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Gators' Meyer wins on scoreboard, but fails by playing Tebow

Florida quarterback Tim Tebow avoided reinjuring his concussed brain Saturday night against No. 4 LSU, and if your vision extends only to the end of your nose, you probably think UF coach Urban Meyer gambled and won.

Borrow somebody's binoculars and look again, because you're wrong.

Did Urban Meyer do the wrong thing by playing Tim Tebow? (US Presswire)  
Did Urban Meyer do the wrong thing by playing Tim Tebow? (US Presswire)  
Florida won 13-3, but Meyer lost. Why? Because he gambled at all.

Meyer gambled Tebow's long-term quality of life, tossing Tebow's recently rattled brain onto the table like a 25-cent ante. At stake Saturday night was much more than a single win at Death Valley. Also on the line were SEC and national championships, an undefeated season, Meyer's own immortality. Meyer went all in by letting Tebow play two weeks after suffering a horrific concussion, gambling something that wasn't his to wager -- the health of his quarterback. Studies show that a second concussion for an athlete, so soon after the first, can lead to a lifetime of depression and even dementia. The odds of that second concussion coming Saturday night weren't great, no. But the odds were there.

So don't tell me Meyer won his gamble. I'm telling you, he lost his way.

This wasn't about football. This was about right and wrong, and playing Tebow was wrong. Only in the most limited viewpoint imaginable did Meyer win the battle Saturday night. Tebow didn't get hurt, Florida didn't get beat, so it's great, to be, a Florida Gator ...

No -- it's not. It's embarrassing to be a Florida Gator. It'll take a while for the sting of Meyer's stupid gamble to fade. He's the guy who hid behind team doctors after they made a guess -- an informed guess, an educated guess, but a guess nonetheless -- and cleared Tebow to play roughly eight hours before kickoff.

Think about the math of that. Two weeks had passed from the time Tebow was knocked senseless by Kentucky until he was cleared to play against LSU. Two weeks is 14 days, which is 336 hours. And Florida physicians needed 328 of those hours -- 97.6 percent of the time available -- to make their best guess that Tebow would be safe to play. Doctors didn't go down to the wire to decide on a tender ankle or a knee. This was a rattled brain. Not to get all Confucius on you, but when a question about brain safety lasts two weeks, there's your answer.

Concussion research is ongoing, and the acknowledged recovery time gets longer and longer, but as of today the minimum time for a player to return to action after suffering a concussion like Tebow suffered is thought to be two weeks. That's the minimum. Playing Tebow after the minimum recovery period was a meathead move, the modern-day equivalent of rubbing dirt on a bruise or withholding water at practice because dehydration would toughen a player up.

It's stupid and dangerous, is my point. In the future, when more and better concussion research is conducted and the minimum recovery time for such a brutal football knockout is extended to three weeks or even a month -- and that day is coming, I promise you -- people will look back on Meyer's decision to play Tebow against LSU on Oct. 10, 2009, as a dodged bullet. Meyer will say he didn't know. He had no idea. Two weeks wasn't enough recovery time for Tebow to play against LSU back in October 2009? Really? Meyer didn't know. That'll be his story.

But he did know. That'll be the truth.

After two weeks of rest, starting with a humble regimen of no television, Tebow wasn't cleared until hours before kickoff. And then he wasn't allowed to play like he normally would. The Gators usually have Tebow run the spread option, letting him decide whether to hand the ball off or pull it from the back's belly and run it himself. Tebow wasn't allowed to do that Saturday night, not until late in the game when the Gators really needed some short yardage.

Why wasn't Tim Tebow allowed to play like Tim Tebow for 3½ quarters? Because Meyer knew. He knew Tebow's brain wasn't ready to be hit. Not all the way. Meyer protected Tebow from contact as much as he could, which means he knew the risk was there -- which means Tebow shouldn't have been on the field in the first place. You saw the game. You know I'm right.

Good news: Tebow's brain survived.

Bad news: Meyer's integrity did not.

 
For more from Gregg Doyel, check him out on Twitter: @greggdoyelcbs
 

Talk Back
Reputation:83
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 25, 2007

October 14, 2009 4:24 pm
I don't have a problem with folks voicing their opinion with what they believe was the correct course of action. What I have a problem with is when posters somehow act as if Meyer is a villain, or fans are greedy, by agreeing that Meyer was right in playing Tebow.

I also have a problem with folks who think that it would have unequivocally been doing Tebow "a favor" to "
...(more)
Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 26, 2008

October 12, 2009 3:06 pm
In 2005, I suffered 2 concussions while playing college football. My concussions were 3 weeks apart and the sideeffects are starting to take hold. Migraines, depression, short temper...the list goes on. I hope for Tim Tebow's sake that his brain has time to heal. He is a bright young man with a great future and I would hate to see that go south because he suffered another concussion too soon ...(more)
Reputation:97
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 7, 2007

October 11, 2009 11:13 pm
It takes some guts to say what needs to be said. Doyle is right and the people who should be backing him up the most are the Florida fans. But they would rather stick their heads in the sand and ignore the obvious risks. Urban Meyer and these Florida fans that are being so harsh to Doyle should think twice. Do they really care about their star QB, or do they only care about the next W?
...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 25, 2006

October 13, 2009 10:04 am
Gregg, I disagree with you on this one... Urban Meyer got input from a lot of experts before he made the decision to let Tebow play. Meyer then made his game plan even more conservative to protect Tebow.  There is an article in today's Gainesville Sun about how Tebow talked to several people - including former 49ers quarterback Steve Young - about the best way to approach healing from this in ...(more)
Reputation:83
Level:All-Star
Since:Oct 15, 2007

October 12, 2009 2:33 pm
Sorry America.  Doyel isn't a part of the UF medical staff and although he'd like to believe he's just as capable of diagnosing Tebow's injury as the rest of you web-MDs, every other coach in America will let his medical staff give him the clear before any of you.  It was Tebow's decision to make in the end and he being the 22 year old adult that he is just about sums up anything else th ...(more)
Reputation:92
Level:All-Star
Since:Dec 3, 2006

October 12, 2009 11:52 pm

Here is the feedback/e-mail I sent to Doyle in response to this ridiculous article:


As a proud alumnus of the University of Florida, I am embarrased that a great school like UF would graduate a total moron such as yourself. Why such hatred towards your alma mater? This is not about Urban Meyer or Tebow at all, is it? Nope. You have some sort of "ax to grind" and we re ...(more)

Reputation:79
Level:Pro
Since:Aug 18, 2008

October 13, 2009 6:17 pm
                       Doyle you fellow gator fans will never agree with you. I made a post before the game that if it was my son there was no way I would let him play. I wouldnt have cared how many doctors said he was ok to play. IF you gator fans watched close he was not the normal tebow ...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Jun 8, 2007

October 12, 2009 2:06 pm

If Meyer’s only motivation is to win the National Championship then wouldn’t he have served himself better by sitting Tebow?  One thing is very clear the past few years, you can have a loss, even 2 losses, and still make it to the championship game.  So if Meyer knew there was a risk of Tebow getting hurt again, and possibly much more ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 4, 2008

October 11, 2009 11:53 pm

Your exactly right and I was waiting to see who would say it. The fact that he didn’t let Tebow be Tebow means that Tebow wasn't ready to play. What else could it mean? And because he did that Urban's real side stuck out like a sore thumb and let me tell you guys it’s not a pretty sight. Many people dismiss all of Urban's shining examples of how much of a horrible person he is ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 10, 2006

October 11, 2009 9:19 pm

I'm not a neurologist, but I am a doctor, and I can tell you that when you are involved as a physician or surgeon in a high-profile case with someone as famous as Tim Tebow, you get very very consevative.  The LAST thing any doctor in that situation is going to do is to take even one baby step out onto a limb.  The onyl way a doctor in a case like this is going to get famous i ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Mar 24, 2007

October 11, 2009 11:09 pm
Doyel, I'd love to offer a comment on this subject that would give me a shot at your hate mail column.  However, the fact is that I fall in line with your views more often than not.  It's clear to me that you are intentionally inflammatory on a predicatable basis and sometimes excessively so.  What I find hard to comprehend is that so many readers here obviously just don't get that. ...(more)
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 8, 2007

October 12, 2009 1:48 pm
I never thought the day would come, but I agree with Doyel. Let's put things into perspective. Tebow suffered a brain injury that was serious enough to send him to the hospital. The doctors were so unsure about his status that he wasn't cleared to play till the day of the game. If they were that unsure, then they shouldn't have played him. Tebow DID risk his future health by playing. Wha ...(more)
Reputation:92
Level:All-Star
Since:Dec 8, 2007

October 11, 2009 10:51 pm
Tim Tebow was cleared by a great set of Doctors, only then did Urban allow him to play.  Tebow's own father who would have absolutely nothing but his Son's long term health agreed with it.  You and all of the others that have become Doctors over the past week wanted nothing more than a Tebowless game.  Every expert Dr in the world could agree that he's 100% and there's no reason for ...(more)
Reputation:73
Level:Pro
Since:Aug 11, 2007

October 11, 2009 11:01 pm
A team of doctors from around the country, Tebow's parents, Tebow and Meyer all had some hand in on making the decision which as best I know was agreed on all the way around.  But some jerk who earn's his living writing about sports knows more than all of them?

Not hardly Doyel, this is the first and last time I'll reply to one of your columns and likely the last time I'll ever b
...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 28, 2007

October 11, 2009 10:21 pm
Just curious if you (Doyel) read my post from yesterday as you basically elaborated on my statement.  Then again, I suppose imitation is the most sincere form of flattery lol.  The coaching ranks are replete with individuals like Lou Holtz who give lip service to their players' health being of tantamount importance then still allow injured players to compete under the belief that it was ...(more)
 
 
 
 
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