Denver Broncos safety is suspended The meeting between Kareem Jackson and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell did not go as planned.
Denver Broncos put safety on hold After losing almost $1 million of his pay due to a string of illegal hits that resulted in two ejections, numerous fines, and six weeks of missed pay, Kareem Jackson has obviously not learned his lesson.
According to Jackson, this is because the NFL isn’t a very effective teacher.
The 14-year veteran claims the NFL is picking on him specifically and that they don’t have any answers for how he can modify his aggressive style of play to fit the modern game, in which the league no longer values the kind of collisions it once did.
Following his second suspension, Jackson was given the opportunity to speak with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, but things didn’t turn out quite as he had intended.
Jackson stated, “I was told that I’m responsible for the offensive guys’ protection,” on Monday night before welcoming 50 youths from the Metro Denver Boys & Girls Club for his yearly “JackaClaus Shopping Spree” at a Parker Walmart.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
Therefore, I’m not really sure how I make plays, protect them, and protect myself. But I was informed that. Furthermore, I’m not really sure how I should play this game going forward. I’m hoping that I can solve it.
“At the end of the day,” Jackson continued, “I’m going to go play the game like I have been playing since 2010.”
That should concern Broncos supporters and coach Sean Payton.
When he hit Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs in Week 11, he got his second suspension for the first tackle he made after serving his first one.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
The first safety in franchise history, PJ Locke, has been primarily responsible for this thanks to his heady, steady play.
The Broncos (7-6) have won four of the five games that Jackson has missed, setting records for sacks in three straight games.
Despite having a poor start, Denver is attempting to become only the fourth team since the merger to get to the postseason. Jackson is allowed to return to practice next week before the Broncos’ game against New England on Christmas Eve. The Broncos are trailing the slumping Kansas City Chiefs (8-5) by just one game in the AFC West.
If he doesn’t get sent out again, they could really use their tone-setter in the last stretch.
According to Jackson, “for me, I guess, lowering my target (zone) even more than I have” is one method to stay out of more difficulty. In terms of attempting to shield the man on
It’s not feasible on the opposite side. I’m not sure how I’m expected to accomplish it.”
Along with the $89,670 fine he received for unsafe hits this season, Jackson has forfeited $837,000 in lost pay. However, he claimed the league completely waived the $43,709 fine he received for an unflagged hit on Chiefs running back Isiah Pacheco in Week 6, which Goodell used as an example of Jackson’s excessive tackles during their Nov. 30 meeting in New York.
When the running back was going down, Jackson said Goodell asked him why he would hit Pacheco the way he did. Jackson replied that he had already committed to going in low and that even if NFL players are the best in the world, it’s impossible for
any person to suddenly alter their course and escape impact as the ballcarrier makes a last-minute duck.
“It’s impossible to play this game and do what you guys are asking us to do,” Jadckson stated. “It makes no sense.”
According to Jackson, “I told him a lot of these are incidental contact,” as well. “Once I’m committed and I’m going, I can’t change.” In addition, Jackson stated, “I’m the last line of protection. My task is to bring him down.”
The league “turned around and gave me all my money back for it,” Jackson claimed, two days after using the hit on Pacheco to justify Jackson’s sentence. “After that, I was like, ‘Why would you give me everything?'”
my Kansas City hit money returned? These other hits are all essentially the same.”
Jackson claimed that he sent Goodell a thank-you note on December 4 for their meeting, along with cut-ups of further unflagged, unfined hits from this season’s NFL. “And I said, ‘I can’t help but think you guys are singling me out because these guys aren’t getting flagged, there’s no consequences and these are far worse hits than mine,'” said Jackson.