Posts Tagged ‘Indianapolis Colts’
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With the 2014 NFL Draft coming up, the media, including The New YorkTimes, are looking back at the 1998 draft when Ryan Leaf and Peyton Manning were the number one and number two draft choices. Peyton was drafted by the Colts, Ryan by the Chargers. The media is questioning why Ryan’s career fizzled and why Peyton’s took off. It’s easy to blame the athlete but we, the public, are almost never privy to what may have gone on behind the scenes between Ryan and his San Diego Coaches that could have caused his career to collapse.
I reside in Springfield, Missouri, where the Missouri State University’s baseball team is often visited by major league scouts. On one such occasion I noticed an African-American man who was scouting for the Atlanta Braves. Walter and I struck up a conversation and he told me he used to use his 6’ 4” frame and 230 lbs to throw 90 mile per hour fastballs. He had a certain style of pitching that had served him well throughout high school and college. After graduating, he was drafted by one of the major league baseball teams and a pitching coach was assigned to help him. Unfortunately, his new pitching coach immediately tried to change his style of throwing, which didn’t sit well with Walter. Instead of standing up to his coach he acquiesced and tried to change his style of pitching but to no avail. Soon, he was released by the team and in retrospect, he now feels it was a mistake not to speak up and attempt to change his coach’s approach to training him. This is a good example of what former major league manager Whitey Herzog once said (and I’m paraphrasing): “Very often the team cuts the player when they should have gotten rid of the coach.”
WHAT HAPPPENED TO TIGHT END DALLAS CLARK WHEN THE COLTS LOST TO THE CHIEFS?
Posted October 9, 2011
on:As I’ve always stated, what takes place off the field affects what takes place on the field. And teams lose games more often than they win them. When the Colts’ tight end Dallas Clark dropped three passes (passes he would normally have caught) against the Kansas City Chiefs, one has to wonder what was gong on in his personal life the night or day before the game? Eddie George, former running back for the Tennessee Titans, once stated: “Ninety percent of all NFL athletes are having extra-marital affairs.” Of course there are all kinds of problems athletes can have off the field such as issues with their business managers, issues with other players, even issues with their coaches. But if I were an NFL coach, I would insist that all players on my team cease and desist from having affairs and if they didn’t, I would suspend them for an indefinite period of time without pay.