 Quincy Anunwa, who was on the IL, or the IR, with a neck injury, was fined $27,900 by the team for missing two days of treatment, and then he went on a Twitter rant. He said he took his wife, a veteran, out to lunch on Veterans Day, also at a house emergency. He acknowledges he should have told the team beforehand, but the believes the penalty is excessive. He says this could have been handled in so many different ways. He also revealed that he has about a 50-50 chance of playing again. He's got some nerve. Okay? I'm going to tell you why. First of all, he invokes veterans. So his wife was a veteran. God bless her. Thank her for her service. He had to take her to lunch that day rather than go get treatment. He could have taken her to dinner. He could have thanked her. He could have had a candlelit dinner. I'm not going to tell him what to do, but whatever he wants to do, that's a poor excuse for missing treatment that you have to have and not telling the team. I think he'd be called the Jets up and say, I'm going to come in a little bit later. He wants his cake and eat it too. I'm sorry. I'm not a Jetshill. We've done nothing the last two weeks except kill the Jets, and they've done stupid stuff with Kalechio Semili that's heavy-handed, looks awful. Luke Faulk also came out, and he has an agreement against them. But this one, I mean, Quincy Anunwa really thinks that he's been wronged. It's a terrible thing if he has a 50-50 chance of ever playing again, but you want to hear what no less an authority than Damien Woody said? He tweeted this out. He said, about Quincy Anunwa, from what I gather, he missed a couple of treatments, let the team know why after the fact, and he got fined. Again, what am I missing here? Exactly. What are we missing here? Michael, you're 100% right on this. And the other thing that's really irritating about it is his wife's a veteran. His wife's a veteran. What does that have to do with anything? Yeah. All right. I mean, it was Veterans Day. He wanted to take her. He's got a 50-50 chance of playing again, so he's trying to go sympathy, and then he's taking it to Twitter. So why do all these players think it's okay? Just take your grievances to Twitter. If you have a problem with the Jets, take it up with the Jets. If you've got a problem with the fine, take it up with your players association. What are you taking it to Twitter for? You know what these players are doing? And it's so weak, they know the Jets are the punching bags. They know they're going to get support from the fans, because right now the fans are hating on their own team. So when Jamal Adams does something, when Anunwa does something, they go to Twitter and they know they're going to get the positive feedback, because it's so easy to support the player and the team. The fact is, you're supposed to get treatment. If you don't show up someplace, I don't care if it's a job, if it's a doctor's appointment. Hey, if I have a doctor's appointment and I decide to take Nancy and the kids out to dinner and not go to the doctor's appointment, I might have to still pay for the appointment. I mean, you see a lot of doctors do that. If you don't cancel within 24 hours, you're still going to get banged for the fee. Sometimes we have to do a little dog and pony show and juggle cats and everything and meet with advertisers, and if we have a lunch meeting set up, say PJ Clark's down the block at one o'clock, and we just blow it off without even calling the salesperson, we should be disciplined. I mean, what is Quincy? He's trying to use, it's insulting to me that he's using the fact that his wife is a veteran as an excuse, and then it's insulting to me that he's using his tenuous situation as a player and moving forward that his 50-50 might ever play again. Well, if there's a chance he might not ever play again, don't you think he shouldn't be skipping any kind of treatment that maybe that could help you play again? And also, Michael, and this is just me making a prediction or thinking about, if he got fined that much, this is probably not the first time it's happened. Alright, so it's probably been a little bit of an issue. And I think you hit it on the nose, though. The Jets are punching bags right now. Of course, but that's what they do. Most of what a lot of people do on Twitter, to me, is they're trying to galvanate their opinion, right? They're going to want people to support them. Alright, so he gets fined $27,000. Oh, I'll just go to Twitter. I'll talk about how my wife is a veteran. I got a 50-50 chance that they're playing again. Plus, everybody's hating on the Jets because they're an awful football team right now. And I'm just going to get a bunch of mentions back about you. You tell them you're right. It's so weak to do. File a grievance with the union. Go to the Jets directly and complain about it. He really does not have a kit coming. He's embarrassing himself. And I think that what's going on with the Jets is that Joe Douglas is a no-nonsense guy. He's a rules guy. And although the Jets look awful with the assembly stuff, do we really know what happened? We just know what assembly is saying. Do we really know what happened? Now, the danger with the Jets is that other players always side with players, always. Never side with Madden. Ever. Is that going to hurt them in the future with players? I don't know. But on this one, if a player could defend what Quincy and Inwood does, please call in and tell me how you defend this. My wife's a veteran. I took out to lunch on Veterans Day to honor her. What a bunch of... Well, take her out after the treat. Take her out to dinner. And again, I'm sure... You should thank her every day for being a veteran. You know what? You could probably call the Jets up and say, listen, it's Veterans Day. Can I move my treatment up or back? Michael, I'm sure he's been a pain about it. And I'm completely 100% behind you on that.