I made the statement based on my read of this NFL.com 
article.https://www.nfl.com/news/bills-to-honor-damar-hamlin-medical-staff-patriots-game-pay-salaryYes,
 the Bills are paying his salary in full, but the following text from the 
article suggests this is a special case."Though Hamlin's four-year, $3.64 
million rookie contract contains a standard split to pay him at a lower rate if 
he lands on IR, Buffalo worked out an agreement with the NFL and NFLPA to pay 
his full rate for Week 18's games, Rapoport reported."Presumably if Rapaport 
had it wrong, the league would say so on its own website.This may be specific 
to rookie contracts, I don't know.DavidSent on my Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 5G.
-------- Original message --------From: Tom Wolper <[email protected]> Date: 
1/8/23  15:57  (GMT-08:00) To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [TV 
orNotTV] Re: How ESPN Covered MNF Medical Emergency I’ve seen that Hamlin is on 
IR and the Bills said they will pay his whole salary.On Sun, Jan 8, 2023 at 
6:54 PM Doug Fields <[email protected]> wrote:






Where did you hear that about salaries while on IR?  That's not true, as I 
understand it.  The Collective Bargaining
 Agreement between the players' union and the NFL guarantees a player is paid 
their full contract if the player suffers a "football-related injury" (defined 
as any injury associated with game play or practice/workouts at the team's 
facilities) that puts them
 on the injured list.  Players who can't play due to non-football-related 
injuries can be denied their full pay at the team's discretion.




Hamlin's injury would definitely fall under the football-related definition, 
and he should be paid his full salary
 if he's placed on the Injured Reserve list (I'm not sure if his official 
roster status has been changed yet at this point).





Doug Fields

Tampa, FL




From: 'David Bruggeman' via TVorNotTV <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, January 8, 2023 10:58 AM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] Re: How ESPN Covered MNF Medical Emergency
 




A brief check of the NFL home page this morning echoes this approach.  A lot of 
organized celebration to make it look like the league isn't patting itself on 
the back for avoiding worse optics.  That the Bills are doing a
 lot to recognize Hamlin makes sense to me.  The league-wide celebrations push 
this into contrivance for me.


And today I learned that standard contracts (not sure if this is just for the 
first/rookie contract or not) are set up so a player on injured reserve doesn't 
get full salary.  If I didn't already wish ill of the NFL, I would
 now.



David






On Sunday, January 8, 2023 at 07:06:55 AM PST, PGage <[email protected]> wrote:









I gave ESPN good marks for how they handled Damar Hamlin’s dramatic and life 
threatening injury last Monday Night. I give them much lower marks for how they 
handled Saturday’s games. With the very welcome news of positive developments 
for Hamlin (who still
 has a long way to go), ESPN switched from the restrained, minimalist 
journalistic stance they took Monday night to the full throated, sentimental, 
religiously transformative propaganda line that no doubt was set in the PR 
offices of the NFL. Joe Buck seemed
 to go as far as to suggest that the injury was actually a net good thing, as 
Hamlin’s recovery has been a unifying force for the nation, while Aikman 
proclaimed that Hamlin’s recovery was due to the power of prayer.


One of my concerns is that this incident almost certainly really was a freak 
accident, less a function of the inherent violence in football than unusual 
timing and location of the contact during that tackle, or perhaps some 
unrecognized heart defect (this
 seems less likely to me). As a result it will be easy to write off all the 
dangers associated with football as part of the random dangers inherent in any 
activity. What is needed is a renewed and sustained focus on the very real, 
very serious, very high health
 risks associated specifically with tackle football. Of course neither ESPN nor 
any of the League’s other broadcast partners (and here the genius of the NFL 
partnering with almost every major outlet) has any business interest in 
focusing on that.


https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/07/business/espn-nfl-damar-hamlin.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare





On Tue, 3 Jan 2023 at 8:34 AM PGage <[email protected]> wrote:


I am no cheerleader for the NFL, ESPN, or Joe Buck, but I give Buck, Aikman and 
ESPN generally positive marks for how they handled an unprecedented medical 
emergency during last night’s MNF telecast. 


As the severity of the incident became clear they were respectful and 
restrained, and avoided speculation. When there wasn’t anything to say, they 
noted that, and didn’t say anything. I thought it was smart to switch to the 
studio and let those people
 fill time, rather than than have the broadcasters on site do that. sideline 
reporter Lisa Salter really distinguished herself, reporting what she could 
observe, filtering out what must have been a flood of rumors and speculation, 
all while allowing her humanity
 and emotion to appropriately come through.


One problem with the restraint they showed is it created a vacuum into which 
anti-vax poison got injected over social media. Qualified physicians could tell 
what had likely happened, but I think ESPN was right not to put one of those 
on, and instead restrict
 themselves to what was actually known.


Hoping for the best for Damar Hamlin, and all the young people who had to 
experience that. Until you actually witness medical professions engage in life 
saving intervention, it is difficult to prepare yourself for what it is like, 
and the sense that you
 might be watching someone you care about die. I am often critical of cliched 
provision of mental health counselors to the scene of emergencies, but this is 
a case where some of those folks are going to need someone to talk to.


“The eerie and heartbreaking scene that unfolded on the field in the aftermath 
of Damar Hamlin’s collapse during Monday night’s Buffalo Bills-Cincinnati 
Bengals game presented a virtually unprecedented scenario for ESPN’s football 
broadcast. As the network
 toggled between the game broadcast crew in Cincinnati and a subdued studio set 
in New York, a news outlet that had prepared to cover one of the season’s 
biggest games suddenly found itself covering a medical calamity.


Viewers at home watched the developing story unfold slowly as commentators Joe 
Buck and Troy Aikman and sideline reporter Lisa Salters received information 
and relayed it in real time. Over the next three hours, the broadcast was 
measured, informative
 and emotional. Analysts, hosts and reporters tried to make sense of a lengthy 
delay and an initial report that play would resume; grappled with the obvious 
severity of the injury; and then finally made impassioned appeals for the game 
to be suspended for the
 night, a choice the NFL eventually made.”


https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2023/01/02/espn-damar-hamlin-bengals-bills/
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