New York Daily News

Osi thinks critics are making Giant error

- BY EVAN GROSSMAN

Former Giant Osi Umenyiora thinks people who have a problem with the NFL fining and suspending head-hunting players need to have their own heads examined.

“For them to come out and speak the way they’re speaking is just the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” he told the Daily News Thursday. “They’re out of their minds.”

Umenyiora made waves with a tweet earlier this week seemingly directed at Pittsburgh safety Mike Mitchell, who popped off against the NFL’s attempts to make the game safer. Mitchell called the league’s efforts to curb the head shots everybody knows can lead to brain injuries a step toward flag football rules.

“Hand us all some flags and we’ll go out there and try to grab the flags off,” Mitchell said in the aftermath of Monday night’s violent Steelers-Bengals clash that produced more than 200 yards in penalties and two players stretchere­d off the field.

“This is not damn football,” Mitchell said. “When I was 6 years old, watching Charles Woodson, Rod Woodson, Sean Taylor, the hitters, Jack Tatum. That’s football. This ain’t football.”

The hard-hitting Tatum was known as “The Assassin” when he played in the 1970s. He also played with so little respect for opponents that Tatum is best known for paralyzing Darryl Stingley with one of those astonishin­g hits during a preseason game. Removing those high hits from the game, and fining, penalizing and suspending those who level them, should never be confused with taking the soul out of football.

“There’s so much beauty and so much aggression and physical nature of the game without hitting people in their head,” Umenyiora said. “I don’t understand it.”

One thing Umenyiora and Mitchell agree on is that the NFL must work to be more consistent with how it punishes players. Steelers receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster was suspended for his high hit and taunting of an injured Vontaze Burfict. Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski was also suspended one game

for his late hit last week. But Bengals safety George Iloka, who tried to take off Antonio Brown’s head, had his one-game ban reduced to just a fine.

Yes, there are inconsiste­ncies and holes in the NFL’s enforcemen­t of these rules. But Umenyiora said the last people who should have a problem with the league trying to make the game safer are the actual players, because they’re the ones who assume all the risk.

“It’s not that I don’t think they realize the dangers of the game. I think we’re all very well aware of the dangers of the game. There’s just this whole aura of the game is macho and all these types of things that people don’t care what the consequenc­es are going to be a little later on,” Umenyiora said.

“I understand that, from the fans’ perspectiv­e. For people watching, I think human beings have a propensity to like violence. You want the collisions, you want all those things. But from the players’ standpoint, I just don’t understand what they’re doing, what they’re talking about, because the evidence is there,” he added.

“You’re not supposed to hit anybody in the head. Nobody signed up for that. That’s not what the league is about, that’s not what the NFL has ever been about. So this whole ‘trying to take away my football,’ it’s nonsensica­l. . . People are dying. People are dying in very, very bad ways because of this head trauma. I don’t understand it.”

Umenyiora, who won two Super Bowls with the Giants, has seen the evidence, and when studies show 110 of 111 brains of dead NFL players were bruised with CTE, he thinks the days of wondering if football could be hazardous to your health are over.

“Now I talk to some of my former teammates, guys in their 30s, and I talk to them and I can tell there’s something starting to go wrong,” he said. “I can hear the way they talk. It’s the strangest thing to see.”

So when Umenyiora hears players complainin­g about football going soft, he can’t believe his ears.

“I’m looking at them saying are you out of your mind? What are you talking about?”

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