Ken norton jr controversy




















He looked at me like he really cared, and he did things and he said things and he lived his life that way, that he was going to set an example for me. So I had to make sure that I carried on his legacy in that way. Skip to main content Skip to navigation. Seahawks' Ken Norton Jr. Seattle Seahawks.

What to know for the NFL wild-card round: Score picks, bold predictions, key stats and more. Arizona Cardinals. Buffalo Bills. Texans fire coach Culley after just one season. Houston Texans. Stafford says toe OK, not feeling playoff pressure. Los Angeles Rams. Watt practices; undetermined if he'll play Monday. San Francisco 49ers. Colts GM won't fully commit to Wentz for Indianapolis Colts. Dallas Cowboys. JuJu looks 'ready' for possible return from IR.

Pittsburgh Steelers. Attorney to appeal Vegas ruling in Ruggs case. Las Vegas Raiders. Brothers Stefon and Trevon Diggs push each other to greater heights. Kansas City Chiefs. These moments played a role in defining the Cowboys-Niners rivalry. Some top moments from the Patriots-Bills rivalry. New England Patriots. How Mike Tomlin's consistency helped guide the Steelers into the postseason.

Jets Zach Wilson has hidden edge as he embarks on key offseason. New Vikings regime could be 'breath of fresh air'. Houston Texans set up coach David Culley to fail, then fired him. What makes Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts tick? The Seahawks have played in a lot of weird games in the Pete Carroll era, but this may have been the weirdest. After many miscues and one of the most disastrous injuries they could possibly suffer, Carroll's crew falls to on the year following a defeat to the Rams on Thursday night.

Though he threw Seattle's chances of winning away with a brutal interception on the team's second-to-last drive, Smith performed admirably under unfavorable circumstances. Following a stagnant three quarters from the offense, Smith drove the ball down the field on a pair of and yard scoring drives to keep the Seahawks' chances alive. The West Virginia alum's efficiency in comparison to Russell Wilson's lack thereof is certainly going to be a topic of discussion in the coming days.

In all, he completed 10 of 17 passes for yards and one touchdown on the night. Metcalf notoriously struggled against Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey last year, but tonight, the third-year receiver got his revenge. Catching five balls for 98 yards, Metcalf found the end zone twice and made a few nice plays with Ramsey in coverage—including on his first score of the night. And when Smith came in the game, the All-Pro served as a much-needed security blanket. He was masterful in this one.

I think we're a better football team than this, but those are just words. If you can't back 'em up, what's the point of saying them? It's too early to tell whether Ditka will be good for the Saints, the only current NFL team never to have won a playoff game.

What has become obvious is that the Saints are about the worst thing imaginable for Ditka, who nine years ago suffered a heart attack while coaching the Bears.

Interim coach Rick Venturi presided over the team's final eight games, seven of which it lost. Then Ditka came to town preaching personal responsibility and love of the game, and the players took to him immediately. They regard him as a sincere, no-nonsense boss who has earned the right to impose his standard of excellence. But there's a huge gap between accepting those standards and measuring up to them. In dropping one-sided games to the St. New Orleans already has 19 turnovers, one more than the Washington Redskins had in the entire '96 season.

The Saints are on pace to surrender the football times on the year, and if they reach even half that total, you can bet that jobs also will be surrendered. Ditka might even walk away. After ending a four-year hiatus from football to accept the Saints job in January, Ditka must be thinking, I gave up a life of golf, speaking engagements, network commentary and gin rummy for this?

We've been feeling so good about the situation, and you wonder, How can this happen? It seems impossible. If we don't get it together, things could get ugly. Instead of people playing to win or to please the coach, we could have people playing to save their careers. The Saints aren't the league's most talented team, but they shouldn't be this pitiful.

Sharkey maintained until his dying day that he was legitimately concussed, but doubts remain. As does the fact that three consecutive heavyweight championship bouts ended in a suspicious manner, with the winner losing the title after a painfully brief reign.

For those who think this trend died out along with prohibition, flappers and fedora-wearing gangsters, two words: Antonio Margarito. Although it was never proven that Margarito had loaded his gloves prior to being caught immediately before his bout with Shane Mosley, it is widely suspected that his blood-smeared TKO of Miguel Cotto six months earlier was tainted. The second part of the double-ended jinx came in Margarito's first defense, when Mosley knocked him out in the ninth round and annexed the junior middleweight belt the Mexican had won from Cotto.

Although the evidence is apocryphal, these are not cherry-picked incidents selected to prove a point. This uncanny phenomenon has occurred many times down through the years: In , when the WBC stripped Muhammad Ali for taking a rematch with Leon Spinks rather than fighting Ken Norton, the alphabet outfit handed its heavyweight title to Norton without the formality of actually fighting for it.

Norton, of course, also lost in his maiden defense of the ill-gotten title, dropping a close decision to Larry Holmes. Then there was Rocky Lockridge. The victim of a hometown decision in when he lost his pound title to badly faded Wilfredo Gomez in Puerto Rico.

Afterward, Gomez gave conspiracy theorists additional fodder when he declared, "I owe this title to Pepe Cordero. Then came the familiar boomerang effect: Layne knocked out Gomez in Wilfredo's first defense, while Lockridge went on to hold a pair of junior welterweight titles before retiring in Few who saw it could forget the forlorn look on Manuel Medina's scuffed-up face after he lost a featherweight belt to Johnny Tapia in April Although he fought well and deserved the verdict, Medina knew what was coming.

Medina was a resourceful fighter with a hangdog look who somehow forged a multi-title career despite the fact that he couldn't punch, wasn't very fast and bled virtually every time he ducked between the ropes. Despite his self-fulfilling prophecy, he didn't deserve a hosing from the judges that night at Madison Square Garden.

As it turned out, Medina gained an indirect measure of vengeance when Tapia relinquished the title in order to take a big-money fight with Marco Antonio Barrera.

Tapia lost to Barrera and never won another major title, while Medina bounced back to capture a featherweight belt the following year in an unlikely victory over Scott Harrison. There is, of course, no guarantee that every fighter who wins a title in dubious fashion will get his comeuppance shortly thereafter. The most notable case is that of Muhammad Ali, who captured the heavyweight championship by stopping Sonny Liston in a fight surrounded by rumors and accusations, including claims that Liston took a dive.

It was very much the same when Liston flopped in the first round of the rematch.



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