In the second quarter of Sunday’s matchup between the Jaguars and Texans, Trevor Lawrence took off on a scramble drill. He got what yardage he could, and slid. Linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair hit him as he was sliding. He hit him really hard. Trevor was instantly and obviously concussed (his arms did the fencing response we are all now too familiar with). The Jaguars Evan Engram retaliated, a whole fight happened, and Al-Shaair was ejected. As of Tuesday morning, he has been suspended for 3 games.

It was an unnecessary use of force and outside Texans homer circles I think everyone more or less acknowledges that. The discourse has still permeated though, because that’s what discourse does. And coming at the discourse several days too late is what I do. So lets rumble, baby.

I think the hit was dirty and unnecessary but maybe a touch overblown. This was not the dirtiest hit I’ve ever seen, but it was dumb and illegal. I think Al-Shaair got his large suspension not so much from the hit itself but because he is establishing the beginnings of a Vontaze Burfict style resume. This is a guy who jacked up Caleb Williams on the sideline earlier this year and then punched another Bears player after the Bears rightfully took issue with the hit (the hit was legal, to be fair, but the degree of force the hit contained is certainly unnecessary). I think Al-Shaair is one of those guys who does not know how to pull up or ease off. He wants to hit everyone really hard. Not a bad instinct for a linebacker, but one that must be measured appropriately and properly controlled. The fact that he’s had a few rough hits in the past indicate a problem, and that means he needs better coaching. It’s not a good sign that right after the incident you had a lot of people going “wait, isn’t this the same guy who (insert one of his past moments of unnecessary roughness)”. Al-Shaair also kept tensions up after the hit and retaliation, and that probably contributed to his harsh punishment.

Unfortunately, DeMeco Ryans kinda put his foot in his mouth on the incident. Ryans said he supports Al-Shaair completely and that the Jaguars overreacted in response. That was expected and probably the right move as a coach but also unnecessary toward the Jaguars. Ryans is a former NFL defender, he’s obviously going to be on the defense side of this argument and stand up for his guy (and I don’t think he is without a few decent points when he discusses how some QBs take advantage of the rule coddling), but blaming the Jaguars for overreacting is kind of insulting. Al-Shaair just visibly and unnecessarily took Lawrence out of the game, very violently. If the Jaguars DON’T react there it frankly looks even worse. Remember a couple seasons ago when Kayvon Thibodeaux injured Nick Foles on a sack and did snow angels? Remember how no Colt came to Foles’ defense? The Colts got destroyed for that, rightfully so. It was a major indicator of the joke that was the Jeff Saturday era. Dirty hits get retaliated. It’s unfortunate because it always results in offsetting penalties instead of the correct and justified outcome, but it’s part of the sport’s honor. I would imagine DeMeco and angry Texans fans would feel differently if Stroud got rocked by a dirty hit instead.

A lot of us probably got reminded of a very similar hit by Kiko Alonso against Joe Flacco. You simply can’t do that. I do understand Ryans’ point that a QB scrambling puts defenders in an awkward position. You can’t hit a QB, but you still have to make a tackle. A scrambling QB is going to try to get as many yards as he can most of the time. There are some QBs who understand the privilege they have and use it. Mahomes has baited countless ticky-tack hits out of bounds because he knows he can, and if a defender pulls up too early in fear of hitting him, Mahomes will scamper a few extra yards. Aaron Rodgers, back when he was younger and more mobile, was the king of this bullshit. It’s smart on the QB’s part. Take advantage of the situation that is in your favor. Kenny Pickett did a fake slide in college and it was the sickest juke ever, yet it also clearly constituted such a major disadvantage for defenders forced to play it that it was banned immediately.

No QB fake slides in the NFL. That’s the big thing to note here. There has been chatter of faking slides and such by defenders but this just doesn’t really happen. The sideline bullshit does, but fake slides do not. This isn’t a reasonable problem for defenders to be concerned about. Al-Shaair has no good excuse here. If a QB is scrambling, you have to treat the situation as an expected slide and position your body to react accordingly. That means staying on your feet, setting yourself, and making sure you have proper tackle form. This allows you to properly play whatever happens, be it a slide you have to pull up on or a tackle if the QB gets frisky. Earlier this year Tua tried to get frisky and ran into Damar Hamlin and concussed himself. Nobody blamed Hamlin for that (nobody intelligent anyway) and Hamlin did exactly as he is supposed to. That concussion was Tua’s fault.

Al-Shaair launched himself like a human missile, leading with his forearm as a battering ram. He might have an argument he was going for the tackle if he had, you know, had his arms out and open like he wanted to make a tackle, even in the middle of a dive. He wanted to ram Trevor, low. He was either deliberately going for the head and body on the slide or he was aiming for the knees and Trevor sliding made it worse. Neither is good. His intent in the move is clear. You can argue all you want about how defenders have to play, and how they have to react, and sometimes the speed of the game makes it hard for defenders to defy physics, and all that is true. The major problem that this argument fails to address is that a scrambling QB is a very specific situation that requires the defender to anticipate the slide. Maybe the slide is too fast to precisely react to in real time, but it’s never a problem when the defender isn’t a dumbass and has several seconds of anticipation to set himself up for all potential moves to begin with. Look back at that Tua concussion and see how Hamlin was properly set up if Tua had slid instead. Hamlin could have just tagged him down, maybe jumped to get out of the way like a lot of defenders end up doing in that scenario. Hamlin didn’t play it like a douchebag trying to hurt Tua.

Al-Shaair couldn’t properly react to the slide because he set himself up to be a human missile instead of playing it to properly react to a potential slide. He’s got the league’s eye on him now, so he better shape up or face a lot of extra scrutiny. He wont get the benefit of the doubt on hard hits after this.

EDIT: Something I forgot to touch on but do want to point out: the suspension statement from Jon Runyan was surprisingly harsh and coming from a guy a lot of players thought was dirty, that’s also a bad look. I do think Al-Shaair is being made a slight example of and a single-game suspension would have sufficed. I also don’t think Al-Shaair is actually Vontaze Burfict level of malicious, but I do think he’s kinda dumb and needs to better understand the situation on knowing when to hit full force.

—–

Discord update: If you missed the first two days of invites, I will be sending out a third round on Thursday for the game. Please check during that timeframe, because again the codes will not stay active for that long, and I don’t want to repeatedly send out new codes because you asked me for one and kept not checking in time before it expired. Also, if you do want one, I didn’t realize you can’t send messages on Discord without being a friend first, and I would prefer to not just friend everybody I don’t know, so if you want an invite, either email (drawplay574@gmail.com) or bluesky DMs are your best bet. I rarely check my Instagram.