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James Harrison Suspension: Steelers LB Responds To NFL Ruling With LOL!' Tweet

By JIM LITKE   12/14/11 04:49 AM ET   AP

-- Even after he became a star with the Pittsburgh Steelers, James Harrison lugged around the equipment bag from his NFL Europe days with the Rhein Fire until it fell apart. The way the story gets told is that Harrison did it to remind himself how difficult the trip had been. In light of recent developments, it also suggests he has a hard time letting some things go.

Take Harrison's most recent run-in with Commissioner Roger Goodell. It was the result of his fifth illegal hit on a quarterback over the last three seasons – a span in which he also had two other fines for unnecessary roughness – but the first to get him suspended. Harrison's loss of a game check will cost him $73,000 or so and that's on top of the $125,000 he's already forked over. If you think he was chastened, think again.

Harrison's immediate reaction after the suspension was to tweet "Lol!" Soon after, he told a reporter about the helmet-to-facemask smash he put on Browns quarterback Colt McCoy last Thursday, "If I would have really hit him, I would have close to knocked him out." Later, Harrison posted another tweet, "Thank you to all my fans and supporters, I'm just going to move on from here and get ready for my next game."

Barring a successful appeal that won't be Monday night, when Pittsburgh plays San Francisco with quarterback Ben Roethlisberger trying to make do on a gimpy ankle and the Steelers competing with the Ravens for the top spot in the AFC North.

"We're disappointed. We're disappointed for James because we know how hard he's worked to play within the rules," coach Mike Tomlin said. "We accept the judgment rendered by the league office and we'll move forward."

Not so fast. The Steelers have already been fined at least 13 times for illegal hits this season. They were also the only team in the league to vote against the new collective bargaining agreement in August, unhappy with the appeals process in place regarding fines and suspensions. It was a pet peeve of Harrison's long before that. After previous run-ins with the league's disciplinarians, he has threatened to retire rather than change the way he plays and called Goodell "stupid," "a puppet" and "a dictator" in the course of an interview with Men's Journal during the lockout. At the last Super Bowl, he used the stage to taunt the commissioner for trying to legislate against the vicious hits Harrison specializes in.

"We'll lay a pillow down where I'm going to tackle them, so they don't hit the ground too hard, Mr. Goodell," he said.

By Harrison's twisted logic, he was "all for player safety," including his own. But in the next breath, Harrison confided he'd suffered several concussions, hadn't reported any of them to team officials in the past and had no plans to start.

"You shouldn't be able to come back in the game," he said. "But if they don't know, they don't have that decision to make."

Whether McCoy was as forthcoming with the Browns after the collision with Harrison remains something of a mystery. Cleveland coach Pat Shurmur has been coy about whether the team complied with the league protocol and tested McCoy, who returned to the game but remembered little about it afterward.

The league is running low on able bodies as it is, and levying stiffer fines and suspensions for any player who knocks another one out won't help keep more of them on the field. When Harrison hammered Cleveland's Mohamed Massaquoi in October 2010, the receiver's agent stated the obvious: that fines, no matter how stiff, aren't enough to make players change.

"Harrison has made $20 million over the past three years, and they only fined him $75,000?" agent Brian Ayrault said. "To me, that's not going to be a deterrent. The Browns are probably going to be without a starter this week. I don't think that fine is a deterrent or fair to competitive balance."

The suspension makes Harrison the first player to miss game time under new league rules aimed at curtailing "devastating" hits. It's a good first step, but still on the light side, considering Harrison is the NFL's biggest repeat offender, Tomlin and the Steelers coaching staff either can't or won't convince him to lower his aim on hits, and if a one-game suspension doesn't do the trick, the next one is going to have to be long enough to get the message across.

The last thing the NFL can afford at the moment is more players trying to tear each other's heads off.

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org. Follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke.

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-- Even after he became a star with the Pittsburgh Steelers, James Harrison lugged around the equipment bag from his NFL Europe days with the Rhein Fire until it fell apart. The way the story gets to...
-- Even after he became a star with the Pittsburgh Steelers, James Harrison lugged around the equipment bag from his NFL Europe days with the Rhein Fire until it fell apart. The way the story gets to...
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IndependentAndProud
Stop trying to change the subject!
01:06 AM on 12/17/2011
This guy is all class. Fifth class.
06:44 PM on 12/16/2011
Gee...my first time commenting and reading comments and I feel sick. Good-bye, won't be back.
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PackFan76
Religion is like Wikipedia.
04:53 PM on 12/16/2011
S0c!op@th!! This guy is dirty and a menace. One more dirty hit and he should be b@nn3d for life!!
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SheikArbusto
11:33 AM on 12/16/2011
Stooler fans:

You have one of the dirtiest teams in the NFL. You have been fined 13 times already this season. Harrison is the king of thugs. You can help clean up the NFL or deny your part in this and stick your head in the sand (which might be preferable to breathing the air in Pittsburgh).
06:34 PM on 12/16/2011
better than the air in Cleveland.
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LSULinebacker64
TRUTH, FAITH, & TRUST in your HEART, SOUL, & MIND
07:52 AM on 12/16/2011
I'd really like to see every Personal Foul call made every week for (Rouching the Passer)... It would be to see (how) every call was made by each different (Ref Crew) at each game...
1. How many come from Helmet to Helmet...
2. How many come from Late Hits...
3. How many come from Helmets into the body...
I'd like to see how many of those (PF) would actually not be one...
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Fez
Ignorance is no excuse for the law.
03:20 PM on 12/15/2011
James, James... the correct term is "SOL." And we all look forward to the day when a crackback block blows out your knee and sends you to Cane City.
02:43 PM on 12/15/2011
Harrison hit was clean, and exactly how he was taught to tackle. Two years ago this was highlight film material, showed when he made the pro bowl. Goodell is ruining the NFL. We do not want arena football.
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Michael D OBrien
We can be heroes, if just for one day!
04:52 PM on 12/15/2011
Jack Tatum fan?
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emrogers
What could possibly go wrong?
05:35 PM on 12/15/2011
Why is it that nearly every other player can figure this out? It ain't that hard. But james makes his best hits on defensless players - everyone knows that. The NFL is better than ever. Ray Lewis hits twice as hard as jimmy and does it cleanly.
06:27 PM on 12/16/2011
actually, lewis was fined this year for a hit during the Steeler game.
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waltzacrosstexas
When in doubt... just ask "HER" to dance!
10:46 AM on 12/15/2011
I think he should be eliminated from the NFL - in any and all aspects of the league - now and forever. It's PAST time for the Commissioner Goodell to put this guy on the sidelines for good - and the good of the game. And if I were a gambler... I would bet that this will eventually happen, so it might as well be now!

He shows absolutely no remorse... no respect... no class... and these type of individuals are never going to change their way(s).
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08:35 AM on 12/15/2011
Harrison "giving the finger" attitude towards NFL is in-line with a long history going back to his high school days assaulting his coaches and team suspensions. The Steelers may have had enough of him.
08:28 AM on 12/15/2011
Speaking of Ray Lewis (EXCON) where was the flag for his helmet to helmet hit on Hines Ward in Pittsburgh that put him out of the game? Then later they call a lame penalty on Ryan Clark.
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emrogers
What could possibly go wrong?
01:52 PM on 12/15/2011
So what? That's your excuse for harrison?
02:46 PM on 12/15/2011
I'm not making excuses for Harrison, If you watched that game, you know the hit I'm speaking of. I just wish refs were more consistent with there calls. That was a blatantly missed head shot to a helpless receiver. That's what I thought the rule was all about. As for Mccoy, had he not lowered his head at the time of the hit, it wouldn't have been helmet to helmet. He was running hard. It's hard to pull up at the last min. when he decides to dump it off. Easier said than done.
10:53 PM on 12/14/2011
He meant Lots of Love.
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Nate35
09:28 PM on 12/14/2011
Day one of football - "never hit with the top of your head."

Expecting tacklers to deliver hits safely is nothing new. A hit can be horrendously violent without being designed to deliver long-term brain injury. Harrison has obviously been coached badly on this issue for much of his career, but that doesn't excuse his current attitude.

Next time don't suspend him, just announce that no chop-block penalties will be called for the Steelers the next game. We'll see what his views on player-safety regulations are after he's taken a 300 pound guard through the ACL.
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emrogers
What could possibly go wrong?
08:38 PM on 12/14/2011
Steeler fans repsonse...whaaa, whaaa, whaaa, whaa, whaaa....
07:17 PM on 12/14/2011
Psychopathy (/saɪˈkɒpəθi/[1][2]) is a mental disorder characterized primarily by a lack of empathy and remorse, shallow emotions, egocentricity, and deceptiveness. Psychopaths are highly prone to antisocial behavior and abusive treatment of others, and are very disproportionately responsible for violent crime when in a violent emotional state or situation. Though lacking empathy and emotional depth, they often manage to pass themselves off as average individuals by feigning emotions and lying about their past.

Think Harrison fits the bill; Football is a violent game but he could have just as easily wrapped McCoy up with his arms and tackled him. Harrison drove the top of his helmet into McCoys chin. That's not a "good" or "clean" hit, that's aiming to injure someone. Play hard but no reason to purposely injure.
10:55 PM on 12/14/2011
Then about 90% of NFL defensive players that played prior to the 1980s were psychopathic.
06:30 PM on 12/16/2011
thank you for this...this is not football anymore. Ready to sell the season tickets.
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thinkingwomanmillstone
great, green, globs of greasy grimey GOPerspeak.
08:00 PM on 12/16/2011
The medical knowledge of the effects of repeated hits to the head has blossomed in the last 10 years. The players have to play by the rules in force at the time of the game...it's not that difficult of a concept. Harrison doesn't think the rules apply...he will be called for it every time. He purposely injures other players and hurts his team with the penalties and suspensions. The calls need to be made each time the foul occurs...this would result in more calls and perhaps the defenders would learn to play the game by the rules. Harrison's psychopathology is his total disregard for rules and structure. The players from past eras played by the rules that were in force then...I'm sure there were some who couldn't abide by them, then, either. There are psychopathic personalities in all walks of life. Violent sports just gives them a "cult" following and encourages their destructive and , face it, self destructive behavior. Harrison will be out of football if he doesn't change his ways.
11:41 PM on 12/14/2011
You are taking this way out of context, and this is the reason people don't take mental illness seriously. You have read the definition and loosely used it as a basis for diagnosis. There are many criteria for finally getting a diagnosis of psychopathy, and I understand to the layperson it seems easy to make the distinction, but you aren't a psychiatrist.

Someone whose job clearly states that they have to: 1. Hit people so hard that they no longer wish for that and 2. Think of such violence as being beneficial for the propgram, just makes the diagnosis seem like something easily applicable.

Mental illness requires some amount of difficulty in functioning. When you account for the fact that the rules change quickly enough that the referees differ on interpretation sometimes, it is clear that Harrison is simply a man performing a task he is paid for as best he can, while misinterpreting the rules.

Do I think the hit was malicious? Of course, but what sort of hits are the fans asking for? The coaches? The program? Prior to rule changes, this sort of hit wouldn't even be a question, and some people may even question why he didn't hit McCoy hard enough to kill him. I believe in preserving player safety, but to ridicule Harrison is absurd. He should be penalized, but to say his behavior is precipitated by mental disorder simply makes it harder to really diagnose and treat real patients.
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ReadMyLipstick1
It can't be that hard.
03:10 PM on 12/15/2011
Excellent comment, and very nicely presented. I agree totally with you. As a Steeler fan, I've observed Harrison having taken the brunt from a new rule which is seemingly hard to deal with as one has to "untrain" himself. I've seen other players on the opposing teams make similar plays, but the refs never see that. Harrison seems to be a good guy who is trying to do his job, but his attitude could do with a little R and R. He still remains one of my favorite players!
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SheikArbusto
11:43 AM on 12/16/2011
He does have Anti Social Personality traits. Consider this:

As a high school student Mr. Harrison
-challenged coachs to fight
-after scoring TD ran to opposing sidelines and challenged other team to fight
-routinely taunted fans with obscenities
-shot a BB gun at his defensive coach

As an adult
-he has a history of assaulting his girlfriends
-faced assault charges
-trained a pitbull to be aggressive, it gets out of the cage and injurs his son, his girlfriend, and a "massage therapist" who was making a visit

As a Steeler he now
-has more fines for helmet to helmet than other player in history
-despite repeated warnings and fines, he won't learn

301.7 Antisocial Personality Disorder
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06:42 PM on 12/14/2011
Harrison's behavior and language indicates that he already has brain damage, probably caused by the type of game he likes to play.