Miami Dolphins (3-6) quarterback Tua Tagovailoa attempted to make a head-first tackle attempt after throwing an interception in the second quarter of this past Monday’s 23-15 Week 10 road victory over the Los Angeles Rams (4-5).
For a player who has suffered multiple concussions in his five-year NFL career, including one in Week 2 this season which caused him to miss four games, using your head to make a tackle didn’t seem like a smart decision. But if there’s anything Nick Saban learned coaching him at Alabama, it’s that Tagovailoa is a fearless competitor who will do “whatever it takes to win,” he said on Friday’s “Pat McAfee Show.” While one can commend the competitiveness inside Tagovailoa, Saban admitted he would like to see him “protect himself a little bit.”
“Let me say this about Tua when I had several conversations with him,” Saban said. “Every time that he got hurt at Alabama, he had tightrope [surgery] on his ankle and then everyone knows about him hurting his hip. But every time he got hurt, there was no play to be made. The play broke down, he’s scrambling. I mean, when he breaks his hip, [Henry] Ruggs falls down. There’s nobody even on that side of the field to throw to. Just throw it away. You don’t have to put yourself in harm’s way.
“But he is such a competitor, and I mean in a good way. He’s a team guy and in a good way. He’s going to do whatever it takes to win. I don’t think that he’s ever going to think about, ‘I’m protecting myself.’ He never has. I don’t think he ever will, and you have to appreciate that because that’s what great competitors do. And that’s not a bad thing. But we don’t want to see the guy get hurt, so sometimes you would wish that maybe he’d protect himself a little bit.”
As Tagovailoa went low to make the tackle, Rams linebacker Christian Rozeboom‘s knee violently connected with the side of his helmet. Tagovailoa didn’t show any side effects from the contact and played the remainder of the game.
Tagovailoa said Wednesday “it didn’t feel as bad as what it probably looked like.” He added he wouldn’t do anything differently if he was in that position again.
“I would say it didn’t feel as bad as what it probably looked like, may have looked like,” Tua Tagovailoa said, via the Dolphins’ website. “When we watched it, our coach had said that ‘he sort of kneed you in the head.’ Essentially, you’re out there playing football; I didn’t necessarily feel that, and I wasn’t just going to jump out of the way for him to just run down the sideline and potentially score.
“So, you’ve got to make decisions, and I should have never threw the pick in the first place so that’s it.”
Miami Dolphins (3-6) quarterback Tua Tagovailoa attempted to make a head-first tackle attempt after throwing an interception in the second quarter of this past Monday’s 23-15 Week 10 road victory over the Los Angeles Rams (4-5). For a player who has suffered multiple concussions in his ...
It’s also trending among top offenses in the league Success in the modern NFL is founded on passing the ball well. It’s a passing league and the rules have changed over the years and decades to favor passing. And over the ...
The game after Dennis Allen was fired, Cam Jordan went from playing a career low in snaps to a snap percentage that tied his season high. That’s not an accident. Interim coach Darren Rizzi said there was a “conscious decision” to get ...
He says ‘they are a great team’ C.J. Stroud spoke to the media this week about the Cowboys defense and what he’s seen from Micah Parsons on film. On thoughts on Dallas Cowboys defense and the challenges they present C.J. : You can tell ...
Will Levis will reportedly have the remainder of the 2024 NFL season to make his case to be the Tennessee Titans' quarterback of the future. Joe Rexrode of The Athletic reported that Levis will get a chance to prove his worth as ...