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- Courtesy: Tim
www.steelertribute.com
(9/9) Steelers RB
Duce Staley really blew it this summer.
He came into training camp knowing that he had a golden
opportunity to make an impact. Jerome Bettis had
retired, FWP had only been the starter for one year and
was by no means entrenched, and most importantly, Staley
was finally healthy again. The Steelers had so much
faith in him that they bypassed LenDale White in April's
draft. So what does Duce do? He shows up for camp out of
shape and proceeds to under-whelm the coaches in practice
and in the pre-season games. Meanwhile FWP earned
himself a new contract and Verron Haynes became his
official backup.
Staley has fallen so far
out of favor in Pittsburgh that the Steelers have been
busy trying to stock their roster with big running
backs. First they traded for New England's Patrick Cobbs.
That apparently didn't work out, so last night they cut
Cobbs and signed Najeh Davenport,
formerly of the Green Bay Packers. You may remember
Davenport as the guy who killed your fantasy team two
years ago when you bought into all the pre-season hype
saying he was going to unseat an injury-prone Ahman
Green and have a monster year (not that I bought into
that and drafted him of course....).
Davenport is a big back,
and you have to wonder if watching FWP carry the ball 29
times last week scared the Steelers into realizing that
they need a guy who can take a beating if they want to
have FWP at full strength late in the season. As for
Staley, I'm not sure where he goes from here. Frankly,
I'm shocked that he is still on the roster. The only
possible reason I can think of is that they are hanging
onto him for a potential trade deadline deal, but the
Steelers haven't made any kind of significant mid-season
trade since the groundbreaking Earnest Jackson deal of
1986, so I don't see that happening. When the Steelers
signed Duce two years ago,
I really had mixed feelings about it. I knew he was
a loser, but I thought maybe that was just a
misperception based on his situation in Philly, much
like how people thought Bettis was a bum when he played
for the Rams. Unfortunately, it turned out to be a bust.
Hopefully Davenport, who is coming very cheap, will work
out somewhat better.

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(9/3) Bad luck
just seems to follow Ben Roethlisberger around lately.
Big Ben had to have an emergency appendectomy on Sunday,
and he will miss the season opener this Thursday night.
No word yet on when he'll be back, but this is a rather
unexpected blow. What a terrible way to start the
season, especially when everyone in Pittsburgh was so
giddy about having the NFL kickoff game here in town.
The Steelers will have to take on a very hyped Miami
team without the services of their star QB. It
definitely puts a damper on the excitement level for
this one. It was proven beyond a shadow of a doubt last
season that the Steelers are nowhere near a championship
caliber team without #7 behind center. Charlie Batch and
company will be lucky to escape with a win.
(9/3) In a very
unexpected move, CB Ike Taylor signed a
new 5-year, $22.5 million contract. It almost seemed
certain that Ike would test the market after this season
and garner an 8-figure yearly offer, given what other
people who can play his position well (and there are
very few around the league) are getting these days. This
sure seems like a bargain for the Steelers. Maybe Ike
just really wanted to stay and was willing to accept
less. Whatever the reason, we're glad to still have him,
and hopefully he can keep moving towards being a
shut-down corner.
(8/30) It's time
to make some predictions. I sometimes regret putting
this stuff in writing when people email me at the end of
the year to tell me how wrong I was, but those are the
kinds of sacrifices I make for my readers. Last season I
said that the "experts" had it all wrong. They were
predicting that Baltimore would win the division, but I
predicted that Cincinnati would be the surprise team
while the Ravens would struggle. I was right on the
money with my predictions (for once), and this year I
think the tables will be turned. Everyone will be
predicting big things for Cincinnati, but they will
struggle while Baltimore will become the team most
threatening to the Steelers' chances of success. Here is
a closer look at how the AFC North, as well as the rest
of the league, will shape up this year:
Baltimore:
As much as I despise this team, you have to give them
credit for always playing the Steelers tough. Pittsburgh
has only lost six regular season games in the past two
seasons, but two of them were against the Ravens. They
also just barely missed beating us at home on Halloween
last year. Their defense is aging but still solid, and
now they have acquired Steve McNair, the biggest
Steeler-killer of them all. Sure, McNair may be past
his prime, but don't count him out. Many other
quarterbacks have experienced revivals late in their
careers upon changing teams (Randall Cunningham, Chris
Chandler, Jim Plunkett, Doug Williams, Vinny Testaverde,
Doug Flutie, ect). Add in quality receivers like Derrick
Mason (McNair's old buddy from Tennessee), Mark Clayton,
and Todd Heap, and the Ravens may actually have a
formidable offense for the first time in franchise
history. The Genius should be smiling right now because
this team could very well take the division.
Cincinnati:
Have you ever seen a bigger implosion? After winning the
AFC North last December, the Bengals began a downward
spiral that seems certain to ruin their 2006 season. It
all started when they gave up in the playoff game
against the Steelers, erupting in a locker room fight
while still leading the game 17-14 (that still has to go
down as one of the most embarrassing breakdowns ever).
Then they suffered thru an offseason from hell. Half
their team ended up in prison, their best defensive
player was suspended for four games, and their golden
boy quarterback was featured on the cover of Sports
Illustrated making bitter and childish comments about
how angry he was watching the Steelers win the Super
Bowl. They were such a joke that Bill Cowher openly
mocked them at the Steelers Super Bowl rally in
February. It's been a rough ride for this shockingly
immature team, and I don't see them recovering from it
anytime soon, especially given the fact that they will
now have to deal with actual expectations for the first
time in years. Congratulations on that AFC North
"championship" last season, losers. Hope you enjoyed it,
because you won't get another one this year.
Cleveland:
This poor franchise. They went out and signed LeCharles
Bentley, an all-pro center who would bring stability to
their offensive line and provide protection for their
young quarterback. But then during the first practice of
the summer, Bentley hurt his knee and was done for the
season. Then the next guy in line to play center
unexpectedly retired. Then another center got himself
suspended! This is the way things typically go for the
Cleveland Browns. Can you really hate this team anymore?
I just find myself feeling sorry for them and their fans
all the time now. Last year I documented
the horrors this franchise has suffered thru for the
past 20 years. If any team/city deserves a championship,
it's this one. If the Steelers were eliminated and the
Browns were making a post-season run, I would totally
root for them at this point. And I'm being 100% serious
when I say that. Unfortunately for Cleveland, that isn't
going to happen this year. Charlie Frye is no Ben
Roethlisberger (who by the way the Browns passed on two
years ago), and while their offense features some
talented young players like Braylon Edwards and Soldier
Boy Winslow, no defense is going to think twice about
sending the kitchen sink at Frye. Still, I think they
made a very smart move in hiring Romeo Crennel last
year, and it may pay dividends in the near future.
Pittsburgh:
That brings us to the Steelers. The past two seasons
have been like an amazing dream. The Steelers have gone
31-7 during that stretch and are currently riding an
8-game winning streak. On paper, they should be just as
good if not better than they were last year.
Roethlisberger is quietly becoming a superstar QB, and
the rest of the offense should return intact (while
Antwaan Randle El was involved in some huge plays last
year, let's not lose sight of the fact that his only TD
catch came in week 1). The defense should be tough as
usual, and the special teams should continue to improve.
So is there cause for worry? Well, in the modern NFL,
you just never know what can happen. Teams surprise and
disappoint all the time, and repeating is near
impossible. The Steelers should have a good season, but
for some reason, I'm just not real confident that they
can repeat as NFL champs or even win the division. I
hope they prove me wrong.
The Rest of the
AFC: Things just get tougher in the
ultra-competitive AFC, where 10 wins wasn't good enough
to get a good Kansas City team into the playoffs last
year. The Patriots are always a huge threat, even if
they lost their Hall-of-Fame kicker. The Colts are
always tough as well, although you have to wonder if
they will be able to recover from what happened last
January. The Dolphins are everyone's dark horse
favorite, although I think it's a huge stretch to put
them in the Super Bowl as Sports Illustrated did this
week. The Broncos, Chargers, Jaguars, and Chiefs all
have good reason to be optimistic as well. This is a
golden age of football for the AFC.
The NFC:
Meanwhile, the NFC continues to stink. I can't get over
how easy it is to make it to the Super Bowl in that
conference. In 2004, the Eagles had to beat just one
team with an over-.500 record to advance to the big
game. In 2005, the Seahawks (who fittingly began this
decade as an AFC team) merely had to dispose of the #5
and #6 seeds. The conference does seem to be slowly
improving, especially in the bad-for-football NFC East.
Dallas, Washington, and New York should put together a
great fight for that division. Carolina should still be
the favorites to win the conference, but they will be
chased by Tampa Bay. I see Chicago and Seattle dropping
off (the Seahawks are going to have to get over the
Super Bowl if they ever want to compete again), while
surprise teams like Arizona or even Detroit could sneak
their way into the post-season. Regardless, the NFC
still has much to prove if it wants to claim more than
one champion in this decade.
(8/23) Steelers LB
Joey Porter caused a stir this week
when he went on the NFL Network to complain that he is
underpaid. Porter has two years left on his current
contract and wants to renegotiate and/or extend the
deal. In the NFL Network interview with Marshall Faulk
(what?!), Porter stated that he was so upset over the
situation that he almost didn't show up for camp.
Joey is scheduled to earn
a $3.85 million this year and $5 million next season,
including a $1 million roster bonus. My first reaction
to this was to wonder what he is so upset about. Porter
did have a monster post-season in 2005, but let's not
forget that he was MIA for the first 11 weeks of the
season, not to mention the two seasons prior to that.
Joey claims that he also brings something more than just
football to the table, like the ability to psyche up his
teammates and mess with the other team's head. While
that may be true (see Stevens, Jerramy), it's really not
worth more than $5 million.
However, I can understand
why Porter is doing this. He has most likely peaked as a
pro football player, and this is really his final chance
to get one big fat contract to take with him into
retirement. The problem is that the Steelers would be
foolish to even think about renegotiating Porter's deal.
They have seen this scenario play out before. Nine years
ago they had to choose whether or not to hang onto
veteran Greg Lloyd. They had a great linebacker in Chad
Brown who was waiting in the wings to replace Lloyd, but
even though Lloyd's best years were behind him, the
Steelers bought into the theory that Lloyd was more than
just a football player. He was a leader and an
intimidator, and they couldn't possibly let a guy like
that line up for another team. I agreed at the time and
even said so on this site. But when the following season
rolled around, all Lloyd was able to bring to the table
were a bunch of offsides calls and a bizzare phone
incident with Jaguars WR Keenan McCardell. After the
season ended, the Steelers were forced to admit defeat
and waive Lloyd.
Porter said that the
reason he didn't hold out was because of his close
relationship with Bill Cowher. That may be partially
true, but Joey also knows that, unlike Hines Ward last
year, he has virtually nothing to leverage. He realizes
that the Steelers have a very capable linebacker in
James Harrison who is waiting patiently to fill Porter's
shoes. So there will be no new deal whether he likes it
or not. Porter has been a great player and many Steelers
fans will be sad to see him go, but that is what will no
doubt happen after next season.
(8/15) Yes, I hate
football in August. I've said it many times before on
this site, and I'll keep saying it until people quit
putting so much focus on it. Poor Clinton Portis
probably won't even be able to suit up for week 1 all
because of stupid pre-season. He was not too happy, and
I don't blame him. Playing in that game was a waste of
his time and our time, plus it throws my upcoming
Fantasy Football draft into a tailspin (I was all set to
take Portis with my #4 overall pick).
Injuries aside, the one
thing that really bugs me about this time of year is how
the media/fans/talk show hosts have to go fishing for
stories that otherwise would be meaningless. The "big"
story this week was the fact that NBC commentator
Jerome Bettis speculated that this
would be Bill Cowher's final year. Nevermind the fact
that it seems kind of obvious to anyone who can read
between the lines of Cowher not renegotiating his
contract and buying that house in North Carolina that
this will indeed be his farewell tour. Instead we were
treated to a whole slew of, "How could Bettis throw his
ex-coach under the bus like that", followed by everyone
who said that phrase being enamored with the pun (you
know, because Bettis' nickname is "The Bus" and all).
To make matters worse,
Cowher foolishly took time to address the comments made
by Bettis, prompting headlines of "Cowher Riled by
Bettis Comments". If you actually listen to what coach
said, he really didn't sound that ticked off. He
basically just said that the comments he made to Jerome
(which Bettis used on NBC) were made several months ago
when he was feeling more reflective, and that it doesn't
mean he is definitely retiring. Even if he is retiring
(and I SERIOUSLY doubt he has 100% made up his mind
yet), he isn't going to tell everyone, so quit asking
him about it!
Unfortunately, everyone
has to talk about it, because you see there is really
nothing else to talk about. The first exhibition game
was incredibly boring and there are no significant
position battles, so now everyone is fishing. KDKA's
John Steigerwald made a great point today. Steigy said
that the blame for this pre-season madness could be
placed solely on the Pittsburgh Pirates. God forbid they
would ever even make a slight run for even a wild card
spot. Then maybe people would actually have something to
distract them. But until that happens (i.e. never), I
guess it will just be more of the same crap.
(8/1) Training
camp opens this summer following a somewhat tumultuous
offseason. The Steelers lost several starters in free
agency, saw their top draft choice get arrested multiple
times, almost lost their franchise quarterback to a
near-deadly motorcycle crash, and perhaps most
discouraging, dealt with the horrific reality that Steve
McNair will be back in their division this season. Any
other year, this string of events would have been a
depressing way to enter the season, but not this year.
For the past six months,
the lasting memories for The Nation have been of its
team completing the single greatest playoff run in
sports history while hoisting their fifth Super Bowl
trophy at the end of it. It has been a glorious time to
revel in championship fever. Personally, I smile every
time I think back to that brilliant February night in
Detroit when I sat there in awe, realizing that my team
had finally won a title after so many years of narrowly
missing out. I get a warm feeling every time I hear Van
Halen's Standing on Top of the World, the song
that blared out of the Ford Field speakers immediately
after the clock struck zero.
Now a new season begins
with the Steelers in an unusual position. They will be
defending a championship for the first time since 1980.
They have done well in this situation before, twice
repeating in the 70's, but the road back to glory will
be extremely challenging. I'm not ready to give any
predictions yet - I typically save that for after the
pre-season - but regardless of how the 2006 Steelers
perform, nothing will ever tarnish the memories of last
year. I hate to let them go - I almost want the
offseason to last longer just so we can continue to say
"defending Super Bowl champions" - but on the other
hand, I love Steeler football and I can't wait to see it
again.
The next month will be
filled with the usual waste-of-time over-analysis of
training camp and pre-season games. As loyal readers
know, I've been whining about this for years, and last
summer my point was made clearer than ever when numerous
panic-stricken fans and media types began advocating the
notion that Ben Roethlisberger needed to be benched
because he had played poorly in the exhibition games.
After Roethlisberger subsequently won the Super Bowl,
pre-season officially became 100% meaningless. Same goes
for the annual "that 7th round draft pick who torched
Carolina's 4th string defense should be a starter"
garbage. It's typical of football in August, but at
least this year there are some new angles, such as "are
the Steelers still hungry now that they won it all?" and
"can Santonio go more than a week without ending up in
jail?" The only thing I'm looking forward to this month
is to see whether or not
that new Cardinals field accidentally slides out
into the parking lot in the middle of the game next
weekend. Other than that, I will just wait patiently,
knowing that the season opener is a mere five weeks
away, and that my Pittsburgh Steelers will always be
2005 world champions.
(6/15) Some random
thoughts on Ben Roethlisberger's accident now that a few
days have passed:
- We all owe a big
thank you to God, because that was an absolute
miracle that Ben not only lived thru that crash, but
that he came out of it fairly unscathed. He
basically broke some bones in his face and suffered
a mild concussion. It wasn't pleasant and he is
still going to need some time to recover, but when
you consider what should have happened, Ben is a
very fortunate human being. He was released from the
hospital and should be ready to play by the fall.
- As I wrote on the
day of the accident, I can totally understand why
The Nation was so disappointed in Ben's decision not
to take better precautions with his life and health.
However, I have to admit that I was a bit surprised
at the force of which people expressed their anger.
An hour or two after the accident, no one was sure
whether or not he was going to suffer permanent or
life-threatening damage, yet there were still people
calling the talk shows screaming about how
irresponsible he was being. I just thought that was
a bit harsh. I also thought that it was somewhat
hypocritical given the fact that Pittsburgh is a
town where "dude, I somehow drove all the way home
last night even though I was completely wasted" is
considered a badge of honor.
- Speaking of people
commenting on the situation, is anyone else sick and
tired of hearing the opinions of former NFL players?
Joe Theismann bashed Ben earlier this week, and even
Joe Montana is weighing in with his thoughts on
Ben's stupidity (apparently Montana was too busy to
attend the Super Bowl but he has all the time in the
world to trash our quarterback). I don't disagree
with the fact that he should be wearing a helmet
when he rides a motorcycle, but I just don't see the
point of these guys publicly talking about it.
Either he is going to learn a lesson from all of
this or he is going to stubbornly continue to ride
helmetless, but it's not like he's going to say,
"Wow, Merril Hoge thinks I am being too reckless? I
guess I need to re-think this."
- You have to love
Steelers fans. Our quarterback was in serious
condition and undergoing surgery, so what better way
to support him than by
tailgating in the Mercy Hospital parking lot. I
tried explaining this to someone from out of town
this week, and I eventually just said, "You'd have
to be a member of The Nation to even begin to
understand."
- The Post-Gazette had
an
article today reprinting some bitter and
tasteless comments about Ben made by Bengals fans on
Internet message boards. Anyone who surfs the web on
a regular basis knows that stuff like this is said
all the time on message boards and that it's really
not a big deal. Clearly the PG is just trying to
stir controversy and get Steelers fans all riled up.
However, I thought the one hilarious part of the
article is how they had the director of clinical
psychology at UPMC talking about how people in
Cincinnati don't have fully developed brains! This
rivalry just keeps getting more fun.
(6/12) Steelers QB
Ben Roethlisberger was seriously injured earlier
today when the motorcycle he was riding on hit a car.
Here is what we know about the accident: Ben was coming
down Second Avenue when he hit a car that was making a
left turn onto the 10th Street Bridge. His bike smashed
into the passenger side of the car, sending
Roethlisberger face-first into the windshield. He then
flew up over the car and landed head first on the
pavement. He was groggy and bleeding severely when
bystanders came over to assist him. He was NOT wearing a
helmet.
Here is what we know
about Ben's injuries: he was taken to Mercy Hospital
(which is only a few blocks away from where the accident
occurred), and he was in surgery for several hours (no
one is sure what the surgery was for, although most
media outlets are saying it was for a broken jaw). The
main injuries appear to be to his head - the
aforementioned broken jaw, a deep cut to his head, a
broken nose, and he also appears to have lost a lot of
teeth. Depending on which sources you believe, he also
may have severely injured his knees when he hit the
ground. As of 6:00 pm, he was in serious but stable
condition at the hospital. The good news to take home
right now is that the injuries do not appear to be
life-threatening.
There will
be a ton of fallout from this. The nature of the
accident - Ben going straight with the car making a left
- would seem to indicate that it was not his fault,
although we really don't know that for sure. The police
will investigate that, but it will take several weeks. I
really feel bad for the woman who hit him. She is a 62
year-old from Squirrel Hill, and knowing this town's
propensity for sometimes overreacting (like with Tommy
Maddox's front lawn last year), this lady may have to
leave town for a few days.


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The reaction to the
accident from The Nation has been interesting so far.
While everyone is concerned and wants to make sure Ben
is ok, there has also been a great deal of anger and
disappointment coming from the Steelers faithful. In May
of last year, Browns TE Kellen Winslow Jr. was
severely injured in a motorcycle accident where he was
not wearing a helmet. At the time, it was revealed that
Roethlisberger also rode a bike and rode it without a
helmet. It became headline news in Pittsburgh. Bill
Cowher used the Winslow accident as an opportunity to
warn his young quarterback about the dangers of riding
without a helmet. Fans, media types, and even former
Steeler QB Terry Bradshaw all weighed in with their
opinion that Ben was taking an unnecessary risk. But
Roethlisberger did not want to hear it. After all, he
said, Winslow wasn't even licensed and he was reportedly
trying to perform dangerous stunts at the time of his
crash. As long as Ben was more careful than Winslow, he
claimed he had nothing to worry about. A year later,
this happens.
The Steeler Nation is so
unlike any other group of sports fans. It's a family.
Like it or not, the players have a lot of people who
depend on them. If it seems like everyone is beating up
too much on him for this, it's only because they care so
much, not just because they're the "I told you so" types
(well, at least most of them). I can see why people are
so upset right now, especially given the fact that this
was made into an issue long before today. However, I'm
really not interested in chastising the guy right now.
This was such disheartening news. The guy was in his
absolute prime and was poised to build upon a legacy
which at age 24, was already ingrained as part of
Steelers history. Now who knows what his future holds,
not just for the 2006 season, but beyond that? My
prayers go out to Big Ben. Regardless of what his
playing status is, we should all just hope he gets well
soon.
(6/10) Speculation is growing that Steelers coach
Bill Cowher will retire after the 2006 season.
The main reason for this speculation is that Cowher and
his wife have recently purchased a large house in North
Carolina. Their daughter has reportedly transfered to a
school down there as well, so that probably means that
the whole family plans to relocate sometime in the near
future. If Cowher does retire, I'd really wish him all
the best. He has given so much to this generation of
Steelers fans, and last year he finally won the big one.
He deserves to be happy, and the Steelers would be in
safe hands with Ken Wisenhunt, who would most likely be
the new head coach.
(5/25) Whenever I look back on last season and
view the aftermath, only one word comes to mind: "wow".
What the Steelers did in the post-season earlier this
year will never be forgotten. By defeating the top three
seeds in the AFC and the top seed in the NFC, they
accomplished a feat that is similar to Tony Dorsett's 99
yard TD run - it can never be bettered, and it is
extremely unlikely that it will ever be matched. But
there was another apsect to this memorable journey to
glory that won't be reflected in the record books. It's
something that I didn't even realize until my insightful
wife pointed it out to me. In the course of winning
their fifth Super Bowl, the Steelers left an astonishing
path of devastation in their wake. Consider the
following:
- In this week's
Sports Illustrated, Bengals QB Carson Palmer
goes on an acrimonious rant about how much he
"hates" the Steelers. "I keep thinking about how
much, back in college, I hated UCLA," says Palmer.
"I hate the Steelers more than I hate UCLA. Yeah,
it's because I'm jealous and want what they have.
It's how everybody in our locker room feels. I hope
they lose every game." In today's world professional
football players usually talk about how it is a
"game" or a "business" - I can't even remember the
last time I heard someone go off on another team
quite like that. Palmer has enough to worry about
trying to rehab, and being consumed with hatred
isn't going to help him or his team next year when
they have to play a first-place schedule. After all,
this is the same club who got into a locker room
fight at halftime of the AFC Wild Card Playoffs over
losing to the Steelers, and that was while they
still held the lead! This young team has so much
promise, but right now they are allowing themselves
to be mentally destroyed all because of the
Steelers.
- The Colts had to
dump their franchise kicker because of the loss to
the Steelers. Peyton Manning's line may never
forgive him for totally betraying them. But worst of
all, they have to come to terms with the fact were
13-0 at one point last year and they couldn't even
win one playoff game. Seriously, where do you go
from there? What free agent signing or coaching
change do you make in order to do better than 13-0?
That franchise may never recover from what has to be
considered the most shocking NFL loss since the same
team blew Super Bowl III.
- In last month's
draft, the Denver Broncos traded up to select an
overrated quarterback, all because the Steelers
defense forced Jake Plummer to turn the ball over
four times in the AFC Championship Game. The guy was
an MVP candidate before he played the Steelers, and
now he'll be out of a job soon. And I don't even
know what will happen to Foxworth, the guy who made
87 tackles in the Championship Game because our
receivers were open every time he was assigned to
cover them.
- As reported by
Peter King this week, the crybaby Seahawks held
a meeting with the head of NFL officiating to whine
some more about the calls in the Super Bowl. They
still just don't get it. The NFL keeps telling them
that if the game could be played all over again
knowing exactly what plays are coming, there would
only be ONE call that they would change and that was
an inconsequential illegal block that took place
after Matt Hasselbeck had already thrown his costly
interception. But it's still not good enough for
them. Rather than try to address all the problems
they had in that game (the clock management, the bad
punting, the dropped passes, the missed field goals,
ect), they want to believe that they played a great
game and were unfortunate victims of some ridiculous
conspiracy. Mike Holmgren has been a head coach for
a long time. He has always been considered classy
and respected, but now he is throwing away all of
that just because he couldn't handle the fact that
we beat him.
It's just mind-boggling,
isn't it? These players, coaches, and fans just cannot
believe that they lost to a #6 seed whose playoff hopes
were all but dead in early December. They cannot accept
the fact that even though they seemingly had the
dominate team during the regular season, they just
weren't championship material like the Steelers were.
Because of that, they have all come completely
unglued. I don't know whether to shake my head in
disbelief or smile in satisfaction (I am leaning towards
the latter). The 2005 Pittsburgh Steelers not only
completed the greatest Super Bowl run the NFL will ever
see, they also impacted the future of four of the
league's premiere franchises. What can you say other
than "wow"?
(3/18) There were
lots of moves in the past few days, so let's get right
to them. I think there is one common factor in all these
moves: the Steelers were definitely thinking with a
"past lessons learned" mentality.
-
The
Steelers lost DE Kimo von Oelhoffen
when he signed with the New York Jets. Kimo was a
really good player for the past six seasons, but he
was getting up there in age, and the Steelers had to
think towards the future. So they let Kimo go and
instead re-signed DE Brett Keisel.
The 27-year old has never started a game, but he has
been a special teams standout and has done well
playing on defense, including a big play in last
year's AFC Championship Game. Remember back in 2000
when the Steelers lost Orpheus Roye to Cleveland?
Roye started out as a special teams standout too. He
was still young and he was developing into a good DL
in the 3-4 scheme. The Steelers said it was their
"top priority" to re-sign him, then watched
helplessly as Cleveland snatched him up on the first
day of free agency. Last season, Roye had a career
high 95 tackles and was nearly selected for the Pro
Bowl. The Steelers did not want to see Keisel follow
the same course.
Evaluation: Great signing.

Free safety
Ryan Clark signed with the Steelers. Clark
was a starter for the Redskins last season.
Pittsburgh's starter from the last two seasons,
Chris Hope, reportedly wanted too
much money to come back. He eventually signed with
Tennessee instead. Free safety is the centerfield
position of football, but it's still an important
spot, especially since the FS is usually the guy who
calls out the plays. The Steelers discovered that
when they lost Darren Perry in the late 1990's.
Neither Clark nor Hope are star players. In
Washington, Clark played on a good defense opposite
an all-pro strong safety. In Pittsburgh, Clark will
play on a good defense opposite an all-pro strong
safety.
Evaluation: This one is a total push. Nothing
gained, nothing lost.
The Steelers
re-signed CB Deshea Townsend, who
has been with the team as long as anyone. Townsend
was part of the great 1998 draft which brought Alan
Faneca and Hines Ward to Pittsburgh. He has been a
solid starter the last few seasons and has brought
stability to a position that was unstable before he
became the starter. That being said, this was an odd
signing. The Steelers have been stockpiling
cornerbacks via the draft for the past three years.
It paid off this past season when Ike Taylor became
a great starter, and rookie Bryant McFadden showed
signs of brilliance playing in the nickel. They have
Ricardo Colclough as well. The Steelers really
didn't need Townsend back. I could see them bringing
him back to play on 3rd downs, but the contract they
gave him (4 years, $8 million) in order to keep him
from going to New England sure seems to indicate
that he will start again. I honestly believe this
was just a case of front office panic. After the
Steelers went to the Super Bowl 10 years ago, they
lost their pass-rushing outside linebacker, all-pro
offensive tackle, and starting quarterback. It
created just enough of a drop-off that they were
unable to go deep into the post-season the following
year. After putting their faith into unproven
players like Keisel and Nate Washington to make up
for this off-season's losses, the team just wasn't
ready to trust in yet another young guy to take over
a key position. It's a shame too, because I think
McFadden is more than capable.
Evaluation: Bad move.
The Steelers also
added some depth this week by re-signing TE
Jerame Tuman and by picking up free agent
Rodney Bailey, who had been with
the team from 2001-03. If you're looking for solid
backups, it probably can't hurt to have guys who are
already familiar with the system.
Evaluation: You can never have enough depth.
|
|
Antwaan makes some serious cash.
|
(3/12) After his
big play in the Super Bowl, the Steelers knew that WR
Antwaan Randle El was going to be a sought after
free agent, but they probably didn't realize just how
sought after he would truly be. The Washington Redskins
have signed Randle El to a 7 year, $31 million deal. I
love El and I'm happy for him, but there is NO WAY he is
worth that much money. He is an important niche player
who has the rare ability to turn games on big plays, but
as a wide receiver, he is a guy who had one touchdown
catch last year (and that came in week 1). I think
Washington and their overzealous owner made a mistake
here. When you have a team who made it all the way to
the divisional playoffs, you should try to add the
missing pieces, but you shouldn't break the bank on a
guy like Randle El. By the way, I thought Washington was
way over the cap? I thought they were the team who was
going to be devasted if the CBA didn't get done? Did an
extra $8 million of cap money really enable them to go
out and start making all these big deals? (they also
traded for Brandon Lloyd this weekend). Well, whatever -
as I said, good for Antwaan. He is a quality guy, and
he'll no doubt do good things with his new paycheck. The
Steelers now need to start thinking about who will
replace him (no, I don't think Cedrick Wilson is the
answer). Perhaps it's time to start looking at an actual
pass-catcher rather than a converted QB. I know that has
been a formula for success in the past, but I wouldn't
mind seeing us pursue a verteran wideout who had never
thrown a pass in his life.
(3/3) The start of
free agency has been delayed until after the weekend,
but regardless of what happens with the CBA situation,
the Steelers know they have to shave some money off of
their cap figure. That usually starts with veterans,
since they tend to make more. Today the Steelers said
goodbye to two guys who definitely left an impression
during their time here: CB Willie Williams and QB
Tommy Maddox.
Williams was in his
second stint in Pittsburgh. The first was during the
mid-1990's, when Williams made one of the greatest
tackles in team history during the 1995 AFC Championship
Game against Indianapolis. He came back in 2004 and was
going to serve as a backup, but injury to starter Chad
Scott that season put Willie in the starting lineup,
where he played very well. He went back to the bench
this season and will most likely now retire. His claim
to fame may just be that he is the only Steelers player
outside of the 1970's team who can say he went to two
Super Bowls with the team.
Maddox's story played out
like a movie script. He was selected by the Denver
Broncos in the first round of the 1992 draft as the
successor to John Elway, but he was never able to live
up to the hype. He bounced around to several different
teams before finally retiring to become an insurance
salesman. A few years later, he decided to try football
again, and had to climb his way through the Arena league
and the XFL before an NFL team finally took a chance on
him. That team was the Pittsburgh Steelers.
During Tommy's first year
with the team, the Steelers went 13-3 and starting QB
Kordell Stewart was a candidate for league MVP. It
seemed like Maddox was destined to ride the bench, but
when the 2002 season started with two straight losses,
Tommy got an unexpected chance. Down by 7 at home to
Cleveland, Maddox replaced Stewart and led the Steelers
to a comeback victory. The rest of that season was a
dream. Maddox threw the ball all over the place, setting
team passing records which included an unreal
473 yard performance against the Falcons. He came
back from a scary neck injury to lead the team to a
division title. In the playoffs, he orchestrated the
greatest comeback ever and nearly pulled off an
upset for the ages in Tennessee.
In 2003, the team and
Maddox slipped, but he opened the next season with a
strong performance and appeared to have the starting job
locked up for the next few years. But then fate
intervened: Tommy got hurt, Big Ben came in, and the
rest as they say is history. Maddox was confined back to
the bench, and along the way lost all his confidence. He
was forced to start two games this past season when
Roethlisberger and Batch were injured, and it was a
disaster. He lost both starts, and the first one
(against Jacksonville) will go down as perhaps the
single worst performance ever by a Steelers quarterback.
Many members of The
Nation beat up on Tommy this past season, even going as
far as allegedly throwing garbage on his lawn. I choose
to remember what Tommy did before this season. I want to
remember how he saved the 2002 season from becoming the
biggest travesty of all time. I want to see the replay
of that now legendary performance against Atlanta, and
see that shot of him celebrating the comeback against
Cleveland. I really did like Tommy Maddox. He was a
fighter - he didn't have to come back to football after
he had failed so miserably, but he did, and we as
Steelers fans are all better off because of it. I wish
Tommy the best on wherever he decides to go from here.
He will truly be missed.
(2/27) I've been
getting a lot of emails asking what my thoughts are on
the upcoming free agency period. After all, this is
going to be a big offseason for the Steelers. Several
key players could be departing, and the league in
general is facing some uncertainty due to its inability
to get a new CBA in place. Normally, I would have been
all over this situation weeks ago, with a full preview
of things to come. However, I'm still in post-Super Bowl
mode.
I'm not sure if any of
you are also experiencing this, but here is how I feel
right now. I feel like this offseason doesn't even
matter. I feel like we could trade all of our draft
picks in April for a third-string offensive lineman, and
it wouldn't bother me. We could go 0-16 next season, and
I wouldn't blink twice. See, all I've ever wanted in my
whole life as a member of The Nation was one - just one
- world championship. I never got to experience one of
those before, and now that I have, I am perfectly
content.
I'm not naive enough to
think that this feeling is going to last forever. I know
that if we started next season 0-3, I'd be panicking up
a storm. I know I'll want the repeat really bad. I know
I'll watch the first six hours of draft coverage,
overanalyzing it the whole time to see who the Steelers
will pick at #32. I just don't care about any of that
right now. We won the freakin Super Bowl!!!! I never get
sick of typing or saying those words! But I know life
will return to normal, and we do indeed have to think
about free agency (which begins on Friday), so with that
in mind, here are some thoughts about who may stay and
who may go:
FREE AGENTS
| WR
Antwaan Randle El: Think back to week 3
against New England last year, when Randel El
tried to lateral the ball to Hines Ward, a play
that totally shifted the momentum of that game
in the Patriots' favor. Would you have ever
thought at the time that Randle El would be one
of the biggest names in free agency? He never
quite jumped in and made the #2 receiver
position his after Plex left. He kept running
sideways on punts, and he made boneheaded plays
like that lateral. However, his talents made us
forget about all that. Last month I put together
a video compilation of the best plays of the
year, and I realized that many of those plays
involved Antwaan. Think about the HUGE plays he
made: the catch against Tennessee, the TD pass
to Hines against Cleveland, the punt returns
against Jacksonville and Detroit, and the
throwback to Ben play in the Wild Card game. And
oh yeah - there was that little touchdown pass
he made in the Super Bowl, a play that will be
replayed just as much as Lynn Swann's catch
against Dallas in Super Bowl X. Antwaan is the X
Factor on our offense, and it would be great to
keep him. But I don't see it happening - we are
already paying a lot for Hines, and we can't
spend millions more on a WR who had one TD
catch. It's a shame too. Some team will
erroneously think that they can do the same
things with El, and both he and that team will
be disappointed. |
| DE Brett
Keisel: Another one that's hard to
believe. This guy has played mostly special
teams, but everyone keeps saying that he is
going to be the next great DE. With Kimo von
Oelhoffen also being a free agent (and getting
up there in years), the Steelers may be wise to
throw some money at Keisel. Finding D-linemen
who can play well in a 3-4 defense is tough.
We'll see what kind of interest he draws from
other teams, and how good the Steelers really
think he is. |
| FS Chris
Hope: I have to be honest - I was much
more excited about this guy when he took over
the FS job at the start of the 2004 season than
I am about him now. He was billed as this
hard-hitting enforcer type, which he really is
not. Don't get me wrong - he has played very
solid football and the Steelers would do well to
hang onto him. But I won't be going nuts if some
other team really wants his services. I also
don't want to downplay the FS position (after
all, I said "whatever - anyone can play
centerfield" when Darren Perry left in the late
90's, only to watch all of his replacements get
burned repeatedly), but Hope is replaceable.
|
| DE Kimo
von Oelhoffen: I want him back, just so
he can play in Cincinnati! In all seriousness,
Kimo is a very good player, but an old one. If
he comes back, it would only be for maybe two
more years at most. |
| CB
Deshea Townsend: Decent corner and
longtime member of the organization, but no way
the Steelers re-sign him. Bryant McFadden played
like a future star last season, and Ricardo
Coclough is still developing. Deshea's lasting
moment will be the sack he made on Matt
Hasselback in the 4th quarter of the Super Bowl
that ended any Seattle chance of a comeback.
|
| CB Ike
Taylor (Restricted): The Steelers
CANNOT lose Ike. They have spent years trying to
solidify their secondary, and Ike is a huge part
of that. He is a restricted free agent, which
means someone would have to pay a price to get
him, but it could happen. |
| QB
Charlie Batch: Simple equation here:
playing for his hometown + the guarantee that he
will be the #2 quarterback (Maddox is gone) =
Charlie Batch staying in Pittsburgh.
|
| RB
Verron Haynes: He is a good 3rd down
back, and the Steelers do need depth now that
Bettis has retired. But they could definitely
replace him if he left. |
| TE
Jerame Tuman: The Steelers have been
trying to replace Tuman for quite some time.
First they tried Jay Riemersma, but that didn't
work out. Now that Heath Miller is here, Tuman
is finally expendable. |
| LB Clint
Kriewaldt and WR Sean Morey: I'm
lumping these guys together because they are
both extremely good special teams players. Given
the disasters the Steelers have seen on special
teams over the years, I'd actually rather see
them use some of what they can afford under the
cap towards guys like these. |
| WR
Quincy Morgan: Pretty solid kick
returner, but when he got hurt for the playoffs,
the team survived just fine without him.
|
| OT
Barrett Brooks: Team needs depth on
O-line, but can get it elsewhere. |
OTHER POSSIBLE
DEPARTURES
| QB Tommy
Maddox: He is done here, and when he
leaves, check back to this site for a very nice
farewell tribute to him. Tommy got WAY too
crapped on last season, and I prefer to remember
the great things he did while he was here.
|
| C Jeff
Hartings: He is nearing retirement, but
he is still an all-pro. He will probably stick
around for at least one more season.
|
| RB Duce
Staley: He is always hurt. How can he
be counted on? |
| CB
Willie Williams: I'm glad he got to win
a championship after he was part of the team who
lost in Super Bowl XXX. Now it's probably time
for him to hang it up. |
(1/23 - 2/7) Super
Bowl XL columns:
(1/16) Has
everyone started to settle down from yesterday yet? I
have been completely useless since that game ended. I've
never experienced that level of emotional chaos in such
a short time span. On the season premiere of 24 (my
favorite TV show) last night, they abruptly killed off
two of the major characters in the first ten minutes,
and I wasn't even phased because nothing could shock me
at that point! Now that I have had some time to collect
myself, here are some thoughts on the Steelers and the
playoffs in general:
- Lost in the
excitement and craziness of yesterday's win was the
fact that Bill Cowher put forth the best coaching
performance of his storied career. I've complained
non-stop this year about how annoyed I get when
certain members of The Nation blame Cowher for
everything that goes wrong. I'd like to hear what
those people have to say after Cowher and his staff
found a way to do what only one other team had done
all year? (i.e. shut down Peyton Manning). I want to
hear what they have to say about him playing "not to
lose" after he boldly went for it on 4th down not
once, but twice during a key clock-killing drive in
the 4th quarter. You can criticize Cowher all you
want, but not today. Even if the Steelers fall short
next week in Denver, what Cowher accomplished
yesterday is already the stuff of legend.
- That being said, I
did hear a few voices from the anti-Cowher crowd (as
well as a few respected broadcasters) ripping him
for running Jerome Bettis up the middle when the
Steelers had the ball late in the game. As you know,
that play that led to the nearly disastrous Bettis
fumble, but that was not Cowher's fault. Keep in
mind these are the same people who ripped Cowher for
NOT running Jerome up the middle in the overtime
game against Jacksonville on a play that led to a
truly disastrous Tommy Maddox fumble. Apparently
Cowher can't win. I'm just not sure what he was
supposed to do on that play. He couldn't take a knee
because the Colts had all three of their timeouts
left, and if he would have done that, he would have
been ripped (rightly so) for playing way too
conservatively. He went for the kill, and he called
the absolute safest play possible - handing off to a
Hall of Fame veteran who never ever coughs up the
ball. It was the right call - it just so happened
that Indianapolis LB Gary Brackett made a great play
in causing the fumble. I feel like a broken record
this season, but I'll say it one more time:
sometimes in football games PLAYERS botch plays.
It's not always the fault of the guy who calls the
plays!!
- While I don't buy
into the conspiracy theories put forth by TJ
Houshmandzadeh and Joey Porter, I do have to agree
with them that the officiating in this year's
playoffs has been overwhelmingly awful. This past
weekend saw a number of questionable calls. The refs
in the Steelers-Colts game really looked lost. On a
big 4th and 1 play in the 4th quarter, everyone
jumped at the line of scrimmage and the refs
eventually ruled that there was "no foul" on the
play and that they would just do it over. Now either
the Colts jumped or the Steelers jumped, but SOMEONE
was offsides! That was nothing compared to the Troy
Polamalu interception fiasco. I can't say enough bad
things about that call. To their credit, the league
came out today and admitted that it was the wrong
call, but they need to do more. The NFL needs do
something to prevent this from happening again -
even if it is as simple as gathering these refs
together for a "let's all get on the same page"
meeting - because we are now heading into the
biggest games of the season.
- The Steelers lucky
number this year appears to be the number 6. They
are playing in their 6th Championship Game under
Cowher this Sunday, for the right to go to their 6th
Super Bowl, riding a 6 game winning streak, going in
as the #6 seed. I'm just hoping the Vegas guys make
us 6 point underdogs for the game.
- Neither the Steelers
nor the Broncos will ever admit it, but they were
rooting for each other this past weekend. Denver
would much rather play at home where they've gone
undefeated this year rather than have to travel to
the RCA Dome where they have gotten pummeled the
last two post-seasons. And the Steelers would much
rather face Denver than take on the Patriots dynasty
that has knocked them out of their last two AFC
Championship Games. Both teams will not have to deal
with the ghosts of playoffs past thanks to each
other.
- Does anyone remember
that episode of Cheers where all the guys in the bar
grew really bad beards and then held a competition
to see whose beard performed the best? (Cliff won,
by the way). I think Jake Plummer and Ben
Roethlisberger need to stage a similar contest
before this week's game.
- I can't believe
Chicago's defense played so poorly. So much for my
insightful Vegas bet (I bet them to win the NFC back
in May at 30-1 odds). And why can't anyone cover
Steve Smith?? Now Carolina and Pittsburgh could both
accomplish something that has only been done one
time in the history of the league - win three road
playoff games.
(1/9) Back in early
September, I
wrote that I had hoped this season would parallel
the memorable 1995 season. As the year played out, that
proved to be right on the money. Consider the following
comparisons:

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| 1995
Steelers |
2005
Steelers |
| In previous
year, posted best regular season record since
1979 but lost at home in the AFC Championship
Game. Began season wanting to avenge that loss. |
In previous
year, posted best regular season record since
1933 but lost at home in the AFC Championship
Game. Began season wanting to avenge that loss. |
| Started the
season by winning their first two games,
including a dominating week 2 win at Houston.
Afterwards, team was talked about as the
favorites to win the AFC. |
Started the
season by winning their first two games,
including a dominating week 2 win at Houston.
Afterwards, team was talked about as the
favorites to win the AFC. |
| Suffered a
mid-season slump during which many people
assumed their playoff hopes were dead. The
slump's low point was a miserable loss at home
to Cincinnati. |
Suffered a
mid-season slump during which many people
assumed their playoff hopes were dead. The
slump's low point was a miserable loss at home
to Cincinnati. |
| Recovered to win
8 in a row to finish 11-5 and make the playoffs. |
Recovered to win
4 in a row to finish 11-5 and make the playoffs.
|
| Convincingly won
their first playoff game (vs. Buffalo), setting
up a showdown with Indianapolis. |
Convincingly won
their first playoff game (vs. Cincinnati),
setting up a showdown with Indianapolis. |
However, this is where
the similarities end. In 1995, that 11-5 record was good
enough to earn the Steelers a #2 seed, and when
Indianapolis came to Pittsburgh in the playoffs, they
were huge underdogs. This season, 11-5 was only good
enough for the #6 seed in an extremely deep AFC, and now
it is the Steelers who will be huge underdogs when they
head to Indianapolis on Sunday (which by the way will
take place exactly 10 years and 1 day after that epic
1995 Championship matchup). Can the 2005 Steelers
produce the same outcome as the 1995 team and earn
themseleves a trip to the Super Bowl? It's going to be
near-impossible, but then again, so was making the
playoffs two months ago.
(1/9) It was nice
to see that the Cincinnati Bengals completely backed up
my assertion in yesterday's
game recap that they were a bunch of amateurs.
Instead of showing some class - you know, the way a
PROFESSIONAL should - they decided to act like five year
old children after their loss. First off, they were
upset about losing their QB. That is understandable, but
it did not cost them the game. Cincinnati twice jumped
out to a 10 point lead without their golden boy, but as
usual their defense blew it. Losing Palmer became a
convinient excuse.
That didn't bother me as
much as the assertion that Kimo von Oelhoffen, a guy who
was quoted days before the game as saying how nice it
was to play for a "class" organization with no "punks",
somehow made a dirty play. If Plamer gets up on that
hit, no one even thinks twice about it. Kimo was
obviously distraught about the incident (even though he
did nothing wrong), but that didn't stop the Bengals
players from screaming at him from the sidelines and
saying crap about him after the game. I would expect
that from their loser fans, but not from the players.
You didn't see the Steelers react like that when the guy
from San Diego rolled into Ben's knee earlier this year.
It wasn't all about
Palmer though. When asked if he thought Pittsburgh was
the better team after going three games against them
without a big play this year, Mr. Mouth (aka Chad
Johnson) simply replied, "No." Cincinnati's other wide
receiver, TJ Houshmandzadeh, implied that the refs had
somehow cheated the Bengals because the NFL wants a New
England-Indianapolis Championship Game.
But the icing on the cake
came from the top dog himself. Head coach Marvin Lewis
was asked about the hit on Palmer, so he decided to use
the opportunity to slam Ben Roethlisberger. "I'm not
going to sit here and baby and cry like their
quarterback did," said Lewis. Wow!! What a little sore
loser! No wonder your players have no clue how to be
ready for the spotlight of the NFL playoffs. Some advice
for Lewis in the offseason: GROW UP!! "Wah Wah Wah...
Their quarterback just smoked us, we just lost in front
of our home crowd, we gave up in the second half - but
at least we don't cry like they do! Ha - take that,
Pittsburgh!"
If you find yourself
stressed out at work this week or looking for a good
chuckle, just picture all those Cincinnati crybabies
sitting around their houses watching the Steelers take
on the Colts next Sunday (preferably on a "black and
white TV"), knowing that they STILL have accomplished
absolutely nothing of significance in the past 15
years. It makes me smile just thinking about it.
(1/2) It's been a
strange season for sure. The story of the 2005 Steelers
season can be broken down into three chapters:
- Chapter 1: the
Steelers open the season looking like true Super
Bowl contenders. They win a tough game at San Diego
and their only losses are narrow ones to New England
and Jacksonville. The Steelers reach their peak with
a huge
27-13 road win over Cincinnati. That game puts
them in first place and touts them as one of the top
three teams in the league.
- Chapter 2: the
Steelers start to stutter, struggling to beat bad
teams like Baltimore and Green Bay. Eventually the
season starts to cave in, as the Steelers drop three
in a row. The last of those three losses is a
38-31 loss at home to Cincinnati. That game not
only gives Cincinnati the division, but it also
leaves the Steelers at a paltry 7-5 and puts their
playoff hopes on life support.
- Chapter 3: the
Steelers get back on track with convincing victories
over two red hot NFC teams. They finish the regular
season with four straight wins, enough to earn them
a wild card spot in the deep AFC. It sets up a third
meeting with Cincinnati.
As you can clearly see,
the crossroads of the season came when the Steelers
played the Bengals. It's only fitting that the two teams
will meet again with the entire season on the line. This
is the end of chapter 3 - let's just hope there is a
chapter 4.
|