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Bettis' book full of surprises (1 Viewer)

Pittsburgh United

Footballguy
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/pp/07234/811164.stm

Bettis' book full of surprises

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Long before the fairy-tale ending to his career on the floor of the Super Bowl in his hometown of Detroit, Jerome Bettis says the Steelers wanted to release him in the summer of 2000 -- and would have had he not faked a training camp injury.

That and several other surprising revelations are contained in "The Bus. My Life in and out of a Helmet," an autobiography by Bettis with co-author Gene Wojciechowski set for its release in bookstores in a few weeks.

Among the stories told by Bettis is an accusation that former coach Bill Cowher conspired with Steelers management to run quarterback Kordell Stewart out of Pittsburgh because he was due for another big contract after his 2001 Pro Bowl season.

Bettis said he avoided being run out as well because of the injury to his left knee. The Steelers, he wrote, wanted to turn his job over to Richard Huntley in 2000 and noted that Huntley turned down a $2 million signing bonus from the Miami Dolphins as a free agent to remain with the Steelers.

Bettis cited a Post-Gazette story that Huntley told his agent that Bettis would be released and that coordinator Kevin Gilbride "loved Huntley."

Bettis entered that training camp with an injured left knee that he said never was right after surgery the previous summer. He kept quiet about the injury, thinking the Steelers would release him right then had they known about it.

Instead, he waited for a chance in practice to fake it. He went down in a short-yardage drill, yelled and grabbed his left knee.

"Man, did I do a nice job of acting,'' Bettis wrote. "The thing is, I wasn't faking that I had an injury. I was just faking that the injury happened on that short-yardage play. I had to fool the coaches and the team's medical department into thinking the injury had occurred on that play. Otherwise, the Steelers would have had their reason to cut me and my salary."

Once hurt in camp, the Steelers could not release him.

"I effectively negated any funny business they were trying to pull on me," Bettis wrote. "I took the pressure off a head coach who was probably trying to get rid of me.

"In my mind," Bettis continued, "what I did was justifiable because the original injury occurred while I was playing for the Steelers."

Bettis ran for 1,341 yards that season and left the game after the 2005 Super Bowl on his own terms.

It did not happen that way for Stewart, the team's MVP in 2001.

"For some reason, Coach would never really commit fully to Kordell ... and because of that, we had no consistent leadership from the quarterback position," Bettis wrote of Stewart's on-and-off stay as starting quarterback from 1997 until Tommy Maddox replaced him in the third game of the 2002 season.

Bettis blames Cowher for not knowing what to do with Stewart and for affecting his development as a quarterback.

"Nothing against Tommy, but I always had my doubts that he won the job fair and square."

He said Stewart was too rich for them as he entered the last year of his contract in 2002. Actually, his contract ran through 2003.

"Anybody who tells you money isn't a factor in personnel decisions doesn't know the NFL," Bettis wrote. "I can't prove it, but in my heart I really believe that Kordell was set up for failure that season."

The Steelers did not discuss a contract extension after Stewart's Pro Bowl 2001 season, something they always had done previously when he had two years to go. Then, he was benched quickly in 2002 in favor of Maddox.

"You bench your Pro Bowl quarterback for a guy who had been out of football for years, who hadn't started an NFL game in 10 seasons?" Bettis wonders in his book. "That just doesn't happen by accident.

"I think they pulled Kordell partly because they didn't want to pay him a big salary and signing bonus. It was cheaper for them if he didn't have success. If he recovered and had a huge year, then the public sentiment would be, 'Hey, you've got to re-sign him for whatever it costs.' I'm telling you, it was a monetary decision. The Steelers had no interest in paying Kordell his market value."

Among other revelations in the book:

Bettis wrote that relying more on the passing game in 2002 rather than the running game is why the Steelers came up short in the playoffs behind Maddox.

He was not happy when the team cut fullback Tim Lester before the 1999 season.

"I even told the Steelers I'd give part of my salary to keep him. But they had no intention of keeping Tim. It wasn't about money [they never offered him a contract]; it was about wanting to give the job to Jon Witman. Witman was a Penn State guy handpicked by another Penn State guy, Coach [****] Hoak. ... Without Lester, there's no question my rushing numbers wouldn't have been as good as they were."

Bettis had a secret appendectomy before the 1999 season.

"The funny thing is, the Steelers didn't want the media to know about the surgery. So, when I went to the hospital, someone told me to register under the name Tex Goldstein. That was my alias. Do I look like a Tex Goldstein?"

He called Denver linebacker Bill Romanowski "a coward" for grabbing his ankle and twisting it.

He said halfback Amos Zereoue "wasn't the hardest-working guy in practice" and he told him so. "Amos listened, but he didn't take it to heart."

On being booed at home for replacing Duce Staley near the goal line in 2004 and scoring a touchdown: "Steelers fans -- at my home stadium -- were booing me for scoring a touchdown. I was so angry that you could have grilled a hamburger on my forehead."

He felt ashamed when Notre Dame fired its first black head coach, Tyrone Willingham, after just three years.

The White House staff misspelled Cowher's name on the Steelers' visit to meet President Bush as "Cower" on the stage floor where the coach was to stand.
 
maybe this has local appeal or something and not to disrespect Steelers fans because i like Bettis, but nothing in that article is too earth shattering. plain vanilla stuff there..

 
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Jerome Bettis was a me first player who put himself and his post NFL career ahead of the team. I say good riddance to bad rubbish; I don't care if the guy was a Halll of Famer, he never put the team first. Ronnie Lott wouldn't have said these things!

:wub:

 
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It doesn't bother me -- mainly just Bettis' opinions to which he is certainly entitled to.

The main thing I disagree with him is about Kordell though. Kordell was given every opportunity to be the Steelers franchise QB but was way too inconsistent for the job. The fact that he flopped in Chicago and was listed 3rd on the depth chart in Baltimore behind Kyle Boller and Anthony Wright tells you all you need to know about Kordell as a QB.

Kordell Stewart was a great athlete and could have been a very good WR. As a QB he did show flashes at times but he was never going to be a great QB. You can't pin that on Cowher.

 
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It doesn't bother me -- mainly just Bettis' opinions to which he is certainly entitled to.The main thing I disagree with him is about Kordell though. Kordell was given every opportunity to be the Steelers franchise QB but was way too inconsistent for the job. The fact that he flopped in Chicago and was listed 3rd on the depth chart in Baltimore behind Kyle Boller and Anthony Wright tells you all you need to know about Kordell as a QB.Kordell Stewart was a great athlete and could have been a very good WR. As a QB he did show flashes at times but he was never going to be a great QB. You can't pin that on Cowher.
:goodposting: Kordell was given every possible opportunity to succeed in Pittsburgh. He cost them games and I believe chances at a championship.Let's look at this a different way - Kordell had a great season but still way making bad throws, can't read defenses and locks onto a WR. He is due a huge signing bonus but the team believes their offensive system can make any QB effective -even a castoff like Maddox. Maddox did very well after he started for the benched Slash which proves Kordell was a product of a system and not a good NFL QB.
 
I hope he doesn't play the race card and imply that the Steelers replaced black players like Kordell and Lester with white players like Maddox and Witman because if their race.

 
I hope he doesn't play the race card and imply that the Steelers replaced black players like Kordell and Lester with white players like Maddox and Witman because if their race.
I don't think he did that. According to Bettis the Steelers cut Lester for Whitman because Whitman was from Penn State and so was RB coach **** Hoak.As for Kordell, Bettis said it was a salary thing.
 
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I hope he doesn't play the race card and imply that the Steelers replaced black players like Kordell and Lester with white players like Maddox and Witman because if their race.
I don't think he did that. According to Bettis the Steelers cut Lester for Whitman because Whitman was from Penn State and so was RB coach **** Hoak.As for Kordell, Bettis said it was a salary thing.
I know... just hoping there's not more in the book that goes beyond what we got from the few quotes that were posted here. It doesn't sound like he turns it into a race issue, though.
 
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/pp/07234/811164.stm

Bettis' book full of surprises

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Long before the fairy-tale ending to his career on the floor of the Super Bowl in his hometown of Detroit, Jerome Bettis says the Steelers wanted to release him in the summer of 2000 -- and would have had he not faked a training camp injury.

That and several other surprising revelations are contained in "The Bus. My Life in and out of a Helmet," an autobiography by Bettis with co-author Gene Wojciechowski set for its release in bookstores in a few weeks.

Among the stories told by Bettis is an accusation that former coach Bill Cowher conspired with Steelers management to run quarterback Kordell Stewart out of Pittsburgh because he was due for another big contract after his 2001 Pro Bowl season.

Bettis said he avoided being run out as well because of the injury to his left knee. The Steelers, he wrote, wanted to turn his job over to Richard Huntley in 2000 and noted that Huntley turned down a $2 million signing bonus from the Miami Dolphins as a free agent to remain with the Steelers.

Bettis cited a Post-Gazette story that Huntley told his agent that Bettis would be released and that coordinator Kevin Gilbride "loved Huntley."

Bettis entered that training camp with an injured left knee that he said never was right after surgery the previous summer. He kept quiet about the injury, thinking the Steelers would release him right then had they known about it.

Instead, he waited for a chance in practice to fake it. He went down in a short-yardage drill, yelled and grabbed his left knee.

"Man, did I do a nice job of acting,'' Bettis wrote. "The thing is, I wasn't faking that I had an injury. I was just faking that the injury happened on that short-yardage play. I had to fool the coaches and the team's medical department into thinking the injury had occurred on that play. Otherwise, the Steelers would have had their reason to cut me and my salary."

Once hurt in camp, the Steelers could not release him.

"I effectively negated any funny business they were trying to pull on me," Bettis wrote. "I took the pressure off a head coach who was probably trying to get rid of me.

"In my mind," Bettis continued, "what I did was justifiable because the original injury occurred while I was playing for the Steelers."

Bettis ran for 1,341 yards that season and left the game after the 2005 Super Bowl on his own terms.

It did not happen that way for Stewart, the team's MVP in 2001.

"For some reason, Coach would never really commit fully to Kordell ... and because of that, we had no consistent leadership from the quarterback position," Bettis wrote of Stewart's on-and-off stay as starting quarterback from 1997 until Tommy Maddox replaced him in the third game of the 2002 season.

Bettis blames Cowher for not knowing what to do with Stewart and for affecting his development as a quarterback.

"Nothing against Tommy, but I always had my doubts that he won the job fair and square."

He said Stewart was too rich for them as he entered the last year of his contract in 2002. Actually, his contract ran through 2003.

"Anybody who tells you money isn't a factor in personnel decisions doesn't know the NFL," Bettis wrote. "I can't prove it, but in my heart I really believe that Kordell was set up for failure that season."

The Steelers did not discuss a contract extension after Stewart's Pro Bowl 2001 season, something they always had done previously when he had two years to go. Then, he was benched quickly in 2002 in favor of Maddox.

"You bench your Pro Bowl quarterback for a guy who had been out of football for years, who hadn't started an NFL game in 10 seasons?" Bettis wonders in his book. "That just doesn't happen by accident.

"I think they pulled Kordell partly because they didn't want to pay him a big salary and signing bonus. It was cheaper for them if he didn't have success. If he recovered and had a huge year, then the public sentiment would be, 'Hey, you've got to re-sign him for whatever it costs.' I'm telling you, it was a monetary decision. The Steelers had no interest in paying Kordell his market value."

Among other revelations in the book:

Bettis wrote that relying more on the passing game in 2002 rather than the running game is why the Steelers came up short in the playoffs behind Maddox.

He was not happy when the team cut fullback Tim Lester before the 1999 season.

"I even told the Steelers I'd give part of my salary to keep him. But they had no intention of keeping Tim. It wasn't about money [they never offered him a contract]; it was about wanting to give the job to Jon Witman. Witman was a Penn State guy handpicked by another Penn State guy, Coach [****] Hoak. ... Without Lester, there's no question my rushing numbers wouldn't have been as good as they were."

Bettis had a secret appendectomy before the 1999 season.

"The funny thing is, the Steelers didn't want the media to know about the surgery. So, when I went to the hospital, someone told me to register under the name Tex Goldstein. That was my alias. Do I look like a Tex Goldstein?"

He called Denver linebacker Bill Romanowski "a coward" for grabbing his ankle and twisting it.

He said halfback Amos Zereoue "wasn't the hardest-working guy in practice" and he told him so. "Amos listened, but he didn't take it to heart."

On being booed at home for replacing Duce Staley near the goal line in 2004 and scoring a touchdown: "Steelers fans -- at my home stadium -- were booing me for scoring a touchdown. I was so angry that you could have grilled a hamburger on my forehead."

He felt ashamed when Notre Dame fired its first black head coach, Tyrone Willingham, after just three years.

The White House staff misspelled Cowher's name on the Steelers' visit to meet President Bush as "Cower" on the stage floor where the coach was to stand.
Is there any mention on his relationship with Chuck Knox?
 
It's interesting, but when someone puts something in print, we have a tendency to believe it. However, there is no less reason to believe that people are BS'ing when in print than when they are speaking. These "tell all" books have to have something controversial, so that they can be a #1 seller among all books written by a 260 lb running back.

 
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It doesn't bother me -- mainly just Bettis' opinions to which he is certainly entitled to.The main thing I disagree with him is about Kordell though. Kordell was given every opportunity to be the Steelers franchise QB but was way too inconsistent for the job. The fact that he flopped in Chicago and was listed 3rd on the depth chart in Baltimore behind Kyle Boller and Anthony Wright tells you all you need to know about Kordell as a QB.Kordell Stewart was a great athlete and could have been a very good WR. As a QB he did show flashes at times but he was never going to be a great QB. You can't pin that on Cowher.
The Kordell thing is interesting. I think the players all just felt that if Kordell was on, he gave them a better chance to win. Also, the players were closer w/ Kordell. He still is around Pittsburgh. For example, he was at Hines Wards b-day @ The Locker Room etc. I find it weird that ESPN will use Kordell as like the Pittsburgh expert though on things.I agree that they should have kept Tim Lester, that Amos wasnt a hard worker, that Kevin Gilbride is an idiot (Huntley over Bus just adds to that opinion), and that there are shady things in the front office and on the players' side going on when it comes to contracts.
 
Bettis wrote that relying more on the passing game in 2002 rather than the running game is why the Steelers came up short in the playoffs behind Maddox.

The Steelers scored 67 points in two playoff games. Seems to me that the defense, which gave up 67 points in those two games, was the reason they came up short.

And besides, the Steelers won the Super Bowl in 2005 when their passing game flourished in the playoffs, not the running game.

Bettis blames Cowher for not knowing what to do with Stewart and for affecting his development as a quarterback.

Give me a freaking break. Bettis should just his mouth and realize that he wouldn't have gotten a Super Bowl ring (as a backup RB) without Bill Cowher.

 
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The Kordell thing is interesting. I think the players all just felt that if Kordell was on, he gave them a better chance to win. Also, the players were closer w/ Kordell. He still is around Pittsburgh. For example, he was at Hines Wards b-day @ The Locker Room etc. I find it weird that ESPN will use Kordell as like the Pittsburgh expert though on things.I agree that they should have kept Tim Lester, that Amos wasnt a hard worker, that Kevin Gilbride is an idiot (Huntley over Bus just adds to that opinion), and that there are shady things in the front office and on the players' side going on when it comes to contracts.
I don't know about the rest of the players but Plaxico Burress made it clear that he preferred Tommy Maddox to Kordell. The frustrating thing with Kordell is he never seemed to improve. 1997 was Kordell's first season as a starter and his best (21 TDs and 11 more rushing). He never came close to those numbers again.He would have his good days but for the most part he was just too erratic of a passer and by 2002 it was pretty obvious he was never going to be a good QB. The Steelers QB with the real gripe with Bill Cowher should be Jim Miller who won the job in 1996 but was yanked at halftime in the opening game and never regained his starting job. I wonder if Bettis says anything about that in his book?Tim Lester was let go because he was having trouble staying healthy. Witman was a pretty decent FB and was younger, healthier and cheaper. After he was let go by the Steelers Lester hooked up for 1 year with Dallas, played sparingly, and then was out of football. I am not sure how you can consider keeping Witman over Lester at that point in his career a mistake.I think we all can agree that Gilbride just wasn't a good fit in Pittsburgh -- certainly the Steelers did and he was fired after only 1 season as OC.
 
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Instead, he waited for a chance in practice to fake it. He went down in a short-yardage drill, yelled and grabbed his left knee.

"Man, did I do a nice job of acting,'' Bettis wrote. "The thing is, I wasn't faking that I had an injury. I was just faking that the injury happened on that short-yardage play. I had to fool the coaches and the team's medical department into thinking the injury had occurred on that play. Otherwise, the Steelers would have had their reason to cut me and my salary."

Once hurt in camp, the Steelers could not release him.

"I effectively negated any funny business they were trying to pull on me," Bettis wrote. "I took the pressure off a head coach who was probably trying to get rid of me.

"In my mind," Bettis continued, "what I did was justifiable because the original injury occurred while I was playing for the Steelers."
Classy guy.Go eat another doughnut :thumbup:

 
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Yeah, Bettis comes across as an idiot. I find it hard to believe anything he says.

"Anybody who tells you money isn't a factor in personnel decisions doesn't know the NFL,"
Who the hell thinks money isn't a factor in personnel decisions?!?!?! Ever heard of the 'Salary Cap'???
 
This book is going to rival Tony Dungy's in sales! It is the greatest tell-all book of the modern NFL era.

- Tex
Dungy has a book?
Yup. "Quiet Strength Sales"
Fixed.
Dungy's book is ranked No. 1 on The New York Times' bestseller list...
Yep, it's #1 among all books written by 2007 Super Bowl coaches...
It's #2 right now, but it debuted at #1 on the non-fiction list.
 
I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.

 
I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.
Give me $1,000 on the under.
 
I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.
Give me $1,000 on the under.
Have you been there? It's a pretty nice bar. Doesnt seat many people inside for dinner though. The outside is decent and the location is perfect for games and when the casinos finally open. Food is good and bar is big with a ####load of TVs.ETA: Hines Ward's place, The Locker Room, is what is going to close. That place sucks.
 
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I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.
Give me $1,000 on the under.
Have you been there? It's a pretty nice bar. Doesnt seat many people inside for dinner though. The outside is decent and the location is perfect for games and when the casinos finally open. Food is good and bar is big with a ####load of TVs.ETA: Hines Ward's place, The Locker Room, is what is going to close. That place sucks.
Yeah, I've been there. The food was average. The restaurant was so loud I couldn't even have a conversation. I doubt that I'd ever go back.
 
I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.
Give me $1,000 on the under.
Have you been there? It's a pretty nice bar. Doesnt seat many people inside for dinner though. The outside is decent and the location is perfect for games and when the casinos finally open. Food is good and bar is big with a ####load of TVs.ETA: Hines Ward's place, The Locker Room, is what is going to close. That place sucks.
Yeah, I've been there. The food was average. The restaurant was so loud I couldn't even have a conversation. I doubt that I'd ever go back.
Loud = busy = good for business
 
I have no problem with Bettis. If these are the juiciest bits from his book then I don't think he's really said anything bad about the Steelers. Like Sinners said, it is no huge revelation that the Steelers (and every other NFL team) makes personnel decsions based on money.

So Bettis feels that Cowher didn't support Kordell enough or that one of his best friends was let go because a coach was a Penn State alum :lmao: . I don't think anyone is going to care.

Bettis was a great fit for the Steelers and a pretty decent guy from where I sit. I'll always have a soft spot for the Bus in my heart.

 
"Anybody who tells you money isn't a factor in personnel decisions doesn't know the NFL," Bettis wrote. "I can't prove it, but in my heart I really believe that Kordell was set up for failure that season."The Steelers did not discuss a contract extension after Stewart's Pro Bowl 2001 season, something they always had done previously when he had two years to go. Then, he was benched quickly in 2002 in favor of Maddox.
He was not happy when the team cut fullback Tim Lester before the 1999 season."I even told the Steelers I'd give part of my salary to keep him. But they had no intention of keeping Tim. It wasn't about money [they never offered him a contract]; it was about wanting to give the job to Jon Witman. Witman was a Penn State guy handpicked by another Penn State guy, Coach [****] Hoak. ... Without Lester, there's no question my rushing numbers wouldn't have been as good as they were."
He felt ashamed when Notre Dame fired its first black head coach, Tyrone Willingham, after just three years.
Is it money? Is it connections? I mean the guy is totally averse to thinking "best person wins out".. or performance actually matters. I can't help but think that black and white colors Bettis' perspective...1. Maddox over Kordell2. Witman over Lester3. "Early" firing of WillinghamNow, everyone has their preferences, and I'm sure he has criticisms for blacks (like Zereoue) and praises for whites... but it sounds like he's really bitter about race relations...
 
Have you been there? It's a pretty nice bar. Doesnt seat many people inside for dinner though. The outside is decent and the location is perfect for games and when the casinos finally open. Food is good and bar is big with a ####load of TVs.
I may have to check it out some Sunday afternoon this season.
ETA: Hines Ward's place, The Locker Room, is what is going to close. That place sucks.
Wow - I didn't even know Hines had a place. Where is it?
 
Leeroy Jenkins said:
CrossEyed said:
Leeroy Jenkins said:
Pittsburgh United said:
CrossEyed said:
I think Jerome has overstayed his welcome. Quite a few people called in the night the quotes from this book came out and most felt the same way. Enough already. We were tired of seeing his mom & dad all the time, tired of the Jerome Bettis show, and now are tired of hearing him spout off since his retirement. I'm guessing his restaurant will go under in 3 years or less.
Give me $1,000 on the under.
Have you been there? It's a pretty nice bar. Doesnt seat many people inside for dinner though. The outside is decent and the location is perfect for games and when the casinos finally open. Food is good and bar is big with a ####load of TVs.ETA: Hines Ward's place, The Locker Room, is what is going to close. That place sucks.
Yeah, I've been there. The food was average. The restaurant was so loud I couldn't even have a conversation. I doubt that I'd ever go back.
Loud = busy = good for business
But that's the thing, it really wasn't that busy. Just too many televisions on too many different channels. It actually started giving me a headache.
 
bicycle_seat_sniffer said:
The rooneys are cheap
Don't confuse cheap with not overpaying for those who may not be worth a big contract. The steelers have been right up against the salary cap every year in recent memory -- not sure how that can be considered cheap by anyone's definition of the word.
 
Here's an excerpt from my upcoming book.

Code:
Kordell Stewart sucked
I hated Tommy Maddox for turning into wadded up paper now every time the pocket collapsed but even I couldn't take Stewart's interceptions anymore, and was calling for Maddox when the switch came. Pepperidge Farm didn't produce as many turnovers as Kordell Stewart.
 
Godsbrother said:
parrot said:
Boy, there are some big surprises there. I mean, Kordell Stewart was a Pro Bowler?!
He had a decent year in 2001 and made it as an alternate.
He was lot more than a pro bowler that year, he finished third in NFL MVP voting.
Great. That & $10.00 will buy you a cup of coffee at Starbucks.The team went 13-3 and Kordell deserves some of the credit for that but remember that team had a great defense (#3 in pts allowed) and a great running game (#1). Kordell was a great runner but even in this pro bowl year he only threw for 14 TDs to 11 ints. Nothing to get really excited about.One of Kordell's biggest flaws was his inability to lead team to victory once when they fell behind. This showed up in the AFC Championship Game when Kordell's 3 ints killed any chance of a trip to the Super Bowl. Kordell didn't lose that game (two special teams plays did that) but the Steelers outgained the Patriots and only lost by 7 points. There were plenty of opportunities to come back and win that game but Kordell was terrible, absolutely terrible.Contrast that a year later when Tommy Maddox took pretty much the same team and was able to come from behind to defeat the Browns 36-33 in the playoffs and nearly did it again the next week against the Titans (the Steelers were behind several times by double digits and eventually lost due to a roughing the kicker penalty in OT).Make no mistake about it Tommy Maddox was not a great quarterback but the one thing Steelers fans can always thank Tommy for is finally nailing the coffin on Kordell's career in Pittsburgh.
 
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bicycle_seat_sniffer said:
The rooneys are cheapNice one page book ya got there
Yup, the Steelers are well known for not paying their performers.
They're well known for letting people go who they think are on the downside of their careers. Saying they don't pay their performers is just silly. When Alan Faneca signed his last contract, he was the 2nd highest paid OG in the NFL (at that time). Troy P's new contract either makes him the highest paid safety in the league, or just 2nd to Ed Reed (depending on how it breaks down by year, It's really close and I don't recall the exact details of each ). They pay people who are in their prime. They don't pay people who are on the other side of thirty the same amount that some other stupid team will pay for them only to have them way underperform. It's happened time and time and time again, with maybe 2 or 3 people who in hindsight they should have kept (Rod Woodson, arguably Chad Brown, some others I may be forgetting). The list of "yep, that was the right call not to pay them" is MUCH longer.
 

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