Mama made me, the hood raised me 💯 A tall light skinned dude in the hood with the name Telly. I fought everyday for my respect. Today I’m a legend in my own right. So put some respect on my name….
Myles Garrett is the rare player who had a no-trade clause in his contract. He is waiving it to be traded to Los Angeles, per sources, and he will keep the same clause in his Rams’ contract.
So….. So did Jamin Davis and others…
Speeding and reckless-driving cases are unfortunately common among NFL players. Here are some high-profile examples, roughly from most to least serious:
Jalen Carter (Eagles DT) — The most serious. In 2023, while at Georgia, he pleaded no contest to misdemeanor reckless driving and racing tied to a January 2023 crash that killed teammate Devin Willock and staffer Chandler LeCroy. Police said Carter and LeCroy were racing at around 104 mph. He got 12 months probation, a fine, and community service.
Rashee Rice (Chiefs WR) — Charged after a 2024 high-speed crash in Dallas involving multiple vehicles and injuries; this was one of the rare cases where the NFL actually disciplined a player, since people were hurt.
Nolan Smith (Eagles edge) — Arrested in May 2026 in Georgia, clocked at 135 mph in a 70 mph zone in a Lamborghini. Speeding and reckless driving charges; court date set for July.
Jordan Addison (Vikings WR) — Cited in 2023 for driving 140 mph in a 55 mph zone.
Myles Garrett (Browns DE) — A repeat offender, cited for speeding at least seven times since 2017, including 100 mph in a 60 zone in 2025. No league discipline.
Shedeur Sanders (Browns QB) — Multiple speeding incidents, including a 2025 citation for 101 mph in a 60 zone.
Two patterns worth noting. First, Aiyuk’s case is somewhat unusual in that the charge came from a video he posted himself, rather than a traffic stop. Second, the NFL has historically been lenient on speeding/reckless driving unless someone gets hurt — which is why Rice and Carter faced consequences but Garrett and Sanders largely didn’t. There’s also a notable cluster of these cases coming out of the University of Georgia program specifically, where dozens of players have been cited or arrested for speeding, racing, or reckless driving since the fatal 2023 crash.
@Tiller56@ZachMao Bruh, my fanbase is so annoying. I can’t with these dudes. They turning their nose up at potential elite talent in his prime. When all he did was sabotage his career to potentially play for our team. And they hate him as if he did something to us. Wierd behavior bruh.
I don’t agree with how BA has been handling his business as a professional athlete..but this right here is strategically put together to smear his name..Some will get it..and some won’t…
Speeding and reckless-driving cases are unfortunately common among NFL players. Here are some high-profile examples, roughly from most to least serious:
Jalen Carter (Eagles DT) — The most serious. In 2023, while at Georgia, he pleaded no contest to misdemeanor reckless driving and racing tied to a January 2023 crash that killed teammate Devin Willock and staffer Chandler LeCroy. Police said Carter and LeCroy were racing at around 104 mph. He got 12 months probation, a fine, and community service.
Rashee Rice (Chiefs WR) — Charged after a 2024 high-speed crash in Dallas involving multiple vehicles and injuries; this was one of the rare cases where the NFL actually disciplined a player, since people were hurt.
Nolan Smith (Eagles edge) — Arrested in May 2026 in Georgia, clocked at 135 mph in a 70 mph zone in a Lamborghini. Speeding and reckless driving charges; court date set for July.
Jordan Addison (Vikings WR) — Cited in 2023 for driving 140 mph in a 55 mph zone.
Myles Garrett (Browns DE) — A repeat offender, cited for speeding at least seven times since 2017, including 100 mph in a 60 zone in 2025. No league discipline.
Shedeur Sanders (Browns QB) — Multiple speeding incidents, including a 2025 citation for 101 mph in a 60 zone.
Two patterns worth noting. First, Aiyuk’s case is somewhat unusual in that the charge came from a video he posted himself, rather than a traffic stop. Second, the NFL has historically been lenient on speeding/reckless driving unless someone gets hurt — which is why Rice and Carter faced consequences but Garrett and Sanders largely didn’t. There’s also a notable cluster of these cases coming out of the University of Georgia program specifically, where dozens of players have been cited or arrested for speeding, racing, or reckless driving since the fatal 2023 crash.
Speeding and reckless-driving cases are unfortunately common among NFL players. Here are some high-profile examples, roughly from most to least serious:
Jalen Carter (Eagles DT) — The most serious. In 2023, while at Georgia, he pleaded no contest to misdemeanor reckless driving and racing tied to a January 2023 crash that killed teammate Devin Willock and staffer Chandler LeCroy. Police said Carter and LeCroy were racing at around 104 mph. He got 12 months probation, a fine, and community service.
Rashee Rice (Chiefs WR) — Charged after a 2024 high-speed crash in Dallas involving multiple vehicles and injuries; this was one of the rare cases where the NFL actually disciplined a player, since people were hurt.
Nolan Smith (Eagles edge) — Arrested in May 2026 in Georgia, clocked at 135 mph in a 70 mph zone in a Lamborghini. Speeding and reckless driving charges; court date set for July.
Jordan Addison (Vikings WR) — Cited in 2023 for driving 140 mph in a 55 mph zone.
Myles Garrett (Browns DE) — A repeat offender, cited for speeding at least seven times since 2017, including 100 mph in a 60 zone in 2025. No league discipline.
Shedeur Sanders (Browns QB) — Multiple speeding incidents, including a 2025 citation for 101 mph in a 60 zone.
Two patterns worth noting. First, Aiyuk’s case is somewhat unusual in that the charge came from a video he posted himself, rather than a traffic stop. Second, the NFL has historically been lenient on speeding/reckless driving unless someone gets hurt — which is why Rice and Carter faced consequences but Garrett and Sanders largely didn’t. There’s also a notable cluster of these cases coming out of the University of Georgia program specifically, where dozens of players have been cited or arrested for speeding, racing, or reckless driving since the fatal 2023 crash.
The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office issued a warrant for the arrest of San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk on a misdemeanor charge of exhibition of speeding, @nwagoner confirmed.
https://t.co/mRcMDYLcM8
The warrant is for a misdemeanor charge of “exhibition of speed” — essentially a street-racing/reckless-driving charge.
It stems from a video Aiyuk posted to his own YouTube channel in December 2025, filmed from the driver’s seat of his Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing, showing him driving well over 100 mph (reportedly hitting 104) past Levi’s Stadium on Tasman Drive in Santa Clara, where the limit is 40 mph. He later apologized publicly and said his car content wouldn’t involve speeding anymore, but the Santa Clara Police investigated anyway and forwarded the case to the Santa Clara County DA’s office on January 15. The DA issued the warrant this week.
The warrant is for a misdemeanor charge of “exhibition of speed” — essentially a street-racing/reckless-driving charge.
It stems from a video Aiyuk posted to his own YouTube channel in December 2025, filmed from the driver’s seat of his Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing, showing him driving well over 100 mph (reportedly hitting 104) past Levi’s Stadium on Tasman Drive in Santa Clara, where the limit is 40 mph. He later apologized publicly and said his car content wouldn’t involve speeding anymore, but the Santa Clara Police investigated anyway and forwarded the case to the Santa Clara County DA’s office on January 15. The DA issued the warrant this week.
For context, this is one more chapter in Aiyuk’s falling-out with the 49ers. He’s been estranged from the team since the latter part of last season
Petty.
How many people post themselves speeding every day and never get charged?
104 mph is stupid, no argument there. But digging up an old IG video to issue a warrant feels like selective enforcement.
The warrant is for a misdemeanor charge of “exhibition of speed” — essentially a street-racing/reckless-driving charge.
It stems from a video Aiyuk posted to his own YouTube channel in December 2025, filmed from the driver’s seat of his Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing, showing him driving well over 100 mph (reportedly hitting 104) past Levi’s Stadium on Tasman Drive in Santa Clara, where the limit is 40 mph. He later apologized publicly and said his car content wouldn’t involve speeding anymore, but the Santa Clara Police investigated anyway and forwarded the case to the Santa Clara County DA’s office on January 15. The DA issued the warrant this week.
For context, this is one more chapter in Aiyuk’s falling-out with the 49ers. He’s been estranged from the team since the latter part of last season
Thank God for another day is another got damn birthday 34 years old and still improving on life learning every day and happy about a lot even the little thing that people give to me thank you family.☝🏿🙏🏾😎🔥 weeeeeeeee liiiiiiiitttttttt