Back to the Fantasy Football Articles Main Page
Fantasy Football Articles

by Steve Stegeman (May 4, 2002)
Guest Writer, FFToday.com
This article is
also up at FF Today. Click here to go
there and view it.
|
I have been going about my off-season in
usual fashion, following cuts and signings, analyzing and scrutinizing draft
picks and trades, in short, doing the small things that I hope will make the difference
when the regular season rolls around. Amidst all the studying, I find myself,
in very typical fashion, getting caught up in the opinionated and completely
speculative rhetoric of the “statisticless off-season, and the bandwagons
this year, no different from any other, are full-steam ahead. I
can tolerate writers bad-mouthing, albeit usually in a biased fashion, the
likes of Fred Taylor or Terry Glenn; I can fathom the lack of confidence many
have in Brian Griese, Jake Plummer, Jim Miller, Marcus Robinson or Germane
Crowell. Heck, I am getting a kick out of the soap opera otherwise known as
the But,
dealing with the predictable, yet arbitrary skepticism and capricious trash
talk about two of the NFL’s hardest-working and, to one degree or another,
finest players is frustrating. The players are quarterback Brad Johnson and
wide receiver Rod Smith, and on the "bandwagon train" ride writers
from across the spectrum, from Fanball to CNN/SI and ESPN, including such
credible guys as John Clayton. This, I am not getting! Since
when does Brad Johnson suck? It was not but a year ago when this guy was the
hottest quarterback on the market. Since when did he come to deserve jibes
like “Brad is long in the neck but short on talent…” or to be, de facto,
shoved down the Buccaneers' depth chart? Initially, when it was announced
that Jon Gruden was traded to the Bucs, I was excited for Brad. It seemed as
if everybody else went in the opposite direction, especially after the
signing of "all-world" Rob Johnson. I have always felt that Brad
Johnson would be an ideal quarterback for the "West Coast Offense."
Johnson is much more mobile than he is given credit for. It is just that he
knows well how to dump off that last-second short pass and let the more
nimble runners do their job. I actually thought it was a shame that he was
forced out of It
will not take too long for Gruden to realize that Shaun King simply does not
have an NFL-caliber arm, Rob Johnson, at best, needs quite a bit more work
and that Brad Johnson is the hardest-working, smartest and, bottom line, best
all-around quarterback he has. In 1999, was it not Johnson that made a hero
out of theretofore "suckass" Michael Westbrook? Did he not pass for
4,000+ yards, have 26 touchdowns, and achieve a solid 90 passer rating before
falling prey to the Snyder-George-Schottenheimer debacle and then falling
into the abyss now known as Tony Dungy's Buccaneer "O", which did
not even have a real offensive coordinator with any kind of proven track
record. New head coach Jon Gruden has acquired all of the complementary
parts: WR Joe Jurevicious, TE Ken Dilger and RB Michael Pittman. Along with
the Johnson’s, Brad and Keyshawn, All
of this talk about Johnsons and I cannot help but think about Rod... Smith,
that is! According to one fairly reputable source, only one of Denver’s
wideouts will make it all the way back this season; Rod is suffering through
a stress fracture from playing through his ankle injuries last season and has
thus far this off-season been limited to riding the stationary bike to stay
in shape and Ed McCaffery is still recovering from his broken leg, and this
writer's "money is on 'White Man Deluxe'." This opinion is
predicated, of course, on the very well-founded and logical parallel drawn
between the hard-working receiver Smith's missing of the Broncos' first
mini-camp and Titans "workoutaholic" running back Eddie George's
missing off-season workouts last year and his subsequent under-productive
2001 campaign. Oh, but of course, the situations ooze similarities. Both
players play the same position... no! Okay, they suffered the same
injury(ies)... no, again! Okay, they both, at least, underwent off-season
surgery of some kind... nope! They are both hard workers... okay, yes, and
according to this clown it stands to reason that two hard-working players
playing different positions for different ball clubs with completely
different injury situations will suffer the same fate. Come on! The bottom
line is that Eddie George’s poor season last year was all about three
(interrelated) things, not just about his being a hard worker who was
unaccustomed to missing off-season workouts: 1) the loss of fullback Lorenzo
Neal; 2) his "between the tackles" bruising running style and how
tough it is on his shoulders, another part of his body that was banged up; 3)
his toe injury and subsequent toe surgery. Those little digits on your feet
are more crucial to an athlete than you could ever imagine and injuries to
them are tough to recover from and easy to re-injure. Just ask Deion Sanders
and O.J. McDuffie what kind of havoc toe injuries and surgeries wreaked on
their careers! Eddie
George's sitch has absolutely nothing to do with Rod Smith. I do not work for
the Broncos' training staff. Perhaps he will have a tough time getting back
to 100% by Week One, almost four months from now, or, perhaps, I am sitting
here writing this at 10:00 p.m. on a Friday night somewhere in Opinion aside, all things equal, as they are at present, "Johnson and Rod," in all likelihood, will rise to the occasion in 2002! That is not what my money is on; in fact, that is what the Buccaneers and Broncos' money is on. |
Top of Page
Copyright © 1999 by GBRFL. All rights reserved.
Revised: 08 Oct 2014 11:56:22 -0700