Foobar75 said:
1. It was very nice to see JJ Watt get some exposure tonight on the big stage. The announcers gave him props all night long, and I did not hear a single utterance of caste-speak. It's very rare to hear that about a White player who's not a QB. Normally, a "high-motor" or "deceptively quick" is thrown in there, but not tonight.
Very true. Gruden and Turdrico were running wild in their praise of Watt, literally calling him a
“monster,” discussing his fantastic athletic abilities (specifically when leaping to block passes), poking fun at the Jets’ black sumo lineman who were attempting to block him, among many other virile compliments…
CAPTION: Watt Tallies 8.5 Sacks through 5 Games
For the past five years or so, it seems as if an unstoppable white defensive end will always lead the NFL (or at least be in the top 5) in sack totals. Kyle Vanden Bosch (2005), Aaron Schobel (2006), Aaron Kampman (2006), Mike Vrabel (2007), Patrick Kerney (2007), Jared Allen (every season), Clay Matthews (2010), Chris Long (2011), and even “white-looking” mixed players such as Jason Babin (2011).
Given that there are so few white starters at DE league-wide, it’s quite remarkable just how many of the precious few permitted to play are so effortlessly superior to their criminally-overrepresented black counterparts. Of the players mentioned above, I think Watt may be the most talented of all.
Former Texans DE, Mario Williams (the highest paid defensive player in NFL history), has registered 11 tackles and a measley 1.5 sacks this season, all of which came in garbage time against the lowly Browns. During the Bills-Patriots game last week, Williams was every bit as invisible as Ndomakong Suh is each Sunday for the Lions (unless, of course, he's attempting to sucker punch someone after the whistle). Keep in mind that stopping Tom Brady was the primary reason Williams was signed. No wonder the Texans let him sign elsewhere.