Hamlin, a safety for the Buffalo Bills, is in critical condition at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center after suffering a frightening on-field medical incident.

The defensive player collapsed just seconds after making a tackle in the Bills game. After his heart stopped, he had to be resuscitated on live TV with cardiopulmonary resuscitation and a defibrillated body.

Buffalo players formed a circle around their teammate to protect him from the cameras while the Bills players were crying and holding each other. It's not yet known what caused the cardiac incident, but the tackle did involve a hit to the chest.

Hamlin's case has been met with anger and confusion. He's a healthy young man, he's only in his second season, he was drafted in the sixth round in 2021, and Monday marked his first start in a playoff game. Again, there was nothing particularly violent about the tackle, at least beyond the normal violence associated with football.

The terrible injury that put one of the league's rising young stars in the intensive care unit has renewed the debate about whether football is ever really safe.

The injury itself, and what it means about the game of football, isn't the only conversation happening as a result of Hamlin's hospital stay. The industry and organizing force that is the NFL has come under fire as well, as they took over an hour to postpone the heavily anticipated playoff match and at one point urged players to take a five minute warm up.

Joe Buck, one of the league's longest-serving and most-trusted broadcasters, said during the broadcast that the players had been given five minutes to get ready to play. Nobody is moving, that's the word from the league and the word we get from down on the field.

The report made a lot of peopleTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkiaTrademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,TrademarkiaTrademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia,Trademarkia The National Football League is a company. Any athlete who changes their body is at risk of injury. Regardless of how much money a player makes, they are still workers within that system. One of the most lucrative enterprises in the country should not be asking workers to return to work just minutes after a coworker almost dies from a medical emergency.

Imagine if your boss told you to take 5 minutes after a coworker needs to be resuscitated in your office. Get back to work. The National Football League tried to do that. Garbage.

The "take five" claims have been denied by the NFL, with the executive vice president of football operations saying during a late Monday conference call that he never considered proceeding with the game. They said that teams were told to get back on the field.

They waited so long to cancel the game because of the confusion and chaos that the injury presented, and because they were worried, according to the explanation given byVincent. The National Football League values on and off field human life.

The most important thing was that it was not about the game. Shawn Smith was asked to communicate with both Taylor and the coach to get the players together. It was just about getting a pulse of where they were. "getting a pulse" is the worst phrase that this man could have said.

This isn't the only high-profile injury that the league has had to contend with. Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa has been at the center of controversy regarding the league's handling of concussions, despite showcasing concussive symptoms after a series of big hits, the Dolphins refused to bench him.

There is no date for the postponed game. They have many questions to answer. We are thinking of Hamlin and his family.

"This is a side of football that no one wants to see or admit exists," Ryan Clark, a former NFL safety turned broadcast anchor, said. This isn't about a person. It's about a human.

There is a question about what happened to Damar Hamlin. The Associated Press reported on the news.

The World Cup is so high tech that they need to charge the balls.