NFL suspends Myles Garrett indefinitely for swinging helmet onto quarterback's head
(CNN)The NFL has suspended Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett indefinitely — and at least for the rest of the season — for ripping the opposing quarterback's helmet off his head and hitting him with it in Thursday night's game with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Garrett's minimum suspension, announced Friday,
puts him out for six regular season games and any playoff games this
year. The six games alone would make it one of the longest suspensions
for on-field incidents in NFL history.
There are no plans to file charges against Garrett, said Ryan Miday, a spokesman for the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor's Office.
"This
would come from the city level and they haven't referred anything to
us," Miday told CNN, adding that he did not know whether the incident is
under investigation.
Two
other players have been suspended for their role in the fight:
Pittsburgh's Maurkice Pouncey (three games) and Cleveland's Larry
Ogunjobi (one game).
Both
teams have been fined $250,000 each. The NFL said it would issue
discipline for other players in the coming days, including those who
left the sidelines.
The helmet
strike, coming at the end of the Browns' 21-7 win over the Steelers in
Cleveland, has drawn shock and condemnation from players and sports
analysts. Fox commentator Joe Buck, who was covering the game, described
the incident as "one of the worst things I've ever seen on a
professional sports field."
How the fight happened
The
fracas started with seconds left in the game, when Garrett — the former
Texas A&M player selected first overall pick in the 2017 draft —
took Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph to the ground after Rudolph
completed a meaningless screen pass.
After they tussled on the turf, Garrett pulled off Rudolph's helmet.
Pittsburgh
guard David DeCastro pushed Garrett away, and Rudolph got up and
chased. Then Garrett swung the helmet onto the former Oklahoma State
quarterback's head.
Obviously not pleased, Pouncey punched and kicked Garrett, who had fallen to the ground with DeCastro.
Pouncey, Garrett and Cleveland's Ogunjobi — who pushed Rudolph to the ground from behind — were all ejected from the game.
What the players and the Browns' owners have said
Garrett showed remorse in a statement Friday, saying: "I made a terrible mistake."
"I
lost my cool and what I did was selfish and unacceptable," Garrett's
statement reads. "I know that we are all responsible for our actions and
I can only prove my true character through my actions moving forward.
"I
want to apologize to Mason Rudolph, my teammates, our entire
organization, our fans and to the NFL. I know I have to be accountable
for what happened, learn from my mistake and I fully intend to do so."
Pouncey, explaining his own actions, said after the game that Garrett "could have killed" Rudolph.
"What if he'd hit in him the temple?" the center said.
Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield called his teammate's actions inexcusable and dangerous.
"It
feels like we lost," Mayfield said. "This is a physical, violent game
and there's moments if you don't keep your cool, bad things can happen
and he knows that. It's inexcusable and he knows that."
The Browns' owners, Dee and Jimmy Haslam, apologized Friday to Rudolph and the Steelers.
"We
are extremely disappointed in what transpired last evening at the end
of our game," the Haslams' statement reads. "There is no place for that
in football and that is not reflective of the core values we strive for
as an organization.
"We sincerely
apologize to Mason Rudolph and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Myles Garrett
has been a good teammate and member of our organization and community
for the last three years but his actions last night were completely
unacceptable. We understand the consequences from the league for his
actions."
Rudolph said Garrett's actions were "bush league" and "a total coward move."
"I'm not going to back down from any bully out there," the quarterback said in a news conference after the game.
Timothy Younger, Rudolph's agent, said that what happened "cannot be defended by reasonable minds."
"There
are many risks an NFL QB assumes with every snap taken on the field.
Being hit on your uncovered head by a helmet being swung by a 275 lb DE
is not one of them," Younger said on Twitter. "Tonight could have had a catastrophic ending. The matter will be reviewed thoroughly."
CNN's
attempts to reach Younger to ask him whether he and his client were
pursuing any further remedy weren't immediately successful.
How this measures up to previous NFL punishments
Garrett's
punishment could be considered, depending on how you examine it, the
longest suspension levied by the NFL for a single on-field incident.
Earlier
this year, Raiders linebacker Vontaze Burfict was suspended for the
rest of his season — amounting to 12 regular season games and the
playoffs — for a helmet-to-helmet hit on a player on September 29. But
the NFL made clear that his previous suspensions and violations of unnecessary roughness rules played a factor in the length of the punishment.
Burfict was suspended twice previously for on-field incidents.
Otherwise, the longest suspension for an in-game violation was held by Albert Haynesworth, suspended five games in 2006 after the then-Tennessee Titan stomped on a player's head.
Garrett was fined previously this season for illegal hits.
All of Friday's suspensions may be appealed under the league's collective bargaining agreement with players.
Assuming
Garrett's suspension stands, he would have to meet with the
commissioner's office before the league decides on whether to reinstate
him after this season, the NFL said.


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