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During an appearance on the “Rodeo Time Podcast,” the ESPN color commentator Troy Aikman talked the tradeoff of lighter training camps in today’s game vs. the past. And he thinks that players now are less physically prepared for the rigors of the NFL now than they were in his day...
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“Wichita Falls is the hottest place on earth,” Aikman said of the Cowboys’ former training camp location. “Back then you did two-a-days in that kind of heat, day after day after day, two practices a day in full pads. Now the restrictions, probably for the better, players aren’t as taxed as they were.”

“I think they only wear pads one day a week or one time a day, and they have a walk-through, and then after, I don’t know how it all reads, but it’s pretty player-friendly and favorable,” he three-time Super Bowl champ explained.

“… But [those are] a lot of the reasons I think that we see so many injuries, especially early in the year. A lot of soft tissue injuries, a lot of muscle pulls, and things of that nature is the players, they’re just not able to train the way that we once did, they’re not able to callous their bodies as easily.”

“Player safety is great. As a former quarterback, I do like that they protect quarterbacks,” Aikman admitted. “With that said, the objective for a defense is to hit the quarterback and affect the quarterback and sometimes I think we’re asking a lot from these defensive players, to try to navigate 300-pound offensive linemen and then not graze the helmet of the quarterback.”
(The Spun)
Filed Under: NFL
12 Comments
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St Augustine8 hours
As a PT I still think it’s mainly because the players are bigger/more muscled, faster, and playing in more open space. Ther are simply more intense forces going through soft tissue.
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304tiger8 hours
He's spot on.
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Dale38 hours
This and artificial turf.
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CDawson5 hours
This is a narrative that isn't true. Natural grass gets a pass, especially as it gets into the season and maintenance cannot keep up with use. Natural grass can be fantastic, especially early in the year, but can be far less stable and consistent once the season gets in gear and the weather changes.
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Redhead573 hours
The very thing that David Bakhtiari kept bringing up about on player safety. I believe hits to the head that cause concussions have now been outlawed is causing more low hits. Knees ankles
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CDawson4 hours
I was at the A's spring training speaking with their training/strength staff and asked him the difference in today's athlete and those even 15 years ago. It was simple, 15 years ago, players showed up early and ready to go. Today, I was told, players don't come early and the majority, as many as 75% are out of shape and use spring training to get in shape where a decade ago, players used the offseason to get in shape. That was the take these guys gave. Players are soft, coddled and so spoiled that many don't put in the work, especially in the offseason, they once did.
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TFH2 hours
Nah. There were always injuries. The difference is used to they just played through it. Today the teams don’t want to risk further injury on their expensive investments.
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Luckydog4 hours
So true
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denvertiger3 hours
Season's also longer with more Thurs (less rest) games. Add in the speed and size of modern day players and it's pretty easy to figure out why there are more injuries (and a higher rate of "severe" injuries). No idea what the frick Aikman is talking about but old guys love to imagine that they're tougher than the new guys
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Timeoday5 hours
I really believe it is the turf. It is not as forgiving as natural.
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Sweep Da Leg3 hours
This isn’t the 80’s or 90’s turf that’s like or is concrete. Most turf is softer than grass now
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HarryHoudini2 hours
No modern turf is terrible. We had it in high school and it sucked to play on.
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