New York Jets cornerback Chris Boyd, age 29, was shot in the abdomen early Sunday morning outside the Say Less Eatery on West 38th Street in Midtown Manhattan. The shooting occurred around 2:00 AM after Boyd reportedly left the restaurant because he sensed “the vibe was off.” He told police there was tension inside and he wanted to avoid trouble. A suspect—described in all-black clothing with multicolored sneakers—fled the scene and remains at large. Boyd was found drifting in and out of consciousness and was transported to the hospital in critical but stable condition. Complicating the investigation, the restaurant allegedly refused to turn over its security footage.
Boyd’s NFL career contains several chapters: four seasons with the Minnesota Vikings, a stint with the Houston Texans, a short run with the Arizona Cardinals, and now a one-year $1.6 million contract with the New York Jets—though he was on injured reserve at the time of the shooting. Eddy highlights a past sideline altercation in which Boyd “violently attacked his own coach,” Frank Ross, suggesting a violent streak that may reflect his wider character. Eddy even speculates that Boyd’s past behavior may have contributed to the circumstances surrounding the shooting.
The incident is placed within a broader pattern of violence involving NFL players, both as victims and as perpetrators. Numerous players—from Tank Dell and Josh Reynolds to Sean Taylor and Steve McNair—have been shot in recent decades. Others, including Phillip Adams, Aaron Hernandez, Rae Carruth, and Anthony Smith, committed high-profile violent crimes. Eddy asserts that many NFL players come from unstable backgrounds, remain prone to conflict despite lucrative contracts, and exist in a league that he believes is “fixed” and driven by manufactured drama.
The shooting, he argues, is another reminder of the NFL’s long-standing crisis around violence, culture, and accountability.