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Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Ryan Clark Says Players want high hits

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell says players have adjusted apt rules instituted to minimize hits to a baby head.

But free agent Ryan Clark,a former longtime safety with an infant Steelers, said some players merely venture to circumvent toddler rules among creative ways, since they are more concerned about suffering an major knee injury than a simple concussion.

"I've had players within toddler beginning of games tell me, 'Hey RC,hear -- whether you got one shot,buffet me up high If you obtain fined, I'll pay it,'" Clark said Tuesday aboard ESPN's "First Take."

"I had one simple player make me [that] this season. I said, 'You're agreeable I don't want to work low anyway. I'll make a baby tackle.' Players are thinking to themselves,aggressive players, 'Hey, I'd rather be strike in toddler head and be out one game, maybe never be out at all, than be buffet among infant knees and it be a basic season alternatively career injury.'"

Improving player safety has become one of Goodell's height initiatives, and it namely centered on eliminating hits that result surrounded concussions. The league has aggressively fined players and Rashard Mendenhall Jersey even suspended chronic offenders for hits above infant shoulders.

The prevailing rules applied apt hitting a defenseless player have forced tacklers to adjust their striking zone, and players such as Clark an interesting former union representative) have raised concerns about lower hitting zones.

Goodell,though said rules that prohibit helmet-to-helmet hits have produced affirmative results.

"While there are some that say it has had a rudimentary negative-- as an example, ACL injuries being up -- that's not a baby case," Goodell said Monday at an infant NFL owners meetings. "What we've seen namely that players have adjusted apt infant rules and they are finding that target zone, and it is a basic safer, better game because of it."


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