Ndamukong Suh Committed a Dirty, Dumb Play, But Should Not Be Suspended
The hanging crew is out. N’Damukong Suh has been tried, convicted and strung up on the same day, and his reputation as a dirty player is forever cemented like dry stuffing thanks to his Thanksgiving day stomp. Calls are going out for suspensions, and comparisons are made to Albert Haynesworth.
The Haynesworth comparisons are ridiculous.
Haynesworth dispassionately removed Gurode’s helmet while he was lying on the ground and cleated his face. Haynesworth may have been angry about something that happened earlier in the game, but it was a premeditated act that caused serious injury. Suh was angry and in the heat of a post-play tussle, and tried to take one last kick in the opponent’s direction as he was being pulled away.
Suh should have been penalized. He was. He should have been ejected once he tried to stomp on the opponent while being pulled away. He was. It was a dumb penalty, and exhibited a lack of control that let the opponent get to him in a key situation. He can bet he will continue to have buttons pushed now. He cost his team four points because of his penalty after a third and goal, and more because of his absence. His explanation/excuse afterward was equally dumb.
I don’t think, though, that this is a suspendable offense. Earlier this year, we saw Brian Robison, against the Packers as well, deliver an intentional stomp to the groin. He wasn’t even ejected (should have been) and then was fined but not suspended afterwards. We’ve seen numerous players take swings at players, some ejected and some not. Charles Woodson threw a punch earlier this year and was not ejected, and not suspended afterwards.
If you want to read an old account of some actions that merited a one-game suspension, check out this account of Raiders defensive lineman Greg Townsend versus the Chiefs (h/t: @bmenezes). Townsend speared one lineman in the back, stomped the head of another with his helmet off, and ripped the helmet off another by the facemask.
I know, I know, you are going to say repeat offender and the suspension should be because it’s Ndamukong Suh.  According to ESPN Stats & Info, that was Suh’s third personal foul of the year and 7th since 2010, tying him with Cliff Avril for most in the league. He’s got a reputation. People will point out that he visited with Goodell in the last month. My understanding of that meeting, though, was that it was initiated by Suh. It wasn’t a “come to Jesus” meeting with Roger Goodell where ultimatums were issued. Suh wanted to clarify his fines for hits on the quarterbacks.
Goodell will likely do what he wants, or bend to the public outrage of an overstuffed population. There are no standards, which is my issue with the Goodell discipline structure. Hey, if the NFL wanted to put clear objective standards, much like an accumulation of red cards in soccer, that you sit after a certain number of personal fouls, then fine. I don’t recall Cliff Avril getting suspended for that. There is no such standard currently in place. If Goodell wants to put those standards in place for future suspensions, okay, but I don’t think you can arbitrarily line draw where a suspension occurs for past (dissimilar) dirty behavior.
On the merits of the act alone, though, this isn’t a suspension. He paid dearly for his act, both in public image, and in cost to his team. The team he harmed, Green Bay, benefited by having him out of the game. Suh should play the next game. He should probably be ready to get some business at the bottom of the pile. I’ve heard that happens in the NFL.
[photo via Getty]

- Alex Sanabia of the Marlins Caught Throwing a Spitball Against the Phillies [GIF]
- Jim Boeheim: Carmelo Will Never Win a Title with These Knicks Because His Teammates Suck
- Andre Ethier Acted Like a Tough Guy, Gave Death Stare to an Umpire After Getting Ejected [GIF]
- Roundup: Ryan Mattheus Broke His Hand Punching a Locker, Spiderman Plays Basketball with Kids & Man Nearly Killed by Bull in Costa Rica
- Jalen Rose Leaving Numbers Never Lie, Jemele Hill in as New Co-Host

- rittyrich on Alex Sanabia of the Marlins Caught Throwing a Spitball Against the Phillies [GIF]
- cracker jack on Roundup: Ryan Mattheus Broke His Hand Punching a Locker, Spiderman Plays Basketball with Kids & Man Nearly Killed by Bull in Costa Rica
- scripty on Alex Sanabia of the Marlins Caught Throwing a Spitball Against the Phillies [GIF]
- Tha_Boogey_Man on Jim Boeheim: Carmelo Will Never Win a Title with These Knicks Because His Teammates Suck
- cracker jack on Roundup: Ryan Mattheus Broke His Hand Punching a Locker, Spiderman Plays Basketball with Kids & Man Nearly Killed by Bull in Costa Rica
20 Responses to “Ndamukong Suh Committed a Dirty, Dumb Play, But Should Not Be Suspended”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.






November 25th, 2011 at 1:08 PM
suspend him for life is what i say ok/.?
November 25th, 2011 at 1:15 PM
Lisk is right: Woodson should’ve been penalized for punching a Saints player in the junk in the season opener.
As for Suh: if they fine his ass heavy, I’d be cool with it. If the league suspends him one week, I’d be cool with that too.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:30 PM
a week suspension, and the extra missed game check, should be fine. Especially since everybody was watching.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:37 PM
In a vacuum I would agree with you. Though in reality he does, in fact, deserve to be suspends. Repeat offender + national broadcast = suspension.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:42 PM
He should be suspended an extra week for this alone.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:46 PM
so, what the hell are the packers doing to get people to stomp on them and kick them in the balls?
November 25th, 2011 at 1:48 PM
Being the worst human beings on the planet. That’s all they do.
/souvenircity’d
November 25th, 2011 at 1:49 PM
is there video of this? i almost wish this would happen when Joe Buck was calling a game, that would be awesome. He might actually start crying.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:53 PM
Elizabeth Olsen, younger sister of Olsen twins
Thank me later
NSFW
November 25th, 2011 at 1:53 PM
he set the precedent last season for this fines and penalties on defenders hitting WR’s. he can do it again.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:57 PM
I love Suh’s game but he’s quickly turning into the next James Harrison.
November 25th, 2011 at 1:58 PM
Yes he should..not only did blatantly do it, he has a history of it and has no remorse about it.
November 25th, 2011 at 2:10 PM
I love Suh’s game but he’s quickly turning into the next James Harrison.
THIS. Fuck the Steelers. I hope Suh doesn’t turn into one of those jagoffs.
/realizes Suh is well on his way to becoming one of those jagoffs
November 25th, 2011 at 2:19 PM
Suh’s always been a dirty piece of shit, now we know he’s a liar too. I am retroactively changing my opinion of the Matt Ryan incident to take this new information into account.
November 25th, 2011 at 2:50 PM
multi all pro, and defensive player of the year? Detroit should really be concerned about that.
November 25th, 2011 at 3:02 PM
That dude needed some help, and Suh helped him.
/Charlie Murphy’d
November 25th, 2011 at 3:05 PM
If you’re gonna post the word “fuck”, then you might as well post “jackoff” as well. No since is making the lesser insult PG13 when you come outta the gate with the big nasty.
November 25th, 2011 at 3:26 PM
You’re probably right that this particular act is not an offense worthy of a suspension. But, it seems pretty obvious that Suh is on a trajectory to have a Charles Martin to Jim McMahon type of incident. And when it happens, I hope nobody acts surprised.
November 25th, 2011 at 3:56 PM
you accumulate yellow cards in soccer, not reds. in most leagues, once you accumulate 5 yellows, you are suspended for a game. if you get somewhere between 8-10, you sit for three more.
November 25th, 2011 at 8:14 PM
Cat cant even get up in the NFL with out being fined and ejected? Do they play with NERF balls too?