Where is rashard mendenhall playing
Just like Rashard Mendenhall and Willie Parker struggled behind some poor offensive line play, we could see a repeat of this if the Steelers were to take a running back in the first round. Pittsburgh lost Maurkice Pouncey and Matt Feiler so far this offseason, and have done next to nothing in terms of replacing them. Finney likely to slide in for Pouncey at center. Though the easy answer seems to be to draft and replace, Pittsburgh would forgo taking a potential quality offensive lineman with the 24th overall pick in favor of a running back.
Pittsburgh has clearly ignored the offensive line in the NFL Draft for far too long, and it is really starting to catch up to them. They would get a very good running back prospect, but the same old issues would persist. Rashard Mendenhall 34 of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Steelers scouting profile: Jermar Jefferson is a wasted pick by Andrew Falce.
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Although Mendenhall, whose Twitter bio at the time of Bin Laden's death read "conversationalist and professional athlete," has since deleted those infamous tweets, he stands by his six-year-old sentiments and blames the media for twisting his criticism of American hypocrisy into treasonous radicalism.
In our country, we do it with poor people or anyone we deem not like us or as important. What exacerbated the Bin Laden comments was that two months prior Mendenhall supported once again on Twitter a statement by Adrian Peterson comparing the NFL to slavery.
He tweeted, "Anyone with knowledge of the slave trade and the NFL could say that these two parallel each other. It's an observation that has been echoed countless times prior and post the two running backs' opinions, especially with America's current racial fire burning over to Colin Kaepernick 's unemployment.
I just think with the game and how people want to see the players, there's just not enough space for the person under the mask and their story. By , Mendenhall was out of Pittsburgh and in Arizona. But he says that, although he was healthy and playing "free and natural," there was an unexplainable feeling that his NFL chapter was coming to a close.
In March , he announced his retirement. While his exit came three years after his Twittergate, the stench of that spring lingered over Mendenhall's career. It was like those eight rushing touchdowns in his final season never happened. To his critics, he was still that anti-American player who gave up playing God's greatest sport for no sensible reason. But what I learned from that is if you don't speak up and put your truth out there, then you're subjected to whatever is being said about you.
As many bullets as Mendenhall took for speaking from the heart, he never considered biting his tongue. Once retired, his passion for conversation only grew. He immediately started his own blog with the Huffington Post. Within a month, the blog had grabbed the attention of Leverage, the production company behind former HBO successes like Boardwalk Empire. A sit-down with the ex-back was requested, and a month later he joined a team of nearly a dozen writers to create the sports version of Entourage.
Mendenhall had come a long way from stacking rap bars as a teen, but he feels his wonder years are connected to his most wonderful years today. They're just being trained in different ways," Mendenhall says. All of those different ways [of writing] got me here writing television. Zach Robbins, who co-wrote episode with Mendenhall, says the new writer became an integral part of the show, contributing perspectives beyond his former sport. Unless it's the Cardinals, Steelers, Bears or a running back he likes, you won't catch Mendenhall watching his former employer.
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