The thrust of Tush, famous for the Philadelphia Eagles, is back at the Center for Attention in this low NFL season after the Green Bay Packers presented a proposal to ban the game.
The chief coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, Jim Harbaugh, has seen it throughout the league, even for his brother, John, with his Baltimore Ravens. Jim admitted that he did not have a “strong opinion” about the matter.
However, Harbaugh said he is looking at a good football when he sees the thrust of Tush, which means finding a way to stop him or, better yet, run successfully.
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The Los Angeles Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh, at a press conference at The Bolt. (Kirby Lee/Imagn images)
“It seems that it works every time, but it looks like football for me. I know well or stop it,” Harbaugh told Pak Gazette Digital while talking about his association with INVIVYD, the US biotechnology company that is working to provide no -preventive pedidas of Vaccine for COVID-19.
“I do not have a solid opinion at this time and probably postpone to others and I see in what direction the vote goes. It gets well in it or put me in a position to stop it.”
Harbaugh said these were his thoughts after the Eagles began to convert the play at such a high pace.
The NFC team presents a proposal to ban the ‘famous thrust’ game of Eagles: report
Since then, other teams have tried the play, but none with the same success as the Eagles.
“I’m not a fan of this work,” said the CEO of the Green Bay Packers, Mark Murphy. “There is no skill involved, and it is almost an automatic first time in the plays of a patio or less. The series of play with the commanders jumping outside the NFC championship game to try to stop the play was ridiculous.”
Athletics reported that the Packers were the NFL team that presented a proposal to the NFL competition committee to ban the game, which will be voted by the owners of the League in March.
“I suppose the discussions will be in the low season, but the field marshal will never be eliminated from football,” Harbaugh added. “I guess it’s the aspect of push [the player under center]And you can’t drag [the player holding the ball]but it is allowed to push. “
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The Field Marshal of the Philadelphia Eagles, Jalen Hurts (1), prepares the impulse of Tush during a game against the Atlanta Falcons on September 15, 2024 in Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. (Andy Lewis/Icon Sportswire through Getty Images)
The Eagles introduced the work in 2022 and have made it more than 90% of the time. Although Harbaugh and others feel that Eagles make it almost automatically, the percentage has decreased since then.
In 2023, Philadelphia became a rate of 88.1%, and it was 82.4% in its winning season of the Super Bowl in 2024. But it was a clutch for the field marshal Jalen Hurts to score another tuchde tuchde tuchdown tu Bowl, the first game score, to help them defeat Kansas City chiefs.
The play was discussed the low season, but we will see where the owners are when they vote to ban the work.
Harbaugh here to help
This low season, Harbaugh’s training implies disseminating information about a multiple layer prevention approach to fight COVID-19, which is still a serious health problem, even if we are no longer in a pandemic.
From October 7, 2023, until September 8, 2024, INVIVYD found that there were more than 656,000 hospitalizations, 112,302 of which were revenues of the Intensive Care Unit, and more than 58,000 deaths due to COVID-19.
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The Los Angeles Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh, at a press conference at The Bolt. (Kirby Lee/Imagn images)
“As a coach, you want to see people not marginalized in the game, in the game and meet without having that fear,” he said. “Proud of having associated with Invivyd. People think that Covid is an old news, I don’t like to talk about it so much. But the facts are still close, and [we] I do not know the long -term effects.
“People still get sick, are still hospitalized, some still die, especially those who are immunocompromised. It could be yourself, could be someone you know, someone who is a friend or family. And there are options, so talk to your doctor , In a nutshell. “