2-year-old daughter of Tampa Bay Buccaneers star linebacker drowned to death in family pool



The 2-year-old daughter of Tampa Bay Buccaneers star linebacker Shaquil Barrett drowned to death in a swimming pool at the family's home on Sunday, according to police.

Around 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, officers responded to a call about a child who had fallen into the family pool of Barrett's home in the Beach Park neighborhood in South Tampa. Barrett's 2-year-old daughter Arrayah was rushed to a local hospital, but she was later pronounced dead.

Police said, "The investigation is ongoing. It is not believed to be suspicious in nature at this time, but a purely accidental and tragic incident."

Barrett and his wife Jordanna have three other children, but Arrayah was their youngest child.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers released a statement, "Today's tragic news is heartbreaking for all members of the Buccaneers family. Our thoughts and prayers are with Shaq, Jordanna and the entire Barrett family during this unimaginably difficult time."

"While no words can provide true comfort at a time such as this," the NFL team added. "We offer our support and love as they begin to process this very profound loss of their beloved Arrayah."

The Tampa Police Department is investigating the sudden death.

On April 19, Barrett wished his daughter a happy second birthday in an Instagram post.

"Happy 2nd bday to my cutie girl. So sweet and cute. You made our family complete. I love you baby girl," Barrett wrote on Instagram.

Barrett is currently recovering from a torn Achilles injury that sidelined him for the second half of last season. Barrett is entering his fifth season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after starting the first four years of his NFL career with the Denver Broncos. In 2019, Barrett led the NFL with 19½ sacks. Barrett is a two-time Pro Bowl player and two-time Super Bowl champion.

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2-year-old daughter of Shaq Barrett drowns in pool in South Tampa www.youtube.com

Whitlock: Tom Brady bought the lie that he could have it all



The biggest lie destroying America is the belief that we can have it all. That we’re entitled to everything we feel.

The belief undergirds the transgender movement, same-sex marriage, drag queen story hour, feminism, the matriarchy, critical race theory, reparations, and diversity, inclusion, and equity.

And the collapse of Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The Bucs lost their third game in a row Sunday afternoon, losing 21-3 to the tanking Carolina Panthers. The Bucs have lost four of their last five games. Seven games into the season, Brady and the Bucs sit at 3-4. No one will mistake them for a Super Bowl contender.

Maybe new Tampa head coach Todd Bowles deserves some of the blame. But I don’t see it. The fall of the Bucs is on their seven-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback.

Tom Brady thought he could have it all. An endless football career, supermodel wife, kids, and more fun and autonomy on the football field than Bill Belichick allows.

He had all that for one year. Two years ago, he won a Super Bowl title in Tampa. He proved, for a moment, that he was bigger and more important than Belichick’s highly structured New England system.

That’s the thing about a good lie. It mimics the truth before revealing its ugly consequences.

You can’t have it all. Adam and Eve learned this in the garden. A properly functioning human, family, society, and football team all require limits. Brady has greatly exceeded his limits. He can still play the game at a relatively high level. His fall isn’t on Father Time.

It’s a result of his unchecked desire to have it all. The desire to have it all causes man to reject his most important covenants. Adam and Eve disobeyed God because they wanted it all.

Brady sacrificed his marriage covenant to continue on as a football player while simultaneously sacrificing his football covenant to spend more time with his wife and kids.

Brady became the most accomplished football player of all time because of his willingness to submit to Belichick’s no-one-is-above-the-team culture. He left New England so he could be above the team.

In Tampa, Brady gets Wednesdays off from work. He missed 11 days of training camp to handle personal matters. The most all-in NFL player of all time is now a part-time player. He works on Sundays.

Brady’s mentality and approach have spoiled Tampa’s culture. The 52 other players on the roster are following their on-field leader. Brady ate the forbidden fruit of entitlement and privilege. Now everyone on Tampa’s roster wants a bite.

There’s a lesson here for all of us.

Tom Brady is America, the most accomplished country in the history of the planet. America is dying from a culture of entitlement and the belief that everything is for everybody. Whatever we feel, we believe we should have.

Fat people believe they should wear thongs and speedos on the beach. If you object, you’re demonized as a fat-shamer. I’m fat. I should not wear a speedo on a beach or even in the comfort of my living room.

Same-sex-attracted men and women believe they should be married. The concept of marriage is derived from the Bible. The Bible spells out that marriage is a sacred covenant to be shared between a man and a woman. Not everything is for everybody.

Bruce Jenner believes he’s a woman. He underwent several surgeries and changed his name to create the false reality that he’s a woman. He dates women. He wants it all.

It’s all a slippery slope straight to hell and chaos. That’s why many elementary school teachers spend more time talking about their sex lives and genders with kids rather than reading, writing, and arithmetic.

The unchecked desire to have whatever the mind conceives leads to anarchy. There’s no magic pill to prevent the consequences of gluttony and disobedience. You can only delay the suffering.

America suffers today because for at least the last 60 years, we’ve rejected commonsense and biblically backed limitations on acquiescing to what we feel.

The political left feels that economic and educational outcomes should be better for American black people. Leftists have adopted critical race theory and diversity, inclusion, and equity as intellectual tent poles to generate the outcomes they deem just.

The Bible prescribes a different solution. It teaches that commitment to family is at the root of all sustainable success. Too many black men and women have bought the feminist lie that marriage is a luxury item at best and more likely an anchor on happiness and fulfillment.

It’s not a coincidence that Tom Brady’s career and family are collapsing at the same time. He violated sacred covenants in pursuit of a football legacy that could go no higher.

Men need to quit lying to themselves and adopting the mindset of feminist women. Real men accept the proper limitations on their desires and live accordingly.

It’s OK if you previously failed to live as a real man. I made that mistake. I pursued everything I desired to excess. It’s not too late to change. The Bucs hope Tom Brady does.

NFL coach shuts down race-obsessed reporters: 'We coach ball. We don't look at color'



Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles rejected racially-framed questions during a press conference on Wednesday, noting that he and fellow coaches focus on football, not skin color.

A questioner noted that Bowles and Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin are among the NFL's only black head coaches, and that Steve Wilks is also joining that group — Wilks has been named interim head coach of the Carolina Panthers.

The Buccaneers are slated to play the Steelers on Sunday and the Panthers later this month.

Bowles said that he has a "very good relationship with Tomlin." He continued by noting, "We don't look at what color we are when" going against one another. "We just know each other." Bowles said that he has many "very good white friends that coach in this league as well."

After briefly mentioning Wilks, Bowles concluded by saying, "we coach ball. We don't look at color."

Another person followed up with another race-focused question, asking Bowles, "You also understand that representation matters too right?" The person suggested that when people "see you guys," they see a person who "looks like them" and "grew up like them."

Bowles shut that line of thought down cold. He said that the phrases "'see you guys' and 'look like them' and 'grow up like them'" indicate "that we're oddballs to begin with." He added, "I think the minute you guys start, stop stop makin' a big deal about it everybody else will as well."

The many Americans weary of a race-obsessed culture will likely find the coach's comments refreshing.

Todd Bowles on Preparing to Face QB Kenny Pickett, Pittsburgh Steelers | Press Conference youtu.be

Whitlock: Mass Formation Psychosis explains Antonio Brown’s meltdown far more than CTE



Professional sports are no longer a force for good.

They do not unify us. They do not inspire us to seek our better selves. They do not provoke participants to take bold and courageous stances.

For the first time in my lifetime, I believe professional sports do more harm to American society than good.

This is what ran across my mind yesterday as I watched Tampa Bay wide receiver Antonio Brown strip off his uniform mid-game, toss his equipment to the ground, wave to the crowd, and run off the field.

Professionalized football – collegiate and the NFL – exacerbated the emotional problems that have plagued Brown since childhood. Because of his immense talent, football afforded Brown the opportunity to ignore the mental scars a dysfunctional upbringing in South Florida wrought. Worse, the new social media demands of professional sports sank Brown further into the mental abyss.

Over the next few days, you will hear plenty of analysts and Twitter pundits speculate that Brown is suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy – CTE.

CTE and white supremacy are the popular and corporate-media-approved explanations given any time a professional football player, particularly a black one, behaves poorly. They’re bogus excuses that ignore the fact that bigotry and head trauma in sports have been around since gladiators fought lions for the entertainment of the masses.

If CTE is real and the cause of unstable behavior, then Spartacus, Bronko Nagurski, Rocky Marciano, Muhammad Ali, Walter Payton, and Joe Montana should all have melted down.

No, what’s new and what explains both Antonio Brown’s plunge into bizarro world and the rapid decay of professional sports as a force for good is the importance of social media brand-building.

Brown has no more or less CTE than Troy Aikman, Jim Brown, Joe Montana, Dick Butkus, or any prizefighter.

Brown is suffering from mass formation psychosis. Yep, the psychological disorder Dr. Robert Malone discussed in his infamous Joe Rogan interview. Malone, of course, was talking about our exaggerated fear of COVID-19. Malone compared modern America to Germany in the 1920s and 1930s.

“A very intelligent, highly educated population, and they went barking mad,” he said. “When you have a society that has become decoupled from each other and has free-floating anxiety in a sense that things don’t make sense, we can’t understand it, and then their attention gets focused by a leader or series of events on one small point just like hypnosis, they literally become hypnotized and can be led anywhere.”

Here’s how I translate Malone’s explanation: America, the land of individualism and independent thought, is suffering from social and corporate media-induced groupthink. It’s made us choose group fear over individual freedom. It’s made us crazy.

Antonio Brown is nuts, and his addiction to Instagram and Twitter is making him crazier.

He turned a rather routine sideline dispute between himself and Bruce Arians into a career-ending confrontation and walk-off. It’s not all that surprising if you have been following Brown’s descent. In 2018, ESPN’s Jesse Washington wrote a prescient piece on Brown and his love affair with the social media matrix. The article perfectly captures the negative impact social media was having on Brown’s reality and worldview.

Brown is the micro. Professional sports are the macro. Social media has eroded the value and integrity of professional sports. It’s done the same thing to corporate media and public discourse. It’s at the root of American division. Social media is a cancer. Mass formation psychosis is just a strand of social media cancer.

For today, I don’t want to stray too far from sports.

Let’s look beyond Antonio Brown. Let’s look at a football player with an impeccable reputation and the damage social media is doing to him: Tom Brady.

He suffers from mass formation psychosis, too. You will never convince me Brady believes in the experimental COVID vaccines. Never. The man is meticulous about what he puts into his body. But he has a social media brand he must protect, so he pretends to be on board with the experimental medical trials being forced on the American public.

Pro athletes are cowards. They’re tools of major corporations. They’ve completely sold out for money. They live in fear of the social media mob. Combined, Brady and his wife, Giselle Bundchen, are worth close to a billion dollars.

Brady has the money and the accomplishments to say and do whatever he wants. He could use his voice and his platform to speak against the vaccine mandates and the stupid and divisive NFL COVID protocols. He remains silent.

The same goes for LeBron James. He’s a slave to his social media following. Pretending that cops are on a murderous rampage against American black men pleases social media and the Chinese Communist Party. The point of view is detached from reality and a symptom of mass formation psychosis.

Professional sports used to reveal and sharpen a man’s character. We’re all flawed. Participation in sports used to shave some of our flaws. Now the games solely reward talent and men willing to swallow and promote whatever agenda Big Tech and global corporations dictate.

Antonio Brown won the talent lottery. That’s why the Steelers, Raiders, Patriots, Buccaneers, and Tom Brady kept bending their standards to make room for Brown.

For me, the Great Reset is turning into my personal Great Awakening. Professional sports and their participants solely serve the dollar. The difference between Antonio Brown and Tom Brady isn’t as significant as you might think.

Jon Gruden's cancellation has commenced: Former coach to be removed from stadium's Ring of Honor, replaced by 'generic likeness' in Madden NFL 22 game



After Jon Gruden resigned as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders this week in the wake of reports featuring years-old emails in which he used language considered racist, homophobic, and sexist, Gruden's cancellation appears to be in full swing.

What happened?

Just hours after Gruden announced his resignation from the Raiders, one of his former teams — the Tampa Bay Buccaneers — said Tuesday that their former coach no longer will be part of the Ring of Honor at Raymond James Stadium.

"The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have advocated for purposeful change in the areas of race relations, gender equality, diversity and inclusion for many years," the team said in a statement. "While we acknowledge Jon Gruden's contributions on the field, his actions go against our core values as an organization. Therefore, he will no longer continue to be a member of the Buccaneers Ring of Honor."

Gruden led Tampa Bay to its first Super Bowl title in 2003.

But wait, there's more

Not to be outdone, EA Sports also brought the hammer down Tuesday, saying Gruden will be removed from its Madden NFL 22 video game "due to the circumstances" of his resignation — and be replaced by a "generic likeness."

https://t.co/KSKsJ1iVXU

— Madden NFL 22 (@EAMaddenNFL) 1634158824.0

How did folks react?

While woke observers reveled in Gruden's subsequent cancellation, others viewed the turn of events a bit differently, calling out the powers that be as hypocrites for singling out Gruden while other NFL figures with questionable histories apparently get a pass.

"Yet I still have literal domestic abusers in the game??" one observer asked in relation to Gruden getting the boot from Madden NFL 22.

Others pointed out that Gruden wasn't the focal point of the investigation that led to the publication of emails' language.

"They really ruined this man's entire legacy/career over an investigation that had nothing to do with him … smh," one user noted in regard to Gruden's departure from the Bucs' Ring of Honor.

Anything else?

Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis on Wednesday morning told ESPN regarding his former head coach's exit, "I have no comment. Ask the NFL. They have all the answers."

TheBlaze's Jason Whitlock on Tuesday wrote that Gruden "broke at least seven of the woke religion's 10 commandments. His damnation to unemployment and disgrace was inevitable. He's a sinner cast into the fiery hell of cancel culture. The woke religion disavows forgiveness and mercy. The woke cult prefers retribution for thought crimes."

Couch: Tom Brady continues to demonstrate Bill Belichick was more impediment than launching pad



There is no charm about Tom Brady the way there is in most Old Guy versus Father Time stories.

Phil Mickelson was washed up at 50 before finding magic this spring to win the PGA Championship. Something just felt good about that. You felt your personal glory might still be reachable again at the right time and place with the right work and circumstance. By the time the U.S. Open came, Mickelson was washed up again, surely forever. His moment lives, though.

Through seven Super Bowl titles, I've never been inspired by Brady. Not even last year. Amazed, yes. But not inspired until Thursday night, with 1:24 left in the Tampa Bay-Dallas game in the NFL season opener. Brady and Tampa had the ball at their 25, trailing 29-28.

And you knew one thing for sure: The game was over. Brady was never going to fail. Forty-four years old didn't matter. Eighty-four seconds left and one timeout didn't matter. His age might amaze us, but to him that's not even a consideration. Brady didn't need magic for another moment because he's not living a moment.

The point of Tom Brady is clear now and particularly important today: It's that limitations and other people don't define who you are. Circumstances like age don't define you. Check your inevitabilities at the door.

Brady is no fluke. He's not finding old magic or a spark. He just is. And when he got out from under the thumb of Bill Belichick authoritatively telling him how things had to be done, how to think, how to face being past his time, Brady went to Tampa Bay and got better. That's because he was himself.

"It's nice that I've found my voice more," he said recently. "I really enjoy being around my teammates, my coaches. It's been a different environment, just really enjoying the experience of playing football, playing with a group of guys."

After a year and a half of COVID, we've had our fill of circumstances dictating. We've had enough of the media — social or traditional — or political parties telling us what to think or do. That's why there is so much rage out there now.

It's why you can't find an Uber any more, because there aren't enough people willing to drive one. It's why employers can't find workers. People don't want to be defined by limitations any more. So they're just not taking the jobs they don't want.

Brady is the poster child for that. A few years ago, when he was still in New England with Belichick, I thought it was time for him to retire. A lot of people did. He was starting to fail. Belichick's dynasty needed a new cog at quarterback because Brady was getting too old.

Brady knew that age wasn't his limitation. Belichick was.

And when Brady won the Super Bowl last year in Tampa while Belichick failed in New England, that changed the picture of Belichick. For so long, Belichick was a genius on every coaching Mount Rushmore, and as long as you did what he said, you would win. Brady knew better.

Former New England cornerback Asante Samuel tweeted recently about Belichick, saying, "...without Brady he is just another coach in my opinion."

A trend has come up this year with athletes talking about their mental health. Simone Biles, Naomi Osaka. Just this week, women's national team soccer player Christen Press announced on social media, "I've made the difficult decision to take a couple of months away from the game to focus on my mental health."

Without using those words, that's what Brady did last year.

It was fun sport last year watching Brady win and Belichick lose and talking about who was winning their divorce. That was just about celebrity bickering.

It seems bigger now. Belichick has rebuilt his offensive line and now has the guy who is supposed to be the new Brady, rookie first-round draft pick Mac Jones, at quarterback.

The idea isn't that Jones is the greatest talent, but instead that he can be a perfect cog in Belichick's machine. If there was any doubt, Brady proved last year that he was never a cog in the first place. He made Belichick look human.

We've seen old athletes come back for greatness. George Foreman won the heavyweight title way past his prime and Jack Nicklaus won the Masters.

Those guys were different from Brady. He isn't finding old talents one last time. He is doing things his way, not Belichick's. That game-winning drive Thursday night was no surprise. Brady won't go away any time soon, either.

Unvaccinated players on two NFL teams to wear yellow wristbands at practices to distinguish them from vaccinated players



Unvaccinated players on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers — the reigning Super Bowl champions — as well as the Pittsburgh Steelers are to wear yellow wristbands at practices to distinguish them from vaccinated players, NBC Sports reported.

What are the details?

The network's Pro Football Talk writer Mike Florio posted two short pieces Sunday describing the wristband plans for each team as they enforce their own COVID-19 protocols.

Florio wrote that the Buccaneers will use yellow wristbands for unvaccinated players and red wristbands for vaccinated players.

Josh Pearson (89) takes the field moments before the start of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Training Camp workout on July 26, 2021, at the AdventHealth Training Center at One Buccaneer Place in Tampa, Florida. Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

In his other piece, Florio noted that unvaccinated Steelers players will be wearing yellow wristbands at practice. There was no indication whether vaccinated Steelers players would don any kind of wristband.

In addition, Florio reported Monday that unvaccinated players on the Jacksonville Jaguars "will wear a wristband" — but he didn't specify a color.

How's that all working out?

Florio on Sunday said Tampa Bay running back Leonard Fournette "surely" will have a wristband since he's been on the fence about getting the jab, but in his Monday piece Florio noted that Fournette was wearing "no wristband" during Sunday's practice.

He added that photos showed there were "plenty of players with red wristbands, such as tight end Rob Gronkowski and receiver Mike Evans" — but Florio reported that "for some players, no wristband can be seen." Among the wristband-less were iconic quarterback Tom Brady and backups Blaine Gabbert and Kyle Trask, he noted.

Looks like Brady was going without a wristband Tuesday as well:

Tom Brady (12) warms up during the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Training Camp on July 27, 2021, at the AdventHealth Training Center at One Buccaneer Place in Tampa, Florida. Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

"It's unclear what any of it means, other than the intended procedures apparently aren't being completely adhered to, yet," Florio noted.

The Buccaneers on Tuesday didn't immediately comment on TheBlaze's request for comment on the apparent wristband-wearing inconsistencies.

Florio also said Steelers first-round rookie running back Najee Harris is "one of the few" players wearing a yellow wristband. "The Steelers have been among the most successful at getting players to choose to take the vaccine," Florio noted Sunday. "That's a testament to the persuasive powers of coach Mike Tomlin, who realizes the competitive advantage of getting it — and disadvantage of not getting it."

As for wristband-wearing in general, NFL Players Association President — and Cleveland Browns center — JC Tretter wrote that "we did not agree to them and think they are unnecessary."

Anything else?

The chatter about players wearing wristbands to signal whether or not they're vaccinated follows a tumultuous couple of days last week when the NFL issued a lengthy memo announcing possible penalties for unvaccinated players and their teams, including loss of pay and game forfeits.

In response, Arizona Cardinals superstar wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins implied he would consider retiring rather than take the vaccine. Cornerback Jalen Ramsey of the Los Angeles Rams tweeted his support for unvaccinated players: "I know 2 people right now who got the vaccine but are COVID positive. I'm just saying. I wouldn't look at a teammate as bad if he don't get the vax."

But defensive end Jerry Hughes of the Buffalo Bills criticized players who refused to be vaccinated: "Sooo the top scientists in the entire world got together to figure out how to combat COVID-19. And when they came up with a vaccine, you question them. They are trying to save lives and you have doubt."

NFL player tweets anti-Asian slur, then apologizes and says he didn't realize the term is derogatory



Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Carlton Davis posted a tweet containing an anti-Asian slur Sunday night — but later apologized and said he didn't realize the term is derogatory, ESPN reported.

What are the details?

"Gotta stop letting g**** in Miami," Davis wrote in his since-deleted tweet. He later apologized and said he thought the term meant "lame."

"I would never offend any group of people," Davis, 24, wrote in a subsequent tweet that included what ESPN said is an image from an undisclosed slang dictionary entry. "You reporters can look for another story to blow up. The term was directed towards a producer claiming he 'ran Miami.'" Davis added that he'll now "retire that word from my vocabulary giving the hard times our Asian family are enduring."

He also tweeted that "I used a term that from where I come from has always meant 'lame,' but I did not realize it has a much darker, negative connotation. I have learned a valuable lesson and want to apologize to anyone that was offended by seeing that word because we need to focus on helping each other during these tough times."

More from ESPN:

According to a report from the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, hate crimes against Asian Americans have risen nearly 150% in major U.S. cities over the past year, with several incidents making headlines in recent weeks.

Davis has spoken out against racism in the past and about his experiences as a Black man. He is part of the Bucs' social justice board, which met with community leaders last summer to discuss ways police can build better relationships with the Black community.

How did folks react?

Reaction to the news seemed mixed, with some commenters saying Davis deserves a pass while others said he should be treated like other athletes who've uttered slurs — such as Meyers Leonard, who found himself in hot water with the NBA and his team, the Miami Heat, last month after using an anti-Semitic slur during a video game livestream.

Leonard soon was banned "indefinitely" from the team and then traded to the Oklahoma City Thunder, which released him last week. Like Davis, Leonard said he didn't know what "k***" meant at the time he uttered it.