****NFL Playoffs 2006****

www.profootballtalk.com

CHAD TOOK SWING AT MARVIN

A league source tells us that multiple members of the Cincinnati Bengals witnessed a troubling incident as the team prepared to take the field for the second half of Sunday's playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Per the source, the last few minutes of intermission were ticking away, when the players were startled by the sight and sound of a helmet slamming against the glass pane of the training room door. Inside, receiver Chad Johnson and receivers coach Hue Jackson were engaged in an altercation. At one point, Johnson was seen holding Jackson in a headlock.

Coach Marvin Lewis entered the training room to intervene, and Johnson (per the source) took a swing at him.

Eventually, receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh broke up the skirmish, within a minute or so of the team exiting the locker room for the second half.

On Monday, several members of the team pointed to the Johnson-Jackson-Lewis incident as the catalyst for the loss of a 17-14 halftime lead and, ultimately, a 31-17 defeat.

Word is that Johnson was unhappy with the lack of balls thrown to him in the first half. A total of three passes came his way, with two completions.

In the second half, another three passes were thrown to Johnson, with only two more completions. For the game, Johnson had four catches for 59 yards.

The incident could have an even more lasting impact on the team than quarterback Carson Palmer's torn ACL and MCL. Some players, we're told, don't want to see Johnson back next year, and there's a belief that the team will be less inclined to give in to Johnson's request for a hefty restructuring of a contract that expires after the 2009 season.

So the Chad Johnson saga very well could evolve into the 2006 version of the Terrell Owens fiasco.

 
Too many Patriots haters.

I'd say this is going to be a good game but Patriots will win it.

The last time they met, the Patriots lost by eight. This game shouldve been a blow out seeing as how Corey Dillon, Teddy Bruschi, Troy Brown, Richard Seymour and a couple other players were inactive by Patriots, yet it wasn't.

Come this Saturday, these 4+ above average players will be active and hopefully completely healthy.

Something tells me that things will be different this time around.

 
Too many Patriots haters.
I'd say this is going to be a good game but Patriots will win it.

The last time they met, the Patriots lost by eight. This game shouldve been a blow out seeing as how Corey Dillon, Teddy Bruschi, Troy Brown, Richard Seymour and a couple other players were inactive by Patriots, yet it wasn't.

Come this Saturday, these 4+ above average players will be active and hopefully completely healthy.

Something tells me that things will be different this time around.
Tom Brady ONLY made a comeback in that game due to Shannahan benching Champ Bailey and Darrent Williams so they could rest their injuries for the game the next week.
Denver will win.

 
http://www.nfl.com/teams/story/CIN/9161575

Doctor calls Palmer's injury 'devastating'

http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/spon...;vip=no;sz=150x30;tile=5;ord=546301137177498?NFL.com wire reports [/URL]

CINCINNATI (Jan. 12, 2006) -- Carson Palmer 's knee injury was "devastating and potentially career-ending," involving numerous ligament tears, a shredded ligament, damaged cartilage and a dislocated kneecap, his surgeon said.

The Cincinnati Bengals quarterback tore ligaments in his left knee when he was hit by Pittsburgh's Kimo von Oelhoffen on his first pass during the Steelers' 31-17 playoff victory.

The team announced that he had torn the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments. The damage was much more extensive and severe, but Dr. Lonnie Paulos said surgery went well and Palmer could be back for the start of the season.

Palmer had surgery Jan. 10 in Houston. Doctors used grafts from other parts of his body and donated tissue to fix the damage during an operation that lasted more than two hours. Palmer headed back to California on Jan. 12 to do his rehabilitation.

"It's not just like it was a torn ACL," Paulos said in a phone interview from Houston. "It's a magnitude more difficult to recover from and repair. It can and has ended careers, without a doubt.

"However, I feel very comfortable with Carson as an athlete and the heart that he's got. In the end, that's the bottom line. I can see the look in his eye already. He's ready to get going."

Paulos, an orthopedic surgeon who has worked with the U.S. Ski Team since 1983, replaced the anterior cruciate ligament, which runs through the middle of the knee and provides stability. He said the medial collateral ligament, which runs along the side of the knee, was damaged "real bad."

"On a scale of 1 to 3, it was a 4," he said. "It was off the chart. It was pretty badly damaged -- shredded is the better term."

The kneecap dislocated when Palmer was hit, damaging tissue around it. There also was some cartilage damage, he said.

Paulos was able to repair the knee without removing pieces of cartilage or soft tissue, a good sign.

"The things that were torn could be repaired," he said. "They were not torn beyond repair. So he's got all his parts in there, which is good. We're optimistic, actually."

If rehabilitation goes well, Palmer could be running in a couple of months and might be able to play in the first regular season game, Paulos said. The 2006 schedule hasn't been set.

Palmer has worn a protective brace on the left knee since he sprained it near the end of the 2004 season. The knee bowed inward on von Oelhoffen's hit even though Palmer was wearing the brace,

"The brace didn't function well in this environment and should have done better than it did, frankly," Paulos said.

The plan is for Palmer to wear more substantial braces on both knees when he returns.

"No brace is perfect," Paulos said. "No brace can prevent every injury, but they do help."

Paulos saw the replay of the injury and wasn't surprised at the extent of the damage it caused. Palmer has absolved von Oelhoffen, saying he didn't think the lineman was trying to hurt him. The lineman said he was trying to sack Palmer, not injure him. He wasn't penalized for the hit.

Palmer made the Pro Bowl in only his second season as a starter, throwing an NFL-leading 32 touchdown passes. The club extended his contract through the 2014 season.

Jon Kitna, who has been Palmer's backup and mentor the last two years, can become a free agent. Palmer's injury will force the Bengals to make sure they have another reliable quarterback on board.

 
http://www.nfl.com/teams/story/CIN/9161575
Doctor calls Palmer's injury 'devastating'

http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/spon...;vip=no;sz=150x30;tile=5;ord=546301137177498?NFL.com wire reports [/URL]

CINCINNATI (Jan. 12, 2006) -- Carson Palmer 's knee injury was "devastating and potentially career-ending," involving numerous ligament tears, a shredded ligament, damaged cartilage and a dislocated kneecap, his surgeon said.

The Cincinnati Bengals quarterback tore ligaments in his left knee when he was hit by Pittsburgh's Kimo von Oelhoffen on his first pass during the Steelers' 31-17 playoff victory.

The team announced that he had torn the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments. The damage was much more extensive and severe, but Dr. Lonnie Paulos said surgery went well and Palmer could be back for the start of the season.

Palmer had surgery Jan. 10 in Houston. Doctors used grafts from other parts of his body and donated tissue to fix the damage during an operation that lasted more than two hours. Palmer headed back to California on Jan. 12 to do his rehabilitation.

"It's not just like it was a torn ACL," Paulos said in a phone interview from Houston. "It's a magnitude more difficult to recover from and repair. It can and has ended careers, without a doubt.

"However, I feel very comfortable with Carson as an athlete and the heart that he's got. In the end, that's the bottom line. I can see the look in his eye already. He's ready to get going."

Paulos, an orthopedic surgeon who has worked with the U.S. Ski Team since 1983, replaced the anterior cruciate ligament, which runs through the middle of the knee and provides stability. He said the medial collateral ligament, which runs along the side of the knee, was damaged "real bad."

"On a scale of 1 to 3, it was a 4," he said. "It was off the chart. It was pretty badly damaged -- shredded is the better term."

The kneecap dislocated when Palmer was hit, damaging tissue around it. There also was some cartilage damage, he said.

Paulos was able to repair the knee without removing pieces of cartilage or soft tissue, a good sign.

"The things that were torn could be repaired," he said. "They were not torn beyond repair. So he's got all his parts in there, which is good. We're optimistic, actually."

If rehabilitation goes well, Palmer could be running in a couple of months and might be able to play in the first regular season game, Paulos said. The 2006 schedule hasn't been set.

Palmer has worn a protective brace on the left knee since he sprained it near the end of the 2004 season. The knee bowed inward on von Oelhoffen's hit even though Palmer was wearing the brace,

"The brace didn't function well in this environment and should have done better than it did, frankly," Paulos said.

The plan is for Palmer to wear more substantial braces on both knees when he returns.

"No brace is perfect," Paulos said. "No brace can prevent every injury, but they do help."

Paulos saw the replay of the injury and wasn't surprised at the extent of the damage it caused. Palmer has absolved von Oelhoffen, saying he didn't think the lineman was trying to hurt him. The lineman said he was trying to sack Palmer, not injure him. He wasn't penalized for the hit.

Palmer made the Pro Bowl in only his second season as a starter, throwing an NFL-leading 32 touchdown passes. The club extended his contract through the 2014 season.

Jon Kitna, who has been Palmer's backup and mentor the last two years, can become a free agent. Palmer's injury will force the Bengals to make sure they have another reliable quarterback on board.
 

 

 

Cicinnati better get Kitna in shape for next season or start shopping for a good quaterback. That dosent sound good at all, matter of fact that sounds very bad.

I dont care if the doc says he will be back, but if he is I dont think he will ever be the same. I hope him the best as he is a very young and impressive quaterback.

 

About the Denver Vs Pats game. I am goning for the Pats cause I love how they play. I have been a fan of there style for a while and respect there play. I think Brady is one of the better more composed quaterbacks in the NFL. So on that note as I know they lost the last meeting, I just think with more healthy players that it will be different, not to mention Brady is 10-0 in the playoffs. I will say one thing though if Denver does win I will be rooting them for the AFC to go to the superbowl. I am hoping it will be Pats vs Seahawks, with the seahawaks taking it all. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif

 
New England puts together some of the best game plans I've ever seen. Make NO mistake about it......they are very talented and coached very well. To count out NE is foolish, they always find a way when it comes to the playoffs. They have to get beat sometime and it may as well be tonight but it will be up to Jake Plummer to do it. New England will put 8 men in the box to stop the run and make Plummer beat them with his arm. Pats used this strategy against Pittsburgh in last years AFC champ game and it worked perfectly as Ben Roethlisberger was unable to beat them with his arm. To me, Jake is the key to tonight's game.

As a Steelers fan I could give a rats *** who wins. If the Steelers win Sunday against the Colts....................no one will be able to stop the Steelers then.

 
I'd like the Steelers to win tonight too. Only because everybody and I mean every sports caster I have seen is saying that the Colts will win easily and by alot. They aren't giving the Steelers any props which they deserve.

I hope they win, if not at least give them a run for their money.

On another note, that Steelers dude that was talking shit (forgot his name) shouldn't be talking about Colts being a soft/thinking team. Last I saw he was getting owned by them, and not just mentally.

 
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