NEW YORK (AP) Jets linebacker Darron Lee was fined $36 http://www.seattleseahawksteamonline.com/dontae-johnson-jersey ,464 by the NFL on Friday for a roughing the passer penalty and another $9,115 for a facemask call in New York's loss at Miami last Sunday.
Lee, in his second season, has been fined four times this year for a total of $72,925. His late hit in Week 1 at Buffalo cost him $9,115 Authentic Jeff Locke Jersey , while an unnecessary roughness penalty against the Dolphins in Week 3 resulted in him being docked $18,231.
After the game last Sunday, Lee disagreed with the roughing the passer penalty and thought it should have been a sack of Jay Cutler, who was knocked out of the game with cracked ribs on a later hit by Jordan Jenkins. Coach Todd Bowles was asked Friday about whether Lee is a bit overaggressive at times.
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"I think Darron's fine," Bowles said. "He had two (penalties) and he's got to cut back. It's not like he has two every week. A lot of people had a bad day at the office, coaches included. We'll get better."
Jets wide receiver Robby Anderson was also fined $12 http://www.philadelphiaeaglesteamonlines.com/markus-wheaton-jersey ,154 for tossing his helmet in frustration toward the end of the 31-28 loss.
Also from that game, Miami defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh was fined $9,115 for a facemask penalty.
Cincinnati linebacker Vontaze Burfict added to his lengthy list of infractions, receiving a fine of $12,154 for kicking at the head of Pittsburgh fullback Roosevelt Nix.
Burfict avoided a suspension, but this marked the 10th time he has been disciplined by the league – resulting in more than $2.6 million that the linebacker has had to pay.
Kansas City cornerback Marcus Peters was fined $9 Eagles Markus Wheaton Jersey ,115 for the unnecessary roughness hit that caused the flare-up last week against Oakland, and resulted in Raiders running back Marshawn Lynch being suspended for a game.
Tampa Bay cornerback Robert McClain has to pay $24,309 for his helmet-to-helmet hit on Buffalo wide receiver Deonte Thompson in the fourth quarter last Sunday. McClain ended up with a concussion and won't play this weekend as a result of the hit, which also was called for a 15-yard penalty on the Buccaneers.
Indianapolis' Jon Bostic and Green Bay's Kentrell Bruce were each fined $18,231 for horse-collar tackles in their games, while Atlanta's Adrian Clayborn was docked the same for a roughing the passer penalty against New England's Tom Brady.
New Orleans defensive lineman David Onyemata was fined $12 Authentic Geron Christian Jersey ,154 for unsportsmanlike conduct after he tried to pull Green Bay receiver Randall Cobb off a pile of players after Cobb fumbled.
FLORHAM PARK Authentic Marquez Valdes-Scantling Jersey , N.J. (AP) Austin Seferian-Jenkins limped out of Gillette Stadium last Christmas Eve and worried about his uncertain future.
The New York Jets tight end was dealing with demons in his personal life, and his body was betraying him. Just three years into his NFL career, Seferian-Jenkins' life was spinning out of control.
"I'm lucky to be here," he said after practice earlier this week. "The last time I played the Patriots, I pulled my hamstring and I thought that was the last time I was ever going to play football. I'm thankful for the opportunity that I was able to play them and I'm thankful for everything that's happened."
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Just 10 months after that game in New England, Seferian-Jenkins is in the middle of a massive comeback story.
On the field – and, more importantly, off it.
He's second on the team with 23 catches, already a career high despite him being suspended the first two games of the season for violating the NFL's substance abuse policy last year.
"He worked on himself all offseason, and that's tough to do, especially when you have things go bad for you Authentic Cody Latimer Jersey ," coach Todd Bowles said. "But I'm happy for him. He's the kind of guy you root for."
That hasn't always been the case for the 25-year-old Seferian-Jenkins, who a year ago was dealing with having been arrested for a DUI – resulting in the two-game suspension – and subsequently getting cut by Tampa Bay after being a second-round pick out of the University of Washington in the 2014 draft.
The Jets took a chance on him, claiming him off waivers and giving him an opportunity to clean up his life and rejuvenate what was once a promising career.
He made little impact on the offense last season, though, finishing with just 10 catches for 110 yards while dealing with a few injuries. But the hamstring issue that ended his season in Week 16 became a defining moment for him.
"I just felt like I was done playing," Seferian-Jenkins recalled. "Life was like a really hard thing for me to grasp and deal with, personally. I know a lot of people can relate to that, how their life sometimes is hard. You have difficult patches in life and sometimes you don't feel like you can get through those. I just felt like that at that point in my life, I was like, I wanted to get my life together more than anything.
"If that meant not playing football anymore, that meant not playing football anymore."
Instead Authentic Jeremiah Attaochu Jersey , football became part of the rehabilitation process for Seferian-Jenkins.
He followed a strict plan to beat his alcohol addiction, and that included making himself healthier, both physically and mentally. The big tight end went out to the Las Vegas area during the offseason and worked out several times a week, reshaping his body and dropping 30-plus pounds from his 6-foot-5 frame.
By the time he showed up for offseason workouts with his teammates this spring, he looked like a different guy. At 262 pounds, he was lighter, faster and stronger.
"As a person, I'm happy," he said. "I've done all those things and football's never really been a hard thing for me. It's like the off-the-field stuff like life that's kind of been the tough thing for me. Once I got that handled, I got the life part of it figured out, the football stuff's easy."
Seferian-Jenkins opened up during the spring about his battles with alcohol addiction and the struggles he had in the past. He focuses now only on the present.
During the spring Cheap Josey Jewell Jersey , Seferian-Jenkins declared that he would have the best season of his NFL career. It took just four games for him to achieve that goal.
"I know that I wasn't fulfilling what I was capable of in the past, but right now, I'm here and I don't want to say I'm content," he said. "I've done some good things. I've definitely missed some opportunities since I've been back. There's a bunch of room to improve and so many things I can improve on, which is really cool."
Those things include run blocking, pass blocking, running routes and route discipline – tools of the trade.
He has 152 yards receiving and two touchdowns this season while becoming an integral part of John Morton's offense. Seferian-Jenkins' 23 catches are just three fewer than Jets tight ends had in the past two seasons combined. In the past four weeks, he leads all NFL tight ends in receptions during that span.
"It's a complete 180 from where he was," said quarterback Josh McCown, who played with him in Tampa Bay in 2014. "The biggest thing is just his attitude, his overall approach when it comes to work and his consistency."
Seferian-Jenkins nearly had his third TD catch of the season – and second of the game – in the Jets' 24-17 loss to the Patriots last Sunday. But his 4-yard score was overturned and called a fumble and a touchback as officials ruled that he briefly lost control of the ball and didn't regain control until he was out of bounds in the end zone.
He thought he scored http://www.newenglandpatriotsteamonline.com/danny-shelton-jersey , but never criticized the officials, saying he needed to work on controlling the ball better.
By Wednesday, Seferian-Jenkins was done answering questions about the play, preferring instead to focus on the Jets' matchup with the Dolphins in Miami on Sunday.
And being better tomorrow than he was today.
"I just want to be the best tight end I can be and be the most complete tight end," Seferian-Jenkins said, "and be the best tight end the.
Also each fined $9,115 this week were: Seattle's Mark Glowinski (unnecessary roughness), Indianapolis' Antonio Morrison (facemask), Chicago's Akiem Hicks (facemask), the Chargers' Russell Okung (unnecessary roughness) and Denver's Zaire Anderson (facemask).
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