Page 24 - Florida Sentinel 10-7-22
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Sports
Antonio Brown Going After Tom Brady With Latest Instagram Post?
BEAUTY UNLIMITED
GABRIELLE
Gabrielle, as this week’s Beauty Unlimited feature, brings a robust and energizing new look to the industry. She’s not lacking in confidence or energy when it comes to her career, and she has no time to waste on tasks that lead nowhere. Gabrielle loves the camera and is more than ready to make a name for herself in the modeling and fashion industry. Congratulations to Gabrielle for appearing as this week’s Beauty Unlimited feature.
Antonio Brown enjoys pressing buttons, and it seems like he was trying to push Tom Brady’s buttons with his latest social media post.
Brown posted a photo on Instagram Sunday night that showed him hugging Brady’s wife, Gisele after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Super Bowl LV win.
“Put that s— on,” was Brown’s caption (edited for profanity).
There’s no way to inter-
GISELE BÜNDCHEN AND ANTONIO BROWN
pret the post as a friendly one.
Brady is known to be
having marital problems with Gisele. And here’s Brown posting a photo of himself hugging his former team- mate’s wife. That’s not some- thing friends do.
Brown’s post comes a day after he made headlines for exposing himself in the swimming pool of a Dubai hotel last week. Not only is the former wide receiver not showing any remorse for his actions, he seems to be asking for more trouble and atten- tion.
The Tua Tagovailoa Effect? At Least
A Dozen Players Benched Sunday
Under NFL Concussion Protocols
Following a firestorm of health and safety criticism directed at the NFL for its handling of Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagov- ailoa last week, at least 12 players were removed from Sunday’s games under the league’s concussion proto- cols.
The neurological evalua- tions occurred across eight of 14 games Sunday and ap- peared to suggest a cautious uptick of emphasis when compared to numbers from the previous week. During the league’s Week 3 slate, only three players appeared to have been benched after entering concussion proto- cols. That group didn’t in- clude Tagovailoa, who hit his head while facing the Buf- falo Bills and then stumbled to the ground as he tried to walk to the huddle, raising concerns about whether he’d sustained a concussion. Tagovailoa underwent a
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is taken off the field after suffering a head injury following a sack.
neurological evaluation at halftime of that game and was ultimately allowed to re- turn to the field. That deci- sion resulted in the NFL Players Association immedi- ately calling for an investiga- tion into whether proper concussion protocols were followed.
Four days later on the league’s prime-time Thurs- day game, Tagovailoa suf- fered a concussion against
the Cincinnati Bengals and had to be taken by ambu- lance to a nearby hospital. In the fallout of that incident and in the wake of pressing questions about what had oc- curred during the Buffalo game, the NFLPA exercised its right to fire the unaffili- ated neurotrauma consultant who examined Tagovailoa and allowed him to continue playing against the Bills. It also spurred the NFL and NFLPA to open discussions about revamping the league’s concussion protocols, with an emphasis on removing players who display any motor instability during gameplay.
The NFL and NFLPA an- nounced potential forthcom- ing “modifications” to the concussion protocols on Sat- urday, leaving open the pos- sibility that changes could be instituted as soon as Week 5.
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