Houston Texans

Shannon Sharpe rips Micah Parsons' brother over Rashan Gary update

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Shannon Sharpe rips Micah Parsons' brother over Rashan Gary update

In Houston, where Texans talk fills sports bars from Midtown to Katy all summer, NFL injury news travels fast. Shannon Sharpe added fuel to that cycle this week after he tore into Micah Parsons' brother for sharing an update on Packers edge rusher Rashan Gary and his ACL rehab.

The controversy started when Terrence Parsons, Micah Parsons' brother, posted that Gary would miss extended time while recovering from a torn ACL. Sharpe responded sharply, arguing that the information should not have come from someone outside the team or the player himself. His reaction turned a routine rehab update into a wider debate about who gets to break injury news in the NFL.

Shannon Sharpe turns a rehab update into a bigger NFL debate

Rashan Gary suffered the ACL injury last season and has been working back toward a return for Green Bay. The report that he could miss more time mattered because Gary is one of the Packers' top defensive linemen, and his availability affects their pass rush from the start of the season.

Sharpe's criticism focused less on Gary's timetable and more on the source of the information. He took issue with a family member of another NFL star sharing a medical update that did not appear to come directly from Gary or the Packers. That angle is what sent the topic across sports TV and social media feeds.

For NFL audiences in Houston, this hits a familiar nerve. Injury timelines shape offseason expectations, roster planning, and betting markets. Teams guard that information closely for a reason, especially with major knee injuries like an ACL tear, where recovery can shift by weeks or even months.

Why the Rashan Gary update drew so much attention

Gary has been a major piece of Green Bay's front, so any setback or delay carries weight. A public comment about extended missed time can alter the conversation around training camp, preseason planning, and early regular-season matchups before the team confirms anything on its own.

That is why Sharpe's response landed with force. He framed the post as stepping outside normal lines of communication. In pro football, injury details usually come from the club, the player, or credentialed reporting tied to those sources. When news surfaces another way, the backlash can arrive fast.

No Houston Texans angle was part of the original report, and none should be invented here. The link for local readers is the broader NFL culture around injuries, privacy, and message control. Around the league, one stray update can become headline material in a matter of minutes.

Training camp and preseason reporting will settle Gary's timetable soon enough, with Green Bay expected to clarify his status as rehab progresses. For now, the loudest development is Sharpe's public rebuke and the fresh reminder that NFL injury news carries as much heat as the games themselves.

This article is a summary of reporting by Sportskeeda. Read the full story here.