NFL All-Pro defender sees 'both sides' of Trevor Lawrence hit: 'It's tricky'
Trevor Lawrence was knocked out of Sunday's game after taking a hit to the head by Azeez Al-Shaair.
Al-Shaair was suspended three games for the hit that was widely deemed dirty. However, the Houston Texans linebacker said he had no ill-intent, and general manager Nick Caseio called the treatment of the defender "bulls---."
Minnesota Vikings cornerback Stephon Gilmore would not go that far, but in a recent interview with Fox News Digital, he noted that it is a difficult circumstance.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
"You never want to see someone get hit like that. Itβs kind of tricky sometimes with quarterbacks running, trying to get first downs, and then sliding at the last second, I see both sides," he said.
Gilmore seemed to agree that defenders almost never get the benefit of the doubt on those bang-bang plays that happen in the blink of an eye.
"Itβs hard β some quarterbacks slide early, sometimes you try to get a first down so they get aggressive," he said. "You donβt know when to pull back and go for the tackle, so itβs tricky."
Gilmore's comments echo what Texans head coach DeMeco Ryans said about the ordeal, who even said the Jaguars players overreacted.
"But itβs also β itβs twofold, right? I mean a lot of the quarterbacks in this day and age. They try to take advantage of the rule where they slide late, and they try to get an extra yard, and now youβre a defender, a lot of onus is on the defender whether itβs on the sideline or whether itβs on the quarterback, you donβt know what a guy thinking," Ryans said. "You donβt know if a guy is standing up and heβs continuing to run, you donβt know, and then you get a late slide, and youβre β you hit the guy.Β
"Unfortunate that Trevor got hurt. Hope Trevor is OK, but itβs also, if weβre sliding, we have to get down. If weβre getting out of bounds, we get out of bounds and that rule is there to protect the quarterbacks, and we want our quarterbacks to be safe in the league, so we just have to be safe. If weβre sliding, make sure weβre keeping our heads down. And the entire thing is Azeez β he hits the guy, but their sideline overreacts, and it turns into a melee.
"It wasnβt our guys. Itβs their team overreacted, pushed our guy, dragging our guy to the sideline, so thatβs uncalled for on that side. We have to be better on the sidelines, as well, with both teams."
Jon Runyan, NFL vice president of football operations, said Al-Shaair's actions after the hit, and other dirty plays, contributed to his penalty.
Lawrence posted on X on Sunday night that he was "home and feeling better."
Follow Fox News DigitalβsΒ sports coverage on X,Β and subscribe toΒ the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.