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Heisman Trophy winner felt like someone in his family died when NFL career ended with Bills

Heisman Trophy winner felt like someone in his family died when NFL career ended with Bills

Yahoo23-06-2025

The Buffalo Bills have seen four Heisman Trophy winners come and go.
O.J. Simpson became a legend. Doug Flutie sparked magic. Reggie Bush faded out. Matt Leinart barely unpacked his bags and never played in a regular-season game.
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The 2004 Heisman Trophy winner and USC national champion spent just five days with the Bills in 2013. Leinart detailed how that brief and painful stop marked the end of his NFL career on a recent episode of his Throwbacks podcast.
Buffalo signed Leinart on Aug. 25, 2013, in urgent need of quarterback depth. Rookie starter EJ Manuel and veteran Kevin Kolb were both injured. The team traded for Thad Lewis that same day and had undrafted rookie Jeff Tuel on the roster.
Four days later, Leinart started the preseason finale against the Detroit Lions in Orchard Park.
'My last game in Buffalo, preseason game four, I threw three interceptions in the first half. I was 4-for-11. I stood on that sideline like someone passed away in my family, dude,' Leinart told co-host Jerry Ferrara, slightly off on the stats − he went 3-for-10 for 11 yards and two interceptions in a 35-13 loss. "I kept my helmet on so no one could see my face. I was embarrassed.
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"I didn't cry. I was so embarrassed that was going to be my last time ever on a football field, and I just knew it."
He was right. The Bills released Leinart the next day.
Leinart was 30 years old at the time. Bills fans were more hopeful than he was about a career revival.
"Honestly, the sad part is like they were so fired up I was there, like 'Yeah, you're going to revive your career here.' And I'm like guys they need an arm, pretty much," Leinart said. "I always wonder if I like went 10-for-11 with a touchdown if I would've made the roster."
Aug 29, 2013; Orchard Park, NY, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Matt Leinart (7) gets hit by Detroit Lions defensive end Israel Idonije (77) after a pass during the first half at Ralph Wilson Stadium.
There was real opportunity in Buffalo that season. Manuel sprained his knee in Week 5, forcing Lewis into the starting role. Bills backup quarterbacks started six of the team's 16 games. Tuel even made a start in Week 9.
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Leinart holds no bitterness, only affection for the Bills.
'I saw firsthand, like Bills Mafia, how awesome their fans were and they treated me great for the first couple days,' he said. 'So that's why I was like, I love Buffalo.'
Aug 29, 2013; Orchard Park, NY, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Matt Leinart (7) during the first half against the Detroit Lions at Ralph Wilson Stadium.
Leinart is widely considered one of the greatest quarterbacks in college football history. He led USC to two national titles, including the 2004 BCS Championship, and oversaw the Trojans' 34-game winning streak. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2007.
The Arizona Cardinals selected him with the No. 10 overall pick in the 2006 NFL Draft. Injuries cut short each of his first two seasons, and Kurt Warner eventually overtook him as the starter. Leinart later served as a backup with the Houston Texans and Oakland Raiders before landing in Buffalo.
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Bush, Leinart's teammate at USC and the 2005 Heisman winner, also ended his NFL career in Buffalo. He backed up LeSean McCoy and Mike Gillislee in 2016, finishing with 12 carries for minus-3 yards — the first non-quarterback in league history to end a season with negative rushing yards on double-digit attempts — along with seven receptions for 90 yards.
This article originally appeared on Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Matt Leinart reflects on heartbreaking end to his NFL career with Bills

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Lawyer leading SJSU transgender lawsuit reacts to controversial probe into trans athlete's alleged misconduct
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Lawyer leading SJSU transgender lawsuit reacts to controversial probe into trans athlete's alleged misconduct

EXCLUSIVE: San Jose State University's transgender volleyball player controversy reignited last week. Fox News Digital reported that the Mountain West Conference hired the same law firm to investigate the trans athlete's misconduct allegations that the conference was using to defend the athlete's eligibility for the conference tournament in court. The White House released a statement addressing the revelation, and now the lawyer leading a lawsuit against SJSU and the Mountain West on behalf of 11 current or former conference women's athletes, William Bock, has spoken out against the conference in the aftermath of the revelation. "It is outrageous, improper, and deceptive that the MWC hired the same law firm to both conduct a supposedly independent investigation of its member SJSU and defend the MWC in a federal lawsuit about MWC's joint conduct and actions with SJSU," Bock said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. Fox News Digital reported on June 24 that the Mountain West hired the firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher (WFG) to investigate allegations against Blaire Fleming of conspiring with an opponent to have teammate Brooke Slusser harmed during an Oct. 3 game. The Mountain West hired the firm to handle the investigation in the same month that the same firm represented the conference to protect Fleming's eligibility in a request for preliminary injunction to have the trans athlete disqualified from women's competition and the conference tournament. The investigation closed after just three days, and documents obtained by Fox News Digital showed that investigators repeatedly incorrectly dated the game as being played on Oct. 2. The WFG attorney who led the investigation into allegations against Fleming, Tim Heaphy, later offered the school legal counsel to help it navigate a federal Title IX investigation over the same situation, as seen in public records obtained by Fox News Digital. The offer was declined. Bock said the revelation "astonished" him. "I was astonished to learn WFG was representing the MWC against Brooke Slusser's lawsuit at the same time another lawyer from that firm was supposedly independently investigating the attempt to injure Brooke and whether SJSU and the MWC adequately investigated those facts," Bock's statement continued. "Hiring WFG to perform such conflicted and mutually exclusive roles suggests that Commissioner Nevarez and the MWC had no interest in discovering the truth. Instead, the MWC has long been focused solely upon advancing the interests of SJSU and pushing the narrative that men should be allowed in women's college sports locker rooms and showers and to compete against women in college sports." Bock called for the U.S. Department of Education to look into the situation. "The report from Fox News provides more evidence of the MWC's scheme to work side-by-side with SJSU to promote trans ideology and harm women athletes while hiding the truth from the public. The conclusions from the WFG investigator favoring MWC's and SJSU's positions in federal court allowed his law partners to continue to milk the MWC for legal fees and then positioned that same investigator to later seek to monetize his relationship with the MWC to defend SJSU in a federal investigation over the very claims he supposedly 'independently' investigated," Bock's statement said. "These shocking revelations of conflicts of interest entirely discredit the MWC and will hopefully be fully investigated in the reported probe of SJSU's conduct by the U.S. Department of Education. Certainly, this investigator is likely to become a key witness in Brooke Slusser's federal lawsuit against the MWC and SJSU, as his hiring and conduct is additional evidence that the MWC worked hand-in-glove with SJSU and was far more concerned with promoting a narrative than protecting women." Bock leads Slusser's lawsuit against SJSU and the Mountain West, and also leads a larger lawsuit against the NCAA led by former college swimmer and current "OutKick" host Riley Gaines. Bock previously called the conference's investigation into Fleming's allegations "inadequate, and anything but thorough" in a Nov. 17 statement and called for the evidence to be disclosed. No evidence was ever disclosed by the conference, as Fleming went on to finish out the season, earn all-conference honors and even led SJSU all the way to the Mountain West championship game. The trans athlete traveled and roomed alongside female teammates to Las Vegas in the final week of November for the conference tournament. After leading the investigation that cleared Fleming's charges in November, Heaphy reached back out to San Jose State's university legal counsel Dustin May on Feb. 6, offering to help navigate a federal probe. President Donald Trump just signed an executive order to try and enforce that mandate just weeks into his presidency on Feb. 5. And just one day after that, Trump's Department of Education launched an investigation into SJSU over the Fleming situation. May declined Heaphy's offer on Feb. 18, but Heaphy responded the next day, writing, "Please let me know if we can help in any way on this or other issues." None of WFG's attorneys have been accused of violating any applicable rules of professional conduct. Fox News Digital has reached out to the Mountain West, San Jose State and Willkie Farr & Gallagher for a response to Bock's statement. The DOE's investigation into SJSU's handling of the situation involving Fleming is ongoing. The White House provided a statement addressing the recent revelations to Fox News Digital. "President Trump is committed to ending the dangerous and unfair participation of men in women's sports and restoring common sense. President Trump will continue to speak out and take immediate action against schools that are jeopardizing the safety of female athletes," White House spokesperson Liz Huston said. Meanwhile, Bock is continuing his lawsuit against SJSU and the Mountain West on behalf of Slusser and the other 10 players on the lawsuit. Bock's office filed a response to motions to dismiss the case on June 23. The response made mention of the allegations against Fleming of misconduct. WFG and the Mountain West's legal battle to keep the trans athlete in the women's tournament was successful, as federal Judge Kato Crews, appointed by President Joe Biden in January 2024, ruled in favor of Fleming's eligibility on Nov. 25. Two days later, after a failed appeal by the plaintiffs, the firm posted an online press release announcing the legal victory to keep Fleming eligible to play. But that webpage has since been deleted. Fox News Digital asked why the page no longer exists, but Willkie Farr & Gallagher did not respond to the inquiry. Archived data shows the original press release stating, "Willkie secured a high-profile win for collegiate athletic conference Mountain West Conference in a suit brought by members of San Jose State University's women's volleyball team and other Mountain West teams that played against SJSU." Fox News Digital previously reached out to the Mountain West, Willkie Farr & Gallagher, San Jose State University and its head volleyball coach Todd Kress regarding the previous findings. No response has been provided by those parties. May's office initially responded to Fox News Digital's request for comment after providing the public records, requesting a list of questions and background information be provided before speaking. Fox News Digital did not provide the information or list of comments, and requested a virtual or phone interview. May's office then responded with the statement, "Any speculation that the firm or attorney mentioned in your inquiry represented SJSU or the CSU is unfounded." Fox News Digital had not posed that question or any other stipulation, only an interview request, at that point. Fox News Digital later followed up with May's office requesting an interview to address other questions, and fulfilled his office's request to provide background information on what would be discussed. May's office responded saying, "He will not be available," and has not responded to request for further comment. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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