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By Harrison's twisted logic, he was "all for player safety," including his own. But in the next breath, Harrison confided he'd suffered several concussions, hadn't reported any of them to team officials in the past and had no plans to start.
"You shouldn't be able to come back in the game," he said. "But if they don't know, they don't have that decision to make."
Whether McCoy was as forthcoming with the Browns after the collision with Harrison remains something of a mystery. Cleveland coach Pat Shurmur has been coy about whether the team complied with the league protocol and tested McCoy, who returned to the game but remembered little about it afterward.
The league is running low on able bodies as it is, and levying stiffer fines and suspensions for any player who knocks another one out won't help keep more of them on the field. When Harrison hammered Cleveland's Mohamed Massaquoi in October 2010, the receiver's agent stated the obvious: that fines, no matter how stiff, aren't enough to make players change.
"Harrison has made $20 million over the past three years, and they only fined him $75,000?" agent Brian Ayrault said. "To me, that's not going to be a deterrent. The Browns are probably going to be without a starter this week. I don't think that fine is a deterrent or fair to competitive balance."
The suspension makes Harrison the first player to miss game time under new league rules aimed at curtailing "devastating" hits. It's a good first step, but still on the light side, considering Harrison is the NFL's biggest repeat offender, Tomlin and the Steelers coaching staff either can't or won't convince him to lower his aim on hits, and if a one-game suspension doesn't do the trick, the next one is going to have to be long enough to get the message across.
The last thing the NFL can afford at the moment is more players trying to tear each other's heads off.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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