Tyreek Hill is the NEXT George Floyd



Tyreek Hill found himself face-down on the pavement in handcuffs after he was detained by Miami police for reckless driving near Hard Rock Stadium before the Dolphins game.

“People are looking for the next George Floyd, and that’s why I think people are making a big deal out of what happened to Tyreek Hill,” Jason Whitlock of “Fearless” comments, noting that a similar thing happened to golfer Scottie Scheffler.

However, because Scheffler is white, no one cared.

“This is incredible. Tyreek Hill gets briefly detained, put on the ground, and gets to go on and play the football game,” Whitlock says. “Jemele Hill somehow connects this to Steven Ross, the owner, and so she tweets out ‘A reminder that Steve Ross, owner of the Miami Dolphins, is a huge Donald Trump supporter — the same Trump who supports giving ALL police immunity from prosecution. Do with that what you will.'”

“They’re trying to immediately turn this into a political issue. There’s no authenticity here, there’s no fairness here. It’s like ‘Oh, we’ve got our George Floyd, we can use this. America’s all racist because Tyreek Hill got cuffed briefly,’” Whitlock mocks.

Stephen A. Smith is really pushing the political race-bait, calling what happened to Hill “totally unnecessary.”

In a post to X, Smith wrote, “I know the Scottie Scheffler incident was in Georgia — not Florida — and he was arrested, detained, booked. I also know we don’t know all the details, blah … blah … blah! But he wasn’t faced down on the ground in cuffs, then forcibly sat down again by officers a second time. Nah! This story isn’t going away — and it doesn’t need to.”

Whitlock notes that Hill has been accused of domestic violence and has several “baby mamas” — so he’s not a totally innocent man anyway.

“People act like there’s no through line, that there’s no connection, that ‘Hey, if I’m irresponsible here, that doesn’t mean I’m irresponsible over here,’” he says, adding, “Yes, it actually does. Irresponsible people do irresponsible things.”


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'Get out of the car!' Miami Dolphin's Tyreek Hill considering legal action after release of intense police bodycam footage



NFL wide receiver Tyreek Hill is considering legal action after bodycam footage revealed his interactions with police before the NFL season opener.

Hill was detained by police during a traffic stop before the Miami Dolphins game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, which his Dolphins won 20-17. After the game, Hill told reporters at a press conference that he was cooperative with police and wasn't sure why he was placed on the ground in handcuffs.

"I wasn't disrespectful because my mom didn't raise me that way, didn't cuss, didn’t do none of that," he explained.

The following day, shocking bodycam footage from the Miami-Dade Police Department was released showing exactly how the incident played out.

'Keep your window down or I'm going to get you out of the car.'

The footage showed Hill, stopped in his black McLaren with heavy tints, as police were asking why he didn't have his seatbelt on. At the same time, Hill was saying "don't knock on my window like that" to the officer.

Hill handed his identification to the police officer and told him to give him his ticket. Hill then rolled his window back up. After an officer demanded the window go down, Hill lowered it about 25%.

"Keep your window down or I'm going to get you out of the car," the officer said, with a thick accent. "As a matter of fact, get out of the car," the officer then immediately added.

After threatening to break the car window, officers took approximately nine seconds to pull Hill from the car. He was then placed on the ground and put in handcuffs.

Then, after standing the football player up, officers forced him down again after deeming he was not cooperative. Hill said on the video that he recently had knee surgery and that was the reason he was trying to lower himself slowly.

During a subsequent interview with CNN, Hill told the network he was "still shell-shocked" from the incident and remarked that if he weren't "Tyreek Hill" then he may have been shot by police in a worst-case scenario.

Host Kaitlan Collins read a statement by the president of the South Florida Police Benevolent Association, who described the incident from their point of view.

The statement said that Hill was "not immediately cooperative with the officers on scene who, pursuant to policy and for their immediate safety, placed Mr. Hill in handcuffs."

The statement continued, "Mr. Hill, still uncooperative, refused to sit on the ground and was therefore redirected to the ground."

"Once the situation was sorted out within a few minutes, Mr. Hill was issued two traffic citations and was free to leave," the statement concluded.

— (@)

In an interview with NBC Nightly News, Hill was asked whether he disputes the police union’s allegations that he was not cooperating.

Hill noted that "everybody has their own sides, their own version" and agreed with the idea that the police union should defend its members.

"You've got to have your teammates' back," Hill said.

The athlete went on, "I feel like at the end of the day, if you roll up on somebody all hostile, knocking on their window and they already got their ID, you know what I'm saying, ready for you. It's not like I said, 'You're not getting my ID, you're not getting my ID,'" Hill explained. "You know, it was one of those situations where I was like, 'Here you go, my ID sir.' And I let back up my window. He said, 'Let it down.' I let it down. That's when it went from zero to 10. Other officers came in, just pulled me out."

As a result, Hill has hired legal representation, who stated they are "exploring all legal remedies."

Per OutKick, the legal team stated that while Hill is appreciative of his "celebrity" status, he is bothered by the idea of how the situation might have unfolded for someone without such a social status.

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INSIDE SCOOP: Brett Favre says THIS is why Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is so successful



As another weekend of NFL football wraps up, Jason Whitlock evaluates which teams and players shined and which failed to perform.

“The biggest star of the weekend,” he says, was “Tua Tagovailoa,” the Miami Dolphins quarterback who “absolutely lit it up” in the game against the New England Patriots.

However, Jason is also concerned that Tua’s success might be short-lived because the team has “the fastest pair of receivers perhaps in NFL history … between Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.”

“I just wonder if Tua has the arm strength to keep up with those guys over a 17-game NFL season,” he tells Brett Favre.

But Brett isn’t nearly as concerned.

One reason for that is because Tua’s position coach, Darrell Bevell, is a good friend of Brett’s and “one of the better coaches in the league.”

On top of Bevell’s excellent coaching, Tua has “great knowledge of the game,” as well as “anticipation and … good rhythm,” he explains to Jason.

Further, Brett also thinks Tua has found a way to compensate for his questionable arm strength. “He throws the ball so far in advance before the guy comes out of his break,” he says, and he knows how to “[play] within his own strengths and weaknesses.”


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Miami Dolphins Are The Republican Party Of Professional Football

Much like the GOP, the Dolphins promise the world to their supporters, only to stab them in the back when it really counts.

Brian Flores’ Lawsuit Exposes The Absurdity Of NFL Racial Quotas Like The ‘Rooney Rule’

Race obsessed-leftists want it both ways: force the NFL to have fewer white coaches and owners, while still signing NFL players based on their performance.

Brian Flores’ Lawsuit Against The NFL Will Only Damage Black Head Coaches

Flores’ unfounded accusations against the NFL of ‘systemic racism’ will set back the relationship between owners and black coaching talent.

Squires: Brian Flores’ despicable NFL-plantation analogy reveals the weakness of his complaint and his backbone



Only time will tell the long-term impact of the lawsuit Brian Flores recently filed against the NFL. Flores could end up permanently destroying his coaching career, or he could open doors for black coaches, general managers, and team owners.

The part of Flores’ lawsuit that immediately stood out to me was his description of the relationship between the league’s owners and players.

“In certain critical ways, the NFL is racially segregated and is managed much like a plantation. Its 32 owners—none of whom are Black—profit substantially from the labor of NFL players, 70% of whom are Black. The owners watch the games from atop NFL stadiums in their luxury boxes, while their majority-Black workforce put their bodies on the line every Sunday, taking vicious hits and suffering debilitating injuries to their bodies and their brains while the NFL and its owners reap billions of dollars.”

This type of hyperbole is to be expected from activists, journalists, and disgruntled athletes. It is unheard of from a head coach. Unfortunately, it fits a familiar pattern.

Brian Flores is the latest black public figure to invoke the horrors of slavery and racial violence as a rhetorical device for his own personal benefit.

He was asked why he chose that comparison during an interview on CBS. He had no answer. That tells me this wasn’t a revelation after a period of deep reflection. It was a cynical ploy to play on the emotions of his supporters in the court of public opinion, not members of a jury who would have to consider real evidence.

The argument being made by Flores and his attorneys is based on Ibram Kendi’s contention that disparities between black and white people in social outcomes are due to racist policies. That view is now accepted as a cultural truism. This is why virtually every sports media outlet believes “systemic racism” is to blame whenever black representation in a given field isn’t somewhere between 13% and the percentage of black people in that field. Somehow this argument is never made in reverse. The dearth of black quarterbacks used to be attributed to racism, but no one asks why there are no white cornerbacks and very few white running backs.

Flores is not the first black man in football to do this. Colin Kaepernick caused controversy when he compared the NFL Combine to a slave auction during the first episode of his Netflix series. In one scene, the former quarterback turned activist showed players walking off the field back in time, where their athletic shorts were traded for tattered pants and shackles.

The message was clear: Young men who trained their entire lives for the opportunity to make millions are no different from slaves being traded at an auction. It was a gripping visual, but the comparison completely falls apart once you realize hockey players also go through athletic drills at the NHL Combine.

Other black elites have shown they are also oppressed.

Sean “Diddy” Combs did the same thing in a letter to General Motors demanding more money for black media companies. The letter starts with a quote about injustice from Bishop Desmond Tutu, the late anti-apartheid leader. The next line directly invoked the murder of George Floyd.

“The same feet these companies use to stand with us in solidarity are the same feet they use to stand on our necks.”

Combs chastised corporate America for manipulating the black community with incremental changes in its business practices, but he had no problem using Georges Floyd’s death to extort white business executives. His passive-aggressive shakedown strategy was punctuated by one of his final lines: “If you love us, pay us!”

Justin Fairfax, former lieutenant governor of Virginia, also invoked George Floyd when describing how he was treated by the media and his political peers after two women accused him of sexual assault. Fairfax even went a step further by saying he was treated like Emmett Till because he was denied due process. In his mind, having other self-interested politicians say they believe your accusers is the same as being beaten so badly that your mother can’t recognize your face.

Americans have become accustomed to this behavior from elected officials who use terms like “Jim Crow 2.0” to describe state voting laws they oppose. We expect politicians to do and say whatever they think will advance their own political interests.

I have much higher expectations for black people who complain that our history is being sanitized and silenced to comfort white people who can’t handle honest conversations about race.

The truth is that nothing diminishes historical injustice more than ripping it out of context and casually invoking it for personal gain. It is shameful, despicable behavior. Black millionaires who treat the history of their ancestors as a trump card in political fights or business deals do much more damage to how we understand the past than parents accused of opposing CRT.

It is especially disheartening to see black men like Brian Flores engage in this type of behavior. It makes the speaker look weak and unable to stand on the merits of his argument. It’s a play for sympathy and solidarity with people on social media who will repost the message with black fist emojis for emphasis.

Men who behave that way have too much jelly in their legs and not enough steel in their spines. Some may accomplish their short-term goals, but you can’t put a price tag on dignity and self-respect.

Whitlock: ESPN race-baiters will not tell you that Brian Flores is actually hurting black coaches



Let’s ask the obvious question as it relates to Brian Flores’ discrimination lawsuit against the NFL, the New York Giants, Denver Broncos, and Miami Dolphins:

Has Flores damaged the job prospects and work relationships of his black coaching peers?

No doubt, Flores is a hero to Nate Burleson, Mike Greenberg, Stephen A. Smith, Elle Duncan, Ryan Clark, Shannon Sharpe, and countless other blue-check sports media figures whose job is to goad and then celebrate emotional and non-strategic behavior from black men.

Flores is following in the footsteps of Colin Kaepernick, George Floyd, and Jacob Blake. He’s acting as an emotional trigger, a justification for chaos, animus, and protest. On Thursday, former NBA star Chris Bosh vowed to quit watching NFL games until the league hires more black coaches and general managers.

Will they?

Dolphins owner Stephen Ross ran the “blackest” organization in the NFL. At one time, his head coach, general manager, assistant general manager, defensive coordinator, and several members of his ownership group were all black.

Brian Flores’ accusations against Ross could get Ross removed from NFL ownership. Flores claims Ross offered him money to lose games in 2019 and that Ross tried to arrange an illegal meeting with a veteran quarterback under contract to another team.

Flores is a snitch. He snitched on the owner who followed the social justice/Black Lives Matter playbook.

Flores also seemingly betrayed the mentor, Bill Belichick, who put him in position to rise to head coach. Belichick’s accidental text messages seem to be the foundation for Flores’ claim that the Giants treated him in a discriminatory fashion. Flores worked for one organization — the Patriots — before landing the head job with the Dolphins. In 2004, he landed a job as a scouting assistant with New England. He spent 15 years working for Belichick.

Flores’ lawsuit could potentially force investigators to seek access to Belichick’s cell phone records.

Brian Flores’ sense of entitlement to an NFL head coaching job has taken precedence over any sense of gratitude and loyalty toward the people who helped him land the Dolphins job. Belichick and Ross were part of the solution for Flores until the moment Flores decided they were part of the problem.

Belichick and Ross are now enemies, and Flores’ allies are the two white liberal lawyers who crafted his Twitter-approved lawsuit.

As a white owner or head coach, would you be nervous about hiring the next Brian Flores?

Shahid Khan, the owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars, committed to hiring Doug Pederson yesterday. Khan can fire Pederson tomorrow without fear of being smeared as racist. The same is true for Raiders owner Mark Davis and his new coach Josh McDaniels. So far this off-season, the NFL has hired five new coaches. All of them are white.

Let me repeat: Stephen Ross ran the blackest organization in the NFL. Brian Flores is attempting to get Ross removed from the league. Stephen A. Smith, Ryan Clark, and the rest of ESPN’s BLM gang are assisting Flores in his effort to kick Ross out of the league.

Brian Flores is hurting black coaches.

The race-bait idiots at ESPN won’t say this. Flores makes their job easier. This is all just a re-enactment of Colin Kaepernick’s national anthem kneeling. Kaepernick’s protest did not advance the cause of black people. It simply heightened animosity toward police, promoted the counterproductive “defund the police” movement, and increased the racial divide. All of it led to elevated violent crime rates in black neighborhoods.

Brian Flores is not advancing the cause of black coaches. He’s undermining it.

Whitlock: Dolphins owner Stephen Ross made the mistake of caring more about Brian Flores’ success than Flores and black players did



Black NFL players have made it quite clear they want to inspire change on behalf of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Jacob Blake, Rayshard Brooks, and other high-profile victims of alleged white criminal misconduct.

Black football players enthusiastically appointed themselves experts on criminal justice reform, systemic racism, housing discrimination, and pay inequality.

During televised commercial breaks, current NFL players preach about “where they’re from” and how people who look like them are over-policed and over-incarcerated and will earn $10,000 less than their white counterparts.

That’s why I expect the next batch of “inspire change” commercials to feature former Dolphins coach Brian Flores. Surely the courageous freedom fighters speaking on behalf of George Floyd will lift their voices in support of Brian “Harriet Tubman” Flores.

As qualified as football players are to speak on local policing issues, it pales in comparison to what they know about coaching football. As the New York Times, ESPN, and Flores’ white attorneys have repeatedly pointed out, 70% of NFL players are black. These black players are eyewitnesses to the racism endured by Flores and countless black assistant coaches.

If they’re willing to take a knee for George Floyd, I’m sure black Dolphins players would be more than happy to support Flores’ lawsuit.

And this is my problem with the Brian Flores controversy and the repeated allegations that NFL owners refuse to hire black head coaches. NFL owners will do pretty much anything the players demand they do. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones took a knee during the national anthem because the players demanded he do so. Jones’ billionaire peers across the league did the same thing.

The players control the league. The players forced the owners to hand over nearly $100 million to finance the “Players Coalition,” a vanity project for current and former players to build social media brands as social justice warriors.

If NFL players wanted more black head coaches, more black offensive coordinators, they would demand it and it would happen overnight.

Players create the hype and buzz around assistant coaches. When a talented and charismatic assistant coach reveals himself on a staff, it’s the players who start gossiping about his impact, his ability to connect, and his relentless work ethic.

Brian Flores doesn’t need a lawsuit to get a head coaching job. He needs the support of black NFL players. The same is true for Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy.

But black people have been taught to prefer the charity of white people over the support of their own. This preference for charity played a role in Flores getting fired. Dolphins owner Stephen Ross figured out that Flores isn’t ruthless enough to win at the highest level.

If you believe Flores’ narrative, Ross tried to forge an alliance between Flores and an established NFL quarterback. Multiple outlets have reported that the established quarterback was Tom Brady. Ross is a Michigan grad and one of the school’s top boosters. Ross has known Brady for years.

Flores refused the meeting because it would violate the NFL’s tampering policy. Flores’ refusal violated common sense. Flores reportedly did not like Miami QB Tua Tagovailoa. Ross was offering Flores a solution, a path to a proven franchise quarterback. Ross was trying to put his head coach in position to win immediately.

That wasn’t racism. Ross was bending the rules to favor his black head coach. Proving again that no good deed goes unpunished.