I'm not sure why he thinks he has a beef. Got 4 years of pay from the Seahawks and plenty of chances, but could never break the starting lineup.
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Forgive me for not being too worried about him being a worldbeater when he comes back with an undeserved chip on his shoulder.
Yes, the whole "has a chip on his shoulder" nonsense, which I see repeated an awful lot around here, comes from people correctly observing that they can make up BS narratives just as well as the talking-head mediots, and incorrectly believing there's some value in that kind of narrative because we hear so much of that kind of crap from the people who are paid to write and talk about sports.
Players with bottom-of-the-roster ability (combination of talent and training) can have as many chips on their shoulders as they want, and they still won't produce as well as players with starting-level ability. Players with even less ability than that can have as many chips on their shoulders as they want, and they still won't even make a roster.
The problem is that we fans don't have access to much of the information used by NFL teams to make decisions, and people want to fill in the blanks, even if they're filling it with nonsense narratives like "[Player X] will have a chip on his shoulder this year" and "[Head Coach Y] is going to put some order in the locker room"
It's basically the same as some cavemen from 95,000 years ago trying to come up with explanations for the behavior of modern electronic equipment or changes caused by modern medical treatments. They just lack way too much relevant information to come up with guesses that come anywhere even remotely close to the truth, so their speculation is doomed to fall into superstition and similar nonsense because we humans have built-in pattern recognition that is so strong it tends to generate a lot of false positives in the absence of strong real patterns.