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 Saturday, November 13
Aikman might sit out three games
 
ESPN.com news services

 IRVING, Texas -- Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman returned from neurological tests Friday and told reporters at the team's training facility that he and doctors have discussed the possibility of him sitting out the next three games.

"I don't have a feel for that," Aikman told The Dallas Morning News. "I'd be out of place in commenting on that. That's something that will be discussed with a lot of people."

Dallas plays three games over 12 days -- Green Bay on Sunday, Arizona on Nov. 21 and Miami on Nov. 25. The thinking is that Aikman might be better served by missing that part of the schedule so he can recover from the seventh concussion of his 11-year pro career. He would return Dec. 5 at New England.

In other Cowboys injury news, cornerback Deion Sanders, still bothered by a right hamstring injury, practiced lightly Friday. Coach Chan Gailey said Sanders will play against the Packers, but he is uncertain just how much.

Although Roger Staubach left the Cowboys to avoid suffering any more blows to his head, he doesn't believe Aikman should retire after two concussions in eight days.

"Someone didn't tell me to retire," the Hall of Fame quarterback said Thursday. "I wanted to remember why I retired. I was 38. If I was 33, I wouldn't have retired."

Aikman, who turns 33 a week from Sunday, will miss a game because of a concussion for the first time in his career Sunday when Dallas plays Green Bay.

With three Super Bowl victories, tens of millions of dollars in the bank and a wedding just months away, a case could be made for Aikman to walk away from football while he still can.

Staubach said the only way he could imagine Aikman even thinking about retiring would be if doctors say he should.

"Some people don't realize how intense Troy is," Staubach said. "He's got Michael Jordan's mentality on winning. Backing away is not going to be easy.

"Besides, he's still playing great. I think he has another Super Bowl or two in him."

Staubach was still playing well in his last year, 1979, but he was concerned by the number of concussions he'd suffered over 11 seasons. With backup Danny White capable of replacing him, Staubach did what he thought was best.

"I had one doctor who said I should and one who said there was no medical reason why I should. But I felt it was time," said Staubach, who led Dallas to four Super Bowls, winning two.

Aikman became a Cowboy a decade after Staubach left, but the two have become good friends. They've talked about lots of things, including concussions. The circumstances around Staubach's retirement hasn't been a topic of conversation.

"We've never discussed anything about it," Staubach said.

Staubach has had that discussion in recent weeks with Steve Young, the San Francisco quarterback who's heard from doctors that he should retire after long-lingering effects from his most recent concussion.

"He asked me what my thinking process was, what I went through, what my feelings were, how much I missed it," Staubach said.

Staubach spoke to Aikman a few days after he took a helmet-to-helmet hit from Indianapolis' Jeff Burris on Oct. 31.

"We talked strictly philosophically about dealing with a season when you're inconsistent," Staubach said. "I told him it reminded me of our '75 season when we made the playoffs as a wild-card team and went to the Super Bowl."

The hit by Burris left Aikman more susceptible to another concussion when he played Minnesota on Monday night. Sure enough, Jerry Ball dumped Aikman on his head and the headaches and dizziness returned -- only this time, they were more intense.

"When I saw him on the sidelines, I knew right away," Staubach said. "It looked familiar.

"The concern I had was that the one the previous week was probably a tougher hit. If there's any linkage, he obviously needs to rest longer. I'm sure he's getting good medical opinions."

 


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