Franknbeans
Footballguy
Rodney Harrison.
He's a punk
He's a punk
Never liked him from the beginning, but everything else is accurate.Glad to see i am not the only one. Use to like him but the past few seasons he is seemingly nothing more then a cocky arrogant ##### #######.Hines Ward
You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)
Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:1) Cooper is not an NFL player.2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.ETA: name of medical condition
"Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:1) Cooper is not an NFL player.2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.ETA: name of medical condition
Hilario.I'll vote Rivers, Rodney Harrison, Marvin Harrison.Brandon Jacobs
Oh yeah...that Judas Ronald Curry.Hilario.I'll vote Rivers, Rodney Harrison, Marvin Harrison.Brandon Jacobs
Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR."Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:1) Cooper is not an NFL player.2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.ETA: name of medical condition
BTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR."Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
This has got to beBrett Favre and Braylon Edwards.Jerks.
So tired. Every time someone starts trying to say a WR is to slow some located the 1 or 2 NFL WR's who have done well and trumpet them as an example that speed does not matter. Jerry Rice was used as this example for about 15 years. Also, Fitzgerald was injured at the combine but that is beside the point.You took a quote from this article earlier but you left out this quote from Cooper which pretty much sums it up: "I think it would be silly of me to say I was going to the NFL," he says.He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR."Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
2) Incidentally, the NFL doesn't seem to mind extremely slow WRs like Anquan Boldin (4.72 - at the combine...in college) and Larry Fitzgerald (4.63 combine time).
I'm completely calm. I just find it odd that people are ripping on a guy who never even had a chance to play in the NFL as their least favorite players in the NFL. I also found it strange that it's assumed that a 6' 4" WR with a 4.7 in high school wouldn't have a chance in the NFL - especially when he would have college to improve on those numbers and there are current NFL WRs who have those very same numbers playing at a very high level.
:X This is the correct answer....1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)
Take it easy, Francis... Psycho.DoubleG said:sad pandas said:You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:1) Cooper is not an NFL player.2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.ETA: name of medical condition
Actually, it's, "Lighten up, Francis."Take it easy, Francis... Psycho.DoubleG said:sad pandas said:You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning2. Eli Manning3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:1) Cooper is not an NFL player.2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.ETA: name of medical condition
For me it is Rodney Harrison. The guy is a heck of a player and I love hitters but the dude is constantly taking unnecessary cheap shots.![]()
What does that have to do with anything? If Terrell Owens was the best in the league at selling draw plays, should people not hate him, too?Hines Ward?Why all the hate, the man is quite possibly the best blocking receiver in the game...
Yo...get a sense of humor d-bag i was joking about cooper...i know he didn't play in the nfl, i know he is sick, i feel bad for the guy. I was exaggarating on that guys hatred for the mannings in that other post. Now chill the f--- out before I dump Coopers drool cup on your head.DoubleG said:He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.menobrown said:Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR.DoubleG said:"Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.menobrown said:Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.DoubleG said:sad pandas said:You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
2) Incidentally, the NFL doesn't seem to mind extremely slow WRs like Anquan Boldin (4.72 - at the combine...in college) and Larry Fitzgerald (4.63 combine time).
I'm completely calm. I just find it odd that people are ripping on a guy who never even had a chance to play in the NFL as their least favorite players in the NFL. I also found it strange that it's assumed that a 6' 4" WR with a 4.7 in high school wouldn't have a chance in the NFL - especially when he would have college to improve on those numbers and there are current NFL WRs who have those very same numbers playing at a very high level.
Stay classy sad pandas.Yo...get a sense of humor d-bag i was joking about cooper...i know he didn't play in the nfl, i know he is sick, i feel bad for the guy. I was exaggarating on that guys hatred for the mannings in that other post. Now chill the f--- out before I dump Coopers drool cup on your head.DoubleG said:He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.menobrown said:Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR.DoubleG said:"Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.menobrown said:Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.DoubleG said:sad pandas said:You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
2) Incidentally, the NFL doesn't seem to mind extremely slow WRs like Anquan Boldin (4.72 - at the combine...in college) and Larry Fitzgerald (4.63 combine time).
I'm completely calm. I just find it odd that people are ripping on a guy who never even had a chance to play in the NFL as their least favorite players in the NFL. I also found it strange that it's assumed that a 6' 4" WR with a 4.7 in high school wouldn't have a chance in the NFL - especially when he would have college to improve on those numbers and there are current NFL WRs who have those very same numbers playing at a very high level.
I never doubted that Rivers had talent but have hated him because of his mouth. I actually gained some respect for him yesterday playing through his injuries. when a guy puts his career on the line to try and win a championship it shows me something. I'll have to get back to you on "who is my least favorite player in the NFL" but it is no longer Rivers.Philip Rivers. The guy never shuts his flap.
Don't be mad. That was pretty funny.Stay classy sad pandas.Yo...get a sense of humor d-bag i was joking about cooper...i know he didn't play in the nfl, i know he is sick, i feel bad for the guy. I was exaggarating on that guys hatred for the mannings in that other post. Now chill the f--- out before I dump Coopers drool cup on your head.He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR."Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
2) Incidentally, the NFL doesn't seem to mind extremely slow WRs like Anquan Boldin (4.72 - at the combine...in college) and Larry Fitzgerald (4.63 combine time).
I'm completely calm. I just find it odd that people are ripping on a guy who never even had a chance to play in the NFL as their least favorite players in the NFL. I also found it strange that it's assumed that a 6' 4" WR with a 4.7 in high school wouldn't have a chance in the NFL - especially when he would have college to improve on those numbers and there are current NFL WRs who have those very same numbers playing at a very high level.
I didn't include Cooper on my list because he didn't make stupid commercials like this one.Don't be mad. That was pretty funny.Stay classy sad pandas.Yo...get a sense of humor d-bag i was joking about cooper...i know he didn't play in the nfl, i know he is sick, i feel bad for the guy. I was exaggarating on that guys hatred for the mannings in that other post. Now chill the f--- out before I dump Coopers drool cup on your head.He didn't even play college football - those were his times in high school. Two quick points so as not to derail this thread:1) The guy was 6' 4" 185 and ran a 4.7 at the end of high school - he obviously could have improved as he went through college.Calm yourself and look at the fact you just wrote. I responded to comment about Coooper being an NFL player, not a college player. 4.7 is EXTREMELY SLOW for an NFL WR."Cooper was heavily recruited by Division I schools Texas, Virginia and Ole Miss," per wikipedia - I guess alot of Division I schools like to heavily recruit extremely slow WRs.Cooper was not a QB but an extremely slow WR. He may have been the best athlete in the family but the best athletes don't always play QB and the NFL is not a home to slow WR's.You left off #4...Cooper, but hes #1 in my book1. Peyton Manning
2. Eli Manning
3. Archie Manning (for making the 2 baby Mannings)2 things:
1) Cooper is not an NFL player.
2) Ironically, he probably could have been (and if you listen to many that knew him including Peyton, would have been the best of the three) - save for the fact that he was diagnosed with a medical condition called spinal stenosis - and tried to play through it. Read up on his battles with said disease in late H.S., early college instead of being a jack###.
ETA: name of medical conditionBTW - "Cooper - in his prime a muscular 6-foot-4, 185-pounder with 4.7 speed in the 40" per the St. Petersburgh Times - 4.7 isn't what I would consider "extremely slow". Please don't mix presuppositions and opinion with fact in you're going to try to rip on people who never got a chance due to a medical condition.
2) Incidentally, the NFL doesn't seem to mind extremely slow WRs like Anquan Boldin (4.72 - at the combine...in college) and Larry Fitzgerald (4.63 combine time).
I'm completely calm. I just find it odd that people are ripping on a guy who never even had a chance to play in the NFL as their least favorite players in the NFL. I also found it strange that it's assumed that a 6' 4" WR with a 4.7 in high school wouldn't have a chance in the NFL - especially when he would have college to improve on those numbers and there are current NFL WRs who have those very same numbers playing at a very high level.
?? ok but there are millions of guys who never shut up. My fav player of all time was a big timer yapper, Cris Carter.To me up until about the mid point of last year, TO easily was my least favourite but since then and even now that he's retired Tiki BarberPhilip Rivers. The guy never shuts his flap.