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Mike Sims-Walker (1 Viewer)

There are plenty of guys who were considered injury-prone who eventually were more reliable than their reputations. Robert Smith and Fred Taylor top the list
:bag:In 21 seasons combined those two guys have managed to play 16 games 3 times - Smith once, Taylor twice. I guess in the years they managed to play 14 games they were "more reliable" than the years they played 2, or 8 or 10, but that's not what I consider reliable overall. They definitely are/were injury prone throughout their careers.
 
There are plenty of guys who were considered injury-prone who eventually were more reliable than their reputations. Robert Smith and Fred Taylor top the list
:thumbup:In 21 seasons combined those two guys have managed to play 16 games 3 times - Smith once, Taylor twice. I guess in the years they managed to play 14 games they were "more reliable" than the years they played 2, or 8 or 10, but that's not what I consider reliable overall. They definitely are/were injury prone throughout their careers.
Smith missed seven games in his final four seasons.Taylor missed nine games from 2002-2007 or 12 games from 2002-2008.I understand what you are saying, but missing on average less than two games per season is not that bad for a running back. As is often stated in Brian Westbrook threads, you don't get a 0 at the position so long as you know the injury before the game.I'm not wanting guys to miss any games, but I would prefer high-impact players who occasionally get hurt over a stiff who doesn't get hurt because he's not explosive or doesn't see a lot of work. Both Smith and Taylor missed many more games early in their career than late. Had they started their careers as they finished, they would not have earned the injury-prone label.
 
There are plenty of guys who were considered injury-prone who eventually were more reliable than their reputations. Robert Smith and Fred Taylor top the list
:thumbup:In 21 seasons combined those two guys have managed to play 16 games 3 times - Smith once, Taylor twice. I guess in the years they managed to play 14 games they were "more reliable" than the years they played 2, or 8 or 10, but that's not what I consider reliable overall. They definitely are/were injury prone throughout their careers.
Smith missed seven games in his final four seasons.Taylor missed nine games from 2002-2007 or 12 games from 2002-2008.I understand what you are saying, but missing on average less than two games per season is not that bad for a running back. As is often stated in Brian Westbrook threads, you don't get a 0 at the position so long as you know the injury before the game.I'm not wanting guys to miss any games, but I would prefer high-impact players who occasionally get hurt over a stiff who doesn't get hurt because he's not explosive or doesn't see a lot of work. Both Smith and Taylor missed many more games early in their career than late. Had they started their careers as they finished, they would not have earned the injury-prone label.
Isaac Bruce was considered to be an above average injury risk earlier in his career when he was battling issues with his hamstrings...
 
By the way, Steven Jackson has missed more games in the past two seasons than Smith in his last four, but because earlier in his career he was less injured, he has avoided the full injury-prone label Smith had. Just one example.

 
Aside from the injury possibility, the other potential drawback in my mind is the power play between JDR and Gene Smith. They cut Hughes the same day that Williamson is announced as injured. And JDR plays dumb about the Williamson injury.

Why would the front office do that? (Aside from incompetence)

Aside from MSW, who benefits? Well, Gene Smith drafted Dillard and Mike Thomas and they get bumped a little further up the depth charts. Seventh rounder Tiquan Underwood gets promoted from practice squad to roster.

Maybe not right away, but if/when the offense continues to struggle and the Jags keep losing, I could see Gene Smith forcing JDR to start one of the rookies opposite Holt.

 
There are plenty of guys who were considered injury-prone who eventually were more reliable than their reputations. Robert Smith and Fred Taylor top the list
:thumbup:In 21 seasons combined those two guys have managed to play 16 games 3 times - Smith once, Taylor twice. I guess in the years they managed to play 14 games they were "more reliable" than the years they played 2, or 8 or 10, but that's not what I consider reliable overall. They definitely are/were injury prone throughout their careers.
Smith missed seven games in his final four seasons.Taylor missed nine games from 2002-2007 or 12 games from 2002-2008.I understand what you are saying, but missing on average less than two games per season is not that bad for a running back. As is often stated in Brian Westbrook threads, you don't get a 0 at the position so long as you know the injury before the game.I'm not wanting guys to miss any games, but I would prefer high-impact players who occasionally get hurt over a stiff who doesn't get hurt because he's not explosive or doesn't see a lot of work. Both Smith and Taylor missed many more games early in their career than late. Had they started their careers as they finished, they would not have earned the injury-prone label.
It's not just about missed games. How many times were they game time decisions, or played when listed as questionable, or got limited touches because they weren't near 100%? Plenty - that's not reliable in a FF sense. And if they ended their careers missing seriously significant time they definitely would have earned the injury prone label - or gone straight to washed up. That's what's happening to LaDainian right now.
 
I cant wait to check into this thread on Monday morning....and I mean that whether he does well or not. This guy just makes for a fascinating story..Potato is killing it in here with facts, and my other WR3s have proven to be WW material for the first 2 weeks.

Every FF season (well each team i mean kinda) needs a story, and he is it for me right now.

 
By the way, Steven Jackson has missed more games in the past two seasons than Smith in his last four, but because earlier in his career he was less injured, he has avoided the full injury-prone label Smith had. Just one example.
Jackson - IMO - is exactly one of the guys I feel is injury prone. Even his first couple of seasons he was having problems that he played through (sometimes), his name appearing in the questionable column all too often.
 
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There are plenty of guys who were considered injury-prone who eventually were more reliable than their reputations. Robert Smith and Fred Taylor top the list
:bowtie:In 21 seasons combined those two guys have managed to play 16 games 3 times - Smith once, Taylor twice. I guess in the years they managed to play 14 games they were "more reliable" than the years they played 2, or 8 or 10, but that's not what I consider reliable overall. They definitely are/were injury prone throughout their careers.
Smith missed seven games in his final four seasons.Taylor missed nine games from 2002-2007 or 12 games from 2002-2008.I understand what you are saying, but missing on average less than two games per season is not that bad for a running back. As is often stated in Brian Westbrook threads, you don't get a 0 at the position so long as you know the injury before the game.I'm not wanting guys to miss any games, but I would prefer high-impact players who occasionally get hurt over a stiff who doesn't get hurt because he's not explosive or doesn't see a lot of work. Both Smith and Taylor missed many more games early in their career than late. Had they started their careers as they finished, they would not have earned the injury-prone label.
Isaac Bruce was considered to be an above average injury risk earlier in his career when he was battling issues with his hamstrings...
ah yes, the isaac "bruise" days... then he got orthotics for his shoes and the hammy problems went away. either that or the rams got better and he stopped dogging it, you decide. :yes:
 
Hines Ward supposedly dropped to the third round because he has no ACL in one of his knees.
Brian Westbrook has a similar issue, except I think he is missing an MCL.Also, Isaac Bruce was basically a walking hamstring injury before he broke out big.
 
That Little Voice said:
tim_whatley said:
So what's the deal with the hyphen? It that the cool thing to do in J-ville?

He should lose that.
He did it to honor his deceased father. Funny post though and all that.
So he and his dad don't have the same last name?
Good point. Hadnt thought about it that way but apparently not.
JAGS RECEIVER CHANGES NAME (1:53 p.m. ET)

The Jacksonville Jaguars now have another player with a hyphenated last name.

Receiver Mike Walker officially changed his last name to Sims-Walker in honor of his late father, and received NFL approval to put it on the back of his jersey beginning this season.

Walker's father, 51-year-old Michael Sims, died Dec. 6, 2008, following a two-year bout with colon cancer. His death came a little more than a week after one of Walker's close friends was fatally stabbed outside an Orlando nightclub.

Michael Sims was hospitalized while Walker attended his friend's funeral. After the funeral, Walker boarded a flight to Chicago to join his teammates. When he landed, he had a message saying his father wasn't doing well. His dad died a few hours later.
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/trainingcamp...tory?id=4419437
 
anyone else afraid that this team implodes/gives up and just lays down and sucks the rest of the season, ruining the value of everyone on the team? supposedly the coaches had no input on hughes being cut, and del rio is only still around because of his contract. if mgmt keeps undermining him/fires him and others get cut/benched, along with losing, this could get really ugly in a hurry.

 
Couch Potato said:
Gr00vus said:
He's having recurring soft tissue injuries at different locations on his body. I don't consider most guys injury prone, but guys like this definitely are.Sorry to be a wet blanket.
I'd be interested to learn whether your theory has any statistical medical backing or whether you're drawing a conclusion because it seems to make sense to you. Very often coincidence can seem like correlation when it is not.Any medical types in the house who would know the answer to this?
There is some merit to the idea that some players have a "tissue issue" where their tendons or ligaments or whatever just aren't as durable, or their bones are more brittle, or whatever. 99% of the time, these guys never make it to the pros because their body gives out at a lower level, which is why I'm usually quick to dismiss two unrelated issues as bad luck rather than a major indicator and cause for concern. Generally, 3 similar but unrelated injuries is where I start raising the red flags.
Interesting, I didn't realize that was possible.Nice tribute, all kidding aside.
Generally any time a baby is born out of wedlock he/she takes the mother's last name rather than the father's.
 
Ok, serious questions for those that are high on him. I admit that I don't know much about the guy so I watched the highlights from the game last week. I was skeptical since most of his production came late in the game.

1) On his TD it actually seems like he ran a poor route. If the CB makes even a decent tackle that still lets Walker gain another yard or two it isn't a first down. Isn't it on him to make sure he goes far enough for the first down? I hate this play when the WR doesn't go far enough.

2) On one of Garrard's interceptions Walker just lets the CB hustle back to the ball harder then he does. He has position on the CB but is just slow back to the ball and the CB gets in front of him. Isn't this on him too?

I'm trying to figure out which week 2 wonder I will be grabbing on waivers and I was just wondering if anyone else saw these 2 things as problems in Walker's game.

 
Ok, serious questions for those that are high on him. I admit that I don't know much about the guy so I watched the highlights from the game last week. I was skeptical since most of his production came late in the game.1) On his TD it actually seems like he ran a poor route. If the CB makes even a decent tackle that still lets Walker gain another yard or two it isn't a first down. Isn't it on him to make sure he goes far enough for the first down? I hate this play when the WR doesn't go far enough.2) On one of Garrard's interceptions Walker just lets the CB hustle back to the ball harder then he does. He has position on the CB but is just slow back to the ball and the CB gets in front of him. Isn't this on him too?I'm trying to figure out which week 2 wonder I will be grabbing on waivers and I was just wondering if anyone else saw these 2 things as problems in Walker's game.
1) Without knowing what route he was told to run, it's speculation that he ran a poor route. It's one thing if he ran the route a couple of feet short, bu it appears he ran it a couple of yards short. That sounds more like he went where he was supposed to. OC's call short plays all the time hoping that the soft underneath coverage leads to an easier completion and that the WR can then make a play. I'm not crazy about those short calls, but they get called all the time by people who get paid to call plays...while I on the other hand pay money so I can call plays on Madden in my living room. I wouldn't consider this a "problem in Walker's game" without knowing for sure that he ran a poor route.2) Meh. Are you worried he gets benched because of this? It doesn't matter who they are, if they're a week 2 wonder, they obviously have holes in their games or they would be proven starters and not made it out of your draft. Flip a coin. You are overanalyzing it if you hang your decision on this one play.
 
JaxBill said:
Aside from the injury possibility, the other potential drawback in my mind is the power play between JDR and Gene Smith. They cut Hughes the same day that Williamson is announced as injured. And JDR plays dumb about the Williamson injury.Why would the front office do that? (Aside from incompetence)Aside from MSW, who benefits? Well, Gene Smith drafted Dillard and Mike Thomas and they get bumped a little further up the depth charts. Seventh rounder Tiquan Underwood gets promoted from practice squad to roster.Maybe not right away, but if/when the offense continues to struggle and the Jags keep losing, I could see Gene Smith forcing JDR to start one of the rookies opposite Holt.
:confused: This. I think there's a forest /trees thing going on here. MSW is a guy with talent in a good situation to get opportunity. But JaxBill, myself and several other Jax homers have been trying to communicate that there are very serious issues going on in Jacksonville right now that could effect every Jags fantasy player. Sure, MSW is worth a roster spot in most leagues, but be careful who you drop and who you pass over in free agency to pick him up. Injury concerns aside, there are other issues that could limit his performance. Think Atlanta 2007 season type stuff.
 
Generally, 3 similar but unrelated injuries is where I start raising the red flags.
Same here.
Then why are you raising the red flags on Sims-Walker? He doesn't meet the criteria. He had the ACL injury in college. The ACL injury his rookie year was the same injury (i.e. does not meet the "unrelated" criteria), so it still counts as one injury. Then we get the sprained MCL, which brings us to two similar but unrelated injuries. Then we have a high ankle sprain, which is an unrelated injury, but it's not a SIMILAR injury (a high ankle sprain is a very different injury than an MCL sprain)... which means the count is still stuck at two "similar but unrelated injuries". If Sims-Walker has any more problems with his knees going forward, then I'll drop the "injury prone" hammer on him. If he has any problems with his other ankle, I'll probably drop the injury prone label on him due to sheer volume of unrelated injuries. Until then, though, I'm not willing to regard him as a significantly greater injury risk than the average NFL player.
 
JaxBill said:
Aside from the injury possibility, the other potential drawback in my mind is the power play between JDR and Gene Smith. They cut Hughes the same day that Williamson is announced as injured. And JDR plays dumb about the Williamson injury.Why would the front office do that? (Aside from incompetence)Aside from MSW, who benefits? Well, Gene Smith drafted Dillard and Mike Thomas and they get bumped a little further up the depth charts. Seventh rounder Tiquan Underwood gets promoted from practice squad to roster.Maybe not right away, but if/when the offense continues to struggle and the Jags keep losing, I could see Gene Smith forcing JDR to start one of the rookies opposite Holt.
:blackdot: This. I think there's a forest /trees thing going on here. MSW is a guy with talent in a good situation to get opportunity. But JaxBill, myself and several other Jax homers have been trying to communicate that there are very serious issues going on in Jacksonville right now that could effect every Jags fantasy player. Sure, MSW is worth a roster spot in most leagues, but be careful who you drop and who you pass over in free agency to pick him up. Injury concerns aside, there are other issues that could limit his performance. Think Atlanta 2007 season type stuff.
Thanks for the local news/analysis.I'm confused about why Sims-Walker would not also be part of the Jaguars' future. He's 24 years old and was a third round draft pick. Thomas and Dillard are 4th and 5th round picks, right? And Dillard's just a year younger than MSW despite being a rookie. I can understand them wanting to see what their young players can do, but why force out a third-year player possibly just starting to tap into his potential for 4th, 5th, and 7th round (Underwood) rookies?
 
Generally, 3 similar but unrelated injuries is where I start raising the red flags.
Same here.
Then why are you raising the red flags on Sims-Walker? He doesn't meet the criteria. He had the ACL injury in college. The ACL injury his rookie year was the same injury (i.e. does not meet the "unrelated" criteria), so it still counts as one injury. Then we get the sprained MCL, which brings us to two similar but unrelated injuries. Then we have a high ankle sprain, which is an unrelated injury, but it's not a SIMILAR injury (a high ankle sprain is a very different injury than an MCL sprain)... which means the count is still stuck at two "similar but unrelated injuries". If Sims-Walker has any more problems with his knees going forward, then I'll drop the "injury prone" hammer on him. If he has any problems with his other ankle, I'll probably drop the injury prone label on him due to sheer volume of unrelated injuries. Until then, though, I'm not willing to regard him as a significantly greater injury risk than the average NFL player.
Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
 
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Generally, 3 similar but unrelated injuries is where I start raising the red flags.
Same here.
Then why are you raising the red flags on Sims-Walker? He doesn't meet the criteria. He had the ACL injury in college. The ACL injury his rookie year was the same injury (i.e. does not meet the "unrelated" criteria), so it still counts as one injury. Then we get the sprained MCL, which brings us to two similar but unrelated injuries. Then we have a high ankle sprain, which is an unrelated injury, but it's not a SIMILAR injury (a high ankle sprain is a very different injury than an MCL sprain)... which means the count is still stuck at two "similar but unrelated injuries". If Sims-Walker has any more problems with his knees going forward, then I'll drop the "injury prone" hammer on him. If he has any problems with his other ankle, I'll probably drop the injury prone label on him due to sheer volume of unrelated injuries. Until then, though, I'm not willing to regard him as a significantly greater injury risk than the average NFL player.
Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
And beyond that they're all injuries to the human body. I've broken my foot when 12, broken my hand when 18, broken my finger when 23. I'm brittle.Guy has had bad luck - worth a flier.
 
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JaxBill said:
Aside from the injury possibility, the other potential drawback in my mind is the power play between JDR and Gene Smith. They cut Hughes the same day that Williamson is announced as injured. And JDR plays dumb about the Williamson injury.Why would the front office do that? (Aside from incompetence)Aside from MSW, who benefits? Well, Gene Smith drafted Dillard and Mike Thomas and they get bumped a little further up the depth charts. Seventh rounder Tiquan Underwood gets promoted from practice squad to roster.Maybe not right away, but if/when the offense continues to struggle and the Jags keep losing, I could see Gene Smith forcing JDR to start one of the rookies opposite Holt.
:thumbup: This. I think there's a forest /trees thing going on here. MSW is a guy with talent in a good situation to get opportunity. But JaxBill, myself and several other Jax homers have been trying to communicate that there are very serious issues going on in Jacksonville right now that could effect every Jags fantasy player. Sure, MSW is worth a roster spot in most leagues, but be careful who you drop and who you pass over in free agency to pick him up. Injury concerns aside, there are other issues that could limit his performance. Think Atlanta 2007 season type stuff.
Thanks for the local news/analysis.I'm confused about why Sims-Walker would not also be part of the Jaguars' future. He's 24 years old and was a third round draft pick. Thomas and Dillard are 4th and 5th round picks, right? And Dillard's just a year younger than MSW despite being a rookie. I can understand them wanting to see what their young players can do, but why force out a third-year player possibly just starting to tap into his potential for 4th, 5th, and 7th round (Underwood) rookies?
Because Gene Smith did not draft him. Thomas, Dillard, and Underwood are his guys.
 
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Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
And beyond that they're all injuries to the human body. I've broken my foot when 12, broken my hand when 18, broken my finger when 23. I'm brittle.Guy has had bad luck
:thumbup:I make allowances for "bad luck" injuries. Guy breaks a bone because some linemen pile on when he's in a vulnerable position or an anvil drops on his collar bone isn't the same thing as repeated ligament injuries - especially when they're different ligaments. People aren't all built the same - some definitely have less elastic/weaker connective tissue than others.
 
Generally, 3 similar but unrelated injuries is where I start raising the red flags.
Same here.
Then why are you raising the red flags on Sims-Walker? He doesn't meet the criteria. He had the ACL injury in college. The ACL injury his rookie year was the same injury (i.e. does not meet the "unrelated" criteria), so it still counts as one injury. Then we get the sprained MCL, which brings us to two similar but unrelated injuries. Then we have a high ankle sprain, which is an unrelated injury, but it's not a SIMILAR injury (a high ankle sprain is a very different injury than an MCL sprain)... which means the count is still stuck at two "similar but unrelated injuries". If Sims-Walker has any more problems with his knees going forward, then I'll drop the "injury prone" hammer on him. If he has any problems with his other ankle, I'll probably drop the injury prone label on him due to sheer volume of unrelated injuries. Until then, though, I'm not willing to regard him as a significantly greater injury risk than the average NFL player.
Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
I don't think it matters unless you're spraining the same ligament or straining the same muscle. Spraining one ankle doesn't make you more likely to sprain the other. I've sprained both ankles, a knee, a shoulder, strained a calf muscle, a hamstring, and a back muscle, but I don't think that makes me any more injury prone than anyone else who participates in sports. If I start to continuously strain the same muscle or sprain the same ligament, then someone can call me injury prone. Same with MSW. If he starts repeatedly having hamstring strains or ankle sprains, then we can label him injury prone.
 
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Gr00vus said:
The Jerk said:
By the way, Steven Jackson has missed more games in the past two seasons than Smith in his last four, but because earlier in his career he was less injured, he has avoided the full injury-prone label Smith had. Just one example.
Jackson - IMO - is exactly one of the guys I feel is injury prone. Even his first couple of seasons he was having problems that he played through (sometimes), his name appearing in the questionable column all too often.
i am pretty sure people firmly place the "injury prone" label on Jackson.
 
Redraft Non PPR- Dropped Coles for him. Low risk considering Coles output lately. I am still taking a wait and see approach with Walker on my bench.

 
Dropped Michael Clayton in two leagues for MSW (I know, you all care so much :blackdot: ). If he's not the second coming of T.O., I'll be back.

 
I was waiting on MSW to get his shot before jumping and was going to dump the Pats for him a week ago.

Unfortunately I lost out with waivers this week because I refused to burn my #1 spot on him. BUT...I was able to deal Gage for him. I was iffy on it, but I need a receiver until the Broncos fix their issues - and Gage against Revis this week is NOT an option.

 
is burleson dropped for MSW a mistake? or a go?

10 teams. i have moss jennings and 85 ahead of them. standard scoring and 3 wr. so he will be on my bench until byes.

 
is burleson dropped for MSW a mistake? or a go?10 teams. i have moss jennings and 85 ahead of them. standard scoring and 3 wr. so he will be on my bench until byes.
I'd hang on to Burleson. He's gotten an obscene amount of targets (currently tied for 5th in the NFL) regardless of QB, and it looks like Hass won't be out long (this time). Seattle will be a pass first team all year long.
 
Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
And beyond that they're all injuries to the human body. I've broken my foot when 12, broken my hand when 18, broken my finger when 23. I'm brittle.Guy has had bad luck
:lmao:I make allowances for "bad luck" injuries. Guy breaks a bone because some linemen pile on when he's in a vulnerable position or an anvil drops on his collar bone isn't the same thing as repeated ligament injuries - especially when they're different ligaments. People aren't all built the same - some definitely have less elastic/weaker connective tissue than others.
Unless you have an M.D. in internal medicine or went to school for some sort of related medical degree I don't think you're at all qualified to make generalizations about that.He may very well have a condition such as Rocco Baldelli, but until a poster more qualified steps up, you're guessing. I don't mean it to be rude or anything, but you're point of view needs to be taken with a grain of salt (unless of course you have the aforementioned degree).
 
Like I said, they're all soft tissue injuries, and beyond that they're all ligament injuries, so they're actually all related. He definitely meets the criteria in my book.
And beyond that they're all injuries to the human body. I've broken my foot when 12, broken my hand when 18, broken my finger when 23. I'm brittle.Guy has had bad luck
:excited:I make allowances for "bad luck" injuries. Guy breaks a bone because some linemen pile on when he's in a vulnerable position or an anvil drops on his collar bone isn't the same thing as repeated ligament injuries - especially when they're different ligaments. People aren't all built the same - some definitely have less elastic/weaker connective tissue than others.
Unless you have an M.D. in internal medicine or went to school for some sort of related medical degree I don't think you're at all qualified to make generalizations about that.He may very well have a condition such as Rocco Baldelli, but until a poster more qualified steps up, you're guessing. I don't mean it to be rude or anything, but you're point of view needs to be taken with a grain of salt (unless of course you have the aforementioned degree).
Link to where I said I was a doctor? We're all guessing, but you can make better guesses when factoring in available information. You really think Terry Allen continually blowing out ligaments was all bad luck? It's a rule of thumb for me in considering how I value a FF player. If you don't like it, great - take all the grains of salt you need. When I have to consider which guy to try to claim first off waivers, all other things being relatively equal I take the guy who doesn't have a history of repeated soft tissue/ligament injuries. If you want to ignore that, bully for you. I'm not saying Walker is going to suck, I'm saying don't be surprised when he pulls up lame again.Sorry for the hijack, I was just trying to express a concern with this particular player.
 

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