

“I think first we have to take in context… what you have to realize with defensive coordinators is that all of us as quarterbacks have flaws, you know, things and again, we have things that we’re not as good at as other things, and so, what I believe that coordinator was really saying was we’ve got to figure out how do we stop Patrick Mahomes, so how we stop him is we try to take the first or the early reads away, and we try to force him to get away from the context and force him to try to make some of those special plays,” Warner said, according to The Kansas City Star.

Kurt Warner defended the anonymous defensive coordinator cited in The Athletic’s recent assessment of NFL quarterbacks, in which the latter remarked that Patrick Mahomes “scrambles” and “plays streetball” when his first read gets taken away.ĭuring a recent appearance on “The Rich Eisen Show,” the Hall of Fame signal-caller, 51, was asked about the now-widespread comments that Mahomes himself addressed, calling the criticism that he and fellow Black quarterbacks face “weird.” Warner praised the Chiefs’ Super Bowl champ, expressing he’s “so good,” while also noting that the coach’s remark may have been taken out of context. Patrick Mahomes’ wife calls out ‘grown men talking s–t’ after Joe Rogan divorce comment Patrick Mahomes’ wife posts cozy couple’s pic during Joe Rogan drama

Patrick Mahomes’ brother accused of assault, forcibly kissing owner at bar Now, with Montage of Heck: The Home Recordings coming out November 13, we have the song’s official release.Jackson Mahomes’ complete list of cringeworthy controversies The cover originally appeared online in April, but was quickly taken down. Only he could make a whimsical love song sound so steeped in vitriol. Brett Morgen’s Cobain doc Montage of Heck unearthed a number of Cobain rarities, and one is a cover of “And I Love Her.” The audio isn’t perfect, but it’s still really interesting to hear what Cobain does with the song. That drama aside, there’s no questioning whether or not Cobain was a Beatles fan - they’re even included on his mixtape! - and now we have the cover to finally hush the doubters.

Remember a few years ago when Nirvana fans were up in arms over Paul McCartney “replacing” Kurt Cobain for a few shows with the band’s surviving members? Much of their ire was over the fact that, beforehand, McCartney admitted he didn’t really know who Nirvana were, as well as the long-standing myth that Cobain hated McCartney (based off a slightly misinterpreted quote).
