King James wrote:
Smith is like 5'9 and 180 something pounds. Greenway is 6'2 and 242 pounds. There's no way he should be getting blasted as hard as he did.
Agree with you if all things were equal on the play, but all things were NOT equal on that play.
Greenway never sees Smith coming. Complete blindside. The only way Greenway, or even a bigger player, stays on his feet in that situation is if he either sees Smith coming and slows down to get his center of mass underneath his body and brace for the impact, or I suppose he could have stayed on his feet had he been moving slower and his center of mass never got out in front of his body. They way Smith hits him (high and hard on the trailing shoulder) would have the same effect as a smaller car hitting a larger car in the trunk section at high speed. It would effectively spin the trailing section of the mass, which in Greenway's case knocked his behind out.
All this play shows me is how smaller players like Smith and Winfield are effective and survive in the pros. They either learn or innately understand how to gain leverage over heavier players. That, plus being extremely strong and durable, enables them to play a game for a long time that if it just came down to weight and height they could never have played for long.
Whether Greenway is a good LB cannot be boiled down to this play.