We are directly in the month of May and with the NFL draft now official behind us, the rookie minicams are turned off.
This time of the year gives our first glance to the players of their new team uniforms and also allows us to know what jersey numbers will use certain players. Do not ask Abdul Carter to make a decision there thought, since it is apparently complicated.
With so much happened throughout the world of sport in this part of the calendar, rookie minicams can sometimes fall through cracks. Here in The Skinny Post We, Michael Peterson and RJ Ochoa, don’t let that happen.
Let’s start.
On a scale or 1-10, how excited you are by rookie minicamps?
TORK Mason / USA Today Network through Imagn Images
RJ:
If I am honest, my level of emotion for anything is generally a 10 of 10. I will say that this is a place around a 6-7 designed to maintain relatively fair things.
It’s fun! I like to see players do the rounds for the first time. When it comes to evaluating and analyzing the draft, obviously, we know a lot about different types, but for some reasson, things hit a bit different when we begin to understand what puzzles are a part of a part of sitting down to sit down to sit down
Obviously, the “most prominent aspects” or videos that come from the types of thesis of things of things mean a lot, but this is my parade and I will not let anyone rain in it.
Miguel:
I am one of those people who will take any new football content with a massive smile. Why not be excited about miniCamms? It is a long job until the training field arrives and these brief events so that the teams meet with their newest players are a good Have fun bouche To pass us.
And yes, I totally agree with the idea that the most prominent and the big short practice thesis plays are not something to have a ton of weight
At some point we will hear that the rookie of the giants Abdul Carter is unlockable. Travis Hunter will make a single jump hand interception before doing exactly the same in the offensive. Maybe let’s listen to the Cowboys rookie guard, Tyler Booker, moving the sky and earth for Dallas runners?
Bring everything!
Who should say more when it comes to retired numbers?
Miguel:
There has been a lot of speech around the numbers retired in the NFL during the past week, mainly voting for the search for the rookie of the giants Abdul Carter of a number that he thinks he has better. Alreaty has asked the legend of the Lawrence Taylor franchise if I could use no. 56 But Taylor refusedly refused and told him to open his own path.
After that, the former Marshal of the Giants Campo, Phil Simms, was publicly arrested that he would not mind whether the Carter field or rookie Jaxson Dart wanted to use his non -retired one. 11, the number that Carter had on Penn State. However, Simms’s own family voted against the idea and seems that number 11 will remain retired.
All this has made me think of who, ultimately, I should say the end in the matter. As things are, the franchise gets the last yes or no. However, it was the player and all his effort that they give to the franchise that helped them to withdraw their number. I can’t help thinking that the decision should start and end the owner of that number and certainly I don’t think your family should have a strip, to be honest.
Am I crazy about thinking that?
RJ:
Finally, I think this is the case with the numbers that were officers removed by a team. Letting that person choose makes sense.
To use my team from my team, the Dallas Cowboys have never officially withdrawn any number. They have certain inherited that they never deliver (8, 12 and 22 are the main ones), but they give a little positive challenge to give some, which has worked well) or 94 (not so much).
If the team does things like this, then I think it’s fine. But the giants allowed the people in question at the time the officers withdraw them.
Those are the rules.
What team do you think owns the other right now?
Tim Heitman Imagn images
RJ:
On Sunday night, the NBA saw the Golden State Warriors eliminate Houll Rockets from the playoffs again. I think this is the 70th time this has happened in the last decade.
The general point here is that the Warriors have collectively owned the rockets during the last 10 years. It is never fun when a team has you completely, but sometimes that happens in sports.
In terms of the NFL, I will keep things in relation to my team and keep in mind that the Green Bay Packers are owners of the Dallas Cowboys (I could say that they said that the 49ers of San Francisco do to be clear, but I go with the Packers). Green Bay Tok Dallas comes out in 2014 (this caught him), 2016 (Tof Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott’s new year) and more recently in 2023 when they flew so bad that they broke everything burden Season. Ah, and did I mention that the coach that the Cowboys hired among all that to fix it was the former Packers chief coach in Mike McCarthy?
Stinks.
Miguel:
Oh God, this hurts because I can’t help thinking about my Milwaukee Bucks that Indiana’s Pacers eliminate once again. Somehow in the last seasons, the Pacers and Bucks have created one of the newest rivalries of the NBA. These teams always heat each other, be it regular or postseason, and games are usually full of drama. Take the elimination game, for example. Tyrese Haliburton won a game winning tray with remaining seconds after the Bucks exploded a seven -point advantage with less than a remaining minute. After the game, Haliburton’s father got into Giannis Antetokounmpo’s face, which made him win an indefinite prohibition of all future Pacers games.
That is the type of old school drama we miss in the NBA!
Oh, expected, was it a football question?
Well, how we don’t see the AFC West that has collectively owned Kansas City chiefs for most of the last 10 years. My chargers are lucky to divide a season series with KC and the same goes for the rest of the division. When every new season arrives, they ask me in several radio programs on how I see that the division shakes this year and I always have the same answer: it is the division of the chiefs until some take them away.
Who is a freeing agent who cannot believe that he has not signed with a team yet?
Miguel:
There are two very good offensive guards in the market in Brandon Scherff and Will Hernández. In a league where teams could always update their offensive line, it is strange to see these two still out there.
Now, of course, it would be negligent not to keep in mind that Scherff is old and Hernández comes a seasonal option, but both were boys who did not expect to last long once the new year of the league was in early March.
In a league where veterans, runners and edge corridors seem to take their time to find the correct “adjustment” in free agency, the liner is usual to find a house where you can do the dirty work again for a franchise. I don’t know how much more time they are in the market, but I would be surprised to see any of them without an initial job for when the regular season arrives.
RJ:
I will keep the things simple and go with Keenan everything.
I recognize that last season in Chicago did not go well, but we have given almost all those who were associated with that kind of pass. You can’t tell me that Allen cannot help an NFL team.
Adding veteran receptors is never a bad thing when they have the body of work that Keenan has for his career to date.
Someone is going to look for him.

