View Full Version : Undeniable with Dan Patrick. One-on-one with Rod Woodson
Six Rings
05-11-2020, 04:16 PM
Did anyone catch this? You get to know Rod who was a sensitive soul and also a player who didn't like to be yelled at.
The Steelers tired to low ball him on his initial contract, they said we'll offer a million, which was well under market value at the time for the 10th overall pick. So Rod held out three months until the Steelers doubled the offer to 2 million.
It was day day of the draft in 1996. Rod Woodson said his phone rang, the Steelers were on the clock in round one. Rod wouldn't give the name of the person on the phone but said he asked if they can count on him to sign the deal that was offered or not. Way to pressure a guy. Rod hung up the phone and just like that, the Steelers lost one of their best players ever who had plenty to give in the free agency period of 1997. Rod had one heck of a 1996 by the way. 6 picks and 3 fumble recoveries. Pay the man. As I said before prior to Heinz Field stadium money, the Rooney's were cheap. They let Kevin Green walk too.
The other bomb shell is Rod said on the Raiders the head coach changed the entire game plan the day before the game. The initial plan was to run, they changed it to passing, which as we saw caused lots of interceptions. At that moment Rod said they knew they were going to lose.
Interesting stuff.
polamalubeast
05-11-2020, 04:21 PM
We talked about this in another thread the other time ... But you are unable to understand that the nfl had a salary cap in the 1990s and that the steelers were closed everytime .... So it's not a good idea to waste our time on this with you.
You can read this thread,this is the same thing
http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/showthread.php/31762-Bob-Labriola-on-Cam-Cowher-s-QB-history
Six Rings
05-11-2020, 04:30 PM
We talked about this in another thread the other time ... But you are unable to understand that the nfl had a salary cap in the 1990s and that the steelers were closed everytime .... So it's not a good idea to waste our time on this with you.
You can read this thread,this is the same thing
http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/showthread.php/31762-Bob-Labriola-on-Cam-Cowher-s-QB-history
Woodson was worth the money. You never let a top player go in his prime, especially one who produced as much as Rod did.
If could hurt, but the Steeler players said the same thing, all the way up to Hines Ward. We had a cheap owner in the 1990's. Show me how much in cap space the Steelers had in 1997, and the tell me whey they could not restructure someone to make room for their best player.
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked. We let two hall of fame player go who had plenty left to give. A reason why the team did not go back to another super bowl. Although Rod didn't say the name of the person on the phone, I think it was Dan Rooney as he indicated he never spoke to that person ever again. He has spoken to Cowher since, and the two appear rather tight. Cowher respected Woodson enough to leave a roster spot open for him, even though it was risky if he could come back for that season.
Mojouw
05-11-2020, 04:49 PM
Oh for crying out loud. Is this fun for you? Or are you just brain damaged?
Look at what the Rams are going through. That is what you are calling for. If the mid 1990's Steelers had tied all their cap up in a mediocre at best QB (Odonnell/Goff) and then an injured player who is no longer able to play his position at an elite level (Woodson/Gurley) they would have not been holding the parades you seem to be fantasizing about.
Woodson even admits that he was wrong to want to continue playing CB and that the switch to safety that the team, the Rooneys, and Cowher wanted him to make was the right call. But he left to prove he could still hack it as high $$$ CB. He couldn't. And he didn't.
86WARD
05-11-2020, 05:29 PM
*sigh*
polamalubeast
05-11-2020, 05:30 PM
Woodson was worth the money. You never let a top player go in his prime, especially one who produced as much as Rod did.
If could hurt, but the Steeler players said the same thing, all the way up to Hines Ward. We had a cheap owner in the 1990's. Show me how much in cap space the Steelers had in 1997, and the tell me whey they could not restructure someone to make room for their best player.
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked. We let two hall of fame player go who had plenty left to give. A reason why the team did not go back to another super bowl. Although Rod didn't say the name of the person on the phone, I think it was Dan Rooney as he indicated he never spoke to that person ever again. He has spoken to Cowher since, and the two appear rather tight. Cowher respected Woodson enough to leave a roster spot open for him, even though it was risky if he could come back for that season.
again the explanations are in this thread
http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/showthread.php/31762-Bob-Labriola-on-Cam-Cowher-s-QB-history
polamalubeast
05-11-2020, 05:42 PM
Oh for crying out loud. Is this fun for you? Or are you just brain damaged?
Look at what the Rams are going through. That is what you are calling for. If the mid 1990's Steelers had tied all their cap up in a mediocre at best QB (Odonnell/Goff) and then an injured player who is no longer able to play his position at an elite level (Woodson/Gurley) they would have not been holding the parades you seem to be fantasizing about.
Woodson even admits that he was wrong to want to continue playing CB and that the switch to safety that the team, the Rooneys, and Cowher wanted him to make was the right call. But he left to prove he could still hack it as high $$$ CB. He couldn't. And he didn't.
He do not understand that the NFL had a salary cap at this time too but he prefer to said that Rooney was cheap...:ranger:
teegre
05-11-2020, 06:21 PM
Interesting stuff.
Not. At. All. :noidea:
polamalubeast
05-11-2020, 06:23 PM
Not. At. All. :noidea:
This
pczach
05-11-2020, 07:35 PM
Woodson was worth the money. You never let a top player go in his prime, especially one who produced as much as Rod did.
If could hurt, but the Steeler players said the same thing, all the way up to Hines Ward. We had a cheap owner in the 1990's. Show me how much in cap space the Steelers had in 1997, and the tell me whey they could not restructure someone to make room for their best player.
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked. We let two hall of fame player go who had plenty left to give. A reason why the team did not go back to another super bowl. Although Rod didn't say the name of the person on the phone, I think it was Dan Rooney as he indicated he never spoke to that person ever again. He has spoken to Cowher since, and the two appear rather tight. Cowher respected Woodson enough to leave a roster spot open for him, even though it was risky if he could come back for that season.
Woodson wasn't in his prime. Not even close. If he was in his prime, he would have been a dominant starting CB for many more years after he left the Steelers. He wasn't. He became a safety....and a damn good one. The Steelers wanted him to consider moving to safety in the near future because they knew he couldn't play CB at the level he did for the many years he played in Pittsburgh. He didn't want to play safety and he wanted more money than the Steelers could pay him.
He only played CB for two years after leaving the Steelers. He became a safety because he couldn't play corner at a high level anymore.
Rod Woodson is one of the greatest Steelers ever and one of the best players in NFL history. He is one of my favorite players ever. I wanted him to stay a Steeler, but the limited cap space and the amount he wanted to play for wouldn't allow both sides to be happy. End of story.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WoodRo01.htm
Craic
05-11-2020, 09:09 PM
Huh . . . why did my link disappear?https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/proxy/AbugszMrp4gUZvH7mEGd0H9Y6Jih6itHSTfDxEFkvydBDuIEGP Syg-G7vWYpRrdalNKNlqke8DUisxPQnlgNjVSfkIYcXoEx2zJJCc0F dSNFXpjvg1t36qD9GMs
HollywoodSteel
05-12-2020, 02:09 AM
Woodson was worth the money. You never let a top player go in his prime, especially one who produced as much as Rod did.
If could hurt, but the Steeler players said the same thing, all the way up to Hines Ward. We had a cheap owner in the 1990's. Show me how much in cap space the Steelers had in 1997, and the tell me whey they could not restructure someone to make room for their best player.
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked. We let two hall of fame player go who had plenty left to give. A reason why the team did not go back to another super bowl. Although Rod didn't say the name of the person on the phone, I think it was Dan Rooney as he indicated he never spoke to that person ever again. He has spoken to Cowher since, and the two appear rather tight. Cowher respected Woodson enough to leave a roster spot open for him, even though it was risky if he could come back for that season.
In the era of the salary cap, I hate it when people call a team cheap for spreading money around to multiple positions rather than paying a single star all that money.
Now, the decision to do so could turn out to be either foolish or wise , but it is not cheap.
Cheap is not spending all your cap money and having the owner pocket it. That’s not a very common thing to do in the NFL because in the long run owners know it’s more profitable to have a winning franchise than pocketing a few extra bucks.
The Steelers most definitely have been the very model of a team that wants to win above all else in the Super Bowl era. We aren’t the Jags, Bengals, or Panthers, who HAVE been known to have some years where the owners pocketed cap money rather than spend it on players.
The Steelers were not cheap to spend that money elsewhere rather than on Woodson.
- - - Updated - - -
Woodson was worth the money. You never let a top player go in his prime, especially one who produced as much as Rod did.
If could hurt, but the Steeler players said the same thing, all the way up to Hines Ward. We had a cheap owner in the 1990's. Show me how much in cap space the Steelers had in 1997, and the tell me whey they could not restructure someone to make room for their best player.
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked. We let two hall of fame player go who had plenty left to give. A reason why the team did not go back to another super bowl. Although Rod didn't say the name of the person on the phone, I think it was Dan Rooney as he indicated he never spoke to that person ever again. He has spoken to Cowher since, and the two appear rather tight. Cowher respected Woodson enough to leave a roster spot open for him, even though it was risky if he could come back for that season.
In the era of the salary cap, I hate it when people call a team cheap for spreading money around to multiple positions rather than paying a single star all that money.
Now, the decision to do so could turn out to be either foolish or wise , but it is not cheap.
Cheap is not spending all your cap money and having the owner pocket it. That’s not a very common thing to do in the NFL because in the long run owners know it’s more profitable to have a winning franchise than pocketing a few extra bucks.
The Steelers most definitely have been the very model of a team that wants to win above all else in the Super Bowl era. We aren’t the Jags, Bengals, or Panthers, who HAVE been known to have some years where the owners pocketed cap money rather than spend it on players.
The Steelers were not cheap to spend that money elsewhere rather than on Woodson.
fansince'76
05-12-2020, 03:03 AM
We didn't pay our Super bowl staring quarterback, his replacement sucked.
Super Bowl-starting QB? O'Donnell was just along for the ride. He's also THE reason the Steelers lost SB XXX.
At his best, O'Donnell was never anything more than a journeyman (backup) QB himself, which is kinda why Parcells ran him out of New York on a rail shortly after the Jets backed up the Brinks truck for him.
But yeah, damn cheap Rooneys...
http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/images/smilies/chuckle.gif
Six Rings
05-12-2020, 07:11 AM
again the explanations are in this thread
http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/showthread.php/31762-Bob-Labriola-on-Cam-Cowher-s-QB-history
This is a ROD WOODSON Thread.
- - - Updated - - -
Super Bowl-starting QB? O'Donnell was just along for the ride. He's also THE reason the Steelers lost SB XXX.
At his best, O'Donnell was never anything more than a journeyman (backup) QB himself, which is kinda why Parcells ran him out of New York on a rail shortly after the Jets backed up the Brinks truck for him.
But yeah, damn cheap Rooneys...
:chuckle:
Were you alive in the 1990's, he's the reason why we got to the game, and actually set a passing record for yardage thrown in an AFC championship game. He was a bit more than a journeyman back up.
And yes, as much as it hurts the Rooney were cheap pre Heinz field.
polamalubeast
05-12-2020, 07:18 AM
This is a ROD WOODSON Thread.
- - - Updated - - -
Were you alive in the 1990's, he's the reason why we got to the game, and actually set a passing record for yardage thrown in an AFC championship game. He was a bit more than a journeyman back up.
And yes, as much as it hurts the Rooney were cheap pre Heinz field.
We talked about Rod Woodson in this thread and the fact that it's not true that Dan Rooney was cheap but you're too stubborn ...
I advise others not to argue with you since you are too stubborn and you refuse to understand that the NFL had a salary cap in the 1990s too.
EDIT
Hahaha…
Steelers admit to salary cap infraction
They could face an NFL fine and lose draft choices
Monday, August 23, 1999
http://old.post-gazette.com/steelers/19990823salary2.asp
But Rooney was cheap...Take the loss and move on and please don't create a another thread 1 month later on this
Six Rings
05-12-2020, 07:19 AM
Woodson wasn't in his prime. Not even close. If he was in his prime, he would have been a dominant starting CB for many more years after he left the Steelers. He wasn't. He became a safety....and a damn good one. The Steelers wanted him to consider moving to safety in the near future because they knew he couldn't play CB at the level he did for the many years he played in Pittsburgh. He didn't want to play safety and he wanted more money than the Steelers could pay him.
He only played CB for two years after leaving the Steelers. He became a safety because he couldn't play corner at a high level anymore.
Rod Woodson is one of the greatest Steelers ever and one of the best players in NFL history. He is one of my favorite players ever. I wanted him to stay a Steeler, but the limited cap space and the amount he wanted to play for wouldn't allow both sides to be happy. End of story.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WoodRo01.htm
He was coming off a season with 6 interceptions and three fumble recoveries. There was no movement of money to make room for him on the cap. The Steelers failed. End of. I'd gladly take him for corner for two more years, then move him to safety. Rod liked Safety better than corner. To use his words you can avoid a corner but you can't take a safety out of the game. Watch the interview.
As you can see below he had plenty of productive years left had the Steelers treated him better and paid market value. Worth a 4 or 5 year contract.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WoodRo01.htm
Six Rings
05-12-2020, 07:25 AM
Oh for crying out loud. Is this fun for you? Or are you just brain damaged?
Look at what the Rams are going through. That is what you are calling for. If the mid 1990's Steelers had tied all their cap up in a mediocre at best QB (Odonnell/Goff) and then an injured player who is no longer able to play his position at an elite level (Woodson/Gurley) they would have not been holding the parades you seem to be fantasizing about.
Woodson even admits that he was wrong to want to continue playing CB and that the switch to safety that the team, the Rooneys, and Cowher wanted him to make was the right call. But he left to prove he could still hack it as high $$$ CB. He couldn't. And he didn't.
Woodson was a productive player all the way up to 2002 when he lead the NFL in interceptions. As a corner for the next two seasons he had 9 interceptions, and two touchdowns. That's a huge 2 years for any corner.
To compare Gurley to Woodson is dumb, even for you. They play different positions. Gurley appears to be done as a NFL player. Woodson had many years of top football play left.
DUH.
fansince'76
05-12-2020, 07:28 AM
Were you alive in the 1990's, he's the reason why we got to the game, and actually set a passing record for yardage thrown in an AFC championship game. He was a bit more than a journeyman back up.
And yes, as much as it hurts the Rooney were cheap pre Heinz field.
Uh, yeah, pretty sure I lived through that period and was there. I think the Blitzburgh defense had a much bigger hand in that team making the Super Bowl than O'Donnell did. Question is, were YOU alive during that time? Delusional.
Jim Harbaugh had more passing yards in the '95 AFCCG than O'Donnell did. Good grief.
Sorry bud, but these numbers scream career journeyman:
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/O/ODonNe00.htm
86WARD
05-12-2020, 07:36 AM
Woodson wasn't in his prime. Not even close. If he was in his prime, he would have been a dominant starting CB for many more years after he left the Steelers. He wasn't. He became a safety....and a damn good one. The Steelers wanted him to consider moving to safety in the near future because they knew he couldn't play CB at the level he did for the many years he played in Pittsburgh. He didn't want to play safety and he wanted more money than the Steelers could pay him.
He only played CB for two years after leaving the Steelers. He became a safety because he couldn't play corner at a high level anymore.
Rod Woodson is one of the greatest Steelers ever and one of the best players in NFL history. He is one of my favorite players ever. I wanted him to stay a Steeler, but the limited cap space and the amount he wanted to play for wouldn't allow both sides to be happy. End of story.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WoodRo01.htm
Once again, very well said!
polamalubeast
05-12-2020, 07:45 AM
A record for the AFC title game?
Neil O'Donnel had only 205 yards in 41 pass attempts against the colts:lol:
Jim Harbaugh had more yards in this game with 267 yards in 33 pass attempts :lol:
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/199601140pit.htm
The record at this time,I think it was Dan Marino in 1984 against the steelers with 421 yards...I don't know if this is the record but I know that this is not Neil O'Donnell
Sometimes it's better not to say false statements, since we are not stupid.
And no Dan Rooney was not cheap before the heinz field, especially the steelers even had a violation for exceeding the salary cap.
Hawkman
05-12-2020, 08:58 AM
What a waste of good typing time.
tube517
05-12-2020, 09:56 AM
Man, I didn't know O'Donnell was a HOF'er. He should get in with John Kuhn so we have another Pittsburgh weekend in Canton in 2021. :tt02: :chuckle:
polamalubeast
05-12-2020, 10:14 AM
The best accomplishment of Neil O'Donnell was to have helped to a very average zone corner in Larry Brown to have a big contract with the raiders.
Mojouw
05-12-2020, 12:02 PM
Woodson was a productive player all the way up to 2002 when he lead the NFL in interceptions. As a corner for the next two seasons he had 9 interceptions, and two touchdowns. That's a huge 2 years for any corner.
To compare Gurley to Woodson is dumb, even for you. They play different positions. Gurley appears to be done as a NFL player. Woodson had many years of top football play left.
DUH.
Well no, you're dumb.
He was a productive player at another position. If he was such a great CB; then why did the 'Niners let him go after one season for cap space? The bottom line is that Rod Woodson is a HOF caliber CB - just not in the period from 1996-99.
And I only spent like .3 seconds looking into this, but most of your research is flawed as well. In 1996, the team offered Woodson various extension packages ranging around about $2-$2.7 million per season. He turned those down because he wanted more cash. Then he played the season and had more injuries and major surgeries. They offered him an extension and he refused. The team then found a CB who would take their money: https://apnews.com/f4dbee69146f4edfaf789539c95b550a. Rod got all butt-hurt that at 32 years old and with his career achievements the team wanted him to prove he was healthy and take an extension that was basically a bunch of yearly "prove your body can still hold up" deals.
"https://playerswiki.com/rod-woodson"
The Pittsburgh Steelers signed a four- year, $12 million worth contract with Woodson on September 18, 1993.
Woodson declined the three- year, $9 million contract extension offer of Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12, 1996, and requested a four- or five- year long- term contract. Later, they offered Woodson a five- year contract extension of $10 million and a five- year incentive-laden $13.5 million worth contract, including a $500,000 signing bonus.
Following the 1996 NFL season, the Pittsburgh Steelers offered Woodson a $ 7.2 million four- year contract with a $ 1 million signing bonus.
It turns out that the ENTIRE NFL also saw Woodson's value around the same $2-$3 million range:
His 49'ers contract: "Woodson's one-year deal in San Francisco, if he reaches all incentives, will earn him nearly $2.5 million." - https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/sports/rod-woodson-steelers-longtime-all-pro-corner-heads-west.html
His Ravens contract: https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/12/%EF%BB%BFnfl-free-agency-flashback-rod-woodsons-1998-baltimore-ravens-contract/
Both are around an annual value similar to what the Steelers were offering. So this was never about money. Rod's feelings got hurt and his pride needed him to leave town. The Steelers judged his value at the EXACT same level as the entire rest of the league did.
You're a clown and a fool.
polamalubeast
05-12-2020, 12:38 PM
Well no, you're dumb.
He was a productive player at another position. If he was such a great CB; then why did the 'Niners let him go after one season for cap space? The bottom line is that Rod Woodson is a HOF caliber CB - just not in the period from 1996-99.
And I only spent like .3 seconds looking into this, but most of your research is flawed as well. In 1996, the team offered Woodson various extension packages ranging around about $2-$2.7 million per season. He turned those down because he wanted more cash. Then he played the season and had more injuries and major surgeries. They offered him an extension and he refused. The team then found a CB who would take their money: https://apnews.com/f4dbee69146f4edfaf789539c95b550a. Rod got all butt-hurt that at 32 years old and with his career achievements the team wanted him to prove he was healthy and take an extension that was basically a bunch of yearly "prove your body can still hold up" deals.
"https://playerswiki.com/rod-woodson"
The Pittsburgh Steelers signed a four- year, $12 million worth contract with Woodson on September 18, 1993.
Woodson declined the three- year, $9 million contract extension offer of Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12, 1996, and requested a four- or five- year long- term contract. Later, they offered Woodson a five- year contract extension of $10 million and a five- year incentive-laden $13.5 million worth contract, including a $500,000 signing bonus.
Following the 1996 NFL season, the Pittsburgh Steelers offered Woodson a $ 7.2 million four- year contract with a $ 1 million signing bonus.
It turns out that the ENTIRE NFL also saw Woodson's value around the same $2-$3 million range:
His 49'ers contract: "Woodson's one-year deal in San Francisco, if he reaches all incentives, will earn him nearly $2.5 million." - https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/sports/rod-woodson-steelers-longtime-all-pro-corner-heads-west.html
His Ravens contract: https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/12/%EF%BB%BFnfl-free-agency-flashback-rod-woodsons-1998-baltimore-ravens-contract/
Both are around an annual value similar to what the Steelers were offering. So this was never about money. Rod's feelings got hurt and his pride needed him to leave town. The Steelers judged his value at the EXACT same level as the entire rest of the league did.
You're a clown and a fool.
Thank You
But he will said that Rooney was cheap before the new stadium even if the steelers had a violation for the salary cap in 1999...
http://old.post-gazette.com/steelers/19990823salary2.asp
Mojouw
05-12-2020, 12:52 PM
Thank You
But he will said that Rooney was cheap before the new stadium even if the steelers had a violation for the salary cap in 1999...
http://old.post-gazette.com/steelers/19990823salary2.asp
Of course he will. In another thread like a week from now. Facts do not mean much to this guy. I've been hearing how the Rooneys are cheap for the better part of 3 decades now. All they manage to do, on the cheap, is run one of the most successful NFL franchises of the modern era.
Rod Woodson was the greatest Steelers player I saw play pre Polamalu. In his prime he was a sight to behold. But, the need to twist the facts and the reality of how and why he left town is just silly after all these years. Rod keeps talking about how it was this and that -- refusing to remember that it was his pride more than anything else that made him leave town.
teegre
05-12-2020, 02:05 PM
Were you alive in the 1990's
In fact, he wasn’t. :nod: While he has indeed been a fan since ‘76, he died on December 31st, 1989. His body was kept on ice until January 1, 2001... when he was brought back to life.
86WARD
05-12-2020, 02:20 PM
Well no, you're dumb.
He was a productive player at another position. If he was such a great CB; then why did the 'Niners let him go after one season for cap space? The bottom line is that Rod Woodson is a HOF caliber CB - just not in the period from 1996-99.
And I only spent like .3 seconds looking into this, but most of your research is flawed as well. In 1996, the team offered Woodson various extension packages ranging around about $2-$2.7 million per season. He turned those down because he wanted more cash. Then he played the season and had more injuries and major surgeries. They offered him an extension and he refused. The team then found a CB who would take their money: https://apnews.com/f4dbee69146f4edfaf789539c95b550a. Rod got all butt-hurt that at 32 years old and with his career achievements the team wanted him to prove he was healthy and take an extension that was basically a bunch of yearly "prove your body can still hold up" deals.
"https://playerswiki.com/rod-woodson"
The Pittsburgh Steelers signed a four- year, $12 million worth contract with Woodson on September 18, 1993.
Woodson declined the three- year, $9 million contract extension offer of Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12, 1996, and requested a four- or five- year long- term contract. Later, they offered Woodson a five- year contract extension of $10 million and a five- year incentive-laden $13.5 million worth contract, including a $500,000 signing bonus.
Following the 1996 NFL season, the Pittsburgh Steelers offered Woodson a $ 7.2 million four- year contract with a $ 1 million signing bonus.
It turns out that the ENTIRE NFL also saw Woodson's value around the same $2-$3 million range:
His 49'ers contract: "Woodson's one-year deal in San Francisco, if he reaches all incentives, will earn him nearly $2.5 million." - https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/sports/rod-woodson-steelers-longtime-all-pro-corner-heads-west.html
His Ravens contract: https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/12/%EF%BB%BFnfl-free-agency-flashback-rod-woodsons-1998-baltimore-ravens-contract/
Both are around an annual value similar to what the Steelers were offering. So this was never about money. Rod's feelings got hurt and his pride needed him to leave town. The Steelers judged his value at the EXACT same level as the entire rest of the league did.
You're a clown and a fool.
Lol.
Lies. All fabricated lies.
86WARD
05-12-2020, 02:21 PM
In fact, he wasn’t. :nod: While he has indeed been a fan since ‘76, he died on December 31st, 1989. His body was kept on ice until January 1, 2001... when he was brought back to life.
Where’s this shit come from...lol.
pczach
05-12-2020, 02:48 PM
He was coming off a season with 6 interceptions and three fumble recoveries. There was no movement of money to make room for him on the cap. The Steelers failed. End of. I'd gladly take him for corner for two more years, then move him to safety. Rod liked Safety better than corner. To use his words you can avoid a corner but you can't take a safety out of the game. Watch the interview.
As you can see below he had plenty of productive years left had the Steelers treated him better and paid market value. Worth a 4 or 5 year contract.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WoodRo01.htm
If safety was where it was at, he would have been a safety his entire career. He played CB because he was a great CB, and only a handful of people to ever play the game could do it as well as he could. So now you're trying to say that he only moved to the safety position because he could be more effective than playing CB? Players that can't play corner anymore moved to safety. He wanted to play corner because that is where the big money is. At that time, safeties didn't make anywhere near as much money. End of story.
Again, he didn't want to play safety with the Steelers. He only figured out that you can't avoid a safety, and said that when he couldn't play corner anymore. Funny how that happens. Market value for a safety was much different than it was for a cornerback.
He still had a lot of interceptions, but that was because he started being a gambler at the position. He took more risks, and while getting turnovers, he also got burned a little more often.
Again, I would have loved to keep Rod here. It's one of those things that just didn't work out.
Dude, the proof is an internet search away, yet you keep saying things that are easily disproved.
By the way, I was alive for all of it. I was a Steelers fan before they became good and turned into an elite franchise. I was a huge fan by 1970 as a 6 year old watching as many games as I could see.
pczach
05-12-2020, 03:01 PM
In fact, he wasn’t. :nod: While he has indeed been a fan since ‘76, he died on December 31st, 1989. His body was kept on ice until January 1, 2001... when he was brought back to life.
Here's some video of his first televised football game party!
https://media.giphy.com/media/9ERBM1RrY9oUU/giphy.gif
Craic
05-12-2020, 08:18 PM
Where’s this shit come from...lol.
Three nuns, a ruler, and a bad batch of acid.
Mojouw
05-12-2020, 08:41 PM
Three nuns, a ruler, and a bad batch of acid.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uzFongNGuQM
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
pczach
05-12-2020, 09:01 PM
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uzFongNGuQM
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
You really can't make this shit up.
In post #10, I respond to his posts, and I post a link to show him that Woodson only played corner for a couple years before moving to safety.
In post #16, he responds to my post, and posts the same link I posted in my post that he is quoting.....like he's showing me something I don't know. Dropping some knowledge on me.......That's some next level shit!
Mojouw
05-12-2020, 09:23 PM
You really can't make this shit up.
In post #10, I respond to his posts, and I post a link to show him that Woodson only played corner for a couple years before moving to safety.
In post #16, he responds to my post, and posts the same link I posted in my post that he is quoting.....like he's showing me something I don't know. Dropping some knowledge on me.......That's some next level shit!
That’s some 4D chess right there. Clearly a mastermind at work. It’s a privilege for all of us to see his genius at work.
pczach
05-12-2020, 09:29 PM
That’s some 4D chess right there. Clearly a mastermind at work. It’s a privilege for all of us to see his genius at work.
I'm mesmerized....watching the master at work, completely in his element and on top of his game.
st33lersguy
05-12-2020, 10:00 PM
Neil O Donnell a Super Bowl QB, yeah. Just like Rex Grossman, Kerry Collins, and David Woodley were all Super Bowl QBs. Everyone with a brainstem knows that he was carried by a top shelf running game and one of the elite defenses of his era.
I will point out this, Neil O Donnell did set a Steelers AFC Championship game passing record in 1994 with 349 yards. Of course that was on 54 pass attempts. Lot of good that did them when they scored all of 13 points and he failed to deliver when asked to get 3 f-ing yards with the game on the line. That game Stan f-ing Humphries (another "Super Bowl QB") also had a better YPA, a better QB rating and more TDs on just slightly over 40% the pass completions.
86WARD
05-13-2020, 05:11 AM
Neil O Donnell a Super Bowl QB, yeah. Just like Rex Grossman, Kerry Collins, and David Woodley were all Super Bowl QBs. Everyone with a brainstem knows that he was carried by a top shelf running game and one of the elite defenses of his era.
I will point out this, Neil O Donnell did set a Steelers AFC Championship game passing record in 1994 with 349 yards. Of course that was on 54 pass attempts. Lot of good that did them when they scored all of 13 points and he failed to deliver when asked to get 3 f-ing yards with the game on the line. That game Stan f-ing Humphries (another "Super Bowl QB") also had a better YPA, a better QB rating and more TDs on just slightly over 40% the pass completions.
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
st33lersguy
05-13-2020, 06:56 AM
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
Ehh, I think it is hard to distinguish O Donnell from some of those other names
Born2Steel
05-13-2020, 07:25 AM
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
Never trust a QB that's on the take.
polamalubeast
05-13-2020, 07:26 AM
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
Brad Johnson in 2002 was better.
fansince'76
05-13-2020, 07:33 AM
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
On a similar note, O'Donnell was the best QB the Steelers had between Bradshaw and Roethlisberger. Still doesn't mean he was good, however - he just sucked less than all the rest of them.
polamalubeast
05-13-2020, 07:38 AM
On a similar note, O'Donnell was the best QB the Steelers had between Bradshaw and Roethlisberger. Still doesn't mean he was good, however - he just sucked less than all the rest of them.
O'Donnell's greatest strength with the steelers is that he was very good at avoiding turnovers .... But it was not the case when it was the playoffs(7 INT in the regular season in 1995 but 6 in the playoffs)
43Hitman
05-13-2020, 10:38 AM
O'Donnell's greatest strength with the steelers is that he was very good at avoiding turnovers .... But it was not the case when it was the playoffs(7 INT in the regular season in 1995 but 6 in the playoffs)
They (meaning the other playoff teams) had figured out all of O'Donnell's tendencies on his hot reads. That's why he turned into a turnover machine in the 94-95 playoff run.
- - - Updated - - -
O'Donnell's greatest strength with the steelers is that he was very good at avoiding turnovers .... But it was not the case when it was the playoffs(7 INT in the regular season in 1995 but 6 in the playoffs)
They (meaning the other playoff teams) had figured out all of O'Donnell's tendencies on his hot reads. That's why he turned into a turnover machine in the 94-95 playoff run.
Blitz and jump the hot reads, boom pick 6.
Mojouw
05-13-2020, 01:24 PM
O'Donnell's greatest strength with the steelers is that he was very good at avoiding turnovers .... But it was not the case when it was the playoffs(7 INT in the regular season in 1995 but 6 in the playoffs)
They (meaning the other playoff teams) had figured out all of O'Donnell's tendencies on his hot reads. That's why he turned into a turnover machine in the 94-95 playoff run.
- - - Updated - - -
They (meaning the other playoff teams) had figured out all of O'Donnell's tendencies on his hot reads. That's why he turned into a turnover machine in the 94-95 playoff run.
Blitz and jump the hot reads, boom pick 6.
You guys nailed it. And that is precisely why Odonnell wasn't worth the FA money. He is the guy who gets your team to 8-8 or 9-7 and no further because playoff caliber defenses just dominate him.
- - - Updated - - -
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
I vote for Delhomme.
- - - Updated - - -
I'm mesmerized....watching the master at work, completely in his element and on top of his game.
I really am getting impatient for my daily lesson at the hands of the annointed one. I need my daily instruction on what, if I had only lived through it, I would know to be the revealed truth about the hidden mysteries of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Six Rings, why have you foresaken me?!!!
86WARD
05-13-2020, 04:47 PM
On a similar note, O'Donnell was the best QB the Steelers had between Bradshaw and Roethlisberger. Still doesn't mean he was good, however - he just sucked less than all the rest of them.
I don’t think he was good, but he’s in the tops of that list of shitty Super Bowl QBs...imo.
Hawkman
05-13-2020, 06:48 PM
His self hasn’t made an appearance in a day and half.......do you think he’s plotting a new irritation?
DesertSteel
05-13-2020, 07:04 PM
Would you say that O’Donnell was the best overall QB of the “Bad Batch of SB QBs”? I think out of O’Donnell, Woodley, Humphries, Dilfer, Grossman, Collins, Ferragamo, Brad Johnson, Delhomme...I think I would choose O’Donnell.
I’d take Delhomme (without even checking the stats).
43Hitman
05-13-2020, 07:14 PM
His self hasn’t made an appearance in a day and half.......do you think he’s plotting a new irritation?
Lick wounds first, then plot.
teegre
05-13-2020, 07:27 PM
Three nuns, a ruler, and a bad batch of acid.
Let’s salvage this thread. :nod:
A priest, a nun, and a rabbi walk into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, “Is this some kind of joke???”
pczach
05-13-2020, 08:27 PM
Let’s salvage this thread. :nod:
A priest, a nun, and a rabbi walk into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, “Is this some kind of joke???”
Is it beaver time????
Hawkman
05-13-2020, 08:31 PM
Let’s salvage this thread. :nod:
A priest, a nun, and a rabbi walk into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, “Is this some kind of joke???”
How strongly do you feel about salvaging this thread?.:noidea::chuckle:
teegre
05-13-2020, 08:42 PM
Is it beaver time????
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7FD_xGLyBs&app=desktop&persist_app=1
pczach
05-13-2020, 08:59 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7FD_xGLyBs&app=desktop&persist_app=1
https://media.giphy.com/media/26ufbHGNjfsvf0sFi/giphy.gif
43Hitman
05-13-2020, 09:01 PM
Page one deserved a hippo fart, but now this is clearly a beaver thread. No doubt about it. :lol:
polamalubeast
05-15-2020, 07:16 AM
Of course after we have destroyed his argument, he does not answer but he will re-start another thread on that in a couple weeks on this same subject
Pathetic.
Six Rings
05-15-2020, 07:40 AM
You really can't make this shit up.
In post #10, I respond to his posts, and I post a link to show him that Woodson only played corner for a couple years before moving to safety.
In post #16, he responds to my post, and posts the same link I posted in my post that he is quoting.....like he's showing me something I don't know. Dropping some knowledge on me.......That's some next level shit!
And I showed you pal that Woodson did very well at corner those two years, and stared later at safety Sure the Steelers did not need that. Is that what you are tying to say? Amazing stuff.
I suggest you watch the 1 hour interview and learn something. Then if you have the nerve you can call Woodson a liar.
- - - Updated - - -
Let’s salvage this thread. :nod:
A priest, a nun, and a rabbi walk into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, “Is this some kind of joke???”
Or how about Harrison, Brown, and Tomlin walk into the bar. The Bartender says what will it be. Tomlin hands the bartender an envelope. The bartender opens it and smiles. Holy &h^t, I don't know who needs to be served first.
polamalubeast
05-15-2020, 07:43 AM
And I showed you pal that Woodson did very well at corner those two years, and stared later at safety Sure the Steelers did not need that. Is that what you are tying to say? Amazing stuff.
I suggest you watch the 1 hour interview and learn something. Then if you have the nerve you can call Woodson a liar.
You did not respond in post 30 per pczach.
Mojouw
05-15-2020, 12:08 PM
We waited days for this? W-E-A-K Sauce!
So disappointing. Just such a let down. Almost as big a let down as when I found out Neil Odonnell was going to be a Jet.
fansince'76
05-15-2020, 12:20 PM
Is it beaver time????
We waited days for this? W-E-A-K Sauce!
So disappointing. Just such a let down. Almost as big a let down as when I found out Neil Odonnell was going to be a Jet.
https://funhuh.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/01874_1231.jpg
:chuckle:
teegre
05-15-2020, 02:09 PM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
pczach
05-15-2020, 05:56 PM
And I showed you pal that Woodson did very well at corner those two years, and stared later at safety Sure the Steelers did not need that. Is that what you are tying to say? Amazing stuff.
I suggest you watch the 1 hour interview and learn something. Then if you have the nerve you can call Woodson a liar.
Pal.....Uh.....OK.
Let me get this straight. You "showed me" by using the exact same link that I used to show you Woodson's career, and told you that he only played two more years at CB? Wow, you really showed me by re-posting my link. You know....the very same link of mine where you quoted my post that my link was in.....and then re-posted it in your response. You used my link that I used to show you something.....to show me something. Alrighty then. :pointlaugh:
I watched the interview with Rod Woodson. Everyone has a different opinion of their own skills. Rod overestimated his own skills, and he didn't want to be a safety with the Steelers. He then accepted moving to safety with other teams to extend his career. All it showed was that the Steelers were right, and they he could have been a great safety here if he didn't let his pride and his desire for more money by continuing to be a cornerback get in his way.
As polamalubeast just posted above. Respond to post #30, where I give an answer to what you were asking. Instead of reposting my links as your own for enlightenment and getting all butt hurt when people call you on your bullshit, try actually responding to real answers by posters here instead of pretending they didn't destroy every single one of your points.
Pal......
You need to work on your tolerance for the truth. Get a grip.
https://media.giphy.com/media/jbJYmyIdelAJh9LQPs/giphy.gif
Six Rings
05-17-2020, 10:20 AM
Who here has watched the interview?. You can either call Rod a liar or accept facts. Calling me names isn't changing a thing. But press on, it only make people who might want to join the board think twice.
Mojouw
05-17-2020, 11:04 AM
OK. Rod Woodson is a liar. He is only remembering to tell part of the truth. I mean what is gonna say? I thought the NFL would pay me far more money than they did. Then I also was sure I as still awesome at CB; turns out I wasnt. No HOF athlete is ever gonna give that interview. I already laid all this out for you:
From post #24 of this thread: In 1996, the team offered Woodson various extension packages ranging around about $2-$2.7 million per season. He turned those down because he wanted more cash. Then he played the season and had more injuries and major surgeries. They offered him an extension and he refused. The team then found a CB who would take their money: https://apnews.com/f4dbee69146f4edfaf789539c95b550a. Rod got all butt-hurt that at 32 years old and with his career achievements the team wanted him to prove he was healthy and take an extension that was basically a bunch of yearly "prove your body can still hold up" deals.
"https://playerswiki.com/rod-woodson"
The Pittsburgh Steelers signed a four- year, $12 million worth contract with Woodson on September 18, 1993.
Woodson declined the three- year, $9 million contract extension offer of Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12, 1996, and requested a four- or five- year long- term contract. Later, they offered Woodson a five- year contract extension of $10 million and a five- year incentive-laden $13.5 million worth contract, including a $500,000 signing bonus.
Following the 1996 NFL season, the Pittsburgh Steelers offered Woodson a $ 7.2 million four- year contract with a $ 1 million signing bonus.
It turns out that the ENTIRE NFL also saw Woodson's value around the same $2-$3 million range:
His 49'ers contract: "Woodson's one-year deal in San Francisco, if he reaches all incentives, will earn him nearly $2.5 million." - https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/s...eads-west.html (https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/sports/rod-woodson-steelers-longtime-all-pro-corner-heads-west.html)
His Ravens contract: https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/1...vens-contract/ (https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/12/%EF%BB%BFnfl-free-agency-flashback-rod-woodsons-1998-baltimore-ravens-contract/)
Both are around an annual value similar to what the Steelers were offering. So this was never about money. Rod's feelings got hurt and his pride needed him to leave town. The Steelers judged his value at the EXACT same level as the entire rest of the league did.
pczach
05-17-2020, 11:47 AM
OK. Rod Woodson is a liar. He is only remembering to tell part of the truth. I mean what is gonna say? I thought the NFL would pay me far more money than they did. Then I also was sure I as still awesome at CB; turns out I wasnt. No HOF athlete is ever gonna give that interview. I already laid all this out for you:
From post #24 of this thread: In 1996, the team offered Woodson various extension packages ranging around about $2-$2.7 million per season. He turned those down because he wanted more cash. Then he played the season and had more injuries and major surgeries. They offered him an extension and he refused. The team then found a CB who would take their money: https://apnews.com/f4dbee69146f4edfaf789539c95b550a. Rod got all butt-hurt that at 32 years old and with his career achievements the team wanted him to prove he was healthy and take an extension that was basically a bunch of yearly "prove your body can still hold up" deals.
"https://playerswiki.com/rod-woodson"
The Pittsburgh Steelers signed a four- year, $12 million worth contract with Woodson on September 18, 1993.
Woodson declined the three- year, $9 million contract extension offer of Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12, 1996, and requested a four- or five- year long- term contract. Later, they offered Woodson a five- year contract extension of $10 million and a five- year incentive-laden $13.5 million worth contract, including a $500,000 signing bonus.
Following the 1996 NFL season, the Pittsburgh Steelers offered Woodson a $ 7.2 million four- year contract with a $ 1 million signing bonus.
It turns out that the ENTIRE NFL also saw Woodson's value around the same $2-$3 million range:
His 49'ers contract: "Woodson's one-year deal in San Francisco, if he reaches all incentives, will earn him nearly $2.5 million." - https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/s...eads-west.html (https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/sports/rod-woodson-steelers-longtime-all-pro-corner-heads-west.html)
His Ravens contract: https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/1...vens-contract/ (https://frontofficenfl.com/2017/04/12/%EF%BB%BFnfl-free-agency-flashback-rod-woodsons-1998-baltimore-ravens-contract/)
Both are around an annual value similar to what the Steelers were offering. So this was never about money. Rod's feelings got hurt and his pride needed him to leave town. The Steelers judged his value at the EXACT same level as the entire rest of the league did.
You just posted exactly what happened in the real world. This stuff is common knowledge. Hell, I'm not sure how old you are, but I lived through this and read the stories in the papers. I remember this so well because Rod was my favorite Steeler. He may still be my all-time favorite player. I wanted him in the draft, and when they drafted him I was so excited. He was my guy, and the player who's career I followed the most closely. I watched this entire scenario unfold. I was disappointed, but I also understood that this is what happens in football.
Rod Woodson decided to take a stand, and bet that he was worth more than the Steelers thought he was. He was wrong. He still could have been a great safety for the Steelers, but it was his choice to move on with his career.
He doesn't want facts. He wants to believe whatever Rod Woodson said in the interview was exactly what happened.......not just Rod's side of the story.
NEWSFLASH: It was Rod Woodson's side of the story.
Mojouw
05-17-2020, 01:08 PM
You just posted exactly what happened in the real world. This stuff is common knowledge. Hell, I'm not sure how old you are, but I lived through this and read the stories in the papers. I remember this so well because Rod was my favorite Steeler. He may still be my all-time favorite player. I wanted him in the draft, and when they drafted him I was so excited. He was my guy, and the player who's career I followed the most closely. I watched this entire scenario unfold. I was disappointed, but I also understood that this is what happens in football.
Rod Woodson decided to take a stand, and bet that he was worth more than the Steelers thought he was. He was wrong. He still could have been a great safety for the Steelers, but it was his choice to move on with his career.
He doesn't want facts. He wants to believe whatever Rod Woodson said in the interview was exactly what happened.......not just Rod's side of the story.
NEWSFLASH: It was Rod Woodson's side of the story.
Yeah. My first favorite NFL player. I remember all this drama as well. But, I’ve totally lost the plot on the need to edit all this to advance some bizzaro world anti Rooney agenda.
hawaiiansteeler
05-17-2020, 10:50 PM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
:rofl2:
Hawkman
05-18-2020, 10:47 AM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
Who won?
pczach
05-18-2020, 12:53 PM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
The more times I read that joke, the funnier it gets! :toofunny:
86WARD
05-18-2020, 01:02 PM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
LMaO
HollywoodSteel
05-19-2020, 02:39 AM
Six Rings, a troll, and a plagiarist walk into a bar.
He ordered a beer.
If it was a Steelers bar you know they overcharged him for the beer. Steelers are so cheap.
43Hitman
05-19-2020, 04:52 AM
If it was a Steelers bar you know they overcharged him for the beer. Steelers are so cheap.
Typical Steelers, overcharging for cheap beer.
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