fleet wrote:dougthonus wrote:fleet wrote:Everyone knew Jay Cutler had diabetes, and openly discussed . If the player wants it to be a secret thats a different story.
Presuming what is going on is a protected health condition, and it sure sounds that way, then no Bears official can talk about it in any detail whatsoever legally. If Frazier publicly discloses it, I'd imagine they can then discuss what is publicly disclosed and can offer no information that is not already publicly disclosed, but would likely opt to say only super generic things around supporting him to ensure they don't get sued even in that case.
If he disclosed he had diabetes or something similar, then the talking heads can talk all they want about diabetes, but anyone who has confidential information still cannot share anything that is non public.
In this case, without more information, I find it highly unlikely there is any reason to be critical of the Bears. Probably whatever they found through extensive testing was not something they would have found pre-draft, and they also likely have no legal option to provide any detail other than what has already been provided. This feels like a "bad luck" situation while now following a legally defined process to me.
I’m not interested in the health condition or anything else in detail further than how it affects his availability going forward. I’m interested in the Bears draft processes around it, whatever the definition “it” is. Poles avoidance could be considered protective if you want to be generous. Or it could be self protective too. This is a GM that doesn’t have a stop sign, that’s proven.
Nothing of the kind has been "proven" about Poles. He stopped short of selecting Jalen Carter. And we don't know how many other players he stopped short of taking for one reason or another. It's one thing to be a little pessimistic, it's another to be condescending and one-sided in your pessimism.