1) Right. The coaches told you how to play the game. And if you failed at that, i.e., made stupid penalties and stupid mistakes, there were consequences for those actions. That's the point here. Repeated penalties are a result of bad technique ( coaches job to teach good technique) and, if repeated consistently, the inability of the player to perform, possibly resulting in removing that player from the field of play (again, a coach's JOB to identify and correct, whether that be through TEACHING initially, and possibly further consequences if the issue continues). These items are not mutually exclusive. Like anything else in life, there is a process. If you want to react to individual incidents on a one off basis, you're missing the point. 2) I concede on this point that sloppy or undisciplined play is a better way to put it as opposed to "dirty players". That's a misstatement on my part and you're right. Dirty players tend to stay just that, dirty players, i.e. Haynesworth, Suh, ol' Bill Romanowski. But sloppy, undisciplined play can and has been corrected. 3) I disagree. They are not mutually exclusive in my opinion. Part of coaching is discipline. Period. Unless you want the inmates running the asylum. 4) Again, that is part of coaching. Benching a player is part of coaching. Part of coaching is doing what you can to put your best players, i.e. team, on the field that will give you the best opportunity to win. If a player's repeated stupidity costs the team, as Jernigan's stupidity has done at least 2 of the 3 times he has been flagged for personal fouls this season (the one in the Raiders game kept their game winning drive alive, and the one last week kept the KC drive alive and put them up 7 when we could have gotten a jump on them and at least kept it a game). I guess with your approach Jernigan, who has shown no recognition that what he did was a boneheaded play, is supposed to police himself? Say, "Gee coach, that was stupid of me, I'm taking myself out of the game now". I guess in your world he is, and the coach is just supposed to throw up his hands and say, "Oh well, nothing I can do". I disagree with your view of this topic. Except for your second point. My bad, there. Good talk, though.