Alex Bachman

6.8K posts

Alex Bachman banner
Alex Bachman

Alex Bachman

@AlexBachman

Born to make mistakes, not to fake perfection #AO1 | 6 Year NFL Wideout @raiders

Austin, TX Katılım Ekim 2013
463 Takip Edilen5.7K Takipçiler
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
I stand with the union on the decision to elect the new executive director of the @NFLPA JC Tretter.
English
0
0
1
281
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Adam Schefter
Adam Schefter@AdamSchefter·
Raiders’ additions today: 🏈C Tyler Linderbaum: 3-years, $81M 🏈LB Quay Walker: 3-years, $40.5M 🏈LB Nakobe Dean: 3-years, $36M 🏈WR Jalen Nailor: 3-years, $35M 🏈Kwity Paye: 3-years, $48M 🏈CB Eric Stokes: 3-years, $30M 🏈DE Malcolm Koonce: 1-year, $11M 🏈Trade for CB Taron Johnson
Adam Schefter@AdamSchefter

Comp update: Raiders are giving Quay Walker a three-year, $40.5 million deal that includes $28 million guaranteed, per agents Kyle McCarthy and Todd France.

English
790
2.5K
21.7K
7M
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
I think I have a crush on Olivia Dean
English
1
0
6
1.3K
Ashley Schaeffer
Ashley Schaeffer@JRinfrette·
@AlexBachman Yep. Football was intended to be played outdoors. Want optimal conditions play Madden
English
1
0
1
63
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
Do we still like the outdoor field conditions for playoffs in order to get the two best teams to play in the SB indoors??
English
3
0
5
1.1K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
NFL on CBS 🏈
NFL on CBS 🏈@NFLonCBS·
LISTEN to this hit by Tommy Eichenberg 💥 @Raiders
English
18
90
1.1K
175.5K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Ian Rapoport
Ian Rapoport@RapSheet·
Here the much-anticipated trailer for Madden, from @PrimeVideo.
English
134
313
3.5K
525.9K
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
Appreciate the story Ryan. Grateful for my journey and all the ups and downs. They say you’ve only lost when you’ve given up. Keep fighting
Ryan McFadden@ryanmcfadden_

Why #Raiders WR Alex Bachman drives a rental car and lives in a guesthouse while in Las Vegas? Bachman’s NFL has been filled with uncertainty. He has played four teams and lived with the thought that each day could be his last in league. espn.com/nfl/story/_/id…

English
10
2
68
11.8K
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
Want to thank Dr. Steven Shin and the Raiders staff for correcting my broken thumb and allowing me to be back on the field competing 19 days post -operation.
Alex Bachman tweet mediaAlex Bachman tweet mediaAlex Bachman tweet media
English
0
0
25
4.7K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
NFL
NFL@NFL·
DARNOLD. SAUBERT. @SEAHAWKS WIN!
Deutsch
100
401
2.9K
236K
Alex Bachman
Alex Bachman@AlexBachman·
Just finished episode 4 of stranger things…. Sheeesh!!!! Ready for the next one 🔥
English
0
0
1
375
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Nick Walters
Nick Walters@nickwalt·
#Raiders rookie WR Jack Bech tells me he doesn't feel pressure living up to his 2nd-round price tag. "I think pressure is saying the eulogy of my brother when he passed away in front of thousands of people. This is just a game." His confidence isn't shaken by having to wait for his opportunities: 'I know God and my brother have a perfect plan.'
English
67
84
4.4K
947.4K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Alex Singleton
Alex Singleton@alexsingleton49·
I shared this news with our team this morning. I’m grateful for everyone’s support and can’t wait to get back on the field soon! Go Broncos!
Alex Singleton tweet mediaAlex Singleton tweet mediaAlex Singleton tweet media
English
909
1.3K
17.4K
2M
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Vegas Sports Today
Vegas Sports Today@VegasSportsTD·
“I always say this: God wouldn’t put anything on me that I can’t handle. It’s usually darkness before dawn. We’re gonna rise. It hurts, it sucks. We’ll figure it out.” Raiders QB Geno Smith speaks after a loss to the Denver Broncos. 🎥: By @Sean_Zittel, Vegas Sports Today
English
167
16
245
33.7K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Jennifer Sey
Jennifer Sey@JenniferSey·
Please show Elizabeth some support. She is the first active NWSL player to publicly stand up for women’s sports and fair competition. Follow her and give her a big thank you. Not easy to do this.
Elizabeth Eddy@elizabetheddy2

The W in NWSL When I joined the National Women’s Soccer League 11 years ago, our games were live-streamed to fans on YouTube. Today, our league is halfway through a four-year, $240 million television contract. Our teams are among the most valuable franchises in women’s sports. Yet with this remarkable growth comes an urgent challenge: How do we preserve women’s rights and competitive fairness while fostering meaningful inclusion?   I’m proud to have played a small role in our league’s transformation from struggling startup to supercharged celebrity-maker. I’ve been a part of winning seven titles: three NWSL Championships, three regular-season titles and one International Champions Cup. But I’m concerned that without clarity about who the league is for, it will lose its identity and its momentum.   Recent controversies across women’s sports — from swimming to track and field — have highlighted the absence of clear eligibility policies in professional soccer, unlike a growing number of other competitions. This uncertainty serves no one, as questions and controversy abound over intersex and transgender athletes. Players have been excluded and then unexcluded, administrators have blamed and criticized each other, and fans have used the uncertainty to harass players.  Leaders from across the political spectrum, including progressives like California Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Vice President Kamala Harris, have expressed support for stronger protections for the integrity of women’s sports. Ensuring fairness prompted numerous international leagues to tighten eligibility. World Athletics did so in 2023 for international track and field competitions. Other countries’ domestic organizations did the same, including the UK Athletics Federation. World Aquatics (formerly FINA), international swimming’s governing body, adopted clear rules about sex and gender eligibility in 2022. England’s Football Association now requires ovaries at birth.   Addressing this challenge entails remembering why women’s sports categories exist in the first place: not to exclude but to create a space where female athletes can physically compete on equal footing. Studies show measurable differences between men and women in muscle mass, bone density and cardiovascular capacity, which directly affect competitive outcomes. Further research has found male muscular advantage is only “minimally reduced” — by about 5% over 12 months — by testosterone suppression.   Fairness and inclusion are core American values. Reasonable people can disagree about where to draw lines, but avoiding the conversation altogether by shutting out diverse views does not serve us. In fact, we owe it to current and future female athletes to solve this.   The NWSL must adopt a clear standard. One option is all players must be born with ovaries, as the FA requires. Another option is an SRY gene test, like those World Athletics and World Boxing implemented.   This SRY genetic marker indicates male-developmental pathways during fetal growth, providing objective scientific criteria for competitive categorization. Critics say genetic-testing policies can cause psychological harm. This concern must be taken seriously. Testing could easily integrate into medical evaluations through existing blood draws or noninvasive cheek swabs, conducted once per career under strict confidentiality protocols. Athletes testing positive for the SRY gene could receive comprehensive support, including counseling, privacy protections and inclusion in professional networks. World Athletics has successfully used similar protocols since 2018, with legal challenges ultimately supporting such policies’ scientific basis.   Creating pathways for athletes traditionally excluded from competing at the highest level would demonstrate inclusion and competitive integrity can coexist.   I know from experience the NWSL is more than just a sports league. For many, dreams are coming true in real life — dreams that were impossible before my generation. I also understand that for many athletes and fans, seeing intersex and transgender athletes compete and dominate on sports’ biggest stages also realizes a dream. How can we make an open arena reality for small and tragically marginalized minorities with nowhere else that may feel safe and inclusive to compete?   The answer is in the NWSL’s own history. Just as we built a new space for women to compete in the largest arenas, now we must honor that commitment and make the National Women’s Soccer League for women. I welcome leaders including the aforementioned American politicians to come together with the NWSL’s blueprint and build solutions.   Some pathway ideas: an open division within the NWSL, small-sided opportunities like the Soccer Tournament and World Sevens Football, pathways to stay in the game and free counseling. I don’t have all the answers, but I do know we’re all in this together. It will take time, space and creativity to cooperate as we move forward.   Decisions the NWSL makes — or shirks its responsibility to make — will shape opportunities for young athletes of all backgrounds for decades to come. We must get them right by finding the most ethical and innovative path ahead.   Women’s sports showcase the full range of human ability as we reach and exceed what is physically possible. Everybody needs a chance to break records and achieve the previously impossible. That is why we love to celebrate women competing against each other and why we need creative solutions to ensure everybody can compete on a level playing field.  It would be nice to have no need for clear eligibility criteria. Unfortunately, when money, power and fame are at stake, which inevitably happens in professional sports, competitors may try to push on what is right or fair. Especially when the goal of winning requires using every available advantage.

English
56
233
2.3K
234.4K
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Elizabeth Eddy
Elizabeth Eddy@elizabetheddy2·
The W in NWSL When I joined the National Women’s Soccer League 11 years ago, our games were live-streamed to fans on YouTube. Today, our league is halfway through a four-year, $240 million television contract. Our teams are among the most valuable franchises in women’s sports. Yet with this remarkable growth comes an urgent challenge: How do we preserve women’s rights and competitive fairness while fostering meaningful inclusion?   I’m proud to have played a small role in our league’s transformation from struggling startup to supercharged celebrity-maker. I’ve been a part of winning seven titles: three NWSL Championships, three regular-season titles and one International Champions Cup. But I’m concerned that without clarity about who the league is for, it will lose its identity and its momentum.   Recent controversies across women’s sports — from swimming to track and field — have highlighted the absence of clear eligibility policies in professional soccer, unlike a growing number of other competitions. This uncertainty serves no one, as questions and controversy abound over intersex and transgender athletes. Players have been excluded and then unexcluded, administrators have blamed and criticized each other, and fans have used the uncertainty to harass players.  Leaders from across the political spectrum, including progressives like California Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Vice President Kamala Harris, have expressed support for stronger protections for the integrity of women’s sports. Ensuring fairness prompted numerous international leagues to tighten eligibility. World Athletics did so in 2023 for international track and field competitions. Other countries’ domestic organizations did the same, including the UK Athletics Federation. World Aquatics (formerly FINA), international swimming’s governing body, adopted clear rules about sex and gender eligibility in 2022. England’s Football Association now requires ovaries at birth.   Addressing this challenge entails remembering why women’s sports categories exist in the first place: not to exclude but to create a space where female athletes can physically compete on equal footing. Studies show measurable differences between men and women in muscle mass, bone density and cardiovascular capacity, which directly affect competitive outcomes. Further research has found male muscular advantage is only “minimally reduced” — by about 5% over 12 months — by testosterone suppression.   Fairness and inclusion are core American values. Reasonable people can disagree about where to draw lines, but avoiding the conversation altogether by shutting out diverse views does not serve us. In fact, we owe it to current and future female athletes to solve this.   The NWSL must adopt a clear standard. One option is all players must be born with ovaries, as the FA requires. Another option is an SRY gene test, like those World Athletics and World Boxing implemented.   This SRY genetic marker indicates male-developmental pathways during fetal growth, providing objective scientific criteria for competitive categorization. Critics say genetic-testing policies can cause psychological harm. This concern must be taken seriously. Testing could easily integrate into medical evaluations through existing blood draws or noninvasive cheek swabs, conducted once per career under strict confidentiality protocols. Athletes testing positive for the SRY gene could receive comprehensive support, including counseling, privacy protections and inclusion in professional networks. World Athletics has successfully used similar protocols since 2018, with legal challenges ultimately supporting such policies’ scientific basis.   Creating pathways for athletes traditionally excluded from competing at the highest level would demonstrate inclusion and competitive integrity can coexist.   I know from experience the NWSL is more than just a sports league. For many, dreams are coming true in real life — dreams that were impossible before my generation. I also understand that for many athletes and fans, seeing intersex and transgender athletes compete and dominate on sports’ biggest stages also realizes a dream. How can we make an open arena reality for small and tragically marginalized minorities with nowhere else that may feel safe and inclusive to compete?   The answer is in the NWSL’s own history. Just as we built a new space for women to compete in the largest arenas, now we must honor that commitment and make the National Women’s Soccer League for women. I welcome leaders including the aforementioned American politicians to come together with the NWSL’s blueprint and build solutions.   Some pathway ideas: an open division within the NWSL, small-sided opportunities like the Soccer Tournament and World Sevens Football, pathways to stay in the game and free counseling. I don’t have all the answers, but I do know we’re all in this together. It will take time, space and creativity to cooperate as we move forward.   Decisions the NWSL makes — or shirks its responsibility to make — will shape opportunities for young athletes of all backgrounds for decades to come. We must get them right by finding the most ethical and innovative path ahead.   Women’s sports showcase the full range of human ability as we reach and exceed what is physically possible. Everybody needs a chance to break records and achieve the previously impossible. That is why we love to celebrate women competing against each other and why we need creative solutions to ensure everybody can compete on a level playing field.  It would be nice to have no need for clear eligibility criteria. Unfortunately, when money, power and fame are at stake, which inevitably happens in professional sports, competitors may try to push on what is right or fair. Especially when the goal of winning requires using every available advantage.
English
0
1.1K
10.2K
2.8M
Alex Bachman retweetledi
Sen. Marsha Blackburn
Sen. Marsha Blackburn@MarshaBlackburn·
Elizabeth Eddy showed tremendous courage by standing up for female athletes and fair play. Her teammates should be ashamed of the sham press conference they hosted bashing her. The American people are behind you, @elizabetheddy2. foxnews.com/sports/womens-…
English
96
644
5.5K
78K