RIP chris henry

Your sooooo much better than him. The difference is he actually had talent at something, so what if he made some mistakes everyone does, nobody's perfect. None of those are reasons to wish death on somebody.

Go back to your laced bowl, seriously I hope karma and laced weed kick your ass sometime
 
haha son YOU'RE the dumbest mother fucker i've ever encountered via internet. First of all your'e contradicting your own argument saying that he did deserve to die and now you think he doesnt. And secondly you think that this kid "happened" to be good at football? It takes skill and hard fucking work and sometimes that shits overwhelming. He worked his ass off to be a good football player, it wasnt just handed to him u ignorant little fuck.
 
Some of the shit said in this thread is tempting me to restart the Golden Wheelchair Award. Seriously, please show a little intelligence.
 
granted he had to work to be where he is now... however his athletic ability was pretty much handed to him.

Regardless, he was still a prick on and off the field. he may not have deserved to die, but he definitely doesnt deserve people mourning over him like he was the greatest guy in the world. He was a stupid prick who fucked up his own life because hes a dumbass.
 
this thread needs some change

DSC_0207Large.jpg


WHO DAT?
 
ok your really pissing me off now, the shit you say in every single fucking thread. benefit to society that hes dead. classy real fucking classy. why dont you grow the fuck up for once. oh right, you cant your balls have not droped yet. you dont even know how much it hurts to see someone you are attached to die. this guy was doing something right in his life, yes he made bad decisions and yes they were stupid much like the act that got him killed but you know what, fuck you. nobody deserves to die.
 
I unfortunately agree that in a way it benefits society to an extent and i'm not saying that proudly at all but its the sad truth, but he never deserved to die man
 
I know whats its like to have someone you are close to die. I was not close to Chris Henry, neither was anyone in this thread. He was a douchebag prick.

I take back my earlier comment that he deserved to die, hoewever, i stand by my statement that his death benefits society. He was given the opportunity of a lifetime to play in the NFL and he fucked it up by acting like an immature dumbass.

Im pretty sure Hitler deserved to die though... (not comparing Chris Henry to Hitler, just pointing out how stupid your last sentence was.)
 
WTF has this site came to? I read every post. A lot of you should be ashamed. You act like he was this terrible person. Ya, maybe he made some bad choices, I am sure everyone on here has. The guy lost his life and you people wanna talk shit? Grow up man. RIP Chris Henry! You will be missed.
 
People like you make me sick. You say you you don't know him yet you call him a douchebag. How the fuck does that work how do you know what kind of guy he was. I, personally, have met him and all the news reports you here about him being soft spoken and very polite is no lie.

I hope that you are sold some "laced weed" by mistake and you trip so hard that fuck something up in your life so i can say that YOU deserve to die and are no benefit to society.
 
First of all. Not trying to disrespect a deceased human being, because that's just wrong. RIP. But it would have been interesting seeing how all you guys who put this Chris guy on a pedestal had reacted if he indeed would have by accident or on purpose killed someone one of the numerous times he had fucked up in life. And I'm just not saying this to be a dick, but as you all have seen or atleast read in this thread. He has fucked up in life and there could have been a big chance of something like that happening.

There sure would have been atleast 10 threads about that, saying how much of a douche or dick he is or something along thoes lines. No it's pretty much the other way around, except for a few of you. Which I find pretty wierd.

Sorry if somebody have pointed it out already I just read the first page, so I might have missed it.
 
whys everyone always get so worked up in these god damn RIP threads. first of all ITS THE INTERNET!! CHILL THE FUCK OUT!! second of all, WE ALL DIE, IT"S NOT A BIG DEAL, and third HOW MANY OTHER PEOPLE DIED ON THE SAME DAY AS HTIS CHRIS HENRY GUY (whoever the fuck he even is)??? I DON"T HEAR ANYONE FREAKING OUT ABOUT ALL OF THEM?!??? so really, who cares. the people who knew him, thats about all who should care. none of you personally knew him so shut the fuck up. pay your respects however you feel the need if thats what you do but honestly lots of people die everyday, and we're all gonna die someday. its a lot less of a big deal then everyones making it out to be.
 
So if i kill 50 people but am also very polite and soft spoken it makes it okay? the guy was a fucking dumbass who got arrested multiple times for being a douche, and acted like a prick on and off the field.

shit happens, people die, and chris henry dying is hardly reason to be upset.
 
Then by that logic, no one should give a shit that George Carlin, Farrah Fawcet and Michael Jackson are dead. Chris Henry was a famous guy, even if it was mostly in Cincinnati. His story at this point is sad. Sad stories make people sad. The point of RIP threads like this is for people who care to express themselves, not for people who don't give a shit about them to hate. This thread should just be deleted in general, or at least have the negative responses deleted.

 
honestly, i really dont care that george carlin, farrah fawcet and mj died. i have respect for the dead and all but why should i care that some famous person died, maybe if i knew them personally i would. people are always gonna die no matter what. RIP to the dead, but we are all gonna have to die sometime so everyone in this thread needs to calm down.

 
I'm not sure you even read past the first sentence of my post. That's what this thread and the subsequent arguments are about. Respect for the dead. This is a thread for people to show their respects for Chris Henry. If you're not in it to do that, and only to cause strife, then you have no business being here ('you' addressing people in general, not specifically you). There would be no argument if people hadn't come in here purely to hate on Chris Henry, and to tell fans that he deserved to die for getting into trouble.
 
that last sentence (i cant delete the rest of the text for some reason) but that last bit destroys any argument that ohmybosh had

there maybe like 2 or 3 exceptions to that though like hitler, saddam and ohmybosh
 
alright, so how many of you on NS have:
done something unsportsmanlike in a high school sport?
speeded?
had marijuana whalst driving?
given or recieved alcohol to underage or from someone when you were underage?
Driven drunk?
beaten somebody up?
From what i have witnessed seems like the majority of NS is just as much of a "thug" as chris. i know almost all Ns'ers have speeded, done stupid shit in a sports game, had marijuana while driving, and got drunnk underage, but have never gotten caught for any of it. So stop chilling on your fucking high horses and take a step back. Seems like everybody loves to throw around life lessons and so called "truths" about famous people whom they know nothing about. Fuck you NS and take this kind of shit with a grain of salt. Maybe take the time to re evalute your own life and look at the choices you are making.
 
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/henrys-death-hits-home-for-lifelong-friend

By the age of five, Shane Shelley found himself a frequent guest in the

home of his best friend, Chris Henry. They lived a couple of blocks

apart, about 20 miles southeast of New Orleans, in a town called Belle

Chasse. “Mixed neighborhood,” Shelley told me over the phone, speaking

from the deck of his oyster boat on Thursday afternoon.















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Shelley and Henry as eighth graders in 1998.

Shane Shelley



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Shelley remembers that

Henry’s mom, whom he still calls “Miss Carolyn,” was usually out

working, as she had three sons to feed, and that Chris’ grandmother

cooked their breakfasts to order. “Eggs, grits, sausage,” he says.

“Anything we wanted.”

She was a wonderful grandma, who once

splurged on a pair of $125 Tracy McGrady sneakers for Chris. The boys

were in middle school when she passed. “I was the only white person at

the funeral,” says Shelley.

Still, most of what Shelley

recalls about Chris Henry took place on a field or a court. Their love

of games was incessant. By freshman year at Belle Chasse High School,

Shelley had been named the starting varsity quarterback, while Henry --

who’d grow to 6-foot-5 -- was intent on becoming the next Tracy

McGrady. Still, seeing his friend on the gridiron incited another

ambition.

“Watching Shane Shelley play and knowing that I

played with him all my life, I thought that maybe I would want to do

it, too,” Henry once told the New Orleans Times-Picayune. “Shane knew I

had it in me. He just kept begging me and begging me to come out and

play.”

Didn’t take long for the best friends to become the

best big-play combination in Belle Chasse history. “Me and Chris was

always on the same page,” says Shelley. “I always knew where he would

be. I guess that’s from growing up together. We were like brothers.”

Senior

year, they won 13 straight before getting clobbered in the championship

at the Superdome. But that’s not the game that stands out in Shelley’s

recollection. Rather, it was a Friday night in the middle of the

season. The Fighting Cardinals of Belle Chasse were on the road against

Landry.

“I think Chris scored three touchdowns,” says Shelley, whose memory serves him well.

In

fact, Henry, who played safety on defense, scored twice off

interceptions, and again on a 55-yard screen pass. Belle Chasse won

39-14. Still, none of that resonates with Shelley as much as the

unaccustomed presence of Henry’s father.





































“All those years he

never really talked about him,” says the fisherman, now 26, the father

of twin girls with a son on the way. “That was the only time I ever

knew the man came around. Chris scored three touchdowns and his dad

gave him $300.”

Three hundred.

“That was the first and last I ever heard of him,” says Shelley. “Chris was just kind of aggravated.”

What did he do with the money? I ask.

“I don’t know,” he said. “Probably bought some Jordans.”

After

graduating in 2002, Henry went to West Virginia, where he averaged more

than 20 yards a catch, while Shelley signed with the Devil Rays. His

professional baseball career lasted about a year and a half. Then he

returned to Belle Chasse, where his daddy taught him the oyster fishing

business.

Henry, with almost boundless talent, went on to

the Cincinnati Bengals, where his potential was overwhelmed by a

well-earned reputation for felonious behavior. It wasn’t what had been

predicted for Henry back in Belle Chasse, where his high school coach,

Bob Becnel recalls him as “a good kid, but not perfect by any stretch

of the imagination.”

His NFL career was marred by gun

charges, marijuana charges, assault charges and drunk driving charges,

among others. He was suspended for two games in 2006, and eight games

in 2007, and four games 2008, a year that also saw him placed under

house arrest.

What happened? I ask Shelley.

The

money was part of it, he says, but not all: “I’m not taking nothing

away from Miss Carolyn, ‘cause she did a great job, but not having a

dad, I think that was a lot of the problem with Chris. He was kind of

lost.”

They’d speak about once a month. It’s tough when your

best friend goes pro -- all those meetings and workouts and the travel.

Not much time. But there was one day Chris Henry was sure to call:

Father’s Day.

Shane Shelley knows that not having a daddy

to teach you the oyster business does not constitute an excuse. He

knows, too, that Chris -- everybody called him “Slim” -- got more

chances than a working man could dream of. He kept telling him so, too.

“You’re throwing it away, Slim.”

“Why would you want to mess it up?

“You got to slow down, Chris. Got to.”

And most damning of all: “People in Belle Chasse say you’re doing bad.”

Finally,

after the Bengals took him back in 2008, Chris Henry proclaimed his

reformation. There wasn’t much reason to believe him -- unless you were

Shane Shelley. “I didn’t care what anyone said,” he recalls. “I bragged

about him all the time. It don’t get any better than telling people

your best friend is playing NFL football. I always knew he would do

good.”

Now Shelley recalls their conversation last summer,

occasioned by Chris’ return to Belle Chasse. He had three kids with his

fiancé, Loleini Tonga.

“Cuz, I’m a change.”

“Better.”

“I want to be there for my kids,” said Henry. “I want to do right.”

It

sure seemed that way. This season, while nursing an injury that

demonstrated how much the Bengals missed him, he remained with his

fiancé and kids in Charlotte. Shane spoke to him around Thanksgiving.

He was already talking about next year. He wanted to make some money in

free agency. And again, he said he wanted his kids to look up to him.

Then, Wednesday afternoon, as Shelley got off the boat, someone asked if he’d heard about Slim.

“Please don’t tell me he got in trouble.”

As

it happened, Chris Henry and his fiancé got into a domestic dispute.

She fled in the truck, and he jumped onto the flatbed. The fall from

the moving vehicle would kill him.

“Tore me up,” says

Shelley, who went to work the next morning, understanding all too well

his obligations at the dawn of yet another father's day.
 
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