OT: The Pittsburgher Thread: 5 and 2 Justin who? Hand the Fields to Wilson

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,928
6,038
Huh? We got 7 1000+ years from Brown and he was arguably the best WR in the NFL for half a decade or more. Sign me up for that from Pickens even if it eventually ends poorly.

Right, but I think you're missing the point of the post - he was a problem in the locker room a majority of the time he was here and Tomlin did nothing about it. He then forced the Steelers to renegotiate his deal, then after that happened he forced his way to the Raiders where the team couldn't get anything of value for him and caused a massive dead cap penalty. All the fans got was "we want volunteers not hostages."

Brown and Bell totally clowned the Steelers at the end of their tenures and had they not been provided to much leash and any control was had over that locker room, they would have won anything in the Triple B era. The team won nothing and and both players f***ed the team on the way out. You're cool with 1000 yard seasons...I would have liked to see playoff wins.
 

WheresRamziAbid

Registered User
Oct 31, 2013
7,290
2,113
Right, but I think you're missing the point of the post - he was a problem in the locker room a majority of the time he was here and Tomlin did nothing about it. He then forced the Steelers to renegotiate his deal, then after that happened he forced his way to the Raiders where the team couldn't get anything of value for him and caused a massive dead cap penalty. All the fans got was "we want volunteers not hostages."

Brown and Bell totally clowned the Steelers at the end of their tenures and had they not been provided to much leash and any control was had over that locker room, they would have won anything in the Triple B era. The team won nothing and and both players f***ed the team on the way out. You're cool with 1000 yard seasons...I would have liked to see playoff wins.
There is no evidence that either was a problem in the locker room aside from the way Brown melted down at the very end.
 

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,673
26,153
The thing about Tomlin's man management reputation and skills isn't that he reforms everyone though. Sometime instead it's about being getting a person to be merely a problem instead of completely unworkable with. Getting limited explosions rather than constant explosions. Guys like Brown being a problem in the locker room through that period - if they were - doesn't mean Tomlin was doing nothing or ignoring them. It is completely possible that Tomlin was doing the best possible job of getting the least possible explosions from a volcano - which is his reputation, right?

Which I believe to have a bunch of truth to it. I don't think all the players and NFL guys raving about it are full of shit.

And yeah, maybe part of how he did things was by ignoring or downplaying some shit that other coaches wouldn't. But that isn't necessarily a bad way of doing his job and I'm going to guess more coaches take his approach now than they did when Tomlin started.
 

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,928
6,038
There is no evidence that either was a problem in the locker room aside from the way Brown melted down at the very end.
Locker room videos being released on live stream? Him actively Twitter beefing with JuJu while he was still a member of the team? These are just off the top of my head.
 

TooManyHumans

Registered User
May 4, 2018
2,929
4,150
Right, but I think you're missing the point of the post - he was a problem in the locker room a majority of the time he was here and Tomlin did nothing about it. He then forced the Steelers to renegotiate his deal, then after that happened he forced his way to the Raiders where the team couldn't get anything of value for him and caused a massive dead cap penalty. All the fans got was "we want volunteers not hostages."

Brown and Bell totally clowned the Steelers at the end of their tenures and had they not been provided to much leash and any control was had over that locker room, they would have won anything in the Triple B era. The team won nothing and and both players f***ed the team on the way out. You're cool with 1000 yard seasons...I would have liked to see playoff wins.
There’s at least as strong an argument that Tomlin kept AB in line and got the most possible out of AB. And Bell didn’t melt down. He had a contract dispute.
 

WickedWrister

Registered User
Jul 25, 2008
11,446
6,132
Philadelphia
Yeah I think what separates Tomlin from a lot of other coaches is that he actually genuinely seems to care about his players on a human level. I remember him doing a podcast with Ryan Clark and Fred Taylor and Taylor talked about some of his former coaches treating him like a commodity (Jack Del Rio - who ironically just got arrested for a DUI and has a humiliating video out right now). Obviously there's more to it than just being a nice guy, but I think he does have good relationship and motivational skills in part because he cares and listens to his players. Knowing what buttons to push to best manage different individuals.

Early in AB's career, I know Tomlin even talked about his family looking after AB's son on road trips and having him over for Easter etc... family type atmosphere. Seems like their relationship changed due to life/fame/money/success but it's hard to argue with the individual results. Almost 15k all purpose yards in 9 years is absurd. Only thing lacking was a Lombardi.

Some of the stories were crazy though. AB fighting Ike Taylor and 75 year old Dick Lebeau the day after he got his $40 mil :laugh:
 

Wattsburgh

Registered User
Apr 3, 2023
531
292
Does anyone know if Roman Wilson is available to play this year. He absolutely was a wrecking ball at Michigan. And at his age (23) I don’t see why he couldn’t step in and make a decent impact. Especially with our depleted WR room. TIA.
 

WickedWrister

Registered User
Jul 25, 2008
11,446
6,132
Philadelphia
Does anyone know if Roman Wilson is available to play this year. He absolutely was a wrecking ball at Michigan. And at his age (23) I don’t see why he couldn’t step in and make a decent impact. Especially with our depleted WR room. TIA.
Teams can only activate 8 players to return from IR during the regular season. You can activate two more if you make the playoffs. I believe with Corey Trice and Mon Adams activated we have used all our 8 for the regular season, but not 100% sure on that.
 
Last edited:

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,673
26,153
Teams can only activate 8 players to return from IR during the regular season. You can activate two more if you make the playoffs. I believe with Corey Trice and Mon Adams activated we have used all our 8 for the regular season, but not 100% sure on that.

Judging from this article they still have 2, as Trice and Adams were 5 and 6 rather than 7 and 8.


He's been eligible for a while too.

My guess is you won't see him unless the WR room ships a bunch of injuries and even if that happens, he'll be more break glass than featured.
 

bambamcam4ever

107 and counting
Feb 16, 2012
15,093
7,161
Right, but I think you're missing the point of the post - he was a problem in the locker room a majority of the time he was here and Tomlin did nothing about it. He then forced the Steelers to renegotiate his deal, then after that happened he forced his way to the Raiders where the team couldn't get anything of value for him and caused a massive dead cap penalty. All the fans got was "we want volunteers not hostages."

Brown and Bell totally clowned the Steelers at the end of their tenures and had they not been provided to much leash and any control was had over that locker room, they would have won anything in the Triple B era. The team won nothing and and both players f***ed the team on the way out. You're cool with 1000 yard seasons...I would have liked to see playoff wins.
They didn't win anything because their defense was average at best and their QB turned it over a bunch in the playoffs.
 

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,928
6,038
There’s at least as strong an argument that Tomlin kept AB in line and got the most possible out of AB. And Bell didn’t melt down. He had a contract dispute.
And did you hear part of the reason why they had a contract dispute? Bell thought Ben had too much say it what was going on. Then he told his offensive line he'd be back and then ghosted them - DeCastro and Pouncey took public exception. I'm not going to sit here and pretend like the two dudes were good teammates. Two of the best Steelers ever but they couldn't stay out of their own way.
And? A bunch of shit that doesnt matter? Except to fans that want it to?
Except it does matter. And very clearly did to Tomlin afterwards also. Twitter beefing with an active teammate at your position? No big deal? K.

So we are now reducing down the original point. There were problems with the two dudes.
 
Last edited:

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,928
6,038
Yeah I think what separates Tomlin from a lot of other coaches is that he actually genuinely seems to care about his players on a human level. I remember him doing a podcast with Ryan Clark and Fred Taylor and Taylor talked about some of his former coaches treating him like a commodity (Jack Del Rio - who ironically just got arrested for a DUI and has a humiliating video out right now). Obviously there's more to it than just being a nice guy, but I think he does have good relationship and motivational skills in part because he cares and listens to his players. Knowing what buttons to push to best manage different individuals.

Early in AB's career, I know Tomlin even talked about his family looking after AB's son on road trips and having him over for Easter etc... family type atmosphere. Seems like their relationship changed due to life/fame/money/success but it's hard to argue with the individual results. Almost 15k all purpose yards in 9 years is absurd. Only thing lacking was a Lombardi.

Some of the stories were crazy though. AB fighting Ike Taylor and 75 year old Dick Lebeau the day after he got his $40 mil :laugh:

I think Tomlin is a master motivator and he can keep dudes on track in life. I'll never take that away from him. The rub is that if he brought in a competent offensive coordinator earlier, this may not have gotten so bad.
 

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,928
6,038
They didn't win anything because their defense was average at best and their QB turned it over a bunch in the playoffs.
They were ranked 18th or better on defense every single year the Killer B's were together. 5/6 years ranked in the top half of the league
 

pistolpete11

Registered User
Apr 27, 2013
12,066
11,103
I'd rather have the headaches of AB and Bell than DJ.

Say what you will about them, but until the end, I never once questioned their effort on the field. It never seemed to affect the offense, either. Those offenses were top 10-top 5 type offenses and that's with a mediocre at best OC. The only thing I'd say is that they spent A LOT of money and draft capital on the offensive side and that played a role in why they were routinely giving up 40 points in the playoffs.

DJ, on the other hand, actively did not try. I'm not even just talking about the time he didn't block or didn't try to recover the fumble, although those were pretty glaring. The constant running backwards, out of bounds, or giving himself up so that he didn't take a hit is the type of stuff that drives me crazy. I think that actually has a negative impact on the team because other guys see that and think (even subconsciously) "If that guy isn't giving it his all, why am I?" Doubly so when he is being rewarded with the most targets.

I know Pickens had the 1 time he didn't block and I don't want to downplay that, but he just strikes me more as AB/Bell type than DJ type. That's still a big risk because both of those guys hung the team out to dry at the end. Those offenses were built around those guys and to not have them when you needed them is essentially wasting a year. Pickens could be better, could be worse, but if you get 4-5 years out of him being a top 5 WR in football, I think you take that tradeoff. Especially while you only have at best a few more years of Russ and Heyward, a few more years of prime Watt, etc. This team is setup to compete for the next few years and not having a true #1 WR would be a major blow.
 

MrBrightside

Registered User
May 5, 2010
5,951
3,798
Franklin Park, PA
I'd rather have the headaches of AB and Bell than DJ.

Say what you will about them, but until the end, I never once questioned their effort on the field. It never seemed to affect the offense, either. Those offenses were top 10-top 5 type offenses and that's with a mediocre at best OC. The only thing I'd say is that they spent A LOT of money and draft capital on the offensive side and that played a role in why they were routinely giving up 40 points in the playoffs.

DJ, on the other hand, actively did not try. I'm not even just talking about the time he didn't block or didn't try to recover the fumble, although those were pretty glaring. The constant running backwards, out of bounds, or giving himself up so that he didn't take a hit is the type of stuff that drives me crazy. I think that actually has a negative impact on the team because other guys see that and think (even subconsciously) "If that guy isn't giving it his all, why am I?" Doubly so when he is being rewarded with the most targets.

I know Pickens had the 1 time he didn't block and I don't want to downplay that, but he just strikes me more as AB/Bell type than DJ type. That's still a big risk because both of those guys hung the team out to dry at the end. Those offenses were built around those guys and to not have them when you needed them is essentially wasting a year. Pickens could be better, could be worse, but if you get 4-5 years out of him being a top 5 WR in football, I think you take that tradeoff. Especially while you only have at best a few more years of Russ and Heyward, a few more years of prime Watt, etc. This team is setup to compete for the next few years and not having a true #1 WR would be a major blow.
I don't disagree with this and on balance think that they need to keep Pickens. That said, once these guys get paid, smaller issues can very frequently become larger issues.
 

pistolpete11

Registered User
Apr 27, 2013
12,066
11,103
I don't disagree with this and on balance think that they need to keep Pickens. That said, once these guys get paid, smaller issues can very frequently become larger issues.
For sure, but it's what type of issues you expect and whether or not you think Tomlin can manage them vs. the reward. I'd say it's worth the risk.

Things can of course change. If they sign Higgins or something, I'm much more open to the idea of moving on from him.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad