Former Seahawks WR Josh Gordon files for reinstatement to NFL

Former Seattle Seahawks WR Josh Gordon has once again filed for reinstatement to NFL after his indefinite suspension for repeated violations.

Former Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Josh Gordon has once again filed for reinstatement to the National Football League.

“Josh Gordon officially has submitted his reinstatement letter to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and hopes to be with a team for training camp, per a league source,” ESPN’s Adam Schefter tweeted Friday. “The NFL has been randomly drug testing Gordon for the past three months and is said to have passed all tests.”

Gordon was suspended indefinitely in December of 2019 after repeated violations of the NFL’s policies on substance abuse and performance-enhancing substances. He was granted conditional reinstatement last December, but it was rescinded just over one month later due to allegations Gordon had experienced a “setback” in his recovery.

If reinstated, Gordon would become an unrestricted free agent.

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Seahawks make defensive end Aldon Smith signing official

The Seattle Seahawks have officially announced the signing of free-agent defensive end Aldon Smith to the roster.

The Seattle Seahawks didn’t waste any time securing free agent Aldon Smith following his visit with the team on Wednesday. Seattle has now announced the signing is official.

Smith was originally selected by the 49ers with the No. 7 overall selection in the 2011 NFL draft. He played four seasons in San Francisco before legal and substance abuse issues eventually led to his release.

The All-Pro pass rusher then spent a number of years out of the league while suspended but made his return last season in Dallas following reinstatement. For the Cowboys in 2020, Smith tallied starting 5.0 sacks, 48 tackles and a team-high 14 quarterback hits in 16 games played.

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Ex-Seahawk Josh Gordon hopes to return to NFL: ‘There’s no quit in me’

Former Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Josh Gordon is hoping for a return to the NFL despite his indefinite suspension for PEDs.

Former Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Josh Gordon hasn’t given up on his NFL dreams just yet. Gordon is hopeful for a return, despite his indefinite suspension for violating the league’s policies on substance abuse and performance-enhancing drugs.

“There’s no quit in me, at least I’m thankful for that, and knowing how to get back on track has been my strong suit,” Gordon told ESPN’s the Adam Schefter Podcast on Tuesday. “What has been deemed once my weakness I can credit for helping me move forward in life.”

Gordon, who was released by the Seahawks ahead of the start of the new league year so he could join the Fan Controlled Football league, has remained in Washington state and has been training in Bellevue.

“Anybody can be really good at the game, but you don’t necessarily want to be seen as an (expletive), pardon my language, off the field,” Gordon explained. “So for me I try to keep it real so what you see and what you hear is as honest as it gets. Not to say I’m the most honest person, but I learned at a certain point in time I kind of got to cut out a lotta B.S. in my life.

“So you’re getting a guy that’s focused, at this age, this late in my career, most importantly you’re getting a great wide receiver.”

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Why Josh Gordon could be Seahawks No. 3 receiver in 2020

The Seattle Seahawks have re-signed wide receiver Josh Gordon, who could make a huge impact in 2020 if he is reinstated into the NFL.

The Seattle Seahawks and wide receiver Josh Gordon have come to an agreement – the veteran has signed with Seattle to return to the Seahawks roster in 2020 should he be reinstated into the National Football League.

Seattle could use all the help it can get in the receiving department this season as quarterback Russell Wilson makes his push for the league’s Most Valuable Player. Once known mostly as a run-first offense, Wilson and the Seahawks are throwing the ball more and more. Re-enter Flash Gordon.

The Seahawks are likely set at the No. 1 and No. 2 spots with Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf, but the third position is wide open for the taking and Gordon is just the man to slide right in.

Gordon played five games for Seattle last season (with only one start) and while his numbers weren’t mind-boggling (seven receptions for 139 yards), everyone who has ever heard his name knows exactly what Gordon is capable of achieving – including coach Pete Carroll, who has been open to Gordon’s return.

“Josh did a really good job with us last year, he fit in really well,” Carroll said during a Zoom press conference early in August. “He was part of this team, by the way we opened and embraced his coming to us, but also by the way he attacked it. So we are very open to that thought and we’ll see what happens.”

Gordon once led the NFL in total receiving yards back in 2013 but it’s not his ability to perform on the field that’s at issue. After numerous suspensions by the league, many wonder if Gordon is up to the task of playing is straight. He applied for reinstatement in June and is still waiting on a decision from the NFL.

With Seattle’s receiving corps – including Phillip Dorsett II – a little banged up, a healthy Gordon would be a huge boost for the Seahawks.

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Seahawks re-sign WR Josh Gordon, who is waiting on reinstatement

The Seattle Seahawks have re-signed wide receiver Josh Gordon, who is waiting on reinstatement from violating the NFL’s drug policies.

Veteran wide receiver Josh will once again play for the Seattle Seahawks. Seattle and Gordon have already worked out a deal he has signed for as soon as he is reinstated into the National Football League. David Canter, Gordon’s agent, tweeted the news Thursday morning.

Gordon was on Seattle’s roster for five games last season before he was suspended for violating the league’s substance abuse and performance-enhancing drug policies after testing positive for a banned substance and a masking agent. He was then suspended indefinitely by the NFL.

He submitted his application for reinstatement in June and it is going “very well,” per ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler. Gordon must be reinstated before he can play this season.

Gordon started one of five games played for the Seahawks in 2019 and logged seven receptions for 139 yards.

This story is continuing to develop.

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Aldon Smith returns with new moves, strength, and motivation as Cowboys DE

The new Cowboys defensive end speaks candidly about his return from a dark place and what he hopes to achieve in his return to the NFL.

“What are the odds?”

The way he asked it, it was difficult to tell just how Aldon Smith meant the question. On a conference call with reporters last week, the former first-round draft pick had just been asked about the chances of his fully returning to form. After 33.5 sacks in his first two seasons as a 49er- the most ever in a player’s first two years- and a Pro Bowl nod in 2012, Smith’s career took a steep and sudden slide, eventually leading to his indefinite suspension. He last suited up in 2015 and all but vanished from the NFL scene until it was reported in March of this year that Smith was in the process of applying for reinstatement.

Smith was signed by the Cowboys in April to a one-year deal. His official reinstatement came through in May. On Tuesday, he started participating in virtual meetings with his Dallas coaches. On Wednesday, he took a physical at the team facility and was outfitted for a helmet and pads. It’s been quite a journey back to this point, but it’s still a long way from being mentioned in the same breath as the sport’s most dominant pass rushers.

When Smith was asked about “beating the odds” and returning to prominence after a 54-month absence from the game, that’s when he came back with a question of his own.

“What are the odds?”

At first, it seemed like Smith was asking for clarification, maybe even actual numbers on the statistical chances of not just returning to the NFL but once again being a legitimate game-wrecker.

But based on how settled the 30-year-old Smith seems with himself, how quietly confident and truly humbled he sounds with where he is now in his life’s journey, one gets the impression that Smith wasn’t really asking for the odds.

He was saying the odds don’t matter.

During the nearly twenty-minute conversation, Smith was open and forthright about the choices that led to his exile from football. He spoke freely of his battle with alcohol addiction as well as the domestic violence charges brought against him while he was a member of the Raiders.

“It has been a journey indeed, and a journey I am grateful for. I’ve had time to really work on myself and take advantage of all the support and things that have been offered to me. The way I look at where I am now [compared] to who I was? In the past, I was a 12-year-old or a young teenage boy in a man’s body. I was a man on the outside, but a boy inside. And the way that I handled those issues, life, and everything was in that immature manner. That was fear-based, not handling things the way that I should have. With the time that I’ve had to work on myself, it’s allowed me and given the chance to grow into the man that I am now. So the man on the inside fits how the man on the outside looks. It’s just given me a new perspective and outlook on life, and it’s allowed me to do things like be able to return to this sport and feel like I am ready to give it all.”

Opposing linemen and quarterbacks have reason to worry about how the man on Smith’s outside looks. Smith always did cut a monstrous figure: the same 6-foot-4-inch height as DeMarcus Ware, but with an even longer wingspan. Recent training has helped the former Missouri Tiger bulk up to a staggering 285 pounds. That’s 15 to 20 pounds heavier than his previous playing weight, reportedly all muscle.

“It’s a very fit 285,” Smith joked.

According to his Plano-based trainer, Smith is fit enough that he could take “15 or 20” snaps if a game were to be played today. Brandon Tucker believes the Cowboys should ease Smith back as if he were returning from injury, but also believes that he’ll accelerate to the upper echelon of pass rushers in short order.

“Double-digit sacks” is Tucker’s prediction for Smith’s 2020 campaign, according to Michael Gehlken of The Dallas Morning News.

That’s a lofty goal for anyone, considering that just fifteen players in the entire league hit double digit sacks in 2019. An even loftier goal for a player who hasn’t seen real football contact in over four years.

“He does everything that I ask of him,” Tucker told Gehlken. “He’s on time. He’s never missed. He’s been receptive to instruction. We’re just systematically trying to get his football feet back underneath him. The first time we met and visited, I basically told him, ‘You’re like an old battleship that’s been in dry dock.’ When you get ready to send that battleship back out to sea, you’ve got to systematically start the systems. You can’t just fire it up and go. You’ve got to make sure everything still works. You’ve got to run it through a bunch of tests. That’s what we’re doing with the big fella.”

Those tests have apparently been quite encouraging. Tucker, who is himself 6-foot-4 and 365 pounds, shared stories of Smith lifting him off his feet during a drill while going at just three-quarter-speed, of leaving him grasping at air while executing an inside move, of even resurrecting a seldom-seen “hump move” that was once a mainstay in the repertoire of Hall of Famer Reggie White.

Smith’s newfound strength isn’t just from hitting the weights, according to NFL insider Jay Glazer. Glazer also famously trains MMA fighters, and he’s been instrumental in Smith’s recent development, even helping introduce Smith to new Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy. It was at Glazer’s gym that the two met; both got involved in Glazer’s military outreach program, Merging Veterans and Players (MVP), before either joined the Cowboys.

Glazer was asked in a mailbag piece for The Athletic about Smith’s improved strength and conditioning.

“He’s so incredibly strong, and the best part is he’s a lot stronger behind his rib cage. We helped him build himself up from the inside out. We didn’t just want to make him physically stronger and faster. We really wanted to build up his emotional and inner strength. He’s vulnerable now. Vulnerability is real strength. Not muscles, but vulnerability. He has a new purpose in life. He wants to use his experiences to help others, so he has a different motivation. He came to two different MVPs in the last week to tell all of our combat veterans he was reinstated. He wanted to share it with them and thank them and tell everyone how grateful he is.

“Gratitude is a big thing, folks. Do not take it lightly. For Smith to come on and continue to tell everyone how grateful he is empowered a bunch of combat vets who really needed it going into Memorial Day. I think Smith is a lot happier on the inside, which allows him to do his job better. On the outside, I’ve trained over 1,200 pro athletes in my MMA program. Smith is probably in the top five as far as guys who have put their hands on me. He’s had four years off so you can look at that as he’ll be rusty or you can look at that and say his body has been saved from four years of impact. I am really excited to see what he can do with the Cowboys.”

Glazer mentioned gratitude. It’s a word Smith used several times during his conference call chat with reporters. The second chance Smith says he is so grateful for wouldn’t have come without the low moments, like famously sleeping underneath his car at one point, because he didn’t feel worthy of anything better.

“For me, like with most people, I think if anybody really wants to change, it comes from within,” he said. “And so I got to a point where I was fed up with how I was living my life, and I knew I needed to change if I wanted to be something and get back ahold of my life.”

Smith has reportedly been sober for close to a year. Asked if there was one specific moment that helped him finally flip the switch, Smith talked about the loss last year of his grandmother.

“She was somebody that I was very close to,” Smith said. “Around the time when she passed, my life wasn’t where I wanted it to be, and she was somebody who meant a lot to me. I remember the last time we spoke. She had ALS, so she passed at an earlier age than she should have. ALS takes away a lot of your body functions, so she couldn’t speak. But before the last time I saw her, she was able to get some words, get a message to me.”

The message Julia Edwards imparted to her grandson?

“‘Do better.’ Basically, ‘Go out here and get what you deserve.’ That stuck with me. Her passing, along with me being totally defeated and surrendering to the problem that I had with my drinking, I was ready to turn my life around. I was happy that I had a place to go and people around me who were willing to help out.”

Now having gotten that help and continuing to gratefully receive it, Smith looks to make the most of his second chance… at more than football.

“I feel so great,” Smith beamed. “I still feel young. I still can move well. I still have a great knowledge of the game, if not a better knowledge of the game. I learned a lot from the guys I played with in California, and they taught me a lot of good things. And I know how to be a leader. I know how to win. And everything that I’ve just gone through and learned through in life, I feel like I can be a source. People can talk to me about whatever they need. I’m just looking to be a help, on the field and off the field.”

Glazer shared one touching story that shows Smith’s desire to be a positive example to those around him.

“Smith is a beautiful soul. When he got his contract with the Cowboys, he called me and asked me if he could sign it at my house, asking if my son was there. He wanted to sign it in front of my son so my son could understand what his dad helped make happen. That’s pretty damn special and beautiful for a guy to do that and to think about my son. That’s gratitude back. That’s beauty. If I’m an offensive lineman, I wouldn’t want Smith putting his hands on me this year, nope. But regardless of what he does on a football field, he’s already had an amazing journey back.”

Don’t tell Aldon Smith the odds. Besides, he’s already beaten most of them.

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WATCH: Josh Gordon suspended indefinitely for violating substance abuse policy again

The NFL announced Monday that Josh Gordon is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.

Josh Gordon is suspended again.

The NFL announced Monday that the 28-year-old is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.

This is the fifth suspension in eight seasons for Gordon, this one impacts the Seattle Seahawks (11-3) who claimed the wide receiver off waiver wires in November. This is the second indefinite suspension in two seasons after Gordon was suspended indefinitely late last year while with the New England Patriots.

The NFL conditionally reinstated Gordon just before the start of this season, then he played in six games with New England (11-3). After 20 receptions for 287 yards and one touchdown, the Pats waived Gordon and the Seahawks picked him up the next day.

With Seattle, Gordon made a mere seven receptions on 11 targets for 130 yards, averaging 26 snaps per game.

The Seahawks clinched a playoff berth Sunday and now prepare to host the Arizona Cardinals (4-9).

Seahawks WR Gordon issued indefinite suspension for second consecutive season after violating substa

The NFL announced Monday that Josh Gordon is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.

The NFL announced Monday that Josh Gordon is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.

Seahawks WR Gordon issued indefinite suspension for second consecutive season after violating substa

The NFL announced Monday that Josh Gordon is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.

The NFL announced Monday that Josh Gordon is suspended indefinitely for failing to follow the league’s policies on performance-enhancing substances and substances of abuse.