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    Tucker's last play (National Post)

    You have all likely seen this piece in today's Journal. But what will likely be of great shock to many is that it was the cover of the National Post's Sports section (with the title "Secondary Route: Eskimos receiver Jason Tucker's last play was as selfless as his career").

    - - - - -
    'Miracle’ last play is the touchstone of a selfless career

    Mark Spector, National Post Published: Monday, July 28, 2008


    EDMONTON -- It was a two-yard catch that should be play-of-the-year material - Jason Tucker making the reception, fumbling the football and then recovering it despite a hit that broke two bones in his neck and nearly paralyzed him.

    The Edmonton Eskimos receiver has made a career of the jaw-dropping play but the most amazing might have been the last play of his career. It was more a testament to football instinct than athletic ability. It was muscle memory working, even when his spinal cord temporarily did not.

    "That is, like, a miracle," marveled Eskimos defensive back Keith Williams. "It just shows you how much he really wants to win, how much he wants to make that play."

    Surely Tucker himself was in a state of semi-consciousness after he had caught a pass over the middle and was felled in a helmet-to-helmet collision by Hamilton's Jykine Bradley.

    Tucker dropped the ball on impact. Bradley went down and stayed down. On his way to the turf, Tucker swivelled, fell towards the bouncing ball and brought it in. He did not make another voluntary move for most of 15 minutes, after which he was strapped to a board and driven out of Ivor Wynne Stadium in an ambulance.

    "To think that, the state that he was in, he's thinking, ‘I've got to recover the football,'" said his head coach Danny Maciocia. "You've seen so many hits over a lifetime, but I have a tough time watching it now. You watch him lunge out, take the ball and cradle it in. We end up kicking a field goal on the next play, and we won that game by only a few points."

    The Eskimos won 19-13. And it would seem Tucker's contribution was his last.

    He had surgery on Sunday at Hamilton General Hospital to help correct fractured and dislocated C6 and C7 vertebrae. The Eskimos flew his wife Giesla into Hamilton, and brought his mother from Texas to look after the couple's four daughters in Edmonton.

    "This is not about playing football," Maciocia said of the next few months, over which doctors have predicted Tucker will make a full recovery. "He's worried about being a husband, being a father. I can guarantee you that. He knows he's a lucky man. He's no fool.

    "He had a great career at [Texas Christian Univerrsity]. He played in the NFL, and came to the CFL and won a couple of Grey Cups. He knows he's got nothing left to prove."

    Tucker's was the second season-ending injury suffered by a star player, after defensive lineman Fred Perry broke bones in his foot in a gruesome incident earlier this season. It is just more fodder for the cliché machine, so that we may hear again how "football is a violent game."

    Receiver Kamau Peterson, Tucker's roommate on the road, found himself packing Tucker's bags before the team checked out of their Hamilton hotel early Saturday morning. It is something many players will do at some point in their careers, when a friend goes down with the kind of injury that you can't just slap an ice bag on top of.

    "To have a career shut off like a light switch?" Peterson said. "I can't imagine it."

    And not just any career.

    In a town that has seen some mighty fine receivers over the years, Tucker climbed to No. 4 on the Eskimos' all-time list. He is a four-time CFL all-star who has wisely saved and invested his earnings, accruing a cattle farm in his home state of Texas where he spends his winters.

    Tucker has always had a place with the Eskimos because, as they used to say in the days of Hugh Campbell and Brian Kelly, when he scored a touchdown he acted as if he had been in the end zone before. His class and production made him the undisputed leader of this team's receiving corps

    "I haven't been here long but when you walk into this locker room, you know it right away," Peterson said. "Half of his pregame speeches, when we meet as a unit, it's just, ‘Nothing needs to be said here.' He is so understated.

    "[He talks about] how not to act like a fool when you get a touchdown. You can't quantify how much we're going to lose in this locker room."

    The CFL has been reborn this summer, after a 2007 season in which the offence and return games went missing. This season has seen intriguing finish after intriguing finish, plenty of points and a renaissance on special teams.

    This past weekend alone, the margin of victory in four games combined was 18 points. That's an average spread of less than five points.

    But the league lost Bobby Ackles, which is a tragedy. And, almost certainly now, a great, understated receiver will retire to his cattle business down south with the same fanfare he reserved for touchdown celebrations.

    That is to say, none.

    "We all know it and we take it for granted," said quarterback Ricky Ray, "Every play. It could all be over. It can be a very brutal sport at times."

    Newly signed receiver Greg Prator practised with the Eskimos Monday. The game stops for no man.

    Copyright © 2007 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.
    Turf Toe:
    - "...turf toe is a common malady that is more of a nuisance than a serious injury."
    - "Turf toe can often progress into a chronic problem..."
    - "A mild instance of turf toe (grade 1) can be merely aggravating while a serious case (grade 3) can be debilitating."

    #2
    Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

    Some moron caller on Total Sports this morning said he didn't think the effort to recover the ball was so great because he may not have had his neck broken by the collision, but by the pile on following the fumble recovery.

    I felt like strangling the guy. So did others, apparently, as there were several emails received by the hosts that took him to task.

    Players know that this can happen any time they step on the field. I respect that they take these risks for so little money, particularly compared to baseball players who make millions and then sit out with a hangnail. This is why I love the CFL.

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

      Originally posted by MoneyGuy View Post
      Some moron caller on Total Sports this morning said he didn't think the effort to recover the ball was so great because he may not have had his neck broken by the collision, but by the pile on following the fumble recovery.

      I felt like strangling the guy. So did others, apparently, as there were several emails received by the hosts that took him to task.

      Players know that this can happen any time they step on the field. I respect that they take these risks for so little money, particularly compared to baseball players who make millions and then sit out with a hangnail. This is why I love the CFL.


      I continued to be stunned by the stupidity of the average person... UN FRICKING REAL.

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

        That was a great article. Not often I say that about the National Post. Kudos.
        Out of my mind; back in five minutes.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

          Originally posted by MoneyGuy View Post
          Some moron caller on Total Sports this morning said he didn't think the effort to recover the ball was so great because he may not have had his neck broken by the collision, but by the pile on following the fumble recovery.

          I felt like strangling the guy. So did others, apparently, as there were several emails received by the hosts that took him to task.

          Players know that this can happen any time they step on the field. I respect that they take these risks for so little money, particularly compared to baseball players who make millions and then sit out with a hangnail. This is why I love the CFL.
          No doubt....The frickin idiot has watched to many Moore/Bertuzzi videos!
          What a LOSER!

          Obviously he never took the time to realize that JT himself said he felt the injury happen on the helmet to helmet contact.

          Unfortunately, these kinds of people "Are Among Us".

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

            Thanks Jack!
            There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

              If Friday night was indeed Jason Tucker's last game as an Eskimo, I want to be one of the first to say it:

              #83 for the Wall of Honor.
              Rhodes to Nowhere - GTFO Len!

              2017 Eskimos Season Ticket Holder - Section P, Row 21!

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                I think he's already a given
                I will not, for a moment longer, support an organization who chooses to cowardly kneel where they once fiercely & proudly stood

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                  Originally posted by MoneyGuy View Post
                  Some moron caller on Total Sports this morning said he didn't think the effort to recover the ball was so great because he may not have had his neck broken by the collision, but by the pile on following the fumble recovery.

                  I felt like strangling the guy. So did others, apparently, as there were several emails received by the hosts that took him to task.

                  Players know that this can happen any time they step on the field. I respect that they take these risks for so little money, particularly compared to baseball players who make millions and then sit out with a hangnail. This is why I love the CFL.
                  I don't disagree with you at all MG.

                  However, I'm just wondering the way things unfolded - do you think it is possible that Jason actually broke his neck on that hit he took earlier over the middle? And, maybe the helmet-to-helmet hit was just the last straw that set everything into motion? On the h-to-h hit, there is no question in my mind he was knocked out for a short period of time.

                  The reason I ask this is the first hit was hellacious, while the second hit looked like such an innocent play?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                    Originally posted by Muley69 View Post
                    I continued to be stunned by the stupidity of the average person... UN FRICKING REAL.
                    You need to move to Saskatchewan....you get used to it eventually....ha ha...
                    Originally posted by Traxy
                    If his moral character isn't good enough for the goddamn Saskatchewan Roughriders, it sure as hell isn't good enough for the Green and Gold.
                    Interesting that it was the Riders who moaned and bitched for a salary cap, and since a cap was put in place for them, they only years they've won they broke the salary cap rules.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                      Excellent article. I hate to even think of that as Tucker's last play though.

                      The guy who called into Total Sports is like a long list of morons who call in and make a complete fool of themselves by proving they know absolutely NOTHING about football. There are a lot of them in this country.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                        Originally posted by Eskiediehard View Post
                        Excellent article. I hate to even think of that as Tucker's last play though.

                        The guy who called into Total Sports is like a long list of morons who call in and make a complete fool of themselves by proving they know absolutely NOTHING about football. There are a lot of them in Saskatchewan.
                        Fixed. The Regina call in shows are absolutely hilarious. My dad usually has to make day trips down to Regina for work and listens to the football call-in shows, and tells me some of the things he hears....Baffling, these people are hilarious. I catch the shows every now and then, hilarious.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                          Every city has their portion of weird fans.
                          If we were put on this earth to help others, what were the others put on earth for?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                            Originally posted by displacedinbc View Post
                            No doubt....The frickin idiot has watched to many Moore/Bertuzzi videos!
                            What a LOSER!

                            Obviously he never took the time to realize that JT himself said he felt the injury happen on the helmet to helmet contact.

                            Unfortunately, these kinds of people "Are Among Us".

                            Probably a Rider Fan, their knowledge is usually lacking.
                            Through the thick and the Thin I will bleed GREEN and GOLD.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Re: Tucker's last play (National Post)

                              Originally posted by Oiler View Post
                              Every city has their portion of weird fans.
                              Have we met?
                              GO ESKS GO!

                              Comment

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