Earl’s Turkey Waiting For NASCAR To Start

Thursday, November 28, 2013 Posted by

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Gobble Gobble

Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Posted by

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H/T to fauxjohnmadden.lockerdome.com and abennihana.

Yet Another Gem for the HOF Hightlight Reel

Tuesday, November 26, 2013 Posted by

We may not be able to enjoy watching Troy Polamalu for much longer, so it’s important to not take him for granted. I believe there has never been anyone quite like him and probably never will be again.

This play from the Cleveland game is a case in point. Most guys act in one role per play. Once that role becomes irrelevant to the play, they stop and just let the play unfold. The better players make a mid-play adjustment based on the action, and those adjustments are often the source of notable plays. A playmaker is a guy who can make an adjustment in the middle of game action to take advantage of the prevailing situation in real time. But here, we see Troy play five different roles in one play. That means he makes four adjustments in a matter of seconds, turning a busted defensive play into something special.

As the play initiates, he is anticipating a run and tries to blitz a gap on the Browns right side. His guess is wrong, as the run is to the left side and the right side gap closes immediately. An ordinary player in this position would continue to push in vain at the offensive line and end up hopelessly irrelevant to the game action. Not so with Polamalu. Almost before your eyes can figure out what is going on, suddenly Troy magically appears three yards back on the left side where he actually has to wait for the runner to smack into him. Troy makes the tackle which is already a great play, but that’s not enough. He then adjusts again and goes for the strip, successfully forcing a fumble. And again, before the brain of  a normal human can even tell what’s happening, Troy adjusts one more time, now scooping up the ball at the instant that it is floating free on the other side of the runner. This is just an astonishing display of a combination of crazy athletic ability with an incredible football sixth sense.

Seriously, often he makes his teammates and opponents look like amateurs playing a different sport.

(Thanks to SteelersDepot for the animated GIF).

Woodley Isn’t Going Anywhere

Tuesday, November 26, 2013 Posted by

Ok, now I’ve read this too many times, (and these are the opinions of reputable scribes), not to offer some kind of opinion in response.  Woodley isn’t leaving; he won’t be cut or traded. Here’s why.

The Steelers have restructured him twice, both times pushing large cap hits into future years.  If they release him before June 1, the net cap impact is only 580K via a $14.17 million dead money hit, less his projected cap cost of $13.59 Million.  If they release him after June 1, or sooner with a post June 1 designation, the net cap impact is a savings of $8 million via the prorated portion of his bonuses for 2014 of $5.59 million, less his 2013 cap hit of $13.59 million. BUT, they would be pushing $8.58 million into 2015 via his remaining bonus proration. These numbers hold true for the respective dates whether he is traded or released.

You can make the argument that you could structure a deal that replaces Woodley with that $8 million savings in year one, you cannot ignore the cap hit in 2015 though. You also have to consider whether the Steelers would be willing to consider investing over $30 million in bonus money into a player and then letting him walk. That figure does not include his salaries over the last three years, just bonus money.

Woodley's Contract

In my opinion, the only way that Worilds stays is if the Steelers move Woodley to the right and stick Worilds on the left side; thus pushing Jones to the backup role he should have held as a rookie.  IF and that’s a big if, they don’t restructure Woodley yet again this year, they can contemplate trading or releasing him in 2015 and then insert Jones on the right. Is this the right move? Maybe. Let’s be honest though. Worilds having success for a few games does not amount to the same sustained success that Harrison or Woodley had from 2007 to 2010. Worilds does not look like the second coming of Kevin Greene at LOLB; not yet anyway.  In point of fact as far as sustained success goes, he isn’t even on the same level with Keenan Lewis, whom the Steelers let walk.

But, if they could sign Worilds to a deal that they could in effect walk away from after one year via a small signing bonus, or by putting that bonus into the form of a roster bonus, it might be worth it to try for a year to see if Worilds could sustain that performance over a year. That kind of contract arrangement and sticking him on the left side would be the only way I would like to see this done though. Heck, we don’t even know if Woodley can play effectively on the right. And, let’s be honest, we NEED someone on the right to do so in order for the Steelers to consistently get pressure like they used to. It can’t be one sided. Offenses just send their extra protection to one side and nullify that advantage.

In closing, I really have to wonder if these stories are being written as a favor for an agent to drum up interest in his client. Or, are they, at the very least, the product of information being fed to journalists about interest from other teams, which may or may not even exist after a few solid games.  I mean, we’ve seen this with QBs before, but would a team really be foolish enough to ignore the rest of a player’s body of work when he’s a linebacker?

Our QB is tougher than your LB

Tuesday, November 26, 2013 Posted by

Ben Avoids Sack

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Another Year Bites the Dust

Saturday, November 23, 2013 Posted by

Happy Birthday, JamesH!

Friday, November 22, 2013 Posted by

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I’m Watching You, Earl!

Friday, November 22, 2013 Posted by

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Good Morning Sister Kate

Friday, November 22, 2013 Posted by

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Thursday, November 21, 2013 Posted by

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