Steelers Nation according to Twitter

Friday, October 24, 2014 Posted by

According to Twitter, this map shows the distribution of Steelers followers across the United States.
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While any claim to “America’s Team” is up for debate, as the following maps show, the Steelers are clearly the team of the AFC North at least.

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Such beauty to behold when the Steelers get nostalgic

Friday, October 24, 2014 Posted by

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Chuck Pagano grooms Andrew Luck for Steelers game

Wednesday, October 22, 2014 Posted by

Touchdown Overturned

Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Posted by

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What Might Have Been

Saturday, October 18, 2014 Posted by

2011 Cornerback Draft Rankings

Picture 9

The Terrible Flag

Monday, October 6, 2014 Posted by

ScreenShot1128If evidence were needed to demonstrate that the Steelers’ biggest opponent is themselves, we might look no further than at their abysmal performance in penalties. As of today, the Steelers are by far the most penalized team in the NFL, with 51 penalties. This is more than double the penalty count of nine other teams. The Steelers have more penalties than Cincinnati (22) and Baltimore (21) combined. They have amassed 437 penalty yards, second behind only the Patriots (466).  The Steelers lead in penalties per game (10.2) while the Ravens have the fewest penalties per game (4.2).

Most egregious, the Steelers lead the league in Face Mask penalties with 6, which is 714% more than the league average of 0.84, and Illegal Block in the Back with 4, some 425% above the league average of 0.94. All of the Face Mask penalties have been the 15 yard variety.

We can also combine three other penalty types, Unsportsmanlike Conduct, Taunting, and Unnecessary Roughness, as three “bad boy” categories. Combined, the Steelers have 7 such penalties compared to a league average of 2.44.

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Peezy Faceplanted by Heyward

Monday, September 22, 2014 Posted by

Nobody in my AARP magazine looks like this…

Monday, September 22, 2014 Posted by

Roger Goodell issues memo to NFL team executives about Ray Rice investigation:

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 Posted by

UPDATED; I’ve included the letter from Steve Bisciotti to his PSL holders. It’s the 1st comment under Roger’s memo. Bisciotti admits that the Rats stopped investigating the matter in March when the prosecutor dropped the case against Janay, but elevated the charge against Ray from simple assault to aggravated assault because it makes sense at that point to stop investigating your player rather than delving further into the situation, right? 

Roger’s memo, as follows:

As you know, there has been a good deal of speculation about the investigatory process that preceded the decision to suspend Ray Rice for his involvement in an incident of domestic violence last February. I want to use this opportunity to address this matter and provide a full understanding of the process that was followed.

First, we did not see video of what took place inside the elevator until it was publicly released on Monday. When the new video evidence became available, we acted promptly and imposed an indefinite suspension on Mr. Rice.

Second, on multiple occasions, we asked the proper law enforcement authorities to share with us all relevant information, including any video of the incident. Those requests were made to different law enforcement entities, including the New Jersey State Police, the Atlantic City Police Department, the Atlantic County Police Department and the Atlantic County Solicitor’s Office. The requests were first made in February following the incident, and were again made following Mr. Rice’s entry into the pre-trial diversion program. None of the law enforcement entities we approached was permitted to provide any video or other investigatory material to us. As is customary in disciplinary cases, the suspension imposed on Mr. Rice in July was based on the information available to us at that time.

Our understanding of New Jersey law is that casino security is regulated by the Division of Gaming Enforcement in the State Attorney General’s office. Once a criminal investigation begins, law enforcement authorities do not share investigatory material (such as the videos here) with private parties such as the NFL. In addition, the state’s Open Public Records Act excludes material that is generated in the context of an active law enforcement proceeding. The law enforcement agencies did nothing wrong here; they simply followed their customary procedures. As the New Jersey Attorney General’s office said yesterday, “It would have been illegal for law enforcement to provide [the] Rice video to [the] NFL.”

We did not ask the Atlantic City casino directly for the video. Again, our understanding of New Jersey law is that the casino is prohibited from turning over material to a third party during a law enforcement proceeding, and that doing so would have subjected individuals to prosecution for interference with a criminal investigation. Moreover, our longstanding policy in matters like this – where there is a criminal investigation being directed by law enforcement and prosecutors – is to cooperate with law enforcement and take no action to interfere with the criminal justice system. In addition, in the context of an ongoing criminal investigation, information obtained outside of law enforcement that has not been tested by prosecutors or by the court system is not necessarily a reliable basis for imposing league discipline.

Finally, it is our understanding that the criminal proceedings involving Mr. Rice are considered an open matter, and that so long as he is in the pretrial diversion program, no information will be made available to third parties or the public.

As always, we will continuously examine our procedures. I believe that we took a significant step forward with the enhanced policies on domestic violence and sexual assault that were announced last month. I also know that we will be judged on our actions going forward. I am confident that those actions will demonstrate our commitment to address this issue seriously and effectively, and will reflect well on the NFL, all member clubs, and everyone who is a part of our league.

Spencer Lanning’s POV of Antonio Brown’s Hurdle

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 Posted by

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