Captain Cliche
Rotational Player and Threatening Starter's Job
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Is it me or is Roethlisberger borderline uncoachable?
A la Favre.... "I'm just gonna run around and chuck it".
It seems to me that, in the rush to get page clicks and followers, the national sports media regularly toss stories with 5% fact and 95% speculation/opinion against the wall to see what will stick, and then plasters a kind of pseudo-legitimacy by citing mysterious, unnamed team sources. They are then rewarded by the attention received from a story that is essentially manufactured--regardless of the validity of the underlying story--with no penalty assigned if the story ultimately proves completely false. Call it the "ProFootballTalk-ization" of national sports coverage, where clicks matter and actual content does not.
Is there some sort of "sports journalism scoreboard" that tracks the actual percentage accuracy of the inside "scoops" vomited up routinely by the national sports media?
If there isn't, there ought to be. It seems to me that, in the rush to get page clicks and followers, the national sports media regularly toss stories with 5% fact and 95% speculation/opinion against the wall to see what will stick, and then plasters a kind of pseudo-legitimacy by citing mysterious, unnamed team sources. They are then rewarded by the attention received from a story that is essentially manufactured--regardless of the validity of the underlying story--with no penalty assigned if the story ultimately proves completely false. Call it the "ProFootballTalk-ization" of national sports coverage, where clicks matter and actual content does not.
Everyone involved here has issued a very swift, vehement, and categorical denial of the story, including Roethlisberger himself. The grain of truth that Rapaport clings to here is that surely Roethlisberger *is* frustrated with a losing season, and he may in fact be frustrated with the direction OC Haley has taken the offense. But that is a far cry from actively seeking a trade, one that is highly risky and makes little sense for either the organization or player.
IMHO, people who support such a speculative trade (and I include plenty of Steelers fans here btw) have been spoiled by the ongoing presence of a franchise-caliber QB, and are guilty of *vastly* underestimating the difficulty in unearthing and developing another one. I'm just old enough to appreciate the nearly 25 year QB wasteland in Pittsburgh that bridged the gap between Bradshaw and Roethlisberger, and am in no rush to enter another era of Cliff Stoudts, Bubby Bristers, Kordell Stewarts and Tommy Maddoxes. As is the case with head coaches, it's quite easy to call for a team to dump a QB...but it's a LOT harder to find an equivalent replacement.
Is there some sort of "sports journalism scoreboard" that tracks the actual percentage accuracy of the inside "scoops" vomited up routinely by the national sports media?
If there isn't, there ought to be. It seems to me that, in the rush to get page clicks and followers, the national sports media regularly toss stories with 5% fact and 95% speculation/opinion against the wall to see what will stick, and then plasters a kind of pseudo-legitimacy by citing mysterious, unnamed team sources. They are then rewarded by the attention received from a story that is essentially manufactured--regardless of the validity of the underlying story--with no penalty assigned if the story ultimately proves completely false. Call it the "ProFootballTalk-ization" of national sports coverage, where clicks matter and actual content does not.
Everyone involved here has issued a very swift, vehement, and categorical denial of the story, including Roethlisberger himself. The grain of truth that Rapaport clings to here is that surely Roethlisberger *is* frustrated with a losing season, and he may in fact be frustrated with the direction OC Haley has taken the offense. But that is a far cry from actively seeking a trade, one that is highly risky and makes little sense for either the organization or player.
IMHO, people who support such a speculative trade (and I include plenty of Steelers fans here btw) have been spoiled by the ongoing presence of a franchise-caliber QB, and are guilty of *vastly* underestimating the difficulty in unearthing and developing another one. I'm just old enough to appreciate the nearly 25 year QB wasteland in Pittsburgh that bridged the gap between Bradshaw and Roethlisberger, and am in no rush to enter another era of Cliff Stoudts, Bubby Bristers, Kordell Stewarts and Tommy Maddoxes. As is the case with head coaches, it's quite easy to call for a team to dump a QB...but it's a LOT harder to find an equivalent replacement.
Criticize the media as much as you wish.
The reality is that Big Ben is "unhappy" under the present OC and has been since the OC arrived. That is the title of this thread. I agree with this title.
Those who think that Roth is NOT unhappy need to have a better understanding of the game.
Perhaps the media shouldn't bother covering their teams and should ignore the obvious elephant in the room. After all, it isn't NEWS that PITT has been going downhill and the coach and ownership are doing little to stop the trend. But, IMHO, media should do more than report news. They, and fan message boards, should indeed speculate; that is a lot of what they do.
Steeler fans have the illusion of a competitive team as long as Big Ben is there. But, barring any changes in FO strategy, it will continue to be an illusion. The players and the fans all understand that things could be better with better coaching and personnel decisions. And, yes, the fans are spoiled. They have had a top quarterback and a top team for the last decade.
I pretty much agree with you. I did bring up the possibility of trading Roethlisberger given the market for franchise QB's and the current state of the Steelers, but like you i think that getting your hands on a franchise QB is really really hard to do so you almost always keep them when you have them. If you think Roehlisberger has 7-8 more years of high quality play in him then there is no way you trade him and you find ways to build back up around him instead. They already have a couple of pieces on the OL but overall the Steelers are facing a pretty substantial rebuild. It will be interesting to see what they do this offseason but I'm guessing there is going to be bloodletting of older players like Taylor and Clark etc... And they won't make much of an attempt to pay guys like Sanders but will instead focus on continuing to rebuild the lines and their defensive front 7 will get the most attention. The easiest way would probably be to dump Haley and return to more of the old Steelers and Raiders approach of pounding the rock and throwing deep for big plays, as i don't see them spending their capital trying to get all the skill players necessary for a west coast offense. Draft big downfield receivers and a franchise TE and focus the rest on defense.
It's you.
Please check the win percentages (including SB's) of all quarterbacks not named Montana since 1980. You know where Brady and Manning stand. Where do you think Big Ben is on that list?
Davenport estimated that about 60 percent of the locker room felt like Roethlisberger thought he was "bigger than the team" and not focused on winning.
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