- Rice faces criminal charges and a civil lawsuit in connection with the crash.
- He has not been punished by the league or the Kansas City Chiefs
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A video showing Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice preparing for the 2024 season has been circulating on social media.
Rice was seen doing some footwork and route running drills along with other college and pro pass catchers in a drill with renowned wide receivers coach David Robinson.
Unfortunately, today the media doesn’t associate Rice with fancy footwork and elite hands.
Rice, of course, has been charged with reckless driving after getting caught in a race in Dallas.
He was driving a Lamborghini Urus at the time of the accident, which reached 119 miles per hour less than five seconds before the accident.
Rashee Rice was spotted doing drills with renowned WR coach David Robinson
Rice and his friend Theodore Knox were racing each other before they collided in Dallas.
Rice and Knox also face criminal charges for their actions in Dallas weeks ago.
Rice’s friend and SMU wide receiver Teddy Knox was driving a Corvette traveling 116 miles per hour less than eight seconds before the crash.
The cars crashed into several others, causing a major crash on a Dallas interstate on March 31.
Rice, Knox and three other people were seen abandoning the vehicles at full speed and leaving the scene of the accident without making sure anyone else involved in the collision was okay.
Although Rice has not yet been punished by the Chiefs or the NFL for the incident, Knox is suspended from the SMU football team. Rice is an alumnus of the Dallas school’s Mustangs.
Rice faces one count of aggravated assault, as well as six counts of collision with injury and another count of collision with serious bodily injury, according to local police.
Both Rice and Knox are also being sued by two victims of the accident for punitive and compensatory damages.
The Chiefs wide receiver turned himself in to police last week and was later released on bail.
In February, Rice helped Kansas City win its second straight Super Bowl to end his rookie season.