Washington Redskins defensive back Sean Taylor (21) looks on against Oakland during the second half at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland on November 20, 2005. Oakland defeated Washington 16-13. (Photo by Allen Kee/Getty Images) | Photo by Allen Kee/Getty Images
This is so gross.
Sean Taylor was legendary, inspirational, and on the path to becoming one of the greatest players of all time. The loss of his life at the age of 24 in a 2007 home invasion is one of the greatest NFL tragedies of the last several decades.
Now his life and memory is being used by the Washington Football Team to deflect from emerging details of their NFL investigation, which started in 2020 after allegations of sexual harassment from former employees.
There will never be another 21
On Sunday, we will officially retire Sean Taylor’s number
— Washington Football Team (@WashingtonNFL) October 14, 2021
The attached blog post written by “Washington Football Team Public Relations” says it all. This is nothing more than a hastily thrown together event on four day notice to try and deflect heat away from former team president Bruce Allen, the willing recipient of Jon Gruden’s hate-filled emails, while sending the coach topless photos of the team’s cheerleaders.
Sunday had already been earmarked to be “Alumni Homecoming,” which would bring former players back to FedEx field for a celebration, but there was zero indication the team planned to retire Taylor’s number prior to Thursday, four days before the game.
Shoehorning this memorial into the event only serves to push Taylor into the national conversation, and is tantamount to saying “see, we’re not racist” during a week where the team is under so much scrutiny. Nobody outside of fans of the team would have cared about an “Alumni Homecoming,” but everyone cares about Sean Taylor.
Make no mistake: Taylor’s life deserves being honored. His jersey is worthy of being retired. Doing it in this way is gross. It didn’t happen in 2017, 10 years after Taylor’s death. It could have happened next year on the 15th anniversary. Instead it’s being rolled out with scant notice — and worst we’re now forced to look at this memorial as a gross cover for PR issues, rather than remember Taylor on his own terms.
Sean Taylor’s memory deserves better.