While I think most can agree that it's probably in Aaron Taylor's best interest to steer clear of using the type of terminology most commonly seen in the tags on porn videos during nationally broadcasted sporting events, I think I can kind of appreciate his creativity. To be clearer than a prematurely disposed of condom, the official term for straight up tackling an oncoming pass rusher is most definitely not "raw dog". However, I would imagine there was a time, not all that many moons ago, that "raw dog" wasn't the official term for casually irresponsible and unprotected sex at its most un-romanticized, so who's to say that one half of CBS Sports' C-Team isn't just well just before his time in burrowing from the urban dictionary? Generally speaking, the term "raw dog" isn't the type of chatter for mixed company, but isn't it kind of society's fault that a majority of said company has such mixed feelings on its use? If so many people weren't out there riding bareback then "raw dogged" would just be a clever new way for a broadcaster to talk about a player failing to provide proper protection while rag-dolling a member of the opposition. Therefore, you can't really get on Aaron Taylor for his R-rated commentary when it's basically just a by-product of an X-rated shift in overall promiscuity...or a freudian slip from an average announcer who was made a little too hot under the collar by either the start of college football season.
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