Albert Haynesworth trashes former Washington players, defends Dan Snyder

Unbelievable.

When you thought you’d never hear the name Albert Haynesworth associated with the Washington NFL franchise again, he opens his mouth.

OutKick posted an interview this week where Clay Travis interviews Haynesworth — who last played for Washington in 2010 — and asks him about his time in Washington, specifically playing for former owner Daniel Snyder, who foolishly gave Haynesworth a seven-year, $100 million contract.

That contract will forever be remembered as one of the worst in NFL history.

Not surprisingly, Haynesworth defends Snyder, calling him “super cool, and “not an a-hole.” Haynesworth said he would talk to Snyder at least once a week, and they were “super close.” Haynesworth likened Snyder to a “billionaire fantasy football,” who loved the Redskins but didn’t know a lot about football.

Let’s quickly review Haynesworth’s two-year stint in Washington. He played for two different coaching staffs, causing problems for each, complaining about the defensive schemes. Jim Zorn didn’t have the clout to stand up to Haynesworth — Mike Shanahan did.

And Shanahan became a hero to Washington fans by ridding the franchise of Haynesworth two seasons into that ridiculous contract. Washington traded Haynesworth to the New England Patriots in the summer of 2011 for a fifth-round pick.

He lasted four months in New England.

If Haynesworth’s comments about Snyder weren’t enough to enrage Washington fans, it was his comments about three former standout players: Cornerback DeAngelo Hall, running back Clinton Portis and tight end Chris Cooley.

He called all three former players “a joke” and said that they represented what “that team represented back then,” which was “trash.” He reiterated the trash statement again before the interview ended.

Hall, Portis and Cooley were some of Washington’s best players, along with Santana Moss, Sean Taylor, Chris Samuels, Trent Williams and Ryan Kerrigan over the last 20 years of Snyder’s ownership, and popular with fans.

You almost have to ask yourself, did this really happen?

Yes, it did.

We’ll leave you with Al Galdi’s response to Haynesworth, which is how every Washington fan “fondly” remembers him.

 

NFL draft history: Every No. 15 overall pick selected since 2000

#NFLDraft history: Looking at every No. 15 overall pick selected since the 2000 #NFLDraft and the #Eagles chances of landing an impact player

The Eagles need impact players on both sides of the ball and with three first-round picks in April’s draft, Howie Roseman will have his best opportunity ever to add game-changing players to the roster.

After missing on picks like Jalen Reagor and J.J. Arcega-Whiteside, Roseman is under pressure to not waste assets or opportunities while attempting to be the smartest man in the room.

Philadelphia currently has the 15th, 16th, and 19th overall picks and we’ll take a look at some of the impact players and draft bust that were selected with the 15th pick.

Remarkable story of Albert Haynesworth meeting, thanking kidney donor

Former NFL defensive lineman Albert Haynesworth thanked Zach Penny, who donated a kidney to him

Former NFL defensive lineman Albert Haynesworth found an angel and has a new kidney — and life.

The ex-Tennessee Titan and Washington Football Team player has Zach Penny to thank for it and was able to do that.

Penny drove seven hours from Arkansas to donate his kidney to Haynesworth and the procedure took April 15.

Haynesworth told the world of Penny’s act via an Instagram post.

So I would like the world to meet what a real living Angel looks like. Everyone please say hello to my donor @packzenny. This kind hearted selfless human being drove seven hours from Arkansas to give me one of his kidneys! This is one of the happiest days of my life next to the birth of my kids. We need more people in this world like Zach i’m striving to be like him. #mykidneybrother #greatman #theworldneedsmorepeoplelikehim #kidneydonor #kidneytransplant #Allherosdontwearcapes #GodisGood

https://www.instagram.com/p/COVulGolkh9/

Haynesworth was a Titan for seven seasons. He received Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro honors during both the 2007 and ’08 seasons.

On July 7, 2019, Haynesworth revealed that his kidneys were failing and was seeking a donor for a transplant. Enter Penny, a 29-year-old physical therapist assistant from rural Arkansas, who’s a student at the Doctor of Physical Therapy program at South College in Knoxville.

“He was very thankful,” Penny told the Tennessean. “And even if neither of us could laugh without having pain, we could share some jokes in there, too. So good times.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CPDtps0l_Fp/

Penny told the newspaper the pair are in touch while taking time to heal.

“I would hope a friend grows and develops, but honestly, we’re two laid back, real cool guys,” Penny said, “So we’re not going to like push for anything. If we click, we click. But I think we’re going to be involved in each other’s lives

“Like we can’t deny the fact that we’re interconnected.”

The entire incredible story can be read by clicking here.

Ex-Titan Albert Haynesworth gets life-saving kidney transplant

Meet the man who saved Albert Haynesworth’s life.

Former Tennessee Titans defensive lineman Albert Haynesworth was once in desperate need of a kidney to save his life, but he has since received one from someone he rightly calls “a real living Angel.”

Haynesworth posted a photo on Instagram last week, announcing that he did receive a kidney and had a successful transplant.

The donor, Zach Penny, a physical therapist assistant who drove seven hours from Arkansas to donate his healthy left kidney, effectively saved Haynesworth’s life.

“So I would like the world to meet what a real living Angel looks like,” Haynesworth wrote on Instagram. “Everyone please say hello to my donor @packzenny. This kind hearted selfless human being drove seven hours from Arkansas to give me one of his kidneys! This is one of the happiest days of my life next to the birth of my kids. We need more people in this world like Zach i’m striving to be like him.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/COVulGolkh9/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

The amount of selflessness displayed by Penny is truly astounding. He is a hero in every sense of the word.

According to Titans beat writer, Paul Kuharsky, the surgery took place on April 15, and since then Haynesworth is feeling much better.

“Now I feel better, I see the changes in my body,” Haynesworth explained. “Now I am kind of discovering another new norm.”

On top of battling kidney disease in the past, Haynesworth has also had a pair of near-death experiences, once because of brain aneurysms, and another as a result of taking the wrong medication.

After seeing Haynesworth’s situation being so dire in recent years, it’s great to see him get what he needed to get healthy. We wish him and Penny the best of health moving forward.

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UT alum Albert Haynesworth calls Tennessee football out for ‘systematic racism’

Tennessee alum Albert Haynesworth wrote a very critical rundown of his thoughts on Tennessee’s coaching hires in a post on Facebook. 

Tennessee football is in the middle of a mess.

With NCAA sanctions looming, Tennessee fired head coach Jeremy Pruitt, along with nine other staff he hired, while athletic director Phillip Fulmer, the man who brought in Pruitt, retired.

The Volunteers answered by hiring UCF athletic director Danny White and UCF head coach Josh Heupel to the same roles in Knoxville. The two spent the last three years together before making the move.

Tennessee alum Albert Haynesworth, a 2002 first-round pick who spent nine seasons in the NFL, wrote a very critical rundown of his thoughts on Tennessee’s hire in a post on Facebook.

 

“BOYCOTT TENNESSEE FOR SYSTEMATIC RACISM!!!!!

“Obviously Tennessee Vols take Tee Martin for granted! Why do s–t on him, hell he even reduce his salary to help the university out when he didn’t have to? Is it bc he’s black? UT won’t even interview him. I bring race into it bc UT has passed over good qualified black coaches like Kippy Brown and others in these past coaching searches. Majority of your players are African-American why not put a African-American coach to lead them especially the one that won Tennessee a championship? You guys give everyone except a black qualified man a chance! With this said I will not be attending any games or supporting until I see change in the university that I love so much! I hope my fellow black Tennessee alumnus will follow me in boycotting the university in showing how serious we are about not feeling the equality for our fellow qualified black coaches!!!”

The former All-Pro defensive tackle called Tennessee out for not hiring UT legend Tee Martin, who quarterbacked the Volunteers to a national title in 1998 and was hired in 2019 to serve on Pruitt’s staff as associate head coach and receivers coach.

On the surface, it seems as if Tennessee has an out here. With NCAA sanctions coming, it is understandable the Volunteers would axe the entire staff, but we’ll know much more about the situation after the sanctions are announced.

 


This week former Bulldogs Brandon Boykin and Chris Burnette joined UGA Football Live with J.C. Shelton to talk Dawgs, their new podcast and more! Listen here for lots of laughs!

 

Ex-Titans DL Albert Haynesworth arrested in Cleveland, TN

Haynesworth did not physically harm anyone, according to a release.

Former Tennessee Titans defensive lineman Albert Haynesworth has been arrested and charged with domestic violence and disorderly conduct, online records obtained by News Channel 9 in Nashville show.

The incident appears to involve Haynesworth, his ex-girlfriend and her boyfriend, according to a release from the Cleveland Police Department.

A release from the Cleveland Police Department says officers responded to a home on Chelsa Drive Northeast in Cleveland on Monday afternoon just after 4:30 p.m.

CPD spokeswoman Sgt. Evie West says Haynesworth was at the address yelling at Jackson and her new boyfriend, Reginald Tucker.

West says Jackson told officers Haynesworth drove to Cleveland from Franklin, Tennessee after making threats to physically harm Tucker and her.

While Haynesworth allegedly made threats to harm Jackson and Tucker, he did not physically harm anyone; however, his threats were against the law because the people he made them against feared bodily harm.

Haynesworth was allegedly yelling and cursing when officers arrived on the scene, and after he refused to stop, he was taken into custody.

The former first-round pick of the Titans, who played for the franchise for seven seasons, has been in the news for very different reasons lately, as he has battled health issues over the years.

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Tennessee Titans don’t land Albert Haynesworth in 2002 NFL re-draft

Who did the Titans take in Bleacher Report’s re-draft of the 2002 NFL Draft?

In the 2002 NFL Draft, the Tennessee Titans came away with a true impact defender in defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth, who was chosen by the team with the No. 15 pick after a trade back.

Haynesworth went on to have a productive career with the Titans. In seven seasons in Nashville, he made it to two Pro Bowls and was twice named a First-Team All-Pro.

Before running into issues later in his career and ultimately leaving the Titans for the Washington Redskins, Haynesworth was one of the best at his position in the NFL.

If NFL teams had the chance to do it again, the Titans never would have been able to grab Haynesworth at the spot they got him, forcing the team to go in a different direction.

Bleacher Report’s Brad Gagnon did a re-draft of the 2002 NFL Draft and the Titans ended up with guard Brandon Moore at No. 14, and Haynesworth landed with the Kansas City Chiefs at No. 8 overall instead.

With Haynesworth gone and Henderson also unavailable, the Tennessee Titans go an even less sexy but extremely steady route with an undrafted guard.

Brandon Moore wasn’t a superstar at a glamor position, but he started every game for eight consecutive seasons with the New York Jets and was extremely consistent and reliable as both a run- and pass-blocker.

It’s surprising he made just one Pro Bowl, but he would have eventually lent a huge hand to a Titans team that often had continuity along the offensive line but could have used more young interior talent when they were competitive between 2007 and 2011.

They were always stronger outside than inside, which is why McKinnie continues to slide.

Originally, Moore went undrafted, but he was able to prove to every team that passed on him that they made a mistake.

Moore had a long career with the New York Jets and started in 16 games for eight consecutive seasons, one of which resulted in a Pro Bowl nod (2011). As Gagnon points out, he probably should have been voted to more than that.

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Throwback Thursday: Texans beat Bucs in 2011, but lose Matt Schaub

The last time the Houston Texans faced the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on the road, they lost their starting quarterback.

Being in different conferences, the Houston Texans and Tampa Bay Buccaneers rarely get a chance to play. The last time they did so was in 2015, and the Texans vanquished the Bucs and rookie quarterback Jameis Winston 19-9 for Houston’s first win of the season in Week 3.

The Texans have not traveled to Tampa to face the Buccaneers since 2011. On that Nov. 13 for Week 10, Houston picked up their seventh win of the season as part of a 10-6 campaign that delivered the Texans their first AFC South crown and postseason berth.

In a blacked-out bout in the Bay, the Texans beat the Buccaneers handily, winning 37-9 in a game that was never in doubt.

Houston scored on long drives, with Arian Foster, Ben Tate and Derrick Ward each scoring rushing touchdowns. The Texans’ first three scoring drives spanned 80, 80 and 90 yards.

The Texans’ then-No. 1 ranked defense looked the part. In turn, promising young quarterback Josh Freeman did not. He threw three interceptions, recording a measly 33.7 passer rating in the process. A rushing attack led by LaGarrette Blount could not get anything going.

By all means, the Texans dominated the Bucs. They won the battles of first downs (21 to 12), total yards (420 to 231), turnovers (four to zero) and time of possession (35:06 to 24:54).

However, they lost.

In the win, the Texans witnessed the collapse of a promising season. Their quarterback, Matt Schaub, suffered a Lisfranc injury when the massive Albert Haynesworth landed on his foot, breaking it in the process.

Schaub’s season was done. Matt Leinart replaced him. The Texans sunk into oblivion. Haynesworth, meanwhile, failed to show remorse.

“You know me, I love to hit Schaub,” Haynesworth said, via The Tennessean.

Schaub had one good season after the injury. However, that 2011 season that showed a hint of promise for a Super Bowl ended in Tampa Bay.

On Saturday, the Texans are looking to prop-up this year’s Super Bowl run. Again, it will run through Tampa Bay. Luckily, Haynesworth does not reside on the opposite sideline.

Garrett-Rudolph fight invokes memories of other helmet incidents, Cowboys involved

The fight that broke out at the end of Browns-Steelers wasn’t the first, nor will it be the last, helmet incident in the NFL. A recap.

The NFL world was placed on it’s head in the final moments of what should have been a celebratory situation for the Cleveland Browns in Thursday night’s win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. Only it’s the Cleveland Browns and nice things rarely happen to that organization. A few seconds before defeating their rivals for the first time in the same season they also took out the Baltimore Ravens, all hell broke loose when defensive end Myles Garrett took down QB Mason Rudolph a few ticks after Rudolph had released the ball.

The takedown was late-hit flag worthy, but on it’s own probably wouldn’t be much of a big deal. What happened after, certainly was. On the ground, Rudolph and Garrett tussled, with Rudolph attempting to take off Garrett’s helmet.

This could be Rudolph’s hand getting stuck in Garrett’s facemask and him trying to get it out, as some have speculated, but what is going on with Rudolph’s left hand cannot be seen by the currently available angles.

There is clear animosity here as Rudolph grabs the back of Garrett’s helmet and almost pulls it off. Just as none of us outsiders know the full intent of Rudolph’s hands, none of us outsiders know what was being said during this tussle and it’s irresponsible to speculate on the specific words being used.

It is, of course, doubtful the two were exchanging pound cake recipes.

As they rose from the ground, Rudolph appears to have made contact with Garrett in the groin area not once, but twice. The intent, and the intensity, is unknown.

Garrett went apoplectic and not only retaliated by trying to remove Rudolph’s helmet — it’s a safe bet to assume Garrett didn’t take Rudolph’s action as a mild-mannered attempt to remove a hand from a facemask — but succeeded, and then things turned surreal.

Rudolph, helmet-less, still decides to pursue confrontation. Garrett, backpedaling, winds up and makes a mistake that could have cost Rudolph his season, career or possibly worse, by swinging the QBs helmet and connecting with his head.

Fortunately, the  open end of the helmet where there is padding is what connected, and not the crown of the helmet, or things could have ended badly. The incident will now get turned over to the league and suspensions will likely be coming for all involved. Steelers’ OL Maurkice Pouncey will likely be suspended for throwing punches in defense of his quarterback, Rudolph will likely be suspended for trying to rip off Garrett’s helmet and moving the situation from a penalty-worthy play to a fight, and Garrett certainly will be suspended for escalating the fight to a place things should never, ever go.

Except, they sometimes do.

This is hardly the first helmet-swinging incident the league or organized football has seen, despite the over-the-top reactions some in the media are having. They happen from time to time, including earlier this season in practice, they just haven’t been on primetime television in front of a national audience and during the age of social media where one instance spawns 10’s of thousands of responses.


Kyle Long vs Jalen Dalton (August 2019)

This tiff wasn’t caught on publicly available camera, though as teams record their practice sessions, video of it does exist somewhere .

For The Win reported on it at the time:

Bears offensive lineman Kyle Long had himself an interesting day at training camp on Wednesday. And by interesting, I mean that he took off a fellow player’s helmet and tried to beat him with it.

No, really, he did.

The three-time Pro Bowler was ejected from a mock scrimmage session after he got into a fight with rookie defensive lineman Jalen Dalton. Long apparently took exception to an earlier block by Dalton during an interception return. And frustrations boiled over when Long removed Dalton’s helmet and started hitting him with the helmet.


Richie Incognito vs Antoine Smith (August 2013)

Smith, the Houston Texans defensive lineman, scuffled with notorious bad boy and the oft-maligned offensive lineman, then of the Miami Dolphins. Yes, the threaten-everyone-in-a-funeral-home-with-guns-and-is-back-in-the-NFL Richie Incognito.

As all can see, Incognito gets his hands into the face and helmet of Smith first, just like Rudolph and Garrett, and the response is the escalation of violence. Smith is able to successfully remove Incognito’s helmet, and swings it at him in retaliation. He just doesn’t connect.


Flozell Adams vs Marcus Thomas (Summer 2008)

The Cowboys aren’t immune to being in such instances. During a joint practice with the Denver Broncos, things got heated leading the Dallas lineman to swing a helmet in a big scrum.

The reactions at the time come courtesy of the Denver Post, including Broncos HC Mike Shanahan being pleased no one threw a punch.

“That’s all part of football,” Cowboys receiver Terrell Owens said. “When you get all this testosterone going out here, it gets a little out of hand.”

“When you’re going against other guys, guys that you’re not friends with, sometimes tempers flare,” Broncos linebacker D.J. Williams said. “I guess two guys got into it a little extra at the end of the play, and once that happens, your friends come, everybody’s friends come. It’s a big pile-on, just grabbing and pushing.”

Asked about the fracas, Broncos coach Mike Shanahan retorted: “That wasn’t a fight. It wasn’t a fight. You know what a fight is. That was just a little pushing. It happens all the time. But they kept their composure and they didn’t swing. And that’s what you want.”


Don Joyce vs Les Lichtner (1954)

These things are of course nothing new. Here, Twitter user @DanDalyOnSports finds an old-school incident involving a current Hall of Famer.

The league’s response? Very interesting.

Lyle Alzado also got frisky back in the 1980s.


Albert Haynesworth vs Andre Gurode (2006)

Of course the most notable helmet incident prior to this one didn’t involve a helmet swing, but did involve a member of the Dallas Cowboys.

After a Julius Jones touchdown, the then Tennessee Titans defensive lineman stood over the Cowboys center Andre Gurode, ripped off his helmet and unsuccessfully tried to step on his face. Undeterred, he went for a second stomp, causing several lacerations to Gurode’s face that would require multiple stitches.

Haynesworth was suspended five games the very next day. It will be interesting to see how long, and how quickly the parties in Thursday night’s events are punished.

Nothing happens in today’s world without being captured in a contemporary meme, and all should be grateful the scream-at-the-too-cool-cat meme is what’s hot right now. Enjoy.

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