Pittsburgh happy about Menndenhall
May 12, 2008 by James Edwards
Filed under Ben Roethlisberger, NFL Football, Pittsburgh Steelers
NFL Football at its best. NFL Football at its craziest.
Rashard Mendenhall taking in the whole Steeler thing

Image details: Pittsburgh Steelers Rookie Training Camp served by picapp.com
Ok, Steeler fans, weren’t you supposed to take an offensive lineman?
Even RB Willie Parker was surprised the Steelers waited until the fourth-round to draft an offensive lineman.
“Everybody said what I need is an offensive lineman,” said Parker. “That wasn’t my call to pick an offensive lineman. It would have been good to get one, but we didn’t.”
Isn’t your offensive line a mess?
Most mock drafts in cyberspace assumed the Steelers were focusing on adding an offensive lineman. But a furious run that saw six tackles come flying off the board in the first 21 selections was over by the time it was Pittsburgh’s turn to pick. “There was a panic attack on offensive linemen,” Arians says. “It just worked out that Rashard flew right into our laps.”
Don’t you have to protect Big Ben Roethlisberger?
And what about a running attack?
That final question got answered on draft day. Offensive Coordinator Bruce Arians had this to say.
“I compare Rashard to Edgerrin James,” Arians says. “Except that Rashard is 10 pounds heavier and a tick faster than Edge was with the Colts.”
Arians served as the Indianapolis Colts’ quarterbacks coach from 1998 to 2002. James joined the team in 1999 as a first-round selection out of Miami.
One of James’ most underappreciated skills with the Colts (and now with the Arizona Cardinals) is his ability to pick up blitzes. One of the most worrisome duties that keep rookie running backs from seeing significant playing time early is pass protection.
That’s where Arians thinks the Steelers’ new Edge-like rusher is the exception to that rookie rule.
“The pass blocking is good with Rashard, and he’s got great hands,” Arians says. “You’re not afraid of letting him cover Ben’s back side in pass protection.”
NFL Football Hines Ward factoid -
• Hines Ward was scheduled to make his second trip of the year to South Korea, where he was welcomed as a hero following his Super Bowl MVP in 2006. Since then, he’s made the trip twice a year to work on his foundation to aid bi-racial people in that country. Ward was born in South Korea, son of a Korean native mother and black U. S. serviceman father.
Now if only that offensive line can hold!
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Jets pony up the dough for Faneca
March 2, 2008 by James Edwards
Filed under Free agency, NFL Football, New York Jets
NFL Football at its best. NFL Football at its craziest.
5 years and 40 million bucks for left guard Alan Faneca.
Yep, a left guard.
Oh, and toss in 21 million semolians in guarantees.
For a left guard.
This building the offensive line thing has gotten out of hand.
The New York Jets felt desperate, obviously very desperate.
New York sorely needed a standout left guard after trading Pete Kendall to Washington following a bitter contract dispute before last season. They plugged in the since-released Adrien Clarke, who was ineffective while starting the first 14 games and was benched the last two weeks.
Faneca will step in between left tackle D’Brickashaw Ferguson and center Nick Mangold to give the Jets a terrific left side. Ferguson and Mangold thrived as rookies with Kendall, but struggled at times without his veteran influence last season. source
Ok, he is a 7 time pro bowler, but come on, 21 mill in guarantees? For a left guard? It is not like he is the missing piece to the NFL Championship or something. This is the Jets.
Remember last year my Lions made Cory Redding the highest paid defensive tackle and Cory went on to do nothing. Nothing.
Maybe the Jets are just deal happy. They made a lot of other deals, too.
The Jets have been active in the two days since the free agency period began. In addition to signing Faneca, they acquired three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Kris Jenkins from Carolina, traded linebacker Jonathan Vilma to New Orleans for a draft pick, signed defensive tackle Sione Pouha to a contract extension and signed fullback Stacy Tutt to an exclusive-rights contract.
Thomas Jones
Even with Thomas Jones, the ex-Bear, at running back the Jets could not mount a running attack. They blamed the offensive line and opened up the check book.
A left guard.
A Jets spokesman declined comment on the signing of the seven-time Pro Bowl selection, considered perhaps the league’s best left guard.
NFL Football Fan Question What do you think? Is Faneca worth it?
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