Front Page
MLB
World Series
NBA
NFL
Super Bowl
Super Bowl Packages
NHL
Stanley Cup
NASCAR
Soccer
World Cup
NCAA Football
NCAA Basketball
Ticket Buying Guide
Contact Us
Link Request
Sports Links
gls55 holdings
Blog
Website Agreement
Site Map
e-mail me



NFL Super Bowl 2010 News | Archive July 25, 2009

 

Pittsburgh Steelers Super Bowl XLIV Odds

By Cappers Mall
July 25, 2009


The Pittsburgh Steelers will be looking to repeat as 2009 AFC North champs, as well as repeating as the 2010 Super Bowl Champion. Bodog Sportsbook has posted Super Bowl Betting odds with the Steelers listed as 9/1. Online sportsbooks have the over/under on the regular season wins set at 10.5 and betting odds of +225 to win the AFC Championship and -220 to win the AFC North.

Las Vegas Casinos have opened the Steelers as favorites in every NFL game this season except week 12 when they will play at Baltimore with the Ravens opening as a one point favorite. Pittsburgh will open up the 2009 NFL regular season in a primetime Thursday night matchup at home against the Tennessee Titans. Steelers opened as a 5 point early favorite with the total opening at 36. The first road game for the black and gold comes in week two when Pittsburgh will be favored over the Bears in Chicago.

The Steelers were 12-4 SU last year and 9-7 against the spread. That includes a 4-4 ATS home record and 5-3 ATS away. They were 5-6 ATS as a favorite and 4-1 ATS in the role of an underdog.

The mark it down on your calendar game comes on November 29th in Baltimore when these two rivals will hook up in the first of two meetings in 2009.
 
Pittsburgh Steelers Schedule
9/10/2009 vs Tennessee
9/20/2009 at Chicago
9/27/2009 at Cincinnati
10/4/2009 vs San Diego
10/11/2009 at Detroit
10/18/2009 vs Cleveland
10/25/2009 vs Minnesota
11/9/2009 at Denver
11/15/2009 vs Cincinnati
11/22/2009 at Kansas City
11/29/2009 at Baltimore
12/6/2009 vs Oakland
12/10/2009 at Cleveland
12/20/2009 vs Green Bay
12/27/2009 vs Baltimore
1/3/2010 at Miami

Sports Ticket Depot - NFL Super Bowl,
News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Refreshing scenarios heading into camp

By Michael Silver
July 24, 2009


The man who led the NFL in tackles last season is underappreciated, undersized and, in a relative sense, grossly underpaid.

So what does Cleveland Browns inside linebacker D’Qwell Jackson plan to do in response?

“We’ve got a new group of coaches, and they’ve identified a few players they might want to build around – so what I have to do is go out and prove I’m worthy of a new contract,” Jackson said in a recent phone conversation. “I’m not making a lot of noise, and I don’t want to stress out and worry about things I can’t control. All I can do is work my tail off and play as hard as I can, and if I get a new deal I’ll be the happiest guy on this earth.”

I have to admit, Jackson’s quote makes me kind of happy, too. Time after time, I hear from frustrated readers (and coaches, general managers and owners) who get their thong panties in a bunch whenever an NFL player lobbies for a bigger salary before his contract is up.

Now here’s a budding star entering his fourth season who’s due to make $640,000 in the final year of his rookie deal, and his approach is to bite down hard on his mouthpiece and pummel the dude with the ball? Try getting bitter about that.

(And how refreshing is it when the most self-important person in the column is the dude writing it? OK, maybe that’s not such a novelty.)

While I’m not prone to getting indignant over an athlete’s salary demands – it’s simply a matter of leverage, on both sides, so why get emotional about it? – I do have my trigger points, and as you might have noticed I tend to vent on occasion.

Today, however, I’m not getting angry. Call it Prozac Friday, or simply the product of a nice, long offseason, but as training camps approach (the Browns’ rookies report today, veterans a week later) I’m busting out more smiley faces than a pair of eighth-grade girls in a two-hour IM session.

Jackson, 25, is the kind of guy who makes football difficult to predict and fun to watch. Barely six feet, bowlegged and virtually anonymous, he raised his level of play at a time when many of his peers were ducking for cover.

Last season the Browns, who had narrowly missed the playoffs in 2007, were a trendy pick to make a run at an AFC title, largely because of a high-powered offense featuring quarterback Derek Anderson, wideout Braylon Edwards(notes) and tight end Kellen Winslow.

Things turned ugly early, and by midseason the franchise was in disarray. Cleveland went an inconceivable 24 quarters without an offensive touchdown to close the season and finished 4-12, and head coach Romeo Crennel and general manager Phil Savage feuded – and both were later fired.

Through it all, Jackson kept playing hard. His 154 tackles (a team stat) made him the unofficial league leader; he also had six passes defensed, three interceptions and two sacks.

“Our offense had a problem throwing the ball when we needed to, so we couldn’t let everything go to [expletive],” Jackson explained. “As a defense, we had to show some pride. This was probably the closest group I’ve been around, but once the talk about [Crennel] not being here started, it became harder to focus and things just snowballed.”

Now Eric Mangini is the man in charge, and though his abrasive leadership style has already alienated some people in the organization, Jackson isn’t one of the people complaining.

“They don’t owe me anything,” Jackson said. “They have enough on their hands right now without having to worry about my situation. I understand that. I have to play the waiting game. But all throughout my career, even going back to high school, I’ve considered myself an underdog. So I’ll just keep scrapping.”


And I’ll just keep smiling – at least for the rest of this column. Here are some other potential feel-good stories that could come out of training camp:

  » Hoping the new coach of the New York Jets checks himself before he Rex himself? I’m not – if there’s one thing I adore more than a smack-talking player, it’s a mouthy dude with a headset, and Rex Ryan is the best thing to happen to NFL journalism in a long time. More significant, Ryan’s players are in heaven right now. After three years of the paranoid, ultratight Mangini, the Jets are enjoying a relaxed vibe that new middle linebacker Bart Scott – who followed his ex-defensive coordinator over from the Baltimore Ravens – described as “swagger-licious.” Hey, when your coach calls out Bill Belichick and starts a war of words with an opposing player (Miami Dolphins linebacker Channing Crowder before his first game, how can you not enjoy coming to work and strapping it on? “Trust me,” says Baltimore’s star pass rusher, Terrell Suggs, “those guys are loving it right now. When a coach has your back like that, you want to go out and back up his words.”


  » Like Hall of Famer Steve Young and so many less successful quarterbacks before him, the Green Bay Packers’ Aaron Rodgers has the toughest job in football: Trying to follow a legend. But if Brett Favre wanted to pave the way for Rodgers to make it in Green Bay, he couldn’t have done his successor a bigger favor than to act the way he has for the past year; first attempting to force a trade to the rival Minnesota Vikings and eventually closing in on his goal. After a cameo with the Jets and a second retirement announcement, Favre became a free agent and is expected to sign with the Vikings next week. He’ll always be a titan of Titletown, but this potential move reeks of vindictive sacrilege to many Packers backers, and some of the guys in Green & Gold quietly share that belief. The likely result? Cheeseheads rally around Rodgers like never before, and his teammates try to establish their new leader’s street cred by taking down their old one. The Packers, who reached the NFC title game as the league’s youngest team in ’07 before sputtering to a 6-10 finish last year, could surprise a lot of people (though, as you know, I won’t be one of them). If Green Bay’s defenders can step it up and pull off a tricky transition to the 3-4, Rodgers could become the most beloved quarterback in Titletown. If so, will he send Favre a thank-you card? Not likely.

  » In the haunting aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, as I toured New Orleans with then-Saints halfback Deuce McAllister, we talked a lot about the city and wondered whether it would ever recover. Football was secondary, but if you’d asked me to guess whether the Saints would stick around after their Superdome lease expired, it wouldn’t have been hard to do the math: Battered stadium plus lousy owner with ties to San Antonio plus devastated populace equals au revoir, bon chance. Somehow, to Tom Benson’s credit, he defied the cynics and made it work in the Crescent City. He cut a deal with the state that will spruce up the Superdome and make it once-again Super Bowl-friendly (hallelujah!) while keeping the team in New Orleans through at least 2025. Good for Benson; good for everyone. This is one of the most surprising developments I’ve witnessed in two decades of covering the NFL, and it makes me want to have an Abita Turbo Dog or four to celebrate. Will Saints fans be celebrating on Sundays? If new defensive coordinator Gregg Williams can turn the Saints into aggressive playmakers and Sean Payton and Drew Brees(notes) work their usual offensive voodoo, this could be a big year in the Big Easy.

  » Jeff Garcia is a quarterback who’s been handed absolutely nothing, and it was no surprise that his latest revival (as the guy who led Jon Gruden’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers to the playoffs in ’07) didn’t have much staying power. That’s just the way things seem to go for Garcia, 39, until he resurfaces with a new team and defies conventional wisdom again. Now he’s back in the Bay Area, where he had his greatest successes, making three Pro Bowls in five seasons as the San Francisco 49ers’ starter. This time Garcia is a Raider, a situation that looks dubious on paper. He’s there as a backup to JaMarcus Russell, the first overall pick in the ’07 NFL draft – and a player so revered by owner Al Davis that, in his infamous news conference to announce Lane Kiffin’s firing last season, he cited Kiffin’s lack of faith in Russell as justification for getting rid of the coach “with cause.” Some veteran quarterbacks would come in quietly and try to tutor the young passer, but that won’t happen here. Garcia doesn’t do mentoring, and he’ll carry himself like a mature, cocksure leader who gives his team the best chance to win. And Garcia may be just that – but unless head coach Tom Cable wants the Kiffin treatment, he’ll likely resist the temptation to bench Russell. However, players aren’t likely to rally behind a young, erratic player who doesn’t always carry himself like a professional should, as has sometimes been the case with Russell – especially if a better alternative exists. Should Garcia get an opening, be it through injury or the threat of locker-room mutiny, things could get mighty interesting in Oaktown. If Davis wants to prove that “Just win, baby” isn’t just an empty cliché, might Garcia be the guy who makes it happen? Nah … now I’m getting too giddy. Oh well – it was fun while it lasted.


TAKE IT TO THE ATM

If this invention takes off, Mine That Bird’s new ride will have some serious horsepower. … If Tim Tebow’s senior season proceeds like his sophomore and junior campaigns, a whole lot of Florida students – of both genders – will be happy to help him “lose his eligibility.” … If Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross sees a video of me singing Bad Company’s “Shooting Star” while playing Rock Band 2 with my kids, he’ll offer me a piece of the team.


LIES, LIES, LIES

1.        Excited by ESPN’s decision to issue a “do not report” edict regarding the civil allegations against him, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger called up vice president and director of news Vince Doria and offered “to come to Bristol and take a quick look at the television set in your office, to make sure it isn’t malfunctioning.”

2.        Derrick Mason’s retirement has nothing to do with money.

3.        When former Browns and current Bucs tight end Kellen Winslow showed up at a recent AC/DC concert, the band busted out a rip-roaring version of this classic.


OXYGEN-DEPRIVED THOUGHT FROM ABOVE

As I told you last month, I had 6,000 reasons to be bummed out the last time I visited a casino. Well, I got back on the horse last week, staying in a casino hotel in Lake Tahoe, Nev., while visiting with various American Century Championship celebrity golf tournament participants, and an old friend topped my tale of woe in a big way. On Friday, future Hall of Fame halfback Marshall Faulk hit a hole-in-one at No. 17 on the Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course, the first in the tourney in 10 years, and just the third ever (skater Dan Jansen and musician Rudy Gatlin hit the others). The tournament advertises a $1 million bonus for anyone who hits a hole-in-one, but the fine print is a killer – that only applies on Saturday and Sunday for the tournament’s final two rounds. As we celebrated Faulk’s triumph in the player-hospitality lounge, a constant procession of rich and famous athletes expressed the opinion that Marshall had gotten … well, turn his surname into a past-tense vowel, and that’s pretty much what it sounded like they were saying. Amazingly, two days later, Faulk launched another glorious nine-iron off the 17th tee that, after landing behind the hole, spun back and stopped a foot away from a potential seven-figure payday. That would have taken the sting out of Friday’s $2,137.49 bar tab, in keeping with tradition requiring a golfer making an ace to buy a round (or four) for everyone and his third cousin.

As for this jilted grand-prize winner, I experienced something of a karmic payback last Sunday at the University of Santa Clara’s Buck Shaw Stadium, where I sat in the stands with my 13-year-old daughter, two of her former youth-soccer teammates and our families watching the Boston Breakers battle FC Gold Pride in a WPS clash. It was a great spectacle made even better when, shortly before the second half, Gold Pride midfielder Kim Yokers kicked a ball into the section behind the team’s bench and I leaned sideways to snag it. True, Yokers and I have a cosmic connection – she’s a former Cal star who, naturally, enjoyed it when I heckled Stanford’s Satanic Tree mascot as it walked by before the game – but I prefer not to consider the possibility that she’d aimed the giveaway-ball my way. After all, I’d never caught a baseball or anything else at a sporting event, and this was my day: Late in the second half, about 90 seconds after my 10-year-old son had uttered the words, “I’m hungry,” a member of the team’s pep squad hurled a hot dog into the stands. Still holding the ball in my right hand, I reached up high to snatch it with my left, and my grateful son chowed it like Joey Chestnut.


LET’S DO SOME DON JULIO SILVER SHOTS FOR …

Lesley Visser, who was recently voted the No. 1 female sportscaster of all time by the American Sportscasters Association. The personable and hard-working Visser was a pioneer in the business, transitioning to TV after working as a New England Patriots beat writer for the Boston Globe, and one of the many reasons she’s great is that she takes her work a lot more seriously than she takes herself. She also paved the way for future generations of successful women in sports broadcasting, including ESPN’s Erin Andrews, for whom I’ll also do a shot. I don’t know Andrews, but the unnecessary humiliation she has had to endure in recent days thanks to a criminal and reprehensible invasion of her privacy makes me sick. Seriously, people (not all of you, but you know who you are) – I know she’s attractive, but life isn’t a scene from Porky’s. Please accept her as a professional and stop trying to be second-hand peeping Toms.


THIS WEEK’S PROOF THAT CAL IS THE CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE

Back in the mid-’80s, I went to school with a guy named Hardy Nickerson who did some great things as a Golden Bear, most notably leading Cal to a 1985 upset of USC and climbing a podium on the field to conduct the marching band after the game. Nickerson, a fifth-round pick of the Steelers in 1987, went on to have a stellar 16-year NFL career, and now he’s giving back to the program in a big way: His obviously brainy daughter, Ashley, will enroll as a Cal freshman next month and will compete as a sprinter on the track team. It gets better: Son Hardy Jr., 15, is a promising linebacker who’ll play at Oakland’s Bishop O’Dowd High School this fall, and he’s already a regular at Cal’s football camps. “He’s good,” Hardy Sr. says. “He’s better than his dad was at this stage, that’s for sure.” If that’s even remotely true, I sure wouldn’t mind seeing another “Dragon” in blue-and-gold. Meanwhile, current Cal kicker David Seawright has skills that extend beyond the gridiron. Check out this impressive article he did for my old stamping ground, the Daily Californian, on the athletic department’s continued march toward worldwide dominance.

Sports Ticket Depot - NFL Super Bowl,
News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008




Sports Ticket Depot -
NFL Super Bowl News Main


 

Redskins’ shiny new toy not playing around

By Jason Cole
July 25, 2009


KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Albert Haynesworth stares out the windows of the French doors at the back of his three-story home, surveying the downward slope of hillside that is his backyard, ending at the Tennessee River.

Haynesworth talks in great detail about all the work he has put into the home, such as the 27 trees he had taken out of the backyard to make way for the pool and pool house. Adjoining the pool is a waterfall Haynesworth had redone three times before the contractor got it right.

“I wanted it a certain way, I even gave the guy a picture of what I wanted and he kept coming back with these other designs,” said Haynesworth, a hint of annoyance still evident in his voice.

In the garage behind Haynesworth is a gleaming black Mercedes AMG hard-top convertible, which runs in the area of $300,000 – a rare car that actually appreciates in value. Sitting in the front yard is Haynesworth’s “fast boat,” a composite-body craft that tops out somewhere around 152 mph, which Haynesworth knows first hand.

That boat is sitting out front while the dock along the river out back is being remodeled. A new roof and a new staircase are the simple changes. The real work is the addition to ready the dock for his latest and greatest toy to date: A Lazzara LSX 75. It’s a breathtaking 77-foot yacht. Haynesworth won’t name the price, but this picture of aquatic opulence retails for roughly $4.2 million.

The four-bedroom, four-bath (not including crew quarters) yacht is sublime in its elegance. From the headroom big enough for the 6-foot-6, 344-pound Haynesworth to move comfortably to iPod docking stations and high-definition TVs in every bedroom to the stark-white, ostrich-skin furniture, this yacht is like a floating Ritz-Carlton.

“Albert likes his toys and he’s willing to pay for them, but he wants his toys to be right. He wants quality,” said Dr. John Verble, a long-time friend who is Haynesworth’s financial advisor.

In reality, Haynesworth, 28, is a big, high-quality toy himself. And he’s the most expensive of all.

For all of $100 million, including $41 million guaranteed (the most ever for any player at the time he signed and still the most for any veteran), Washington has Haynesworth under contract for the next seven seasons. The former Tennessee Titan is the latest ultimate symbol of how Washington owner Dan Snyder has run his team in the 10 years since he bought the Redskins.

Snyder’s tenure has been marked by his willingness to make huge splashes on players and coaches such as Bruce Smith, Deion Sanders and Joe Gibbs, though there hasn’t been much success on the field. Since Snyder took over in 1999, the Redskins have made the playoffs three times and won all of two wild-card playoff games, never getting past the divisional round.

“I don’t know about any of that because I’m not one of those people from before,” Haynesworth said, shrugging his shoulders lightly. “That’s not why I’m going there. I’m going there to win. If I don’t win, if I’m not the best at what I do, I’m upset.”

There is also a deep motivation for Haynesworth, who feels almost cast aside after seven years of playing just down the interstate in Nashville for the Titans.

“I just want to stick it in the Titans’ face,” Haynesworth admitted. “Not the guys I played with, but the team … It’s like I want all the guys to be successful, make the Pro Bowl and stuff, but I want to really stick it to management.”


A beast moves east

The sweat pouring off Haynesworth’s body has long since changed the gray Redskins T-shirt he’s wearing from light to dark during his three-hour workout inside the University of Tennessee field house in early July. Haynesworth goes from one drill to the next under the supervision of trainers Tripp Smith, Dominick Flora and J.D. Cherry, who Haynesworth has hired from Competitive Edge Sports.

At one point about midway through the workout, Smith attaches surgical tubing at Haynesworth’s upper arms and knees and has Haynesworth simulate the moves he would make to get off the line after the snap. This is part of Haynesworth’s resistance training.

After the tubes are taken off, Haynesworth again works on his break out of a three-point stance. Even at his size, Haynesworth moves like a defensive end who might weigh 100 pounds less. His quickness and athletic ability are startling, which may explain why roughly a dozen college players are staring at him from a distance, stunned as if they had just walked in on a Sports Illustrated swimsuit shoot.

After a quick break to throw down a couple of bananas and some water, Haynesworth finishes the workout with an hour in the weight room. He flips the metal weight discs around as if they were poker chips and talks about how he was measured at 22-percent body fat by the Redskins recently, an absurdly low number for a man of his size.

“I had the highest amount of lean-muscle mass on the team,” Haynesworth said.

Haynesworth is a defensive tackle prototype. Big, strong and fast, he’s capable of both getting upfield quickly and clogging the running game. The Titans regularly put him at right defensive end for four to six plays a game, which is almost unheard of for a man his size.

“You can count on one finger the number of guys in the NFL who can do all the things he can do on the defensive line,” former Tennessee defensive coordinator and current Detroit head coach Jim Schwartz said.

Haynesworth also has a malevolent streak straight out of the “Mean Joe” Greene days. In 2006, Haynesworth was suspended for kicking off the helmet and stomping on the head of Dallas center Andre Gurode. Haynesworth, who is generally well-spoken and frank, doesn’t talk about that situation much anymore. However, in games, his love of contact is obvious.

“I love football,” he said. “It’s the only thing you can do and not get arrested for f-ing up somebody.”

Later on, he adds, “I was made to play this game. Just ask my mom.”

He is the ultimate weapon in a division that did plenty of line-dancing this offseason.

Washington led the way by signing Haynesworth in the first few hours of free agency. The Giants, who expressed interest before they were priced out of the market, countered by adding defensive tackles Chris Canty and Rocky Bernard (as well as linebacker Michael Boley. Finally, Philadelphia made two significant moves on the offensive line by trading for tackle Jason Peter and signing free agent guard Stacy Andrews.

“Everybody has made some move in the division to upgrade,” Giants general manager Jerry Reese said. “That’s the nature of the beast … and those are some pretty big beasts.”

While Canty is an inch taller at 6-7, none of them is more imposing than Haynesworth, a man who harkens to the glory day of the NFL’s most alpha male position. Great defensive tackles generate fear unlike just about any player at any other position. From Greene to Merlin Olsen, Warren Sapp and Ted Washington, defensive tackles stand at the top of the NFL food chain.

“When you’re facing a great defensive end, it’s hard,” New England left tackle Matt Light said. “You have to do things against those guys to account for their speed. But when you face a great defensive tackle, you’re talking about a guy who can wreck the middle of the field. It’s different. Everybody has to be worried about that.”

A prime example of Haynesworth’s impact was on display two years ago in the preseason against the Patriots. Haynesworth was at his usual right defensive tackle spot with accomplished pass rusher Kyle Vanden Bosch next to him at end. The Titans ran a stunt with Haynesworth running toward the guard and tackle and Vanden Bosch looping inside.

Both Patriots offensive linemen immediately went with Haynesworth, allowing Vanden Bosch a free shot at New England quarterback Tom Brady.

“Guys like Haynesworth make you react differently,” Light said.

Now in the NFC East, Haynesworth smiles at the notion of knocking heads with the massive offensive linemen from Dallas, Philadelphia and New York.

“I love that because it’s not going to be all these smaller offensive linemen that you see from Indianapolis and Jacksonville,” he said. “This is going to be man-to-man stuff.”

Moreover, he joins what has been the deepest division in the league the past four years. From 2005 to 2008, the four teams in the NFC East combined to qualify for the playoffs 10 times. They also have combined for only two losing records and no team in the division has had a losing record over the past two seasons.


Turning point in Tennessee

It’s late on a glorious July night as Haynesworth relaxes on his yacht with Verble nearby. Haynesworth is sitting back on the ostrich-skin couch, talking about how different this all could have been.

On July 15, 2008, Haynesworth was ready to give in to the Titans after nearly a year of haggling over a contract. Haynesworth’s original contract had run out and Tennessee had slapped him with the franchise tag, effectively eliminating his chance to hit the free-agent market.

Haynesworth said the Titans had offered him a four-year, $36-million deal, a contract that would have made him one of the top paid defensive tackles in the game. Haynesworth wanted one change. Instead of $26 million in the first three years of the deal, Haynesworth wanted $27 million so that his deal would compare favorably to a contract defensive tackle Tommie Harris had gotten with Chicago.

The Titans wouldn’t budge.

“That told me all I needed to know,” Haynesworth said, adding that the Titans have a long history of letting defensive linemen go in free agency after their first contracts expire. That includes Jevon Kearse, Antwan Odom(notes), Carlos Hall, John Thornton and Travis LaBoy.

“I lasted longer than any defensive linemen that’s ever played for [Tennessee coach] Jeff [Fisher],” Haynesworth said. “They want to pay offensive linemen all this money, but they think they can just get by on the defensive line. That’s fine, that’s their business. Whatever. … It’s like with Jeff. Everybody says he’s a defensive coach, but all he really cares about is the offense,” Haynesworth said. “Jeff didn’t care about the defense if the defense did good. It was like, ‘Oh yeah, nice play.’ But if the offense did anything it was like, ‘Wow, that was great.’”

Haynesworth also said that Fisher, who couldn’t be reached for comment, helped make center Kevin Mawae a team captain in Mawae’s first year with the team in 2006, even though that honor is normally voted on by the players.

When the contract talks broke down, Haynesworth signed the one-year franchise tender after the Titans agreed not to franchise him again if he reached one of a series of relatively simple incentives. Throughout the season, Haynesworth said the team never held serious talks with him on a new contract and allowed him to become a free agent. More than two months following Haynesworth’s signing with Washington, the NFL opened an investigation into tampering charges.

“If they had wanted me, they would have done something. They didn’t. You figure it out,” Haynesworth said.

But the whole dance the Titans did with Haynesworth speaks to a larger issue: Why didn’t the team trust him after seven years?

Haynesworth’s first three seasons in the NFL were inconsistent. He came out of UT as a 20-year-old junior and basically didn’t understand the rigors of the NFL. However, the knocks in the past three years have centered around the Gurode incident and Haynesworth’s history of minor injuries. He hasn’t played a full season since his rookie year in 2002, missing an average of more than three games a season since 2003.

“It’s kind of like with one of your kids, when they do something wrong,” said Verble, who lives near Haynesworth outside of Knoxville and who also has studied sports psychology. “They can shake it, but every time they do something else a little wrong, you keep bringing up the past … and your child feels like you haven’t forgiven them for the big one, and you just can’t let it go and so they are damned.”

Critics definitely buy that Haynesworth’s production the past two seasons is more aberration than a sign of things to come.

“He played to get paid, that’s it,” one NFL general manager said. “He still takes a lot of plays off. … Yeah, he’s a factor and he makes people around him better, but he’s never been out there for a full season. You think he’s going to now?”

Fact is, Haynesworth will have a tough time living up to the contract even if he plays well. He is coming off a career-high 81⁄2 sacks last season and already senses what fans and the media expect.

“I could tell right from the start what it’s going to be like,” Haynesworth said of the first media conference he did after signing with Washington. “It was like, ‘Hey, if you don’t get two sacks per game, are you doing your job?’ I told them, that’s not necessarily my game. I’m there to take on blockers, create for other people. My game isn’t all about sacks. Really, I like playing against the run more than pass rushing.

“Ask me after my contract is up, ‘What was it like to earn $100 million.’ Not just sign for it. [The contract is] worth just as much paper as it is written on, unless you go out there and do it. That’s what I think. [People say] ‘Oh, you’re the $100 million dollar man.’ No, I don’t have $100 million … You still have to earn it. I got to go out there and work for it and get it. It’s great that I got that capability to make up to $100 million. It’s not guaranteed that I’ll make it. It’s not baseball.”

That last quote is a mouthful and will lead to all sorts of discussion down the road. Over the next two years, the league and the union are going to haggle over the collective bargaining agreement. The owners contend that player costs have skyrocketed faster than income. On the flipside, the union contends that the current system has been healthy for both sides, allowing the game to grow.

For now, the onus is on the owners to prove their case because they were the ones to opt out of the agreement. However, high player salaries tend to rankle fans faster than anything else. With that in mind, contracts like the one for Haynesworth could become part of the battle cry for the owners’ side if he doesn’t live up to the deal. If he does, Haynesworth could be the symbol of how the system works, allowing teams to take great strides quickly toward being a contender.

“There aren’t many times when you have a player like that hit free agency, a guy who can change the balance of power,” one long-time agent said. “You’ve had Reggie White and Deion Sanders [with San Francisco and Dallas], just a couple of guys with that kind of talent [who were able] to switch teams. They helped their teams win Super Bowls. That’s huge and it helps the case for the players.

“Most of the time, the players who hit free agency aren’t truly premier guys. It just doesn’t happen. That’s why a lot of people look back at free agents and say, ‘Oh, that guy was a bust.’ He wasn’t really a bust, he just wasn’t worth all the excitement that was created. It’s a real perception thing.”

Back in Haynesworth’s house, the afternoon sun is shining on his face through the French door window, creating a long, wide shadow on the tile floor. Haynesworth’s body blots out nearly every ray of sunshine.

The perception he creates is quite obvious.

Sports Ticket Depot - NFL Super Bowl,
News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008


 













For Email Marketing you can trust

Convert Currency here



HONESTe Online Member Seal
Click to verify - Before you buy!





Sports Ticket Web Masters,
       Submit your sports event, venue, news, and memorabilia link(s) as ‘articles / advertisements’. Your article(s) will occupy their own EXCLUSIVE and UNIQUE page directly linked to a Sports Ticket Depot sports section of your choice.

Submit details here.