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Bills Release Kevin Everett; TE to Receive NFL Disability Benefits

The Buffalo Bills released tight end Kevin Everett this morning, but that does mean the two sides will be parting ways.
"Kevin will always remain a Buffalo Bill in the same way that Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas and so many others before him are held in the highest regard by our franchise," the team said in a statement Tuesday.
Everett's release opens the door for him to receive several NFL disability benefits, including a one-time payment under the player health reimbursement plan. He will also be able to apply for additional long-term injury benefits, and should be well taken care of for the foreseeable future.

Although Everett may never return to 100%, his recovery is nothing short of remarkable. Not only did doctors believe he would never walk again, initial reports indicated that the severity of his injuries were considered life-threatening. Yet, less than a year later, Everett has regained most of the feeling from his neck down and has also learned to walk on his own once again.
"The Buffalo Bills continue to be moved by Kevin Everett's heartwarming story of his recovery," the team's statement read. "His progress from September 9 of last year through today is nothing short of a miracle, and is a tremendous example of faith, family and hard work."

Report: Bills' James Hardy Pulled Gun on Dad

A Fort Wayne, Indiana police report indicates that Buffalo Bills rookie wide receiver James Hardy pulled a gun on his father, the Journal Gazette reports.

According to the paper, Hardy was listed as a suspect but his name was redacted from a police report that said his father, James W. Hardy II, was engaged in a fight with his son. A witness said she yelled at the younger Hardy to stop fighting, and he then pulled out a gun before leaving. Hardy has a permit to carry a gun.

Hardy's father told police he and his son were in an argument, and that the younger Hardy was always angry with him because he was in prison while his son was a boy, but that he was not injured and did not want to press charges against his son. He told the Journal Gazette:

"Me and my son's relationship is fine and anything (different) ... is not factual. Me and James' relationship is fine," he said.

In May of 2006 Hardy was arrested on battery charges in what authorities said was an attack on his girlfriend and their infant son. Four months later he was suspended by the team for two games for still-undisclosed personal reasons that were apparently unrelated to the arrest. After leaving Indiana with a year of eligibility left, Hardy was the Bills' second-round pick in last month's draft.

Via PFT.

ESPN Finally Stops Ignoring Karl Malone Statutory Rape Allegations

Kudos to Jemele Hill of ESPN.com for writing a great column about Buffalo Bills offensive tackle Demetrius Bell and the famous father who had nothing to do with him, Karl Malone.

The Bills picked Bell in the seventh round of the NFL draft, and several media outlets reported that Bell was the son of Malone, the NBA great. But not every outlet made clear that Malone was a deadbeat dad who hadn't been there for his son, and hardly any followed up on the report, which first appeared in the Buffalo News, that Bell's mother was 13 years old when she gave birth.

That news would make Malone not just a deadbeat dad but also a criminal, and it was shocking that ESPN and the rest of the mainstream sports media completely ignored it. The Buffalo News and Los Angeles Times were the only media newspapers that reported it, and as far as I know it has never been mentioned on television.

Maybe Hill's column will change that. Bell is from all accounts a fine young man whose life story should be told. And that story isn't complete unless it includes disturbing details about his father.

Previously on FanHouse:
Offensive Tackle Demetrius Bell, Son of Deadbeat Dad Karl Malone, Drafted by Bills
Report: Mother of Buffalo Bills Player Was 12 or 13 When Karl Malone Got Her Pregnant
Why Is Mainstream Media Ignoring Statutory Rape Allegations Against Karl Malone?

Why Is Mainstream Media Ignoring Statutory Rape Allegations Against Karl Malone?

When we learned that Buffalo Bills draft pick Demetrius Bell was the son of NBA legend Karl Malone, and that Malone played no part in Bell's upbringing, it was a story that made a lot of people sad. And then when the Buffalo News reported that Bell's mother was 12 or 13 when Malone got her pregnant, it was a story that made a lot of people angry.

But it's a story that the mainstream media has almost completely ignored. As far as I can tell, only two newspapers, the Buffalo News and Los Angeles Times, have made any mention of the report that Gloria Bell was 13 years old when she gave birth to Demetrius. A couple of other news sources, including BET.com, have mentioned the story, but I have been unable to find it mentioned in Sports Illustrated or on ESPN or ABC or TNT or Fox or any of the other media outlets that cover the NFL or the NBA.

Malone was 20 when Demetrius Bell was conceived. It is a very serious crime for a 20-year-old man to have sex with a 12- or 13-year-old girl. I can't say whether Malone committed that crime -- I don't have a DNA test or a birth certificate -- but no one has disputed the original Buffalo News report.

An all-time NBA great committing a sex crime that resulted in the birth of a boy who is now in the NFL would seem like the kind of thing the media would be all over. Why is this story being thoroughly ignored?

Report: Mother of Buffalo Bills Player Was 12 or 13 When Karl Malone Got Her Pregnant

We've previously noted the story of Demetrius Bell, the offensive tackle who was drafted by the Buffalo Bills on Sunday and who spent his entire childhood without any support from his father -- NBA star Karl Malone.

But as bad as being a deadbeat dad makes Malone look, this column by Allen Wilson of the Buffalo News makes him look worse:

Bell is the son of Malone, but the Mailman had no role in Bell's success except passing along athletic genes.

The two have had very little contact during Bell's life. His mother, Gloria Bell, reportedly was only 13 years old and Malone a college sophomore at Louisiana Tech when Demetrius was born. Malone might have served jail time had her family asked the district attorney to file criminal charges.

So far, Malone has said nothing publicly about Bell. But he needs to now. Wilson's column accuses him of a very serious crime -- sex with a 12- or 13-year-old girl -- and Malone needs to explain himself.

NFL Draft Grades: Buffalo Bills

Buffalo Bills 2008 Draft Picks:

Round 1 (11): Leodis McKelvin, CB, Troy
Round 2 (41): James Hardy, WR, Indiana
Round 3 (72): Chris Ellis, DE, Virginia Tech
Round 4 (114): Reggie Corner, CB, Akron
Round 4 (132): Derek Fine, TE, Kansas
Round 5 (147): Alvin Bowen, OLB, Iowa State
Round 6 (179): Xavier Omon, RB, Northern Missouri State
Round 7 (219): Demetrius Bell, OT, Northwestern State (LA)
Round 7 (224): Steve Johnson, WR, Kentucky
Round 7 (251): Kennard Cox, CB, Pittsburgh

The Good: Not only was Buffalo able to land the cornerback they so desperately needed, they were also able to land the big-time wide receiver they coveted as well. Both Leodis McKelvin and James Hardy will come in and have an immediate impact for the Bills, giving them two dimensions they were lacking last year. Additionally, Derek Fine was a tremendous value pick in round four and will likely add some quality depth to Buffalo's currently shallow tight end position.

The Bad: Outside of McKelvin and Hardy, many of the players Buffalo drafted have several question marks. Can Ellis become a more consistent player at the next level? Is Corner's size (or lack thereof) a major concern? Is Bowen big enough to play every down? And does Bell have enough game experience to offer any significant value? Those are some rather concerning questions ...

The Grade: B-. At the very least, Buffalo got two solid starters out of the draft and a lot of depth. Some of the other players will most likely realize their talent and reward the Bills, while the rest will eventually fade away into nothing. It wasn't an outstanding draft by any means, but it certainly wasn't a poor one either.

Click here to read other draft grades.

Offensive Tackle Demetrius Bell, Son of Deadbeat Dad Karl Malone, Drafted by Bills

The Buffalo Bills picked Northwestern State offensive tackle Demetrius Bell on Sunday in the seventh round of the NFL draft. Seventh-round offensive linemen rarely get any attention.

But Bell is getting a lot of attention today because of his famous father, NBA legend Karl Malone. And Bell says the genetics of a great athlete is all he ever got from that famous father.

When they met for the first time, Bell was 18, and Malone delivered a harsh message that, according to several reports, amounted to, "It's too late for me to be your father, and you'll earn your money on your own."

Charming. There is one nice piece of news in all this: Bell has become close to his half-sister Cheryl Ford, a WNBA player who is another one of Malone's children out of wedlock. Bell calls Ford the biggest influence on his football career.

Thanks to First-Day Draft Craziness, Bills Get Better on Both Sides of the Ball



Heading into yesterday's festivities, Bills fans had pretty much resigned themselves to the team landing either a big-play cornerback or deep-threat wide receiver. But certainly not both.

Which is exactly what happened thanks to a bunch of trades, an early run on defensive linemen and linebackers, and a mid-round run on offensive tackles. Leodis McKelvin, who can also return kicks, was the first cornerback off the board when the Bills selected him 11th. He's in line for the starting job opposite Terrence McGee, which will allow Jabari Greer to move to nickel back. Everybody's happy ... well, except for J.P. Losman.

With the 10th pick in the second round, Buffalo looked to be prime position to take their game-changing wideout since one wasn't drafted in Round 1 for the first time in the history of man. And then, just like DL, LB and OT before them, there was a run on receivers. Three of the first five second-round selections were wideouts, but 6-6 James Hardy was still on the board when the Bills went on the clock.

While there was no agreement on a name, there was a pre-draft consensus that the Bills needed a tall target to line up opposite Lee Evans. Done and done. And head coach Dick Jauron was, in his own special way, super psyched:
Personally, for me, I'm really pleased," said Bills coach Dick Jauron. "It's a relief in terms of the draft because these are two critical positions on any football team, and on ours they were two critical needs. Now we go into the second day of the draft a little more open, a little more at ease."
Virtual high-fives all around.

11. Buffalo Bills: Leodis McKelvin, CB, Troy


Troy cornerback Leodis McKelvin was a dominant player at cornerback as a senior, and as you can see in the above video he's one of the best punt returners in college football history. The Bills took him with the 11th pick in today's draft, making him the first cornerback off the board.

I'm not totally sold on him, though. I don't think McKelvin's any better than Aqib Talib of Kansas, and I certainly wouldn't have taken McKelvin this highly.

Previously on FanHouse:
FanHouse Mock Draft: Buffalo Bills Select WR Limas Sweed No. 11
NFL Draft: Oklahoma's Malcolm Kelly Pulling Away as the Top Wide Receiver Prospect

For the Bills, Devin Thomas Could Be This Year's Donte Whitner


Conventional mock-draft wisdom has the Bills using their 11th-overall pick on either a wide receiver or cornerback. Both make sense: Lee Evans' contract expires after the 2008 season and Trent Edwards could use a big target to line up opposite Evans, one of the most underrated wideouts in the league.

The defense could also use a warm body in the secondary, particularly if it meant Jabari Greer could move to nickel back. We'll know one way or the other in four days. In the meantime, the Buffalo News thinks Michigan State wideout Devin Thomas could be the guy.
Two years ago, the Bills picked safety Donte Whitner a tad higher than many draftniks had him rated- at eighth overall. This year the Bills may make a similar move in selecting Devin Thomas, the wide receiver from Michigan State. Thomas is rated by many as the best receiver in the draft but most experts don't put him among the top 12 players overall.
That's a good point: most people just assumed Marv Levy was senile when the Bills took Whitner. As it turned out, Levy knew what he was talking about and the rest of us didn't. Shocking, I know.
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Division Standings

AFC East W-L-T PF PA
Patriots 16-0-0 589 274
Bills 7-9-0 252 354
Jets 4-12-0 268 355
Dolphins 1-15-0 267 437

Team Leaders

Passing COMP ATT YDS TD
Trent Edwards 151 269 1630 7
J.P. Losman 111 175 1204 4
Marshawn Lynch 1 1 8 1
Receiving Rec Yds Avg TD
Lee Evans 55 849 15.4 5
Josh Reed 51 578 11.3 0
Roscoe Parrish 35 352 10.1 1
Rushing Att Yds Avg TD
Marshawn Lynch 280 1115 4 7
Fred Jackson 58 300 5.2 0
J.P. Losman 20 110 5.5 0

Injuries

Pos Player Injury Status
S Coy Wire neck IR
DE Copeland Bryan knee IR
T Jason Peters groin Day-to-Day
DE Ryan Denney foot IR
S George Wilson fractured ribs IR

Transactions

Pos Player Transaction
LB Kevin Harrison signed
QB Kevin Eakin practice squad deletion
QB Gibran Hamdan practice squad addition
G Jason Whittle Placed on IR
DT Orien Harris practice squad addition

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