The Cleveland Browns lost their star running back, Nick Chubb, possibly for the rest of the season on Monday night after he suffered a knee injury so severe that ESPN refused to show replays of it.
After Pittsburgh fans gave Chubb a send-off of sorts as he left the field in a cart, fans on social media waited for updates on his injury.
When ESPN’s Adam Schefter, who is one of the most connected NFL insiders in the business, decided to post an update on X (formerly known as Twitter) that could have been better said than done. that he chose to frame it. .
Check it out:
Nick Chubb dislocated his left knee and tore his MCL, PCL, and LCL with cartilage damage on October 10, 2015 against Tennessee. He injured the same knee tonight against Pittsburgh.
– Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) September 19, 2023
The fans were not impressed.
this is the worst way to write this update https://t.co/Ov21tM0ne8
— sean yoo (@SeanYoo) September 19, 2023
Schefty just put Browns fans in the hospital how he started this tweet https://t.co/tl5eM0EXjP
– Big Cat (@BarstoolBigCat) September 19, 2023
Please say a tweet correctly once https://t.co/phetXt2Jq2
— JP Acosta (Pug Dederson Stan Acct) (@acosta32_jp) September 19, 2023
Adam I am begging you to please read your tweets before you post them. https://t.co/vRW2rsuxMU
— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) September 19, 2023
Absolutely pathetic way to start this tweet https://t.co/lw9Uk2HcnC
— BW Carlin (@BaileyCarlin) September 19, 2023
https://t.co/MJxAuJ2yQD pic.twitter.com/IFh7PAfs4I
— charles (“you’re beautiful” – andy reid) mcdonald (@FourVerts) September 19, 2023
There are less scary ways to send this tweet https://t.co/8PddF50YKt
— Blaiden Kirk (@blaiden) September 19, 2023
Dude just start tweeting with “In 2015,” https://t.co/ob4fch4dGZ
— Joshua Brisco (@jbbrisco) September 19, 2023
Why do you start this sentence like that? “In 2015” is just there to get you started. https://t.co/hOVeiWwhzL
— Strictly 4 My X’ers (@Lizzs_Lockeroom) September 19, 2023