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Ben Roethlisberger (Pittsburgh Steelers)

Alex Boone fan;621828; said:
Defense is playing great. The only thing struggling is Ben because he's rusty and the running game still has some questions. Willie played great against Cincy. I am still not convinced he's an up the middle back. Bring back the BUS!

He's too busy making cameos on The Office. :)
 
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tibor75;640588; said:
Big Jen just took a nasty hit to the head (and maybe knee? I didn't see it) and is beign wheeled to the locker room.

As opposed to his other incidents, this might be a real injury.

You are such a freaking jackass. It is not hard to see why most everyone here cannot stand you.
 
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tibor75;640672; said:
yeah, what I am thinking. Big Jen has never over-dramatized his previous injuries. :roll1:

Relax he's fine anyway. He was on the sidelines looking all sad when The Falcons won.

I didn't initially see you were a Bengals fan but now I see you are just being a flamer. Typical behavior for you, and once again not hard to see why you rank well below dog shit on the bottom of a shoe. I apologize for falling for it.
 
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Dispatch

NFL NOTEBOOK
Roethlisberger seems OK following hard hit
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Pittsburgh Steelers aren?t saying if quarterback Ben Roethlisberger suffered his second concussion in slightly more than four months.
Roethlisberger was fit enough to fly home with the Steelers following their 41-38 overtime loss Sunday in Atlanta, and to drive his SUV to a team meeting yesterday, despite being briefly knocked unconscious by a helmet-to-helmet hit with the Falcons? Chauncey Davis.
The Steelers? biggest concern is if this is Roethlisberger?s second recent concussion. He suffered a severe concussion, and needed seven hours of surgery mostly to repair facial injuries, when his motorcycle collided with a car June 12 in Pittsburgh.
Coach Bill Cowher might say today if Roethlisberger has any chance to play Sunday for the Steelers (2-4) against the Oakland Raiders (1-5).
 
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Canton

Roethlisberger may play Sunday
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH Ben Roethlisberger's second concussion in slightly more than four months may not keep him out of the Pittsburgh Steelers' lineup Sunday or prevent him from practicing this week.

The Super Bowl-winning quarterback is questionable for Sunday's game in Oakland, but Coach Bill Cowher sounded Tuesday very much like he expects to have his starting quarterback ready to go this week.
"He had an MRI done on his brain and neck, and both of those came back normal," Cowher said. "We also did the concussion test, and we're very encouraged by the results. We'll monitor his progress as the week goes on, but again, I emphasize that we're very encouraged by where he is."
Asked if Roethlisberger would practice today, Cowher said, "We'll see how he feels."
Roethlisberger was briefly knocked unconscious during a helmet-to-helmet hit with the Falcons' Chauncey Davis midway through the third quarter of Pittsburgh's 41-38 overtime loss in Atlanta. The injury came in Roethlisberger's best game of the season - he was 16 of 22 for 238 yards and three touchdowns.
Cowher expects the NFL to review the hit for a possible fine or disciplinary action, as the league does with almost any play that involves a quarterback's head injury.
Roethlisberger was woozy and appeared dazed a few minutes later while being taken to the locker room on a motorized cart, but returned later to watch the rest of the game on the sideline.
His replacement, Charlie Batch, threw two touchdown passes during a day the Steelers passed for 413 yards in 60 minutes - the most they've had in a game in which their quarterback never stepped on the field past the fourth quarter. Their only better passing day was Tommy Maddox's 473-yard effort in the Steelers' previous game against Atlanta, a 34-34 tie in 2002 that lasted 75 minutes.
Roethlisberger was deemed well enough to fly home on the team plane Sunday night, and he drove his car to a team meeting Monday. Later Monday, he met with a neurosurgeon and took the ImPACT concussion test that many NFL teams use to determine the severity of a concussion and when a player is fit to return. "He will take the test again later in the week to make sure he is cleared medically before we would subject him to playing," Cowher said. "Again, it's too early to make a final decision on that. We will definitely do so by taking all necessary precautions to make sure he is cleared."
 
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Is there anything this pussy won't cry about? :slappy:

Big Ben: Falcon taunted me after hitAssociated Press


PITTSBURGH -- Ben Roethlisberger won't have any trouble remembering the hit that gave the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback his latest concussion.

"It felt like it busted my whole jaw," he said Wednesday.

He also won't forget the crude comment made by one of the three Atlanta Falcons players who, while sacking him Sunday, apparently taunted Roethlisberger by saying he wanted to hit him in his surgically repaired face.

Roethlisberger took part in limited work during practice Wednesday and is listed as questionable for Sunday's game in Oakland, despite receiving his second concussion in about four months. He has not been cleared by doctors to play but, if he is, plans to "beg and plead" with coach Bill Cowher to do so.

"If you ask me, I'm always leaning toward playing, no matter what it is," he said Wednesday. "But it's something we have to be smart about."

Roethlisberger, who led the Steelers to a Super Bowl win last season, was injured during a helmet-to-helmet hit by defensive end Chauncey Davis immediately after releasing a pass during the third quarter. Roethlisberger also was sandwiched by defensive lineman Patrick Kerney and linebacker Ed Hartwell.

"They got me from every angle," he said.

Roethlisberger lay motionless for several minutes, and at least one teammate said he was unconscious on the turf. He was visibly dazed while being taken to the locker room but felt better within a few minutes and later returned to the sideline.

"The last thing I remember is throwing to Hines [Ward] and I tried to duck out of it, and as I tried to duck out of it I remember getting hit in the chin -- it felt like I busted my whole jaw or something," he said. "One of their players said something to me, and that's the last thing I remember."

He declined to identify the player who talked about the facial injuries the quarterback received during his June motorcycle crash but said: "I'll remember his number."

"They made a little comment, but I won't bring it up right now," he said. "When I got hit, I wasn't worried about the front of it [the jaw] -- it's stronger than it was before -- but the back of it was a little sore."

Roethlisberger needed seven hours of surgery to repair the facial damage caused during the crash, with strips of titanium placed in the jaw to strengthen it. He also received a concussion during an accident that occurred while he wasn't wearing a helmet.

Despite another head injury, he doesn't plan to switch to the recently designed football helmet that affords a player more protection from concussions.

Roethlisberger has had headaches since Sunday, though they are not as bad as they initially were. Still, Cowher is encouraged by the tests Roethlisberger has taken at least twice this week.

The tests measure a player's memory, attention, mental processing speed and reaction time. The results are compared to those taken when the player was healthy, and are used to determine when he can play again after a concussion.

Although those close to Roethlisberger labeled the concussion as "mild" and not worrisome, the symptoms he describes suggest otherwise. (:slappy: Big Jen exaggerate, really??)

According to widely recognized grading systems used by neurosurgeons and other medical professionals, any concussion that involves a loss of consciousness cannot be labeled as mild. Loss of consciousness, headaches and memory loss are more often associated with severe concussions.

The concussion tests NFL players take were largely designed by doctors who work in the medical complex where the Steelers practice, so Cowher isn't worried Roethlisberger might be cleared prematurely to play.

"The biggest thing is we get clearance from the medical people," Cowher said. "Once that has been decided then I have to sit down and talk to Ben and see how comfortable he is and see where he is."

Long-term medical studies have suggested that players who receive multiple concussions can be increasingly susceptible to others. Roethlisberger acknowledged he may have had others in his career.

"I've been playing football a long time," the 24-year-old said. "I'm sure I've had a few mild dings here and there."
 
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Drama%20Queen%20L.jpg


Christ, imagine if he played behind the Browns line.
 
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Concussions a dirty little secret for many in the NFLBy TIM DAHLBERG, AP Sports Columnist
October 26, 2006

capt.72dc751d078e4cb5903f4c5e40ea4441.tim_dahlberg_roethlisberger_steelers_ny162.jpg


Questionable is a word used a lot around the NFL. It's there every week in the injury reports that bookies and bettors like to study so much, usually stuck somewhere in between probable and doubtful.
Ben Roethlisberger, who was last seen sprawled unconscious on the field in Atlanta, is questionable this week. The Pittsburgh Steelers said so, meaning their star quarterback may or may not play Sunday against the Oakland Raiders.
Questionable. It's a word that can be used to describe many things.
Let's begin with the judgment of anyone involved with the Steelers who actually believes it is a good idea to rush back Roethlisberger after two concussions in four months. Head injury one Sunday, starting nod the next. You don't need a degree in neurology to figure out something is wrong with this equation.
Concussions forced two other quarterbacks out of the game in recent years. Troy Aikman and Steve Young retired early because of the cumulative effect of concussions, and they're hardly alone among NFL alumni.

Current players aren't faring much better. Quarterbacks Charlie Frye and Steve McNair recently left games with concussions and so did Minnesota receiver Troy Williamson.

Carolina linebacker Dan Morgan's season is over, and the horrifying image of Chiefs quarterback Trent Green having his head slammed to the ground in the first game of the season is an indelible one.
Concussions, it seems, are the NFL's dirty little secret. It's not just that they happen so often, but that the league doesn't seem to be doing much about it.
Sure, the NFL says it has had a committee of doctors studying them since 1994. But experts in the field say the league's studies are flawed, use suspect data, and don't stand up to peer review.
So when the NFL says no evidence has been found that brain function declines as a result of a concussion, the news is greeted with skepticism in the medical community.
"What the NFL allegedly finds is totally at odds with scores of publications that are out there," said Dr. Robert Cantu, a neurologist and leading expert in brain injuries at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "The stuff the NFL is putting out is just not the way the thinking is in the community of sports medicine and specialists with expertise in this area."
Among those is a recent study by the University of North Carolina, which reported 10 percent of retired NFL players say concussions have had a permanent effect on their ability to think and remember things as they've gotten older.
Hall of Fame linebacker Harry Carson of the New York Giants is one of them. He estimates he had a dozen or more "bell-ringers" in his career, though he wasn't aware they were concussions. Carson said he has long had memory problems because of postconcussion syndrome.
For others, it's even worse.
Former Steelers lineman Terry Long died last year at the age of 45 from a brain inflammation that resulted, in part, from repeated head injuries. Fellow Steelers center Mike Webster was diagnosed with football-induced dementia before he died at the age of 50.
Coaches, though, seem to regard them as minor irritants.
Vikings coach Brad Childress offered his own diagnosis the other day after Williamson was injured.
"He does know what time zone we're in right now, and he can read a clock. So he's going to be OK," Childress said.
Football, of course, isn't alone in having to deal with brain injuries. Keith Primeau had two years and $6 million left on his contract with the Philadelphia Flyers but retired earlier this year when even the most mundane skating drills caused him problems due to past concussions.
And David Eckstein and Jim Edmonds of the St. Louis Cardinals struggled for much of the season after concussions.
Still, the NFL, filled with violent helmet-to-helmet tackles and players with bad intentions, stands out.
In boxing, a fighter knocked out is automatically suspended for 60 days. In the NFL, a player knocked unconscious has returned to play in the same game.
Roethlisberger didn't go back into the game last Sunday, though he wanted to. He also wants to play this Sunday.
"If I get cleared I'm going to beg and plead to be out there," he said.
Hopefully, no one will be listening. Hopefully, the Super Bowl champions, 2-4 so far this season, will resist the temptation to put him in.
Roethlisberger has no business playing Sunday. There's a good argument to be made he shouldn't play again this year.
Big Ben has only one career -- and only one life.
It's up to those around him to make sure neither is cut short. Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-timdahlberg&prov=ap&type=lgns
 
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Steelers | Roethlisberger would support a quarterback change
Wed, 1 Nov 2006 23:00:04 -0800
Ed Bouchette, of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, reports Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Bill Cowher said he has no intentions of changing quarterbacks. QB Ben Roethlisberger said he would support Cowher's decision if he decided to start QB Charlie Batch. Roethlisberger said, "I want what's best for the team. If that's Charlie Batch being in there, then that's Charlie Batch being in there. I want what's best for this team to help it win. I'm not going to cry and complain about getting pulled. My job is to go out and play good football, so that there isn't even a decision to be made."



http://www.kffl.com/hotw/nfl
 
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