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Harrison still seemed to believe the crackdown stemmed from the press coverage of the previous weekend's flagrant tackles.
"Maybe if that was the only one that happened," he said of his hit on Cleveland receiver Mohamed Massaquoi that drew the hefty fine, "it wouldn't have transpired the way it did. But there were three or four other hits. It caused a real media storm and I guess they felt they had to do something and they got everybody."
This week, they probably won't get anyone, judging by Anderson's comments.
One hit that was questioned came in Tennessee's victory over Philadelphia. Titans running back Chris Johnson was headed down the right sideline when he was slammed helmet-to-helmet by Eagles linebacker Ernie Sims. No flag was thrown -- correctly.
Anderson explained that Johnson was a runner with the ball heading downfield and was anything but a defenseless player. Sims' hit was well within the rules.
"It's never been an intention to legislate all helmet-to-helmet hits out of the game," said Anderson, a member of the NFL's competition committee and one of the league's loudest voices about player safety. "We just are trying to make sure when a player is in a defenseless situation, he is not hit in the head or neck area."
[Associated Press;
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