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Packers fans may be familiar with Aaron Rodgers’ comments about firing Robert Saleh

Packers fans may be familiar with Aaron Rodgers’ comments about firing Robert Saleh

If you can believe it, Aaron Rodgers is back in the news. It’s amazing how often Rodgers is in the news even though he’s never done or said anything wrong. I guess the media just hates it when people tell hard truths! Time is really a flat circle.

This latest episode has to do with the fact that he definitely didn’t get Jets head coach Robert Saleh fired. And if you think his outward disgust toward Saleh during training camp — or during the preseason and regular season — had anything to do with it, just think. He’s simply a humble quarterback trying to build on the stellar reputation of the historically great team he plays for. To protect his honor, he appeared on another lowly (former) football player’s TV show to clear his name and absolutely SHUT OFF the haters who would say otherwise.

RELATED: Packers fans need to laugh at how quickly Aaron Rodgers is ruining the Jets

“As far as the ridiculous accusations out there, I’m not going to spend more than one sentence on them, and that means I reject every one of those accusations because they’re patently false,” he told Pat McAfee. “It’s interesting how much power people think I have…”

What an epic setback! The haters have never been able to match Rodgers’ mental toughness and are truly in shambles. Now why do people say that retreats in the dark are attention-grabbing nonsense?!

Anyway, for no reason at all, here’s what Rodgers said in 2018 when asked about his role in McCarthy’s midseason firing:

“I have no reaction to that,” he told ESPN. “I don’t have to answer every expert out there. I don’t know how many times I have to stand here and tell you that I don’t feel like I have to convince anyone about Mike and I’s relationship… Again, I don’t have to respond to every person out there who has an opinion. That just opens a whole door to things I don’t want to be a part of.

The woke media will probably try to conflate these two statements, but we cannot allow that. They’ll point out that other QBs don’t have the track record of firing coaches in the middle of the season; They roughly assume that his aggressive pursuit of anyone who would suggest he influences his team’s decisions is just to get the monthly clicks he needs. Rodgers is just trying to go about his business and win a Super Bowl – it’s not his fault people are listening to what he says on the world’s biggest cable sports network. Can you really “blame” him for his “actions”?

Some things – like the head coach you criticize publicly getting fired in the middle of the season – just happen. Sometimes they happen more than once. Sometimes they happen in exactly the same way. That doesn’t mean they are “similar.” Who hasn’t fired their boss twice in seven years?

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