The term "savage" gets thrown around a lot these days. "Savage" can mean anything. "Oh did you see that catch I made dude? That was savage." "Remember when we went to that party Brandon Williams Jersey , you were a savage that night." You get the point. It can mean anything.
Now, think about the world of memes. They are seemingly everywhere nowadays. Any situation or any insult you want to throw out at your friends to get a good laugh, throw out a meme. You want to troll somebody you want nothing to do with Frans Nielsen Jersey Kids , throw out a meme. Memes can be found on a daily basis within friend groups, on pages of social media such as Facebook, Twitter Tomas Tatar Jersey , and Instagram, and just about anywhere else you can imagine. The thing with memes is nobody is safe from not becoming one. So fans, might want to watch what you say and do or else you could become one. But how does this relate to professional sports?
Professional athletes and sports teams are just as subject to these memes as the everyday fan is. How many memes have you seen of the Indians blowing a 3-1 lead in the World Series last year? How about the Atlanta Falcons blowing a 28-3 lead to the New England Patriots? The Golden State Warriors being a "super team"? The world is full of sports memes. But have you seen many from the NHL?
This list looks at exactly that. Are you looking for the funniest and most "savage" memes from the NHL? We got them. Are you looking for NHL memes you wouldn't expect the world to have? We have those too. So sit back Garry Gilliam Jersey , relax, and take a gander at 15 recent NHL memes that are absolutely "savage".
Tavon Austin is restructuring his contract to remain with the Los Angeles Rams.
The Rams worked out a deal with Austin on Thursday to keep the high-priced veteran receiver on their roster.
Austin got a four-year, $42 million deal with Los Angeles before the 2016 season Riley Nash Jersey , and he reached career highs with 58 catches for 509 yards. But after Austin caught just 13 passes for the Rams last season, the team explored a trade or a buyout.
Coach Sean McVay frequently used the speedy former No. 8 overall pick as a ball-carrier instead of a receiver for the NFC West champions. Austin rushed 59 times for 270 yards last season.