Month: November 2024

HGH Allegation Notes: 12/28/15

Speaking over the phone to Peter King of TheMMQB.com on Sunday, Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning once again strongly denied allegations connecting him to HGH, which surfaced in an Al Jazeera documentary.

“I can promise you this is a total fabrication,” Manning said. “I simply do not understand how somebody makes up something like this and it becomes a story. And then the guy (Charles Sly) admits he made it up and it’s still a story. How exactly does that work?”

As King and Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk both detail, one primary point of contention between Al Jazeera and Manning’s camp is the timeline for when Sly was employed at Indianapolis’s Guyer Institute, which allegedly sent HGH to Manning’s wife. Founder Dale Guyer insists that Sly was never an employee, and only served as an intern in 2013, well after Manning was treated at the facility. However, reporter Deborah Davies is adamant that a transcript of a phone conversation she had with the clinic reveals that Sly began working there in October 2011.

The uncertainty surrounding Sly’s time at the Guyer Institute isn’t the only item related to the report that’s worth passing along today. Here are a few more:

  • As Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk writes, the NFL had no real jurisdiction over players during the four-month lockout in 2011, and didn’t even didn’t test for HGH until September 2014. As such, even if Manning or other players did use certain PEDs, they may not have violated any league policies.
  • In a separate piece at Pro Football Talk, Florio wonders if Manning shouldn’t have simply gone the “no comment” route when these allegations surfaced, rather than extending the news cycle with his repeated, forceful denials. Florio also points out that Manning may not want to sue over the Al Jazeera report – as the quarterback suggested on Sunday that he might – since that process would mean making his private life public. For his part, Steelers linebacker James Harrison – who was also named in the report – said he looked into pursuing legal action, but decided it wouldn’t be worth it monetarily, tweets Mark Kaboly of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  • Mike Klis of 9News (Twitter links) points out that Manning made his visits to the Guyer Institute accompanied by Colts medical people, making it unlikely that the alternative treatment he received there violated any laws or NFL policies.
  • According to Jason Cole of Bleacher Report (video link), the NFL is getting pressured to take these allegations seriously and devote resources to investigating them. After all, the NFL dedicated significant time and energy to the Deflategate allegations, treating them with at least as much weight as PED allegations, so the league will face scrutiny if it doesn’t do the necessary legwork to look into the latest accusations.

Josh Freeman Working Out For Colts

The Colts are bringing in former Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freeman for a workout, according to Mike Freeman of Bleacher Report (Twitter link). Indianapolis may be in the market for a free agent QB, with most of the team’s in-house options battling some sort of injury.

The Colts’ still have an outside chance at earning a playoff berth, but several things would have to go right for the team, and that includes winning its Week 17 game against the Titans. With Andrew Luck having been on the shelf for a good chunk of the season, the club’s backup options are dwindling — Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets that Matt Hasselbeck has sustained a sprained AC joint, while Charlie Whitehurst suffered a hamstring injury. Despite having four quarterbacks on their 53-man roster, the Colts may only have one (Stephen Morris) who is healthy enough to play, and he has been with the team for just four days.

Freeman, who turns 28 next month, was Tampa Bay’s full-time starting quarterback from 2009 to 2012, but saw the wheels come off in 2013 and was cut by the Buccaneers. In his first four seasons, the former 17th overall pick completed 58.8% of his passes and tossed 78 touchdowns to go with 63 interceptions, as well as throwing for more than 4,000 yards in 2012.

Since a brief 2013 stint in Minnesota, however, Freeman has bounced around from team to team, unable to find a permanent NFL home. Most recently, he spent some time with the Dolphins this summer and then played for the FXFL’s Brooklyn Bolts in the fall.

Considering how long it has been since Freeman played in an NFL game, the Colts are unlikely to sign him with an eye toward having him play on Sunday. But if he impresses in his audition, perhaps Freeman could be added to the club’s roster as an emergency backup for Week 17 and a potential option for 2016.

Latest On Browns’ Ray Farmer, Mike Pettine

Earlier this month, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com suggested that it’s not realistic to expect Browns general manager Ray Farmer and head coach Mike Pettine to both return to Cleveland next year. According to Rapoport’s report, the deteriorating relationship between the coaching staff and the front office made it “unfathomable” that the Browns would want to have Farmer and Pettine continue working together in 2016.

Today, Jason Cole of Bleacher Report (video link) explores that same line of thinking. Citing sources within the Browns organization, Cole reports that Farmer’s seat appears hotter than Pettine’s, with the head coach considered the more likely candidate to keep his job. Cole’s sources indicate that Farmer’s draft selections and roster decisions are more to blame for Cleveland’s struggles this season than the job Pettine has done with the talent – or lack thereof – he has been given.

While Cole doesn’t go so far as to say that the Browns will fire Farmer in January, it sounds like that’s a realistic possibility. If owner Jimmy Haslam does decide to replace Farmer, Cole expects Chris Ballard (Chiefs), George Paton (Vikings), and Duke Tobin (Bengals) to receive consideration for the job, since those executives are viewed by the NFL as some of the top general manager candidates around the league.

With one week until the NFL’s Black Monday, I’d imagine there are several scenarios still in play in Cleveland, but it sounds like any outcome that involves both Pettine and Farmer staying in their current roles is extremely unlikely.

NFC Notes: Forte, Lions, Lynch, Bonuses

With Matt Forte‘s contract set to expire, Bears tackle Kyle Long hopes to continue playing with his veteran teammate, but knows there’s a chance next week’s game could be their last together, as Jeff Dickerson of ESPN.com writes.

“I’d love to play with Matt forever, but it’s a business,” Long said. “I understand that. If he is around, I’ll be as psyched as anybody. And it will be one of the hardest things ever to see him in another jersey if that’s the case. But we have one more game with him, sure. We’re going to run the workhorse until the wheels fall off.”

Here’s more from around the NFC:

  • Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford has turned around his 2015 season since Jim Bob Cooter took over as the team’s offensive coordinator, so it’s no surprise that Stafford would like to see Cooter keep the job in 2016, as Tim Twentyman of DetroitLions.com details.
  • Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch hasn’t progressed as quickly as expected in his recovery from a sports hernia ailment, but he was seen training on Christmas Day at a San Francisco facility. The 29-year-old is expected to be back in Seattle this week, with an eye on potentially returning to practice, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reports. A determination on Lynch’s ability to play in his fifth postseason with the Seahawks remains elusive, however.
  • In advance of the Seahawks‘ rematch with the Rams on Sunday, GM John Schneider said offensive rookie of the year contender Todd Gurley rated as the No. 1 player on Seattle’s draft board, the Seattle Times’ Bob Condotta reports (on Twitter).
  • Joel Corry of CBSSports.com (Twitter links) identifies a couple players with major money on the line in Week 17, noting that Vikings running back Adrian Peterson‘s 2016 roster bonus will be reduced by $1MM if he doesn’t rush for 132 yards against the Packers, while Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee will miss out on a $2MM salary increase if his playing time for the season dips below 80% (he’s currently at 82.1%).
  • One player who has cashed in on bonus money recently is Cardinals edge defender Dwight Freeney, who earned an extra $300K on Sunday after racking up three more sacks. Per Ed Werder of ESPN.com (Twitter links), Cardinals president Michael Bidwell says he hopes to write Freeney a year-end bonus check worth more than the $500K the veteran pass rusher has already earned.

Sam Robinson contributed to this post.

Updated Projections For 2016 Draft Order

Last week, we examined what the NFL’s projected draft order for the top 10 picks of 2016 would look like, with the Titans in the lead for the number one overall pick. Tennessee’s blowout loss to the Texans on Sunday kept the Titans firmly in the driver’s seat for the No. 1 pick, and the club could clinch that top selection with a loss next weekend against the Colts.

While the outlook at the top of the projected 2016 draft order remains the same, with the Browns right behind the Titans for that first overall pick, there were a few other changes to the top 10 based on this weekend’s results. The Ravens’ win over Pittsburgh dropped Baltimore from No. 3 to No. 8, while victories by the Saints and Bears removed those teams from the top 10 for now, with the Buccaneers and Giants taking over their spots.

Here’s the current projected order for the top 10 picks of the 2016 NFL draft, with just one week left in the regular season. Teams are sorted by worst record, with strength of schedule serving as the tiebreaker — the weaker a team’s schedule, the higher its draft pick.

  1. Tennessee Titans: 3-12 (.493)
  2. Cleveland Browns: 3-12 (.532)
  3. San Diego Chargers: 4-11 (.511)
  4. Dallas Cowboys: 4-11 (.529)
  5. San Francisco 49ers: 4-11 (.558)
  6. Miami Dolphins: 5-10 (.453)
  7. Jacksonville Jaguars: 5-10 (.467)
  8. Baltimore Ravens: 5-10 (.489)
  9. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 6-9 (.453)
  10. New York Giants: 6-9 (.498)

While a loss by the Titans would lock them into the first overall pick, the door remains open for the Browns, and given all the ties on this list, it’s possible the top 10 could shuffle around significantly by next Monday, so stay tuned.

East Notes: Coughlin, Grimes, Eagles, Pats

Asked after Sunday night’s embarrassing loss to the Vikings about his job security, Giants head coach Tom Coughlin insisted that he’s not worried about it, and that it’ll “take care of itself,” according to Dan Graziano of ESPN.com.

While Coughlin claims he’s not concerned about his future with the Giants, he probably should be, says Jordan Raanan of NJ.com, who adds that the “walls are closing in” on the team’s longtime head coach. Graziano adds that there was a strange vibe in New York’s locker room after Sunday’s game, suggesting that players seem somewhat resigned to Coughlin’s potential fate, despite the fact that most of those players still strongly support and respect the coach.

As we wait to see what the next couple weeks hold for the Giants and Coughlin, let’s check in on some other notes out of the NFL’s East divisions….

  • As Armando Salguero of the Miami Herald writes, members of the Dolphins‘ front office, including Mike Tannenbaum, aren’t thrilled with the attention that Brent Grimes‘ wife, Miko Grimes, brings to the organization. After being arrested before a game earlier this season, she has recently been critical of quarterback Ryan Tannehill, as well as certain local media members. Although her outspoken nature may not significantly impact Grimes’ future in Miami, it’s fair to wonder if it’ll be taken into consideration if the club explores the possibility of cutting the cornerback or asking him to take a pay cut.
  • After Jason Peters removed himself from Saturday’s game against Washington, reports surfaced that the Eagles’ veteran tackle didn’t want to risk further injury for a team that wasn’t headed to the playoffs. Confirming that story, Les Bowen of the Philadelphia Daily News explores what it might mean for Peters and Chip Kelly in 2016.
  • The Patriots took another injury hit on Sunday when starting tackle Sebastian Vollmer went down with a sprained ankle, per Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk. Vollmer has an MRI scheduled for Monday.
  • The fact that the usually-effusive Jerry Jones wasn’t even willing to talk to reporters following the Cowboys‘ latest loss is a reflection of how bad things have gotten in Dallas this season, says Darin Gantt of Pro Football Talk. It’ll be interesting to see whether the frustrating year results in major offseason changes, or if the Joneses will simply count on Tony Romo‘s return to reverse the team’s fortunes in 2016.

South Notes: Saints, Colts, Hoyer, Wright

Some inside the Saints organization view Drew Brees‘ contract as an albatross that’s hampered their ability to progress, Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reports (via Conor Orr of NFL.com).

The Saints are over the cap going into the offseason for the second straight year and may have to part with more veterans as a result. Brees will be due a $30MM cap hold in 2016, a number that will likely be renegotiated if the soon-to-be-16th-year quarterback is to return for an 11th season in New Orleans.

The 36-year-old Brees enters the final year of the five-year, $100MM deal he inked in 2012.

Here are some more items from the Southern divisions during Week 16’s penultimate game.

  • NFL executives aren’t ruling out Sean Payton going back on his word on returning to New Orleans for an 11th season, per Rapoport. A path out of the Big Easy for Payton is a potential trip to Los Angeles. Payton’s daughter attends USC, and Rapoport believes a union with Philip Rivers would make sense if the Chargers move north and opt not to bring back Mike McCoy for a fourth year.
  • The Colts‘ pair of middle-aged starters appear to be heading in divergent directions, with Adam Vinatieri looking set to come back for a 21st season and Matt Hasselbeck appearing prepared to retire after his 18th year, Zak Keefer of the Indianapolis Star writes. Hasselbeck left a game due to injury for the fourth straight week. Both are free agents after the season, but Colts punter Pat McAfee insists the 43-year-old Vinatieri will suit up next season.
  • Hasselbeck does not sound optimistic when referring to his chances at making another start this season, per Stephen Holder of the Indianapolis Star. With the Colts almost certainly out of the playoff picture, Charlie Whitehurst or Stephen Morris could get the call in Week 17.
  • Despite Brandon Weeden‘s surprising work keeping the Texans in front in the division, Bill O’Brien will go back to Brian Hoyer once the veteran is able to return from the concussion he suffered, Aaron Wilson of the Houston Chronicle reports.
  • Kendall Wright appears likely to be shut down for the Titans‘ Week 17 game against the Colts after the fourth-year wide receiver reinjured his MCL, Terry McCormick of TitanInsider.com reports. Wright left Sunday’s game in the first half when doctors determined he could endure a further setback by continuing to play on the injury that cost him three games in November. Wright’s set to enter his fifth-year option season in 2016 and will do so coming off by far his worst year as a pro.

Latest On Drug Allegations

We heard the nationally televised stance from Peyton Manning regarding the Al Jazeera report linking him to HGH usage, but James Harrison and Clay Matthews addressed their accusations following their games Sunday.

Although Manning’s name jumps out most in this report, Harrison appears prominently as well, and the Steelers linebacker predictably denied any wrongdoing, telling media (including the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review’s Mark Kaboly) “They never supplied me with anything. “I never took steroids. Point, blank, period. End of discussion.”

The report linked Harrison to the performance-enhancing drug Delta-2, but the 2008 defensive player of the year joined the chorus of denials emerging this weekend. At 37, Harrison is the NFL’s second-oldest defensive player behind Charles Woodson.

The Steelers declined to comment.

As for Matthews, whom the report connects with requesting Toradol and using other drugs, the Packers standout claims he did not know who alleged supplier at the Indiana-based Guyer Institute Charles Sly is (Twitter link via Tom Silverstein of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel).

I don’t know who the guy is. I don’t know what he looks like. I haven’t talked to him,” Matthews told media.

Also named in the report were Packers linebackers Julius Peppers and Mike Neal, who both denied involvement (Twitter links via Silverstein), with Peppers calling the report “irresponsible journalism.”

Sly said in the report he ventured to the homes of both Green Bay linebackers and talked to around 25 Packers players, alleging Peppers to have taken Delta-2 “maybe two days a week.” Peppers has served a suspension for PEDs, doing so as a rookie in 2002.

Matthews was not linked to the advanced performance-enhancer due to his higher-profile stature inducing reluctance, but the report does infer past HGH usage, claiming the seventh-year veteran wasn’t using the drug “anymore.”

Cowboys’ Barry Church Breaks Arm

The Cowboys’ cratering season encountered more turbulence in Week 16, with starting safety Barry Church suffering a broken arm that will shelve him for Week 17 and a considerable stretch of offseason time, Charean Williams of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports.

After starting 47 straight games — and 50 overall in his six-year career — for the Cowboys, Church broke his right arm while tackling Tyrod Taylor in the fourth quarter Sunday.

As of now, the injury will not require surgery, instead being a “clean break” necessitating a cast, Church told media.

Church finished with 77 tackles. The 27-year-old ex-undrafted free agent has one more season left on his contract, which will pay him a base salary of $2.75MM in 2016.

Church last missed time in Dallas after tearing his Achilles’ tendon during the 2012 season.

 

 

Latest On Peyton Manning, HGH Allegations

6:56pm: The quarterback told Peter King of TheMMQB.com he will probably sue over these allegations, Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk relays. Manning cited anger over this account as the reasoning behind potential litigation, but Florio argues such a course of action would further open up the guarded signal-caller’s private life to scrutiny. In Florio’s mind, the 18-year veteran’s staunch denials intensified the degree the to which American media covered this matter. Such a lawsuit would keep this story going in future news cycles, Florio writes, instead of allowing it to run its course.

11:55am: Manning just completed an interview with ESPN’s Lisa Salters, and several prominent journalists have indicated (via Twitter) that they have never seen Manning so angry. Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk provides some of the choicest quotes from that interview, in which Manning said he was “angry, furious, [and] disgusted.” Manning added, “[I’m] [s]ickened by it. I’m not sure I understand how someone can make something up about somebody, admit that he made it up, and yet somehow it’s published in a story. I don’t understand that.”

Thus far, the NFL has declined to comment on the documentary, although Barry Svrluga, Mark Maske, and Adam Kilgore of The Washington Post report that the league will investigate all players named in the documentary. Jason La Canfora of CBS Sports confirms that report (via Twitter), although La Canfora adds that the fact that Sly has already recanted his story “has not gone unnoticed at the league office” (Twitter link). Per ESPN.com news services, Sly said, “When I was [working at The Guyer Institute], I had never seen the Mannings ever. They were not even living there at that time. Someone who worked there said they had been there before. That was the extent of any knowledge I had. I feel badly. I never saw any files. This is just amazing that it reached this point.” 

In the Salters interview, Manning describes the procedures he underwent at The Guyer Institute and says everything was done with the authorization and under the supervision of the Colts’ medical staff. Nicki Jhabvala of The Denver Post provides more details via Twitter.

10:48am: Within the documentary, pharmacy intern Charlie Sly goes into great detail about his interactions with Manning.

He’s really cool if you just sit down with him. The first time I met him was at [Dr. Dale Guyer’s office]. He sounded real genuine. He’s like, ‘I really appreciate you guys working with me.’ He sounded real genuine,” Sly said.

Sly also claims that the prescriptions for performance enhancing drugs were actually written out in the name of Peyton’s wife, Ashley.

Him and his wife would come in after hours and get IVs and [expletive]. One thing that Guyer does is that he dispenses drugs out of his office which physicians can do in the United States, just not that many of them do it. And, all the time, we would be sending Ashley Manning drugs. Like growth hormone, all the time, everywhere…Florida. And it would never be under Peyton’s name, it would always be under her name. We were sending it everywhere.”

Sly also made damning accusations regarding Packers defensive stars Mike Neal, Julius Peppers, and Clay Matthews. The former Guyer Institute employee claimed that Neal started out as a client before getting a great number of his teammates on board.

Last year I went out to Green Bay for like six weeks. I set Mike’s stuff but then, like, he started bringing everybody..I’m not even joking, more than half the team started to come by,” said Sly, who went on to name Julius Peppers as one of the clients that came to him through Neal. “So, I would do everything, usually at Mike Neal’s house or at Julius’ house.”

The pharmacist said that Peppers takes Delta-2, a substance mentioned frequently throughout the documentary, but “not that often” and maybe as infrequently as “two days a week.” Sly estimated that he has probably talked to about 25 Packers players and “directed like ten of them, twelve of them.” When it came to Delta-2, Sly said that he only pointed them in the right direction to acquire it rather than actually supply those players with it.

While Sly and Collins are chatting, the pharmacist tells Collins that he had just received a text from Matthews asking him for an oral form of Torodol, a powerful anti-inflammatory. Sly also indicates that Matthews has used Ipamorelin, a peptide, and said that he doesn’t believe that he takes HGH “anymore.” He says that Matthews was not among his clients taking Delta-2, however, because he didn’t want to “push the envelope” with Matthews since he is a “high-profile guy.”

9:52am: Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets that Peyton Manning has retained the services of former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer, who now does crisis management work. Rapoport spoke with Fleischer last night, and he was told that Manning has never used HGH, has never failed any league drug tests, and that the Al Jazeera documentary that created a media firestorm yesterday would not affect Manning’s status with the league. Fleischer did say that Manning’s wife, Ashley Manning, was a patient at the anti-aging clinic referenced by the documentary and had a prescription from the clinic, though Fleischer would not say what the prescription was for (Twitter links).

The Broncos, for their part, have stood behind their quarterback, and have released the following statement via the team’s official website:

“Knowing Peyton Manning and everything he stands for, the Denver Broncos support him 100 percent. These are false claims made to Al Jazeera, and we don’t believe the report.

“Peyton is rightfully outraged by the allegations, which he emphatically denied to our organization and which have been publicly renounced by the source who initially provided them.

“Throughout his NFL career, particularly during his four seasons with the Broncos, Peyton has shown nothing but respect for the game. Our organization is confident Peyton does things the right way, and we do not find this story to be credible.”

Rory Parks contributed to this post.