T10YL - 2014 NFL Draft, Part 4
The latest and therefore the greatest trades from the 2014 NFL Draft.
This is the final installment of our 2014 NFL Draft coverage. If you’re just joining us, an explanation to what we’re doing can be found in the prior posts:
TRADE SEVENTEEN
The Traded Picks: Cleveland Browns receive: #94 overall. San Francisco 49ers receive: #106 overall, #180 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Browns receive: 41. 49ers receive: 32 + 8 = 40.
Surplus value accumulated by Cleveland (1) equivalent to a late 7th-round pick (#241-257).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Browns receive: 698. 49ers receive: 637 + 368 = 1005.
Surplus value accumulated by San Francisco (307) equivalent to late 6th-round pick (#203).
The Selected Players: Cleveland Browns select: Terrance West. San Francisco 49ers select: Bruce Ellington, Kenneth Acker.
Terrance West was born in Baltimore and played college football at Towson University, whose stadium is separated from the Baltimore Ravens’ stadium by 10.9 miles. He got the news he had spent his life dreaming of at the end of the third round, when his agent got a text informing him that the Ravens would be using their third-round pick at #99 to select him. The Ravens were mistaken — in fact, the division-rival Browns would be selecting West after trading ahead of the Ravens. West’s rookie year in Cleveland was not entirely harmonious even as he was fairly productive, and he was waived at the end of preseason in his second year. These things have a tendency of working out though – after two games in Tennessee, West was able to join his hometown Ravens and played two seasons there.
Bruce Ellington was a depth wide receiver and kick/punt returner for his two seasons in San Francisco. Kenneth Acker didn’t play during his rookie season, started at cornerback in his second season, and then got traded to Kansas City for a 7th-round pick.
Minnesota Vikings select Jerick McKinnon #96 overall.
Atlanta Falcons select Devonta Freeman #103 overall.
TRADE EIGHTEEN
The Traded Picks: San Francisco 49ers receive: Stevie Johnson. Buffalo Bills receive: Conditional 2015 4th round pick (became #113 overall).
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Bills receive: 27. 49ers receive Stevie Johnson.
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Bills receive: 604. 49ers receive Stevie Johnson.
The Selected Players: Subsequently traded.
This trade has no 2014 draft picks involved and doesn’t fit the rest of what we’re doing, but (a) it did happen during the NFL draft and (b) it gives us an excuse to mention Stevie Johnson. Johnson was born in San Francisco and grew up in the Bay Area (Fairfield, so we’re stretching that definition). He was homeschooled, but as he approached his junior year, the local high school added a football program that Johnson began playing for. In his senior season, he made the All-State team and showed enough to play college football at Chabot College. After two seasons there, he transferred to Kentucky and became one of the best receivers in the SEC. That all happened in like a five-year span.
Johnson was drafted by Buffalo in 2008 and didn’t really get going until 2010, when he became the team’s star receiver and posted 82 receptions, 1,073 yards, and 10 receiving touchdowns. “Johnson represented a mirthful defiance that made Buffalo fans feel they’d unearthed a star,” said Tim Graham in an article that reflected on an infamous moment from Johnson (and which I relied on for the entirety of this blurb). Johnson’s star turn was well underway, but in a November game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, he dropped several passes, including what would’ve been a wide-open game-winning touchdown in overtime. In the post-game press conference, Johnson accepted blame for “75 drops in the game” and said he would “never get over it. Ever.” That would be pretty dramatic, but the press conference didn’t hold a candle to what Johnson would proceed to tweet:
“I PRAISE YOU 24/7!!!!!! AND THIS HOW YOU DO ME!!!!! YOU EXPECT ME TO LEARN FROM THIS??? HOW???!!! ILL NEVER FORGET THIS!! EVER!!! THX THO…”
The tweet kicked off a firestorm of controversy, as people didn’t appreciate that Johnson seemingly blamed God for his dropped pass. But Buffalo fans who knew the whole package of Stevie Johnson’s personality spoke up on social media to defend their guy. Many of them got blocked by Adam Schefter on Twitter as a result. Apparently, this was the origin of the now-ubiquitous “Bills Mafia” phrase for the Buffalo fanbase.
In March 2012, Johnson hit free agency and reportedly received a higher offer from San Francisco than the contract he ultimately signed with Buffalo. In 2013, Johnson was less effective and admitted that he didn’t work out in the preceding offseason. After the Bills traded up for Sammy Watkins, Johnson’s future in Buffalo was thrown into doubt and the tie was severed before the draft ended. Johnson was in the Bay Area visiting his family at the time of the trade and never sent for his possessions from Buffalo (several follow-up questions here but cannot find answers to any of them).
Johnson was traded for a 2015 4th-round pick that could become a 3rd-round pick if certain conditions were met (whatever they were, they weren’t met). Johnson was third on the wide receiver depth chart in San Francisco and had a reasonably effective year with 35 catches and 3 touchdowns. The 49ers cut him after the season and he played one more season for the Chargers. After retirement, Johnson was head football coach at his alma mater for a while, but it seems he’s left the position. He’s still an active Bills supporter on Twitter and is a big fan of their 2024 draft class.
ROUND FOUR
TRADE NINETEEN
The Traded Picks: Cincinnati Bengals receive: #111 overall. Seattle Seahawks receive: #123 overall, #199 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Bengals receive: 28. Seahawks receive: 21 + 5 = 26.
Surplus value accumulated by Cincinnati (2) equivalent to a mid 7th-round pick (#229-240).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Bengals receive 613. Seahawks receive: 561 + 318 = 879.
Surplus value accumulated by Seattle (266) roughly equivalent to an early 7th-round pick (#220 = 267)
The Selected Players: Cincinnati Bengals select: Russell Bodine. Seattle Seahawks select: Kevin Norwood, Garrett Scott.
Russell Bodine is listed as a “guard” on Pro Football Reference and it’s not clear why he would be. The Bengals traded up to get him in the fourth round and immediately made him their starting center. In the four years of his rookie contract, Bodine started every game and played almost every snap on offense (his backup got a few snaps in Week 6 and Week 11 of his third season, but at no other time). This is the kind of fourth round pick that is definitely worth trading up for. Bodine left for Buffalo in free agency when his contract expired.
Kevin Norwood caught nine passes for 102 yards in his one season with the Seahawks and then moved on. Garrett Scott was an offensive tackle in college, but his pre-draft physical with Seattle revealed a previously unknown heart condition that prevented him from playing in the NFL. Scott refers to it as “the day I got my heart crushed” (unclear if the pun is intended), but left the Seahawks with his $100,000 signing bonus and the advice from Russell Okung to invest in Bitcoin. If he spent 10% of that signing bonus on Bitcoin on May 23, 2014 (when the price was $525.72), it would be worth about $1.16 million today; a much easier way to make a million dollars than playing offensive line in the NFL. On October 15, 2023, Scott tweeted “A lot of O-lines need help right now. Suit me up !!” Nobody has taken him up on it.
Pittsburgh Steelers select Martavis Bryant #118 overall.
Arizona Cardinals select Logan Thomas #120 overall.
TRADE TWENTY
The Traded Picks: Chicago Bears receive: #131 overall, #246 overall. Denver Broncos receive: #156 overall, 2015 5th round pick (became #143 overall).
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Bears receive: 18 + 1 = 19. Broncos receive: 11 + 14 = 25.
Surplus value accumulated by Denver (6) equivalent to a mid 6th-round pick (#187-194).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Bears receive: 529 + 210 = 739. Broncos receive: 441 + 485 = 926.
Surplus value accumulated by Denver (187) roughly (but not quite) equivalent to the last pick on the chart (#256 = 190).
This is a Fitzgerald-Spielberger testament to the power of getting a 7th-round pick back. Trading two 5th-round picks for one of the worst 4th-round picks makes it pretty impossible to get fair value and is more aggressive than most NFL teams are comfortable with, as the Rich Hill chart will testify. In the Rich Hill model, getting that pick #246 is only worth 1 point and barely moves the needle on a trade that Denver clearly wins. But Fitzgerald-Spielberger gives every pick a three-digit value and has much less divergence on the value of picks in the later rounds. The 5th-round pick ends up being worth 14 times as much as the 7th-round pick in the Rich Hill model (14 v 1), but just over twice as much in the Fitzgerald-Spielberger model (485 v 210).
The Selected Players: Chicago Bears select: Brock Vereen, Charles Leno Jr. Denver Broncos select: Lamin Barrow, 2015 5th round pick subsequently traded.
And why wouldn’t the 7th-round pick be valuable? You could use that pick on Charles Leno! Leno played sparingly in his rookie season, but was a fixture at left tackle for the Bears thereafter, playing in every game from 2015 through the 2020 season (including a Pro Bowl season in 2018). Leno was the best 7th-round pick in this draft and provided more value for the Bears than 18 of this draft’s first round picks provided to their teams.
Unfortunately, the actual trade up target in Brock Vereen was not as successful. Vereen had one interception in his rookie year and otherwise served as a depth cornerback. He was released three games into his second season and is now a broadcaster for the Big Ten Network and CBS Sports.
The Broncos drafted Lamin Barrow and used him almost exclusively on special teams in his rookie season. On the eve of his second season, he was cut from the Broncos and added to the Bears’ roster for the rest of the season. The timing worked out such that all three of these guys were on the Bears at the same time, making them the clear-cut winners of this trade.
ROUND FIVE
TRADE TWENTY-ONE
The Traded Picks: Dallas Cowboys receive: #146 overall. Detroit Lions receive: #158 overall, #229 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Cowboys receive: 13. Lions receive: 10 + 2 = 12.
Surplus value accumulated by Dallas (1) equivalent to a late 7th-round pick (#241-257).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Cowboys receive: 474. Lions receive: 434 + 246 = 680.
Surplus value accumulated by Detroit (206) equivalent to a late 7th-round pick (#248).
At this point of the draft (entering the middle of the 5th round), no team should be giving up surplus value that exceeds that of a late 7th-round pick. No team should really be giving up anything of value besides a 7th-round pick.
The Selected Players: Dallas Cowboys select: Devin Street. Detroit Lions select: Caraun Reid, Nate Freese.
Devin Street caught nine passes in Dallas. Caraun Reid was a Lion for the first two years of his career and a starter in his second season, so they win the trade. Actually, maybe not; with the 7th-round pick, the Lions took a kicker named Nate Freese out of Boston College. In Week 1, Freese made two field goals and three extra points, but missed a 43-yard attempt. In Week 2, Freese made an extra point but missed a pair of 49-yard field goal attempts. In Week 3, Freese made an extra point and a field goal but also missed a 41-yard field goal attempt. This is too many misses; Freese was cut before Week 4 and never played in the NFL again. By missing 4 of his 7 career field goal attempts, Freese managed to post -1 AV for the Lions — the only player in this draft class to actually be worse than no pick at all. That was the entirety of his NFL career and he’s now an assistant project manager at a construction company.
TRADE TWENTY-TWO
The Traded Picks: Carolina Panthers receive: #148 overall. Minnesota Vikings receive: #168 overall, #225 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Panthers receive: 12. Vikings receive: 9 + 3 = 12.
Even trade.
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Panthers receive: 468. Vikings receive: 403 + 255 = 658.
Surplus value accumulated by Minnesota (190) equivalent to the last pick in the draft (#256 = 190).
The Selected Players: Carolina Panthers select: Bene Benwikere. Minnesota Vikings select: Jabari Price, #168 overall subsequently traded.
Bene Benwikere was actually a pretty good pick, playing nickelback for two strong seasons in Carolina. Forgive me for forgetting about the good parts, because I only remember how his time in Carolina ended. After the Panthers had controversially let star cornerback Josh Norman leave the team ahead of the 2016 season rather than letting him play under a franchise tag, Benwikere was elevated to starting cornerback and ended up matched up with Julio Jones in a Week 4 matchup. Jones had uhhhhhh 300 receiving yards, which is a lot; Benwikere was waived later that week.
Jabari Price played 50% of special teams snaps and 5% of defensive snaps in his one season of game action in Minnesota (and the NFL). He hung on the roster until 2017, with all the intervening time spent either suspended from the league or on injured reserve.
TRADE TWENTY-THREE
The Traded Picks: Tampa Bay Buccaneers receive: #149 overall. Buffalo Bills receive: #221 overall, 2015 5th round pick (became #137 overall).
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Buccaneers receive: 12. Bills receive: 3 + 16 = 19.
Surplus value accumulated by Buffalo (7) equivalent to an early 6th-round pick (#182-186).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Buccaneers receive: 464. Bills receive: 264 + 507 = 771.
Surplus value accumulated by Buffalo (307) equivalent to late 6th-round pick (#203).
Trading a future 5th-round pick to move back into the fifth round this year looks terrible when you do what the Buccaneers did and finish with the worst record in the NFL in 2014.
The Selected Players: Tampa Bay Buccaneers select: Kevin Pamphile. Buffalo Bills select: Randell Johnson, 2015 5th round pick subsequently traded.
On the bright side, the Buccaneers made a successful pick in Kevin Pamphile. Pamphile was mostly a backup tackle in his first two seasons and then started at left guard for his final two seasons in Tampa Bay. On the not so bright side, their 2015 5th-round pick got traded a couple more times and eventually used on Grady Jarrett, who continues to harass Tampa Bay as a star defensive tackle for the Atlanta Falcons.
Randell Johnson was a part-time special teams player for two seasons in Buffalo. Just four more trades left, we can do this.
Cincinnati Bengals select A.J. McCarron #164 overall.
TRADE TWENTY-FOUR
The Traded Picks: Atlanta Falcons receive: #168 overall. Minnesota Vikings receive: #182 overall, #220 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Falcons receive: 9. Vikings receive: 7 + 3 = 10.
Surplus value accumulated by Minnesota (1) equivalent to a late 7th-round pick (#241-257).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Falcons receive: 403. Vikings receive: 363 + 267 = 630.
Surplus value accumulated by Minnesota (227) equivalent to a mid 7th-round pick (#238).
The Selected Players: Atlanta Falcons select: Marquis Spruill. Minnesota Vikings select: Antone Exum, Shamar Stephen.
Marquis Spruill was only on the Falcons for long enough to tear his ACL in training camp, then have footage of his reconstructive surgery used as content in Episode 3 of HBO’s Hard Knocks. He was waived before the season started. An NFL draft pick only remaining in the league long enough to suffer a catastrophic knee injury that literally gets used for content is too on the nose.
Antone Exum and Shamar Stephen each played games for Minnesota, which is good. Antone Exum was mostly a special teams player who got to play defense in clear passing situations. But Shamar Stephen was the 2nd-most successful 7th-round pick in this draft, playing four seasons at defensive tackle and then returning to Minnesota for two more seasons later in his career.
ROUND SIX
TRADE TWENTY-FIVE
The Traded Picks: Tennessee Titans receive: #178 overall. Washington Football Team receives: #186 overall, #228 overall.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Titans receive: 8. Washington receives: 7 + 3 = 10.
Surplus value accumulated by Washington (2) equivalent to a mid 7th-round pick (#229-240).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Titans receive: 374. Washington receives: 352 + 249 = 601.
Surplus value accumulated by Washington (226) roughly equivalent to a mid 7th-round pick (#238 = 227, #239 = 225).
The Selected Players: Tennessee Titans select: Zach Mettenberger. Washington Football Team selects: Lache Seastrunk, Zach Hocker.
Mettenberger was drafted out of LSU to serve as the backup quarterback to Jake Locker, the Titans’ recent first-round pick who was less than a year away from retiring. Mettenberger was pressed into starting duty by October and was embroiled in one of the stupidest and most one-sided conflicts in recent NFL history. Mettenberger was named the starter on a Thursday and gained some quick virality based on how much his floppy hair, headband, and mustache combo evoked Ben Stiller in Dodgeball. The next day, Mettenberger got a haircut, which according to coach Ken Whisenhunt was not Mettenberger’s decision but a requirement due to “what that position entails,” ignoring that Tennessee had already started Charlie Whitehurst that season, known to all as “Clipboard Jesus” due to his flowing locks.
As seems reasonable for a 22-year-old in 2014, Mettenberger posted a selfie of the new haircut on Instagram. This act incensed J.J. Watt, an above-average defensive end who gained fame as one of the most insufferable athletes of the 21st century (please don’t fact check this). Watt sacked Mettenberger twice in his first start and celebrated the second one by pretending to take a selfie. This would be cool and funny in isolation, but because J.J. Watt is neither cool nor funny, he ruined it in his postgame press conference that included phrases like “it’s just kind of a reminder, this is the National Football League, not high school,” and “I take my job very seriously. If I was a rookie quarterback being named the starter for the first time in the league, I feel like I’d be a little bit more focused than that.” Yeah man, you sure hate those cameras. Maybe if J.J. Watt took more selfies in his playing career he would’ve won a playoff game over any team besides the Cincinnati Bengals. Go be the world’s hardest worker in your minimalistic cabin and flip a tire on television a dozen more times. What a clownfraud.
Anyways, Zach Mettenberger was a pretty worthwhile pick, making ten starts across two seasons as he backed up a couple of injury-prone quarterbacks. Unfortunately, his performance in the second season was quite dreadful, with 4 touchdowns against 7 interceptions and a -2 AV for the season (twice as bad as that kicker who missed half his field goals). Mettenberger never played in the NFL again, but still used his time in Tennessee to set up his future — his head coach Ken Whisenhunt is now his father-in-law and Whisenhunt and Mettenberger are both on the coaching staff at Alabama.
On the Washington side, we have a kicker and a running back named Lache Seastrunk. Lache Seastrunk has always stuck out in my memory, probably due to the awesome name, so imagine my surprise to learn just now that (1) it’s pronounced “lake,” not “lashay” and (2) he was cut by Washington before the season began and never played in the NFL. The former is particularly shocking because it actually makes the name better, tying in two bodies of water into one name. The latter doesn’t seem to have been injury-related; apparently he was just bad.
Washington managed to go 0-for-2 on these picks — Zach Hocker was also cut in preseason when Kai Forbath beat him out in a preseason roster competition. He caught on to a roster spot in 2015, when he beat Dustin Hopkins out to start the season for the New Orleans Saints. But then Hocker missed four field goals in six weeks and got released, replaced by none other than Kai Forbath again.
Kansas City Chiefs select Laurent Duvernay-Tardif #200 overall.
New York Jets select Tajh Boyd #213 overall.
ROUND SEVEN
TRADE TWENTY-SIX
The Traded Picks: Baltimore Ravens receive: #218 overall. Cleveland Browns receive: 2015 6th-round pick (became #201 overall).
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Ravens receive: 3. Browns receive: 5.
Surplus value accumulated by Cleveland (2) equivalent to a mid 7th-round pick (#229-240).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Ravens receive: 271. Browns receive: 312.
Surplus value accumulated by Cleveland (41) is roughly equivalent to 20% of a late 7th-round pick (#248 = 206).
If you call another team about trading up for their 7th-round pick, they’ll probably ask what’s wrong with you. You’re supposed to include 7th-round picks as filler in other trades, not seek them out in isolation. Assuming you can pass a toxicology screen, the next matter is figuring out appropriate compensation. The Ravens didn’t have their own seventh-rounder, so the only viable option for building a package was to give up a pick from next year. The 6th-round pick the Ravens gave up only ended up being 17 slots higher than this one, so not terribly calamitous.
The Selected Players: Baltimore Ravens select: Michael Campanaro. Cleveland Browns subsequently traded 2015 6th-round pick.
Grading on the 7th-round pick curve, this is a great pick by Baltimore. We’ve already passed quite a few guys who didn’t even make an NFL roster; Campanaro played four seasons in Baltimore (even if he only got into a couple of games per season in the first three years). He had two touchdowns for Baltimore as a receiver and another touchdown as a punt returner, which came with under two minutes in the fourth quarter and allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 24-24. If NFL coaches were allowed to make mid-game trades in order to guarantee in-game results, all of them would happily trade away a 7th-round pick (or maybe even a future 6th-round pick) in exchange for a clutch punt return touchdown.
TRADE TWENTY-SEVEN
The Traded Picks: Philadelphia Eagles receive: #224 overall and conditional future mid-round draft pick. Buffalo Bills receive: #237 overall, Bryce Brown.
The conditional pick could be one of three picks:
If Bryce Brown were to hit certain rushing targets in 2014, it would be the Bills’ 2016 3rd-round pick. If Brown missed those targets, the pick would be determined by how Stevie Johnson did.
If Stevie Johnson performed well enough for the conditional pick the 49ers had traded away to become a 3rd-round pick, then the Bills would send Philadelphia their own 4th-round selection in 2016.
If Stevie Johnson missed those performance targets and San Francisco’s 2015 4th-round pick went to Buffalo instead of their 3rd-round pick, the Bills would trade that pick to Philadelphia.
The last one is what ended up happening, as both veteran players involved in draft day trades missed their performance targets.
Pick Trade Value (Rich Hill): Eagles receive: 3 + 27 = 30. Bills receive 2 + Bryce Brown.
This trade valued Bryce Brown (28) equivalent to a mid 4th-round pick (#111-112).
Pick Trade Value (Fitzgerald-Spielberger): Eagles receive: 258 + 604 = 862. Bills receive: 229 + Bryce Brown.
This trade valued Bryce Brown (633) roughly equivalent to a mid 4th-round pick (#107 = 632)
The Eagles had selected Bryce Brown with pick #229 of the 2012 NFL Draft, so it was quite savvy to trade him away after two seasons for a 7th-round trade up and a future mid-round pick. A sensible theory behind this trade is that Buffalo offered the Eagles this conditional pick for Bryce Brown, the Eagles considered it but ultimately didn’t accept, and then when the seventh round rolled around, Philadelphia countered with the offer along with a swap of 7th-round picks. Buffalo couldn’t reasonably say no to that counteroffer without looking like jerks.
Bryce Brown was the country’s top football prospect in high school and was subject to a zany recruitment that involved his manager running a website that offered updates on Brown’s recruitment for $9.99 a month (or just $59 a year!). Brown’s approach didn’t seem to endear himself to coaches along the way, and he ended up falling to the 7th round. Brown was a backup to LeSean McCoy in Philadelphia who did well in limited opportunities, but those wouldn’t be much easier to come by in Buffalo, who already had C.J. Spiller and Fred Jackson on their roster. Brown was active for seven games in the 2014 season, rushing the ball 36 times for 126 yards. He was released at the start of the 2015 season, with his roster spot effectively taken by new Bill LeSean McCoy.
The Selected Players: Philadelphia Eagles select: Beau Allen, 2015 4th round pick subsequently traded. Buffalo Bills select: Seantrel Henderson.
We’ve already seen that 4th-round pick go from San Francisco to Buffalo to Philadelphia and it’s going to get traded one more time before it’s said and done. Can’t wait to see who gets taken with that pick (spoiler alert: nobody good).
Beau Allen and Seantrel Henderson took different routes to their status as “good 7th-round picks.” Allen was a rotational tackle for four seasons in Philadelphia, playing a minority of snaps on defense and special teams but still a solid number. He left the team and signed free agent contracts with Tampa Bay and New England for an announced value of $23 million combined (based on the amount of games played, he definitely did not earn this full amount).
Seantrel Henderson’s story has higher highs and lower lows. Henderson was a top recruit who went to the University of Miami, but was suspended three times in his college career for violations of team rules. Ahead of the NFL Draft, Henderson decided to clear the air by telling everyone that these suspensions were due to marijuana use. These concerns led Henderson to fall to pick #237, but he immediately slotted in as a starting right tackle for the Bills. He was a starter in 2015 as well, but missed the end of the season after he was hospitalized due to recently-diagnosed Crohn’s disease. Ahead of the 2016 season, Henderson underwent surgery to “remove all infected areas and reattach his intestines,” emphasis added with horror.
As Henderson recovered from surgeries, he received a four-game suspension for marijuana use, followed by a 10-game suspension later that season for the same offense. After the second suspension, a source provided one of the most reasonable quotes to ever start with the sentence, “He needs cannabis,” continuing to note that “You can’t take painkillers with the way his intestines are.” Henderson was reactivated during the 2017 season, but never worked his way back into the starting lineup for Buffalo.
Get it? His story has “higher highs and lower lows” because of the cannabis suspensions. And the removal and reattachment of his lower intestine. Thank you for reading, we are quite clearly done with this topic.