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Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is still going through the National Football League’s concussion protocol and is seeing outside specialists, head coach Mike McDaniel said on Friday.
He added that Tagovailoa will not travel with the team for Sunday’s game at the New York Jets nor would he be going on injured reserve at this time.
“He’s been diligently going through the process,” McDaniel told reporters. “Right now he’s still in the protocol, obviously. There’s several outside specialists that we’re also utilizing and we’ll just take it from there.
“But happy that we get to see him every day. It’s nice when I walk down the hallway and I hear, ‘What up, beast?’, which is, for whatever reason he calls me beast all the time. I don’t think I give off the beast vibe.”
When a player is added to the injured reserve list it means he is ineligible to play for at least the next four games.
Tagovailoa was carted off the field last week after his head slammed onto the turf when taking a sack during a prime-time game against the Cincinnati Bengals on Thursday night.
The quarterback’s arms appeared to seize up immediately after that hit and he remained on the field for about seven minutes before being taken to the hospital where he was diagnosed with a concussion.
This is a disaster. Pray for Tua. Fire the medical staffs and coaches. I predicted this and I hate that I am right. Two concussions in 5 days can kill someone. This can end careers. How are we so stupid in 2022. pic.twitter.com/D8S8eEbgda
— Chris Nowinski, Ph.D. (@ChrisNowinski1) September 30, 2022
That incident came four days after Tagovailoa, 24, looked disoriented after hitting his head on the ground during a game against the Buffalo Bills.
He was cleared to return to the Buffalo game after being evaluated for a concussion by an unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant but his treatment has since put the NFL’s concussion protocol under scrutiny.
The NFL and the NFL Players Association have since said in a joint statement that modifications to the concussion protocol are needed to enhance player safety.
Copyright 2022 Thomson/Reuters