Plus, Martz in Chicago, Sean Payton's game plan and more. Matt Bowen
Kurt Warner announced his retirement from the NFL yesterday, and I have a hard time believing that Hall of Fame voters will find a reason to keep him out of Canton. From my perspective, Warner’s career was so different in that he didn’t come into the league with any fan fare and no matter where he played — even when he was on top in St. Louis — it seemed that he was always trying to be replaced. Does he have good numbers? Of course, and he has a Super Bowl ring and two MVP trophies to go along with it. But, beyond that, he has a career that players like myself looked to as an example of how persistence and dedication to his craft eventually paid off.
I played with Kurt as a rookie in St. Louis back in 2000, and I will always remember how impressed I was with his professionalism and the way he treated everyone in the locker room: rookies, veterans, equipment managers, etc. It was all done with first class and he never took a practice or a meeting for granted. A true pro and someone I will miss watching on Sundays — because it is hard not to cheer for a guy that represents everything that is good about the NFL. Warner is a winner, he is first class and he deserves to be in Canton.
The talk of Mike Martz heading to Chicago has become more than just rumor as the Bears interviewed the former Rams head coach for their vacant — and newsworthy — offensive coordinator position that no one seems to want. I can only speak of Martz as a head coach when he was with the Rams, but I do believe he is brilliant when it comes to offensive play calling. But, even though I am a fan of Martz and what I think he can do with Bears QB Jay Cutler, the weapons on the outside in Chicago are anything but what he worked with in St. Louis. The scheme is perfect, but the tools to fit that scheme in Chicago are not. An interesting decision coming up for Lovie Smith and Bears GM Jerry Angelo, but one I would make. Cutler can’t get worse than 26 INTs, right?
We will get into more Super Bowl talk on Monday, but I am curious to see what type of game plan Saints head coach Sean Payton presents in the first quarter next Sunday night in Miami. Does he try to establish the ground game with Pierre Thomas and a sprinkle of Reggie Bush, or does he try and exposes the Colts corners in the vertical passing game? I do believe that the Saints are the one team that can keep pace with Manning and the Colts when it comes to putting points on the scoreboard, but do you really want a shootout with Indy? The Colts don’t need to run the ball to win because they treat the 3-step passing game as part of their running package, but the Saints still need to produce first downs and eat some of the clock with Thomas.
The Chargers' Shawne Merriman wants a new deal with the Chargers, but with the OLB essentially a restricted free agent due to the possibility of an uncapped year, I don’t think this will be any different than what we saw with the Jets and Braylon Edwards. Expect San Diego to give Merriman the High Tender — which would require a team to give away a first and third-round pick to get the linebacker out of a Chargers uniform. Also, it gives San Diego another year to evaluate what they want to do with Merriman in the long term. In 2009, Merriman posted 36 tackles, 4 sacks and a forced fumble. Not the kind of stats to bring to the negotiating table when you are looking for a new deal. Production equals money in the NFL, and Merriman's production shouldn’t equate to anything but a one-year tender.
I wrote about Ravens QB Troy Smith the other day and the possibility of a club — such as the Bills — making a play for the former Heisman Trophy winner from Ohio State. The trade value I heard for Smith would likely equate to somewhere in middle- round value, and yesterday the QB said that he would like to play for his hometown Browns. A possibility? The NFP’s Michael Lombardi wrote yesterday that new Browns team president Mike Holmgren does not want to enter training camp with the QB position undecided, but once Cleveland opens their spring practices, it should be interesting to see if Holmgren likes what he sees from Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn. Regardless, Smith is becoming a hot name already and we will find out more when free agency opens up in March if he is hot enough for a club to come and get him out of Baltimore — where he isn’t going to get a chance to play behind starter Joe Flacco.
The NFL brass usually leaves Mobile by mid-week of the Senior Bowl, especially when practices are scaled down, the pads come off and both teams get ready for today’s game. They will watch the tape from the game, but the practices are more important from a scouting perspective as coaches, GMs, etc. can get up close with the players, see them in one-on-one situations and essentially see more of them in terms of repetitions against the best seniors in the country. The game film will count for something — as coaches will see these prospects in live situations — but the week of practice is bigger for these rookie hopefuls in the first step of the draft process.
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"A true pro and someone I will miss watching on Sundays — because it is hard not to cheer for a guy that represents everything that is good about the NFL."
He has all kinds of time for the fans, too. The game was Marc Bulger's first career start, Warner was not suited up, he took time to stop and sign autopgraphs for Rams die hards. Kurt Warner doesn't forget where he came from and he remembers who helps make football the greatest of team sports.
Kurt is the last of a dying breed. Coming out of Northern Iowa, he bounced from World League and Arena Football. Neither of which are out there giving the next Kurt Warner an opportunity to fight to the top. Absolutely deserves to be in Canton.
I think that Martz will be a good hire too - and I'm a Packer fan.
Cutler really is a talented guy stuck in a vanilla offense that fools nobody.
The Bears do have some weapons that are developing. Martz can creatively
bring out the speed that the Bears possess in Hester and Knox. Bennett looks good
too. Olsen really needs something because he really dropped in performance this year.
I thought he was the best TE in the north coming into 2009 but Finley has surpased him.
Martz can gameplan to get more out of Olsen.
Forget about complaining about the turf. Good teams can play on anything and win.
Don't hold your breath waiting for the Chicago Park District to replace it in a bad economy
Warner is absolutely a Hall of Famer, and I think his "rags to riches" story helps alot, even if it doesn't need to. My personal Hall of Fame criteria is what did you do among your peers, and Warner met that criteria. Warner led the entire league in Completion Percentage for three straight seasons from 1999 to 2001. He also led the league in touchdown passes in both 1999 and 2001, and was third in 2008 with the Cardinals. He also has the three highest passing yardage totals in Superbowl history. Taking the Rams and the Cardinals to Superbowls is very impressive, and as Matt mentioned two league MVP awards in 1999 and again in 2001, as well as the Super Bowl MVP in 1999 as well. I know his career wasn't the longest, and he did struggle in New York, but you can't argue with the level he played at. In 1999 and again in 2001 he was the best in the league, and couldn't be stopped. The MVP awards and the Superbowl MVP award, as well as a Superbowl win, already put him ahead of alot of other guys he played with that will get mention for the Hall of Fame, so I agree, Warner should definitely be enshrined in Canton.
Anyone who doesn't vote for Warner for first ballot HOF should have their voting privileges lifted.
Just Pick Troy Smith up already. The Cleveland Browns need him.
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Jan 30, 2010
03:03 PM
Matt, I'm all for Martz. But one of the things that will have to go is that crap they call "grass" at Soldier Field. You played there, what did you think?
There's no homefield advantage because our guys slip as much as the other guys. Daniell Manning had a sure return TD taken away when he slipped on a great cut, just to name one of about 1000 examples from last year alone.
Can't they get that cool synthetic stuff they use in other cold weather stadiums? And I don't want to hear that crap about cost, because the taxpayer paid for the upgrades to Soldier Field.