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Albert Haynesworth kicked Dallas' Andre Gurode in the face twice in the third quarter.
Agent: Titans DT finally speaks to Dallas' Gurode
Posted: Tuesday October 3, 2006 5:36PM; Updated: Tuesday October 3, 2006 9:38PM
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- After dialing his number all day with no luck, Titans defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth finally got the chance Tuesday to personally apologize to Andre Gurode for tearing open the Cowboys center's face with a cleat.
Haynesworth spent much of the day getting nothing but unanswered rings
and a full voice mail box, then connected in the late afternoon with
Gurode, who needed 30 stitches to repair the facial cuts.
"The purpose of the conversation was to apologize," said Haynesworth's agent, Chad Speck.
Haynesworth was suspended five games without pay by the NFL -- the
longest-ever punishment in the NFL for on-field behavior -- for kicking
Gurode's helmet off, then swiping his cleated foot on his face while he
lay on the ground. Speck said Haynesworth wouldn't appeal, even though
the NFL Players Association wanted him to try.
"He said Sunday
night he would accept the league's decision of what to do from a
discipline standpoint, and that's what he's going to do," Speck said.
Haynesworth's agent gave the tackle's phone number to Gurode's agent
and the Cowboys, hoping to connect the players. That finally happened,
but Speck wouldn't detail the conversation and said he is leaving that
to either Gurode or Haynesworth -- if they choose.
Gurode's agent, Kennard McGuire, did not immediately return messages left by The Associated Press on Tuesday.
The Dallas center plans to talk with his family about whether or not to press charges, his agent told Nashville police Monday.
Haynesworth's suspension was more than twice as long as the previous
punishment for a player's misbehavior on the field. Green Bay lineman
Charles Martin got two games for throwing Chicago quarterback Jim
McMahon onto his shoulder in 1986.
The NFL Players Association is studying the suspension.
"We're just in the fact-finding stage right now," NFLPA spokesman Carl
Francis said before Haynesworth's decision not to appeal.
"For
what I did, whatever they give me, I deserve it. I did it, and it's
wrong," Haynesworth said Sunday after he was ejected from the 45-14
loss to Dallas.
The Dallas Morning News reported Tuesday
that Gurode still had blurry vision Monday. Gurode said after the game
Sunday that he would have gone back on the field if his vision had been
clear.
But fans and even people who pay no attention to sports
condemned Haynesworth's actions; many said five games wasn't enough.
Haynesworth was replaced by a rookie teammate on his weekly radio show
Tuesday night, which airs live from a shopping mall south of Nashville.
The Titans agreed to terms with Tony Brown on Tuesday as a replacement for Haynesworth on the defensive line. His suspension had left Tennessee with veteran Robaire Smith, Randy Starks in his third season and rookie Jesse Mahelona,
who sprained a knee against Dallas. Brown is a two-year veteran who has
four career starts and was most recently with Carolina.
The
Titans asked the league to clarify the restrictions that would be on
Haynesworth during the suspension, which will keep him off the field
until Nov. 19, when the Titans visit Philadelphia. Players suspended
for substance abuse violations cannot work out with their teams nor
attend games, but it was not clear if those rules applied to
Haynesworth.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said because there is no
precedent for a suspension of this length for on-field activities, the
NFL was researching
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