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Miami Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill is opening up about the ‘traumatic’ police stop that ended with him on the pavement in handcuffs.

Ahead of the Dolphins’ ‘Thursday Night Football’ matchup against the Buffalo Bills, Amazon Prime aired a sit-down interview between reporter Taylor Rooks and Hill, four days after he was forcibly removed from his vehicle and detained during a routine traffic stop in Miami.

Hill said he hasn’t fully processed what happened Sunday before the Dolphins’ home opener against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

‘It’s tough. It’s hard. Going through something like that is traumatic,’ Hill told Rooks. ‘It’s embarrassing for my family and my kids. Had my wife (Keeta) worried and she’s pregnant. I’m still trying to put it all together. I’m still trying to put pieces to the puzzle.’

Although Hill never wanted to become a poster child for police brutality, the eight-time Pro Bowler said he will use this situation to bring awareness to excessive use of force by police.

All things Dolphins: Latest Miami Dolphins news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘I get a chance to at least try to bring awareness to what this whole entire country has been trying to fix for the past decades,’ Hill said. ‘You got pros and you have cons in every situation, it’s about what you do with it.’

Hill, 30, added: ‘You learn from the situation, you hold yourself accountable.’

‘In the heat of the moment, the officer is thinking about his safety and I’m thinking I don’t want pictures taken of me … before a game getting pulled over. I tried to meet in the middle of here’s my ID and I’m going to leave my window barely tipped,’ Hill said, noting that ‘there’s no law’ against rolling up your window. ‘But does that give them the right to pull me out my car? No that doesn’t. That doesn’t give them the right to put their hands on me.’

Hill added that one of the officers was trying to ‘antagonize’ him while he was detained.

‘When I was handcuffed, the officer was pinching me behind my neck trying to get me to do something to him. It was next level crazy,’ Hill said.

Hill said he has only watched the body camera footage once.

‘I can’t watch it more than once. My mom and wife have probably watched it 100 times,’ Hill said.

Hill said he wants to use the whole situation to ‘move the needle.’

‘It’s all about accountability on both sides. I’m going to take accountability for my wrongs … and I want to hear the accountability on that side,’ Hill said. ‘I don’t want to hear anything from those police officers. We got to talk to the top. We are going to figure it out and have some conversations. We are going to have some very uncomfortable conversations and hopefully we are able to move the needle. I think we will.’

Hill said he’s got calls to boycott the national anthem as a result of the confrontation with police, but he said he won’t because he wants to keep football separate. ‘Football is my sanctuary,’ he said.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Indiana Fever will try to avoid a season sweep at the hands of the Las Vegas Aces when the two teams meet for the final time this season, Friday night in Indianapolis.

It will be a rematch of Wednesday’s clash between two of the WNBA’s most visible players as rookie of the year favorite Caitlin Clark will lead the Fever (19-18) against reigning league MVP A’ja Wilson and the Aces. Wilson had the upper hand in that game, scoring 27 points in a winning effort – and in the process setting a WNBA record for most points in a single season.

The Aces (23-13) prevailed 86-75 for their third consecutive double-digit victory over the Fever this season. It marked only the third loss for Indiana in 11 games since the Olympic break.

When is Indiana Fever vs. Las Vegas Aces?

Date: Friday, Sept. 13
Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse; Indianapolis

How to watch Caitlin Clark and Fever vs. Aces

TV: ION

In addition to local TV markets, the Fever-Sparks game will also be available on demand upon its conclusion on WNBA League Pass. Fans can get the WNBA League Pass by downloading the WNBA app.

Caitlin Clark stats last game

In Wednesday’s loss to the Aces, Caitlin Clark had 16 points, six assists and three rebounds, but she suffered through one of her worst shooting days of the season. She hit on just six of her 22 field goal attempts, including 1-of-10 from 3-point territory.

With 708 points on the season (19.1 ppg) and three games remaining, Clark needs just 37 more points to pass Seimone Augustus’ WNBA rookie record of 744.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After a brief-yet-incredibly-welcome break, the forces of conference realignment began churning again this week.

Late Wednesday night, news broke that the Pac-12, with Oregon State and Washington State as its only existing members, would be bringing in Boise State, San Diego State, Colorado State and Fresno State from the Mountain West, moves that were officially confirmed the following morning.

A merger of some sort had long been expected between the Pac-12s remnants and the Mountain West, the only other FBS conference with a membership rooted in the country’s western-most time zones. But after the two leagues failed to extend their football scheduling agreement beyond this season, the Pac-12 suddenly became a predator after spending the previous two years getting picked apart.

It’s a near-certainty the Pac-12, now up to six schools, won’t be staying pat, especially since the NCAA requires that a conference has at least eight members to qualify as an FBS league. Yahoo Sports reported that the Pac-12 bringing in the four Mountain West schools is the “first phase in a multi-phase expansion endeavor,” signaling that this conference shuffling is only just beginning.

Where might the Pac-12 turn as it continues its search to fortify its ranks? Here are eight potential additions that could make sense for the reconfiguring league:

Pac-12 Conference expansion candidates

Memphis

There’s perhaps no school not already in one of the Power Four conferences that’s as desirable as or due for a step up more than the Tigers.

They have a storied basketball program that regularly plays in front of large home crowds in a basketball-mad city. Their football program has won at least 10 games in four of the past nine full seasons and is located in a talent-rich part of the country. Financially, they have the backing of FedEx, which has pledged $25 million over the next five years to support Memphis’ NIL efforts.

The question may come down to whether a move is even worth it for the Tigers. The Pac-12 now isn’t the Pac-12 of yore and the conference doesn’t have an automatic berth in the College Football Playoff for its champion. Would it be worth leaving the American Athletic Conference for a league that’s only marginally better (if that) on paper?

Tulane

Memphis’ longtime conference mate – from its days in the Metro, Conference USA and now the AAC – would make sense for some of the same reasons.

After enjoying only sporadic bursts of football success since leaving the SEC in the 1960s, the Green Wave has gone 23-5 over the past two full seasons and appears well-positioned to continue that run with Jon Sumrall as coach. Tulane would open the Pac-12 up to a major city (New Orleans) and a private school with a wealthy alumni base.

The same question Memphis faces of whether a move to a western conference would make sense also applies to the Green Wave.

UNLV

Perhaps the biggest surprise of the group of Mountain West schools the Pac-12 added was that it didn’t include the Rebels.

UNLV has a men’s basketball program with a national championship to its name in the past 40 years and a rapidly improving football program that went 9-5 last season and is off to a 2-0 start in 2024, which included a 27-7 throttling of Houston. Though market size doesn’t matter as much as it did in previous rounds of realignment, Las Vegas is a top-40 television market that could help the Pac-12 try to make up for losing schools in Los Angeles, Seattle and the San Francisco Bay Area over the past several years.

UTSA

For a conference looking to fortify its football bona fides, getting a foothold in Texas isn’t the worst idea. In that state, there are few, if any, better non-Power Four options than the Roadrunners.

UTSA has enjoyed a meteoric rise in football since joining the FBS ranks in 2012, going 32-9 over the previous three full seasons under coach Jeff Traylor. Like many of the aforementioned schools, it’s located in a major media market, but unlike New Orleans or Las Vegas, San Antonio only has one professional team the university has to compete with for attention.

If the Pac-12 is committed to going into Texas, North Texas, located about 40 miles north of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, could also make sense.

New Mexico

The Lobos represent the largest school in a state with no professional teams and are in a growing city, Albuquerque, that’s one of the 35 largest in the country.

Not only do they fit the conference’s geographic footprint, but they have a historically successful basketball program with a rabid and loyal local fan base that routinely ranks them among the top 20 programs in college basketball in attendance. Though its football program is underwhelming, with just two bowl appearances since 2008, the school recently hired coach Bronco Mendenhall, a proven winner in previous stops at BYU and Virginia.

Air Force

The Falcons’ football program has been a model of steady success since the early 1980s, with only nine losing seasons since 1982. That run includes 24 seasons with at least eight wins and 10 with at least 10.

Despite its location, it likely doesn’t bring the Denver media market into play for the conference – Colorado State already helps take care of that, anyway – but the idea of adding a service academy to the fold could be incredibly enticing for the university presidents tasked with making these decisions of who to invite.

Utah State

Though it’s the third-most prominent school in a smaller state that already has two Power Four schools in it, the Aggies have a passionate following and have been successful in both football, with 10 bowl berths in the past 11 full seasons, and basketball, which has gone to the NCAA tournament four times in the past six seasons and won the Mountain West in 2023-24.

The FCS powerhouses

For the sake of brevity, this designation includes North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Montana and Montana State.

The Dakota schools have combined to win 11 of the past 13 FCS titles. Montana has won two national championships since 1995 and made it to the title game last year. Montana State advanced to the championship game three years ago.

While there have been undeniable success stories, other schools have struggled with the FCS-to-FBS transition. For all their achievements, the four aforementioned FCS schools would be playing catchup financially to the four additions from the Mountain West, who all spend significantly more on football. Montana State, the biggest spender of the four FCS schools, shelled out only about half of what Fresno State, which had the smallest football budget of the four Mountain West defections, did according to the most recent US Department of Education data.

These four schools would have to weigh the question of whether a bigger payday is worth potentially sacrificing their status as perennial championship contenders.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After an eventful opening weekend, Week 2 of the 2024 NFL season seems decidedly frontloaded – and potentially lacking drama between the lines.

For on- and off-field factors, Thursday night’s AFC East showdown between the Buffalo Bills and Miami Dolphins in South Florida – a rematch of last season’s regular-season finale that determined the division crown – shapes up as the most compelling matchup on the docket. Both teams come off shaky wins but are expected to be vying for postseason berths again this year. Of course, there’s an extra level of scrutiny on the game as developments continue to unfold in the aftermath of Miami All-Pro WR Tyreek Hill’s incident with local police as he drove to the opener at Hard Rock Stadium.

Elsewhere, it remains to be seen if injured Pittsburgh Steelers QB Russell Wilson will have the opportunity to face former coach Sean Payton and the Broncos in Denver on Sunday afternoon – though it looks to be a long shot. Sunday night will mark No. 1 draft pick Caleb Williams’ prime-time debut as his Chicago Bears meet the Texans in Houston. And the Philadelphia Eagles host the Atlanta Falcons to wrap the slate on Monday night.

Here’s how are our expert panelists see the games playing out.

USA TODAY Sports 2024 NFL season predictions: Our picks to win Super Bowl 59, MVP, rookies of the year, Nate Davis’ updated win projections and more

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

(Odds provided by BetMGM)

Buffalo Bills at Miami Dolphins
Las Vegas Raiders at Baltimore Ravens
Los Angeles Chargers at Carolina Panthers
New Orleans Saints at Dallas Cowboys
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Detroit Lions
Indianapolis Colts at Green Bay Packers
Cleveland Browns at Jacksonville Jaguars
San Francisco 49ers at Minnesota Vikings
Seattle Seahawks at New England Patriots
New York Jets at Tennessee Titans
New York Giants at Washington Commanders
Los Angeles Rams at Arizona Cardinals
Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs
Pittsburgh Steelers at Denver Broncos
Chicago Bears at Houston Texans
Atlanta Falcons at Philadelphia Eagles

All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa exited Thursday’s NFL matchup between the Miami Dolphins and Buffalo Bills after taking a scary hit to the head in the third quarter.

Tagovailoa, in his fifth season with the Dolphins, scrambled for a first down on fourth-and-four late in the third quarter, and his helmet struck into the shoulder pads of Bills defensive back Damar Hamlin. Tagovailoa lay on the ground for multiple moments before exiting the game under his own power and heading to the locker room.

At the time of the injury, Miami trailed Buffalo 31-10, as Tagovailoa struggled to a 17 of 25 passing night with 145 yards and a touchdown with three interceptions, one of which was a pick-six in the third quarter.

Tagovailoa signed a four-year contract extension worth $212.4 million in the offseason and has suffered a multitude of head injuries in his career.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Here’s everything to know about Tagovailoa’s injury, including his concussion timeline:

How many concussions has Tua Tagovailoa had? Injury timeline

Tagovailoa, who suffered a head injury on ‘Thursday Night Football’ against the Bills, has now sustained three concussions throughout his NFL career, with Thursday’s injury being the third.

Tagovailoa’s first confirmed NFL concussion was during the 2022 season, during a scary moment on ‘Thursday Night Football’ against the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 4. The play was the subject of controversy, as Tagovailoa four days prior fell hard onto the turf against the Bills, which was originally deemed a head injury but later determined to be a back ailment. Tagovailoa returned to the game against the Bills in Week 3.

The moment resulted in the NFLPA firing the independent neurologist who participated in the clearing of Tagovailoa to re-enter the game in the second half of the Week 3 game.

Tagovailoa then suffered another concussion in Week 16 against the Green Bay Packers, which led to him missing the final two games of the season, including a playoff game. Tagovailoa returned to the game against the Packers in the second half, tossing three interceptions. The concussion was only ruled as such after the game.

It’s unclear if he ever suffered a concussion before his college career at Alabama.

Tagovailoa injury update

Tagovailoa exited Thursday’s game against the Buffalo Bills with a head injury, and it was reported by the Amazon Prime broadcast that he won’t return to the game. The Dolphins later ruled Tagovailoa suffered a concussion.

Tagovailoa took a hard hit to the head after scrambling for a first down on fourth-and-four. He lay on the ground for multiple moments before exiting the game under his own power and heading to the locker room without his helmet.

Tua Tagovailoa official concussion total

Tagovailoa has suffered three concussions in his career, two of which came during the 2022 season with the third happening on Thursday night against the Buffalo Bills.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

College football fans face another week of blackouts as negotiations between The Walt Disney Company, which owns ESPN, ABC and college conference channels, and satellite carrier DirecTV appear to remain at a deadlock.

Disney-owned channels went dark on DirecTV Sept. 1 when the contract between the two ended.

DirecTV filed a complaint against Disney with the Federal Communications Commission Saturday, accusing the entertainment giant of negotiating in bad faith.

‘DirecTV and Disney have found themselves in an impasse for a week now,’ according to the complaint obtained by USA TODAY. ‘Millions of Americans have already missed early college football games, may well miss the first Monday Night Football game.’

Disney denied the allegations ahead of the filing and said that, ‘we believe there is a path to a fair and flexible agreement that strikes this critical balance and works for all sides, especially the consumer,’ in a statement sent to USA TODAY Sept. 4.

The company said that it is continuing to, ‘negotiate with DirecTV to restore access to our content as quickly as possible,’ in a separate statement sent to USA TODAY Monday.

The negotiations caused college football fans to miss the final two games of Week 1 and the entire slate of Week 2 games carried on the Disney channels.

What Week 3 college football games are on Disney owned channels?

Disney owned channels are slated to air 19 games this weekend.

The schedule includes the Arizona State Sun Devils and Texas State Bobcats kicking off the weekend Thursday night, No. 24 Boston College heading into Columbia to face No. 6 Missouri Saturday afternoon and No. 1 Georgia traveling to Lexington to take on Kentucky in the Saturday primetime slot.

All times EST

Thursday

Arizona State @ Texas State ESPN 7:30 p.m.

Friday

UNLV @ Kansas ESPN 7 p.m.

Saturday

No. 13 Oklahoma State @ Tulsa ESPN2 12 p.m.
No. 16 LSU @ South Carolina ABC 12 p.m.
Memphis @ Florida State ESPN 12 p.m.
Louisiana Tech @ NC State ACC Network 12 p.m
Cincinatti @ Miami (OH) ESPNU 12 p.m.
No. 24 Boston College @ No. 6 Missouri SEC Network 12:45 p.m.
Ball St. @ No. 10 Miami ACC Network 3:30 p.m.
Tulane @ No. 15 Oklahoma ESPN 3:30 p.m.
Texas A&M @ Florida ABC 3:30 p.m.
West Virginia @ Pitt ESPN2 3:30 p.m.
Appalachian State @ East Carolina ESPNU 4 p.m.
UTSA @ No. 2 Texas ESPN 7 p.m.
No. 1 Georgia @ Kentucky ABC 7:30 p.m.
New Mexico @ Auburn ESPN2 7:30 p.m.
Toledo @Mississippi State ESPNU 7:30 p.m.
Kent State @ No. 7 Tennessee SEC Network 7:45 p.m.
Maryland @ Virginia ACC Network 8 p.m.
San Diego State @ Cal ESPN 10:30 p.m.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Vice President Kamala Harris campaign says they hauled in $47 million from nearly 600,000 donors in the 24 hours after her debate with former President Donald Trump on Tuesday night in Philadelphia.

‘This historic, 24-hour haul reflects a strong and growing coalition of Americans united behind Vice President Harris’ candidacy that knows the stakes this November, and are doing their part to defeat Donald Trump this November,’ Harris campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon said in a statement.

Tuesday’s showdown was the first time that Harris and Trump had met in person, and the encounter came two and a half months after President Biden’s disastrous performance against Trump in their late June debate in Atlanta.

Biden’s unsteady appearance and uneven and meandering answers fueled questions about whether the 81-year-old president was physically and mentally up for another four years in the White House and fueled calls from within his own party to end his re-election bid. Less than a month later, Biden suspended his 2024 campaign and backed his vice president to replace him atop the Democrats’ national ticket.

The latest Harris cash haul, which was first reported by the New York Times, is the latest sign of the vice president’s surge in fundraising since becoming her party’s standard-bearer.

At the time this report was published, the Trump campaign had yet to announce any fundraising figures post-debate.

The Harris campaign recently announced that they hauled in $361 million in August, nearly triple the $130 million raised by the Trump campaign.

When asked about the fundraising deficit, Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley told Fox News Digital in the debate spin room that ‘the Democrats have a ton of money. The Democrats always have a ton of money.’

However, he emphasized that ‘we absolutely have the resources that we need to get our message out to all the voters that we’re talking to and feel very comfortable that we’re going to be able to see this campaign through and we’re going to win on November 5.’

Trump, in a social media post on Thursday, ruled out having another debate with the vice president.

Harris, speaking about an hour later at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, said, ‘I believe we owe it to the voters to have another debate. Because this election and what is at stake could not be more important.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Trump campaign is doubling down on former President Trump’s debate performance this week, calling it a clear victory against Vice President Kamala Harris, despite recent reports that Harris is gaining momentum in battlegrounds Georgia and North Carolina.

‘Their little reaction to the debate and performance is nothing but a sugar high, and it’s artificial, and it’s based entirely on the fact that she came out and she managed to deliver her memorized lines, and she put on a fine performance, which we anticipated she was going to do, because she’s able to go out and memorize things and go out and put on a performance,’ senior Trump campaign adviser Tim Murtaugh told Fox News Digital in an interview Thursday.

‘They placed so much emphasis on that debate, and so many millions of people tuned in to hear why she was running for president, because they had heard that she’d been in hiding most of the time, and they were expecting her to explain the rationale for what her record is and what her goals would be as president and what her plans would be. And they walked away not having heard or learned anything,’ he said.

The campaign’s assessment comes as Trump himself said Thursday he will not be doing any more debates.

While debate watchers initially gave the victory to Harris after Tuesday’s showdown, there are still six toss-up states on the map worth a combined 78 electoral votes. The election is still considered up for grabs for either candidate.

As of Thursday, Trump has lost his edge in Georgia and North Carolina in the latest Fox News Power Rankings, giving Harris a lead in the overall forecast for the first time. 

Over the last 12 months of the Fox News Poll, between 48%-50% of registered voters have said they supported Trump. While Biden polled as low as 45% earlier this year, Harris is now only one point behind Trump at 49% in the latest Fox national survey. 

Criminal indictments, a conviction, the primaries, a last-minute change in opponents and an assassination attempt did nothing to move the former president out of that three-point range.

But Murtaugh believes Trump had ‘a strong performance’ and that he refused to let Harris ‘escape her liberal record and her responsibility in the Biden-Harris administration.’ 

Murtaugh pointed to Harris’ flip-flop record in which she’s tried to distance herself from her former progressive record. 

‘And everyone knows what they are. It’s fracking, it’s the wall, it’s making illegal immigration or making illegally crossing the border not illegal. She reversed herself on outlawing health insurance that people get from their employer,’ Murtaugh said. ‘She reversed herself on gun confiscation. She’s reversed herself on a variety of tax cuts. You know, she’s actually even reversed herself on plastic straws.’

‘And she also needed to try to separate herself from the Biden-Harris administration,’ Murtaugh said. ‘And she absolutely did not do that. And so while the pundits might think, ‘Oh, wow, what a great performance she put on,’ because she went out and did her lines, in fact, the truth is, the grocery store will not let you buy food with style points.’

On top issues like the economy, Trump clearly has the upper hand, according to polls. In a CNN poll conducted after the debate, 55% of voters preferred Trump’s economic platform compared to Harris’, trailing behind at 35%. 

And while pundits and debate watchers called the victory for Harris, middle-of-the-road voters may not have been convinced, according to Reuters and the New York Times’ interviews with undecided voters.

‘She needed to connect with these people and convince them that she wasn’t hiding and that she is a serious candidate, and she failed. You don’t get another chance to make a first impression on those people,’ Murtaugh said. 

Fox News Digital’s Remy Numa contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

GOP Rep. Michelle Steel is rolling out a bill to block China and other American adversaries from accessing U.S. ports.

Steel, R-Calif., a member of the House Select Committee on Communist China, created the Secure Our Ports Act, which would prohibit companies owned fully, or in-part, by state-owned enterprises in China, Russia, North Korea and Iran from operating or managing a U.S. port. 

Steel told Fox News Digital that adversaries accessing U.S. ports can harm U.S. supply chains because it would enable them to access shipping infrastructure. 

Steel said her bill ‘would shore up America’s economic and national security in the face of threats from Communist China and their like-minded allies.’ 

‘Congress must protect America’s supply chains by restricting enemy governments from having high-level access to our ports,’ Steel told Fox News Digital. ‘Nations which threaten the very existence of the United States should not have easy access to our port infrastructure, a key lifeline of America’s supply chains.’

Steel’s home region in Southern California is home to two of the largest ports in the country: the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach. 

Steel’s office told Fox News Digital that multiple China-owned conglomerates have an active presence in American ports, including on the West Coast. This includes the Chinese-Owned Shipping Company (COSCO) on the West Coast and China Oil and Foodstuffs Corp. (COFCO) on the Mississippi River.

The legislation is co-sponsored by Reps. Stephanie Bice, Ken Calvert, Rick Crawford, Richard Hudson, Doug LaMalfa, Nicole Malliotakis, James Moylan, Aumua Amata Coleman Radewagen, John Rutherford and Randy Weber.

The bill comes after national security and defense officials last year began viewing giant cargo cranes at U.S. ports as potential Chinese spying tools. Officials have suggested that Chinese equipment and cranes at ports could be used for surveillance.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa exited Thursday’s NFL matchup between the Miami Dolphins and Buffalo Bills after taking a scary hit to the head in the third quarter.

Tagovailoa, in his fifth season with the Dolphins, scrambled for a first down on fourth-and-four late in the third quarter, and his helmet struck into the shoulder pads of Bills defensive back Damar Hamlin. Tagovailoa lay on the ground for multiple moments before exiting the game under his own power and heading to the locker room.

At the time of the injury, Miami trailed Buffalo 31-10, as Tagovailoa struggled to a 17 of 25 passing night with 145 yards and a touchdown with three interceptions, one of which was a pick-six in the third quarter.

Tagovailoa signed a four-year contract extension worth $212.4 million in the offseason and has suffered a multitude of head injuries in his career.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Here’s everything to know about Tagovailoa’s injury, including his concussion timeline:

How many concussions has Tua Tagovailoa had? Injury timeline

Tagovailoa, who suffered a head injury on ‘Thursday Night Football’ against the Bills, has now sustained three concussions throughout his NFL career, with Thursday’s injury being the third.

Tagovailoa’s first confirmed NFL concussion was during the 2022 season, during a scary moment on ‘Thursday Night Football’ against the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 4. The play was the subject of controversy, as Tagovailoa four days prior fell hard onto the turf against the Bills, which was originally deemed a head injury but later determined to be a back ailment. Tagovailoa returned to the game against the Bills in Week 3.

The moment resulted in the NFLPA firing the independent neurologist who participated in the clearing of Tagovailoa to re-enter the game in the second half of the Week 3 game.

Tagovailoa then suffered another concussion in Week 16 against the Green Bay Packers, which led to him missing the final two games of the season, including a playoff game. Tagovailoa returned to the game against the Packers in the second half, tossing three interceptions. The concussion was only ruled as such after the game.

It’s unclear if he ever suffered a concussion before his college career at Alabama.

Tagovailoa injury update

Tagovailoa exited Thursday’s game against the Buffalo Bills with a head injury, and it was reported by the Amazon Prime broadcast that he won’t return to the game. The Dolphins later ruled Tagovailoa suffered a concussion.

Tagovailoa took a hard hit to the head after scrambling for a first down on fourth-and-four. He lay on the ground for multiple moments before exiting the game under his own power and heading to the locker room without his helmet.

Tua Tagovailoa official concussion total

Tagovailoa has suffered three concussions in his career, two of which came during the 2022 season with the third happening on Thursday night against the Buffalo Bills.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY