Riggins says Snyder is 'a bad guy'
There's been no harsher critic of the Redskins this fall than John Riggins, from his YouTube laceration of the Skins' front office to his hour-long skewering of the franchise on a WTOP town-hall program with Frank Herzog.
And yet just when you think he's brought all the ammunition he can muster, Riggo nudges the rhetoric up another notch or two. The Hall of Famer was a guest on Showtime's "Inside The NFL" this week, which first airs at 9 p.m. on Wednesdays. The network sent out a release with some of the quotes, which I'm quoting from here.
UPDATE: Rick Maese watched the program and passes along additional quote. They're filled in as appropriate, and marked with an *** to indicate what's new.
James Brown: "John, you have been pretty doggone outspoken on the Washington Redskins and what is not working. Maybe it is an obvious question, but why so passionate? Why so intense in terms of your critique or criticism of the Redskins?"
John Riggins: "First of all, it's what I do, JB. I have been in broadcasting for the last 15 to 20 years, so it is sort of my job. And the other part is, and I've been asked this question a lot, when they say do you have an ax to grind? And I think any time an older player criticizes or says anything about his former team, unless he's throwing Bon Mots at them, that all of a sudden you get a, 'What's he griping at?' type of thing. Maybe that's the case. But truthfully, I do have an ax to grind and I just realized I have been a little bit disingenuous. But this is a bad guy that owns this team. I'll just tell you that upfront. Bad guy. And if the Commissioner is worried about potential new owners and saying some of these guys shouldn't apply, he might want to police his own inside guys...."
Brown: "Why is he a bad guy?"
Riggins: "Because his business practices, I think. I don't want to say they are unethical, but I don't think it's a place, a climate that is created there where people can be successful. It's driven all by his ego and everything has to come from him. And I just don't think you can be successful in those situations and when you are dealing with someone with the mindset of a child and yet owns a franchise in the NFL. I think you have some problems there."
***Phil Simms: All these years you've been following the football team -- and I kind of follow the Redskins enough -- I haven't heard you even be close to this vocal. What did it this year that made you go, 'I've had enough?'
***Riggins: Well, you see the decisions that are made. There was a moment in time before the season, they had a big brouhaha about the tickets, about how tickets were sold. I don't know if you guys are aware of that. They were basically doing things that were a little underhanded. Underhanded may be a strong word. Certainly, as I said, it isn't really the protocol that you'd expect from a professional franchise. This is something where right away, a lawyer comes and starts talking about it, instead of the guy-- they're not visible, they have no responsibility, other than hiding behind the mantle of being an owner and taking all the good and refusing all the bad. We've seen what's happened the last two weeks down there with Jim Zorn and bringing in an outside consultant and now this guy's part of the play-calling, and it's just a circus and a joke. And the fans after 10 years have gotten to the point where they sense it and they've had enough.
Cris Collinsworth: "We are talking about Daniel Snyder . Are you saying in some way he is unethical? Because I have dealt with him in the past and I have never sensed anything close to that. Or are you saying he has made bad decisions on the football side as an owner? Or what is specifically the issue?"
Riggins: "I am saying that I don't think that this franchise can be successful where you have people saying, 'Oh, this person Dan Snyder wants to win. He wants to win.' It's all about priorities. 'What's my priorities? The priority is it's all about me. I have to have my needs met, then I want to make money, and those are one and two, and then I want to win. You can see by the decisions that are made....I don't know if you have agreed with anything I am saying so far, but at this point, I would think you would say, 'Yeah, I'll go along with that.' This person knows nothing about football, absolutely nothing. I don't think they have a clue how a football team comes together, how it works. And yet they are the ones that are basically calling all the shots through a puppet, which is Vinny Cerrato. That is my take on it....I speak for the fans because these are the people that paid my salary for all these years. They are the ones that need to know that this is a bad guy."
Collinsworth: "There is a fine line between being a bad guy and a bad GM, if you will. Are you saying a bad guy as in the NFL needs to take a look at this?"
Riggins: "Let me put it to you this way, Cris, this person's heart is dark."
***Brown: Let me state some facts here John and get your thoughts. In 10 years that Dan Snyder has owned the team, six head coaches....
***Riggins: Let me stop you there, JB. In all fairness, he inherited Norv Turner and then Terry Robiskie was an interim. So it's really four. He hired Marty Schottenheimer, he hired Steve Spurrier, he hired Joe Gibbs, and he hired Jim Zorn. Everybody says six coaches; I'll defend him on that. And remember this, I defended this person his first year or two in the league. Everybody across the country was jumping on him, 'Oh man, this guy is an upstart. He's bad news,' and all this stuff. I was saying give him a chance. He was very succesful in one operation. Usually those people can transfer that into another business or another corporation, whatever you want to call. And so I said, 'Give him some time, let him figure it out.'
***Brown: Even if you do that...even if you say, 'OK, four head coaches because Norv Turner, he inherited.' That was the year he won a division title then. Since then, not a division title, not a successful franchise for those four. You talk about selecting people. My question is, what do you think about their selection -- his and Vinny Cerrato's selection -- of Jim Zorn?
***Riggins: Once again, I think you hire a guy-- I remember Phil saying it last year, he's a tremendous quarterback coach. If you had a young son that you want somebody to coach, Jim Zorn would've been that guy. But remember, I think, it's a big leap, particularly when you don't really have the power and not necessarily the acumen, having built your way up to that from a quarterback coach all the way to the head coach of this franchise. You have to assume by now the manipulation that went on behind Jim Zorn's back or basically being told, 'Jim, this is what we're going to do.' I mean Jim Zorn could've very well said, 'Gee whiz, Albert Haynesworth's great, but we need offensive linemen. I've got a bad offense here. I've got to fix my offense.' But priorities weren't for that. Priorities were, 'Let's go out here and sign Albert Haynesworth so we can bandy about the headline that I paid -- me, big guy -- paid 40 million and all this owners, 'look at me.' I mean, it's all about, 'Look at me.'
Collinsworth: "Fix the Redskins. They make you the general manager tomorrow, who are you hiring as a coach?"
Riggins: "I can't answer your question realistically, because I couldn't be the General Manager with that ownership in place. I said I had an ax to grind. The ax to grind is that people need to know if you are going to go to these games and support this team, that money goes in this person's pocket. And you know what? Bad guys shouldn't be enriched."
***Brown: Two things. One, are you concerned -- and you have always been one to call it as you see it, clearly -- any concern about your outspokenness now and how this will impact one way or another your legacy as Redskin great?
***Riggins: You know, I'm not smart enough to think of that kind of stuff, JB. Honestly, when it's all said and done, it'll raise my status even higher. It ain't why I'm doing it. Sure it is. Of course it's why im doing it. It's all about me. Don't you guys get it? [Chuckles]
The Redskins, through a team spokesman, declined to respond to Riggins's comments.
By Dan Steinberg | November 4, 2009; 8:31 PM ET