The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Beckham, Norman annoyed by NFL’s pregame talk

- By Barry Wilner

EAST RUTHERFORD >> Odell Beckham Jr. and Josh Norman believe they are being picked on.

Not by each other, but by the NFL.

No more infamy was the NFL’s message to Beckham and Norman. Before Sunday’s game between the Giants and Redskins, referee John Hussey and field judge Rick Patterson delivered explicit instructio­ns on how they expected New York’s star receiver and Washington’s All-Pro cornerback to behave.

Beckham didn’t appreciate the special treatment, nor did he think it was necessary. Ditto for Norman.

“They implemente­d a new rule this year. It’s basically the Odell Beckham Jr. rule,” Beckham said. “I had three personal fouls last year, so they said if you come out and get one personal foul and another one for the same thing (you are ejected). Today, they came up before the game and said, if you do anything, we’re throwing you out of the game. That was before the game.

“There was no, you get a warning. There was not any of that. You just have to be on your best behavior. Unfortunat­ely, that’s what it’s come to. It’s not really football anymore as much as it is all the other things that play into it.”

Norman was just as annoyed by the pregame treatment.

“They pulled me off to the side and said, “We are not going to make a mockery of the game,” Norman said. “I don’t know if that was from the top, or (Hussey) saying that directly to me.

“Wow. What am I doing? I’m just playing a sport that God has blessed us with and being as physical as I can be within the rules and the confines of what they ask us to do. That (mockery) was a big word. I kind of felt bad.

“At the same time, I appreciate the officials. They really did a good job of controllin­g the game. It didn’t get out of hand.”

Not like it did in December, but it had its moments.

In that previous Beckham-Norman affair, while Norman was establishi­ng himself as a premier coverage guy with Carolina, Beckham committed three personal fouls. There were plenty of nasty words aimed at each other, too, and some excuses for the near-brawling.

Beckham subsequent­ly was suspended for a game, and when Norman signed as a free agent with Washington, it meant two meetings per season for the foes.

Beckham insists any feud is vastly overblown.

“It’s never been an issue,” he said. “It’s been something that’s been made up by all of this, in a sense. All I care about is football, and I’m sure it’s the same for him.

“We’re just two fierce competitor­s, that’s all it is.”

On that score, Norman agreed.

“We got it in us. We are fighters, fighters to the end,” he said. “Scrapping ... real gritty, all the way down to the bone and gristle. Fight, fight, fight.”

This first face-to-face matchup as division rivals saw Beckham make seven receptions for 121 yards. He spiced up his performanc­e with some sideline antics in an intense fourth quarter.

Incensed at one point by the Giants’ inability to score, he swung his helmet at the kicking net. The net didn’t appreciate it and hit Beckham in the head.

He said he didn’t remember doing it.

The biggest news either player made on the field was Beckham’s 200th career catch, the quickest ever (30 games).

Until late in the game, Beckham was a minor factor while handled, mostly in press coverage, by Norman. They did bump on the first snap from scrimmage, a running play on which Beckham wasn’t required to do much as a blocker. It was nondescrip­t contact.

From there, it didn’t get particular­ly physical for three quarters. No spearing by Beckham while Norman was on the ground. No flailing away with the arms in coverage. Not much trash talk, either.

It couldn’t last.

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