The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
WHAT FALCONS DID ABOUT THEIR SUSPENDED LINEMAN
Suspended defensive tackle dropped by team following domestic-violence case.
FLOWERY BRANCH — Just a few months ago, Falcons defensive tackle Ra’Shede Hageman was starting next to Dwight Freeney in the Super Bowl.
After his domestic-violence case was fully adjudicated and he was suspended by the NFL, the Falcons released Hageman, a former second-round draft pick, on Monday.
“The organizational decision to move forward without Hageman was made by the Falcons after a thorough investigative process by local authorities,” the team said.
Hageman was selected with the 37th overall pick in the 2014 draft. He was expected to add some bulk and tenacity to the Falcons’ defensive line.
The Falcons drafted him, despite warnings of maturity and work-ethic issues, from his days at Minnesota. But after working the Senior Bowl, the Falcons
liked Hageman and former defensive line coach Bryan Cox felt he could motivate Hageman.
An anonymous scout told Bob McGinn, then of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, about Hageman before the draft:
“Those guys on that line at Minnesota played hard. Except him, he’s kind of fooling around. He had two sacks the whole year and he’s probably the most talented physical specimen in the Big Ten at the position. He has no feel on the pass rush. He just throttles it down whenever he gets stymied.
“If things don’t go (his way) he just stops. You’ve got your hands full coaching him. I just don’t think mentally it’s there.”
The Falcons found out early about Hageman’s motor on the HBO show “Hard Knocks,” whose cameras recorded Cox telling
coach Mike Smith on the sideline about Hageman’s poor performance in a scrimmage:
“He made some mistakes
and then he got tired and then he was mentally weak. So that wasn’t good. I told him I’m disappointed and discouraged but I ain’t
defeated. It ain’t good enough.”
Cox later told Hageman as they left a meeting: “I need to see less clown class and more productiveness.”
Hageman was a load to block when he was putting forth the effort.
Hageman and Cox would later get in a shoving match during a game against the Carolina Panthers in the 2015 season.
Hageman played in 44 regular-season games and made 15 starts. He has four career sacks, but at 6 feet 6 and 318 pounds, he was expected to become a dominant force.
Things started to unravel for Hageman in March of 2016 when he was involved in a domestic-violence case in DeKalb County.
“Today the NFL placed Ra’Shede Hageman on the commissioner’s exempt list as a result of domestic violence-related charges filed by prosecutors in DeKalb County, following a March 2016 incident,” the league noted Saturday. “The criminal proceeding concluded in late August, and the league’s investigation remains pending.”
A player who is placed on the Commissioner Exempt List may not practice or attend games, but with the club’s permission he may be present at the club’s facility on a reasonable basis for meetings, individual workouts, therapy and rehabilitation, and other permitted non-football activities.
Hageman was reluctant to discuss his case when it was pending. He reportedly pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges.
Hageman was charged with interfering with a call for emergency help, battery family violence and cruelty to children in the third degree.
The charges stem from an incident in which Hageman was alleged to have pulled the hair of the mother of his child and pushed her down in the parking lot outside of her apartment, causing her to sustain lacerations on her left hand and elbow. Hageman then allegedly took her phone, preventing her from calling 911. This incident happened in front of the couple’s child.