Inside Conditions: This is Mike Tomlin’s Steelers team

STEELERS QUARTERBACK RUSSELL WILSON HAS LED THE TEAM TO TWO IMPRESSIVE PRIMETIME VICTORIES, INCLUDING THE OCT. 28 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL WIN OVER THE NEW YORK GIANTS. (PHOTOS BY MARLON MARTIN)

Russell Wilson proved people wrong, including Big Ben

The Pittsburgh Steel­ers and the New York Giants played a com­petitive and exciting game on Monday Night Football. The Steelers prevailed by the score of 26-18, Oct. 27. However, folks continue to become weirder and weirder. I keep hearing ques­tionable sounds coming from the alleys with the rats and the cats. There are screams of horror with the victims yell­ing: “We need more wide receivers, trade Russell Wilson or Justin Fields to acquire a number two wideout…”

I don’t exactly know where these screams may be originating from. But we can take a good guess once we reach that poorly lit area if we focus on a few of the garbage cans without lids, we will discover the victims…oops, I meant fans that are residing in the immediate vicinity.

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receivers George Pickens, Van Jeffer­son, Calvin Austin III, and tight-ends Darnell Washington and Pat Freiermuth combined for the majority of the 278 yards that the Steelers gained through the air against the New York Giants defense.

Now please explain this to me. If the Steel­ers or any other NFL franchise were to re­tain the services of John Stallworth, Lynn Swann, Jerry Rice, Ran­dy Moss, Lance Alworth or any other NFL wide receiver and did not have a quarterback to toss them the rock, they would be the perfect examples of rich play­ers that got paid and laid, while the Steelers or any NFL team that adopted that financial and personnel strate­gy would have gotten slayed. That would be the perfect example of a strategy for mediocri­ty. Different strokes for different folks is how I would describe how many folks define the noun, “mediocrity.”

T.J. WATT TO THE RESCUE—HIS STRIP SACK AND FUMBLE RECOVERY SEALED THE 26-18 WIN FOR PITTSBURGH OVER THE GIANTS, OCT. 28.

Merriam-Webster Dic­tionary describes medi­ocre as: 1. The quality or state of being mediocre. (Came to terms with his mediocrity.) In fact, many yinzers misuse the word and incorrect­ly define Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin as mediocre, at least by the definition provided by the dictionary.

Mike Tomlin has a 17-year streak of great­ness as an NFL coach. If there are any people from the sports world that could be defined as “mediocre,” many of the people that cover Mike Tomlin would definitely fit into that category.

In an article posted by Jacob Camenker on De­cember 14, 2023, titled; “Ben Roethlisberger criticizes Mike Tomlins ‘bad coaching’ in Steel­ers loss to Patriots,” the article quoted Ro­ethlisberger as saying: “Maybe the tradition of the Pittsburgh Steel­ers is done.” The article also pointed out that: “this isn’t the first time that Roethlisberger has openly criticized his for­mer team. He referred to some of the teams players as ‘coddled’ last season in comments that drew the ire of de­fensive lineman Camer­on Heyward.”

Roethlisberger had the nerve to use the word “coddled.” I don’t know, nor have I seen anoth­er NFL or Pittsburgh Steelers player past, or present that has been more entitled or “cod­dled” than Ben Roeth­lisberger. Rothlisberger was one of the primary reasons if not the pri­mary reason that two Steelers NFL Pro-Bowl­ers, LeVeon Bell and Antonio Brown, exited the team prematurely. Out in the then-Heinz Field parking lot, “Big Ben” had separate bus­es parked and ready to go with all of the play­ers’ and coaches’ names on them, just in case he was forced to throw more than two people under the bus, simulta­neously.

 

Another excerpt from the article quoted Ro­ethlisberger trashing the Steelers coaching staff: “You can’t afford in the second half of games to burn silly tim­eouts and not to have them late in the game. To me, that’s bad coach­ing.”

Just a few weeks ago “fly-by-nighter” Roeth­lisberger was critical of Mike Tomlin’s deci­sion to sit QB Justin Fields and replace him with 35-year-old Rus­sell Wilson. Now the bipolar, schizophrenic, “podcast coach” is all in on Russell Wilson as he has proven everyone to be wrong, except Mike Tomlin.

The Pittsburgh Steel­ers are poised to enter a new era. Hopefully, there will be no nega­tive conduct issues to distract the team. This new team belongs to Mike Tomlin. No one will be able to say that Tomlin won with Bill Cowher’s players. No one player will be able to vilify his fellow team­mates on a whim. That player will no longer be empowered to reject blame for his bad per­formances and deflect responsibility for the negative outcomes of games, unjustifiably to others. The players from the 2024 squad not only accept responsibility, they welcome it, just like they will welcome hoisting a champion­ship trophy above their heads when they are standing in the winner’s circle.

FORMER STEELER JOEY PORTER SR. LEADS THE TERRIBLE TOWEL TWIRL…

 

 

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