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To: PRND21
He sure looks like an upstanding citizen to me:

Pro Bowl receiver Randy Moss is getting fined a second time for abuse of game officials; this time $40,000 for squirting a water bottle at an official. The NFL said Thursday the latest fine resulted from Moss' conduct in the Minnesota Vikings' 49-37 loss to the St. Louis Rams in an NFC divisional playoff game Sunday. The league also confirmed Thursday that it fined Moss $10,000 earlier for excessive verbal abuse. The lanky wide receiver, standing near the Minnesota bench during the fourth quarter at the Trans World Dome in St. Louis, squirted liquid from the bottle at field judge Jim Saracino following an incomplete pass intended for him. Vikings spokesman Bob Hagan said the bottle most likely contained water. The St. Louis fine was high because it was the second violation this year against Moss for abuse of game officials, the league said. The amount for a second offense is up to the NFL commissioner. Moss was fined $10,000 for excessive verbal abuse of side judge Larry Rose during a game against the Chicago Bears on Nov. 14. In that game, Moss was flagged after Cris Carter caught his third touchdown of the day and Moss continued to argue with an official about a call on the previous play. Moss acknowledged the squirting after the game, but has said little about it. ``There were some things going on,'' Moss said after the game. ``I don't really want to talk about it.''
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news/ap/20000121/ap-vikings-mossfined.html

On Saturday, Moss went into freefall, slipping to the No. 21 pick in the NFL draft. "The past had a lot to do with it,'' Moss said, in a marvelous understatement. He is an imposing 6-foot-5, 211 pounds. He has breathtaking speed; he was recently timed at 4.28 seconds in a 40-yard dash. There are some other statistics worth noting, numbers that made those NFL scouts shiver. Three, for instance. As in the number of colleges Moss has been associated with in two formal seasons: Marshall, Notre Dame (where his scholarship was revoked) and Florida State. Two. As in the number of battery charges he has faced. One was a conviction, the other a misdemeanor domestic battery charge in a dispute with the mother of his child. One. As in a positive marijuana charge. These are, as Moss took great pains to point out in his interviews with NFL teams over the past few months, events of the past. And then, at the NFL's scouting combine in Indianapolis, some of the baggage, some of the bile in his background, leaked out again. Moss was in a sporting goods store, when he noticed there weren't any Marshall caps in stock. He cursed out the store manager. Several league scouts who witnessed the outburst reported it to their teams.
http://espn.go.com/gen/columns/garber/00667734.html

The potential reward in selecting Moss in the April 18-19 draft is enormous, but so is the risk. Never did the risk look greater than last week, when the Marshall wide receiver passed up a precious opportunity to erase doubts, showcase his phenomenal athleticism and sell himself at the NFL's scouting combine. He had been scheduled to participate, but he canceled his trip to Indianapolis the day the event began because, according to his agent, an abscessed wisdom tooth flared up and forced him to have six teeth removed. If almost any other player had been a last-minute no-show, it wouldn't have been a big deal. But this was the talk of the combine because teams had more questions about Moss than any other player in the draft. And now they have even more. Moss has made a series of bad decisions in his life. He spent 30 days in jail for battery. He was arrested for allegedly choking a girlfriend. He tested positive for marijuana once, and he was in the same car with a friend who was arrested for possession another time. One scout says he watched Moss "quit and walk off the field" against Miami of Ohio because "a midget corner who couldn't run or cover was pressing him."
http://share.sportingnews.com/voices/dan_pompei/19980209.html

Minnesota Vikings star receiver Randy Moss was asked Thursday to pay restitution for a crime he committed while in high school. Ernest Roy Johnson, who was beaten by Moss and another student at Dupont High School in 1995, filed a motion in Kanawha County Circuit Court saying a judge never followed through on a promise to make Moss pay. Johnson was hospitalized with injuries to his spleen, liver and kidney and suffered a concussion. He spent some time in an intensive care unit. Police and school officials at the time said the fight was racially motivated and concerned a slur written on a desk. Moss and the other student charged are black and Johnson is white. Moss later publicly apologized for the fight. He pleaded guilty to battery and was placed on probation. Moss lost a scholarship to Notre Dame because of the fight. While on probation, he admitted to smoking marijuana and was then kicked off Florida State's football team.
http://espn.go.com/nfl/news/1999/1021/126056.html

Minnesota receiver Randy Moss was fined $25,000 by the NFL on Thursday for making contact with an official Sunday in the Vikings' 41-13 loss to Tampa Bay. Moss said he was trying to get field judge Lloyd McPeters' attention when he grabbed the official's arm. Moss was ejected with 1:54 remaining in the game. Moss also will have to pay $15,000 as part of an agreement he made after last season. He was fined $40,000 for squirting an official with a water bottle in the Vikings' NFC divisional playoff game against St. Louis last season, but that penalty was reduced to $25,000 on the condition that Moss have no further problems with officials. Moss agreed to pay the remaining $15,000 if he had any other fines involving referees. Moss also was fined $10,000 last November for abusing an official in Chicago.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news/ap/20001102/ap-vikings-moss.html

After the Vikings were flogged 41-0 in the NFC Championship Game, Randy Moss, famous for catching passes, launched a few missiles. He called out coach Dennis Green, saying that the team wasn't prepared. He complained about his role -- or lack thereof -- in the offense. He questioned the desire and commitment of his teammates. Funny, those same teammates could say the same thing about him. It's convenient to let Moss' babble go, excusing it as an in-the-heat-of-the-embarrassment remark. It's even more acceptable to wink at his tongue, given his enormous talent. Listen, Moss had every right to be angry after the Vikings' most humiliating defeat not involving Roman numerals. However, it's one thing to be volatile. It's quite another to be hypocritical. Moss' fine whine is absurd when you consider his actions Sunday. For starters, according to a CBS sideline reporter, the Pro Bowl receiver went Eminem on a security guard for failing to let some of his friends on the field. As pointed out by broadcaster John Madden, Moss made a habit of not running hard on plays that weren't called for him. This type of effort should be intolerable. Unfortunately, it's repetitive. Earlier in the year, it was noticed by ESPN's Merril Hoge that Moss wasn't exactly searching out an oxygen mask following a Vikings series. Moss complained about the criticism, only to cop to the charge in a magazine article recently.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/columns/psx/20010117/troyerencksnflroundu.html

Vikings receiver Randy Moss was fined $10,000 by the NFL on Friday for taunting. Moss drew a 15-yard penalty when he twirled on his way into the end zone on a 25-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter of Minnesota's 28-16 victory over the New York Giants on Monday. Moss probably will appeal the fine, according to his agent, Dante DiTrapano. Moss was fined $5,000 for taunting against Green Bay on Oct. 21.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news/ap/20011123/ap-vikings-mossfined.html

The Minnesota Vikings, who have been criticized for failing to control wide receiver Randy Moss, fined him $15,000 for verbally abusing a group of corporate sponsors on a team bus. Moss was fined Nov. 12, the day after a 48-17 loss at Philadelphia, but the Vikings didn't announce the fine then, and coach Dennis Green declined to confirm it on Thursday. The Star Tribune reported that Moss was upset to find the seat he wanted occupied by a sponsor, and raised his voice when the person didn't move immediately. The AP source said the sponsor complained to owner Red McCombs, who directed Green to do something about the behavior. The Vikings, like most other NFL teams, typically invite to road games top executives of the companies that advertise with them. Moss has been fined $20,000 by the NFL this season, twice for taunting and once for wearing an unapproved cap on the sideline during a preseason game. Before that, Moss was fined $10,000 in November 1999 for verbal abuse of a side judge; $25,000 in January 2000 for squirting liquid on a field judge; and $40,000 in October 2000 for making contact with an official.
http://espn.go.com/nfl/news/2001/1213/1295121.html

25 posted on 09/28/2002 7:09:28 AM PDT by Excuse_My_Bellicosity
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
He sure looks like an upstanding citizen to me:

Your big dumb post leads with water squirting. Case closed.

29 posted on 10/01/2002 9:40:32 PM PDT by PRND21
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies ]

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