lots of great White receivers, but until the filtering process changes -- star White high school players getting few scholarships and opportunities at the big programs, and many of the ones who do being subsequently ignored by the NFL -- all we can do is note the slight incremental changes that occur in a positive direction.
The crux of the problem is at the college level, but there is great ignorance by the fans and often the White players themselves that allow it to continue. For now, the continued shrinking of the pool of black athletes (due to ever increasing dysfunctionality in the black "community") combined with White players doing noticeably better with their opportunities in recent years is the best trend going against the Caste System, but the system itself remains firmly in place for now.
Whether Harris qualifies as an All Pro or not, Gruden is still a shameless flatterer :laugh:
"Being flattered by Gruden is often the kiss of death. Last week he was comparing Tony Romo to Clint Eastwood and John Wayne - ie the greatest, toughest gunslinger in the West. How'd that turn out? He thinks half the players on the field are NFL MVPs"
He's like that late 80s film critic on NBC - a Jew with crazy hair and glasses - who said about almost every movie he reviewed, "this has Oscar written all over it," or "It'll be raining Oscars!"
Liverlips could be referring to Gene Shalit.