Joe finds it comical how some of his media brethren get worked up when Greg Schiano won’t offer every last ounce of detail about a player’s health.
It’s as if these media types can’t imagine a scenario in which a sound diagnosis is not available on demand. Meanwhile, recent Bucs history with post-surgery Chris Simms, pre-surgery Brian Price and Arron Sears are just a few examples of situations that needed extended time to diagnose.
That brings Joe to LeGarrette Blount, who was tackled on the field Sunday, then got up, and after doing some bizzare leg movements, fell to the turf and clutched his knee while flexing it repeatedly at the same time. Blount didn’t return to the game but literally ran out of the locker room.
Greg Schiano essentially said a few different ways on Sunday and Monday that Blount needed more time to be evaluated and his condition was unclear at that time. Then Stephen Holder, of the Tampa Bay Times, digested that and took to Twitter on Tuesday to take a shot at Schiano and call shenanigans.
@HolderStephen – Schiano won’t like me saying this, but oh well. He’s extremely evasive when talking about neurological issues. Makes one wonder about this
It’s seems Holder just coudn’t fathom the possibility that Blount truly needed more medical testing, and as it turns out the team sent Blount to North Carolina to see a specialist. Gee, whaddya know. Schiano wasn’t being evasive, just honest, and responsible by not speculating about a guy’s health.
Mark Cook of PewterReport.com
also wrote Tuesday that “to suggest 24 hours after an injury occurs that the team simply doesn’t know isn’t being honest with the media or Buccaneers fans.”
Maybe Joe’s just seen too much of life to know that people get injured and sick and doctors don’t always know what the hell is going on. Joe’s brother had a brain tumor that took about four months to accurately diagnose. Years ago, Joe himself had a severe jaw issue out of nowhere that took a third medical opinion to figure out, when finally a doctor was wise enough to ask Joe if he had taken any kind of blow to the face within the prior year 12 months.
Yesterday, Schiano had a special sit-down with New York media and was asked to elaborate on his core beliefs. Here was his response, per BigBlueInteractive.com.
A: Well, I think it starts with trusting each other, that everything is on the up and up and there’s no shenanigans. Belief in what we’re doing, I think that’s huge. Holding each other accountable. Those aren’t football X and O things, those are core values that I think as an organization allow you to do all the X and O things and strength and conditioning things, and film study, and community relations; all the things that go into being an NFL football team. Without core values, I don’t know if you can do any of that successfully.
Joe thought the “no shenanigans” line was so appropriate in light of the Blount situation. It would have been shenanigans if Schiano had, in fact, elaborated on Blount’s medical condition without knowing all the facs.
Joe’s not sure whether Schiano is a South Park fan. But as Officer Barbrady says, “You can’t just go declaring shenanigans on innocent people. That’s how wars get started.”