Ahead of the Saints' trip to Indianapolis Sunday, Kenny Vaccaro was asked if Andrew Luck has "deceptive speed" for a QB. The safety quickly gave the media a lesson on the power words carry.
The Ravens Should've Complained About Deflategate, Not The Colts
"Not deceptive. Just because he's white doesn't mean he's deceptive," Vaccaro said, per ESPN. "He's actually a great athlete.
"He has all the tools that you ask for as a quarterback: smart, big arm talent, can go through all his reads and he can run. So not deceptive, he's actually athletic."
Cam Newton Should Be Fined For Every INT He Throws
"Deceptive?"
Clearly, someone didn't pay attention to Luck's combine in 2012.
The former No. 1-overall pick ran a 4.67 40-yard dash, a 4.28 in the 20-yard shuttle and finished the three-cone drill in 6.80 seconds.
Virtually the same times as Cam Newton just a year before.
Then -- in 2011 -- Newton ran a 4.59 40-yard dash, a 4.18 in the 20-yard shuttle and finished the three-cone drill in 6.92 seconds.
Do you hear anyone calling the Panthers QB "deceptively fast?"
No.
Chip Kelly -- who will learn first hand (again) in Charlotte this Sunday -- even went as far as using key phrases like "explodes" and "dangerous" when assessing Newton's ability to scramble with the football.
"With Cam, you may have him and hit him," Kelly said, per ESPN, "then he explodes out of there and you'd better have somebody on top of him to contain him because he's such a dangerous threat running the football."
And yet -- despite having similar athleticism -- it's Luck who's tagged as "deceptive."
Newton was right. The media is comical.
For more content, follow us on Twitter @SportsWN or LIKE US on Facebook
© Copyright 2024 Sports World News, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.