Wallace officially a no-show; Steelers suspend negotiations

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  • hawaiiansteel
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 35649

    #17 of Steelers Should View “Merriweather vs. Front Office 1988″ as Valuable Lesson

    Jul 28th, 2012 by DomSteelers

    Since he has yet to arrive in camp, I have decided to not refer to a certain Wide Receiver on the Steelers by his name anymore. In fact, for as long as his absence continues, this aforementioned pass-catcher will be referred to as #17 in my posts until he decides he would like to either sign his RFA tender, or sign a long-term deal and suit up for the Black & Gold in 2012-2013 or beyond.

    New monikers aside, #17 has still yet to report to Latrobe, and was probably further distressed by the fact that the Steelers’ Front Office signed #2 Wide Receiver Antonio Brown to a 5 year $42 million dollar extension. Kudos and a shout-out must go the Front Office for covering their bases and making sure that if #17 continues his hold-out long-term, they will have a way to at least off-set his absence if it occurs.

    In the event that #17 continues to harbor a negative attitude about his tender and long-term future with the club, and thus refuses to report until he “has to,” I believe that #17 should consider the example of a former Steelers player Mike Merriweather, and use Merriweather’s hold-out situation in 1988 as a cautionary tale of what could come from his own stubbornness and decision to tango with the Steelers’ Front Office.

    Mike Merriweather: What Could Have Been

    Let me begin by saying that I only remember Mike Merriweather on the back-end of his career from his days with the Vikings. As the youngest member of the NPC staff, I never got to witness his overall awesomeness of #57 as a player when he suited up for the Black & Gold during the early-mid-1980’s. Yet from the highlights I have seen, the statistics which he put up, and from what my Mom and other older Steelers fans have told me, Merriweather was a terrific talent and considered arguably the most exciting player on the Defensive side of the ball on those mid-80′s teams.

    A cat-quick Outside Linebacker, Merriweather was a complete and total play-making and tackling-machine in his prime with the Steelers, and had a nose for the football (11 INT’s, 2 TD’s and 9 FR’s with Black & Gold) to boot. Merriweather could also pressure the Quarterback, and racked up a career-high 15.0 Sacks in 1984, a then-team record, and totaled 30.5 from 1984-1987. For his tremendous efforts, Merriweather made three Pro Bowls during the mid-1980’s in back-to-back-to-back campaigns (1984,1985, 1986) and was rightfully thought of as a cornerstone of the Defense as he approached the prime of his career. Sadly, Merriweather never played a down with the Steelers after 1987.

    The beginning of tensions between Merriweather and the Front Office can likely be traced to when Wilber Marshall of the Redskins signed a 6 year $5 million dollar contract around that time period. And after the 1987 season ended (one where he was actually named Team MVP), Merriweather got the idea in his head that he did not like his contract (he was still signed through 1989 at the time), was intent on being paid more ($1 million dollars per season), and thus wanted it renegotiated. Granted, Merriweather’s asking price (over $1 million dollars per year) was nowhere in the ball-park of the type of coin which #17 has his heart-strings set on, but the “more money compared to players at his position” concept is nonetheless similar to #17 who has been thought to want “Larry Fitzgerald money” at this point in his career.

    Because Pittsburgh’s Front Office was unwilling to meet his thought to be outrageous demands, the Pro Bowler sat out (he attended a Baptist Theology School during his time away) and was intent on staying away until he got what he wanted in 1988. Unfortunately for Merriweather, who sat out at age 27 and in the prime of his career, and the Steelers alike, #57 never suited up in the Black & Gold again, and each and every party involved was hurt because of it.



    Aftermath: 1988 and Beyond

    In 1988, Pittsburgh finished with their worst record since Chuck Noll took over the team in 1969, and the 5-11 mark from that season remains the most dismal season in franchise history since the 1-13 mark which was dubiously reached by Noll’s first squad. Pittsburgh eventually moved their disgruntled Linebacker in April of 1989 for a 1st Round pick (which they basically threw away when they used it on Guard/Tackle Tom Ricketts who played only three seasons with the team).

    Merriweather on the other hand had a decent career in Minnesota, but was hardly considered to be the dominant player he was with Pittsburgh. The Vikings got a decent return on their investment as Merriweather led the team in Tackles in 1990 and 1991 and notched 14 Turnovers (7 INT’s, 7 FR’s), but for the price they paid, especially for an Outside Linebacker in a 4-3 Defense, it was hardly enough.

    Merriweather’s glory days as a pass-rusher were behind him as he put up only 10.0 Sacks from ages 29-32, and failed to make a Pro Bowl during his time in the Twin Cities. Worst of all, Minnesota failed to make it past the Divisional Round of the N.F.C. Playoffs despite having one of the Conference’s best Defenses during the late 80′s-early 90′s. Their investment in Merriweather ultimately lasted four seasons, and his career was finished a year later after stints with the Packers and the Jets in 1993.

    Even though they lost their best Linebacker at the time, the Steelers eventually came out winners in the situation though because of what they did and what they always have done when they lost top-level talent: they drafted sensibly and developed their young players to fill the hole left by their departed star. As they counted on veterans David Little and Bryan Hinkle on the back-end of their careers to lead the Linebacking corps in the late 1980′s, the Steelers also drafted/developed some talented youngsters named Hardy Nickerson, Greg Lloyd, and Jerrol Williams to offset the loss of their Pro Bowl Linebacker. These moves worked and from 1989 to 1991, the Steelers played decent .500 ball and eventually set themselves up for success down the road in the 1990′s.

    Final Thoughts

    Management is not the bad guy in the situation #17, they are just the “sensible guy.” If the Front Office really wanted to mess with you, they would have lowered your tender when they had the chance and taken a page from the Mike Brown/Bill Bidwell penny-pinching playbook. Plus, if management really wanted to yank your chain, they would not have publicly stated or made efforts to resign you. C’mon #17, a Front Office which has limited cap space cannot act irrationally and “make it rain” by giving a contract above market value to you like a Jerry Jones or a Dan Snyder would. They are actually interested in resigning you to a long-term deal, and would love to keep you around to continue their wonderful tradition of winning at a price they deem manageable.

    I am rooting for your success #17, I really am. I hope that if you come to your senses over the next few weeks and sign the RFA tender (or hopefully work out a long-term deal), you come in like a “bat out of hell” and wipe the floor with your competition this season and either force this Front Office to pay you in 2013, or simply walk away as a UFA while the Front Office receives nothing in return.

    Just understand however that there will be no winners in this fight until you consider how adept the Front Office led by Colbert and Co. and the scouts are at finding/drafting then having the Coaching Staff subsequently develop talent at the Wide Receiver position. Pittsburgh’s Offense will definitely hurt with your absence in the short-term, there is no doubt about it, and they really suffered without Merriweather in 1988. Yet give Scottie Montgomery and O.C. Todd Haley (who was a Receivers Coach for a large chunk of his career) time to develop a speedster and big deep threat like Rookie Toney Clemons or draft one in the early Rounds over the next couple of seasons, and the transition will be seamless. You know? Kind of like how Santonio Holmes replaced Antwaan Randle El and Plaxico Burress, or how you yourself replaced Holmes and left Limas Sweed in the dust.

    The proverbial “ball” is in your and your agent’s (Bus Cook) courts, and has been since the team placed the 1st Round RFA tender on you instead of the franchise tag close to four-five months ago. Do whatever you want though #17, because you are an adult and if you want to wait until the last third of the season to sign so you can be a UFA then go right ahead. Regardless of what happens though, I just earnestly hope that you take Merriweather’s story into account before you start doing something rash like he did. You might achieve a small measure of success elsewhere after you leave, but know this: the Steelers organization will find a way to be fine without you if you do decide to leave. It has happened before with Merriweather, and it you choose to hold out then depart, it will happen again.

    [URL]http://nicepickcowher.com/2012/07/28/17-of-steelers-should-view-merriweather-as-cautionary-tale/[/URL]

    Comment

    • RuthlessBurgher
      Legend
      • May 2008
      • 33208

      Brown, whose emergence as a downfield threat began about the same time as Wallace’s production began falling off last season, signed for the same money the Redskins gave free agent Pierre Garcon.
      Not exactly...in NFL contract negotiations, the name of the game is guaranteed dollars. Garcon got $20.5 million guaranteed, including an $11 million signing bonus and his entire 2012 base salary. Brown got an $8.5 million signing bonus.
      Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

      Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

      We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

      We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

      Comment

      • flippy
        Legend
        • Dec 2008
        • 17088

        Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
        The precedent is not caving in to players who are currently under contract but violate the provisions of that contract by not showing up to camp. Wallace is not violating anything...he is not under contract. He is not a hold out because he is not signed to any deal.

        Saying that negotiating with an unsigned Wallace while camp is going on is breaking the past precedent of not negotiating with a signed Ward or a signed Meriweather until they ended their camp holdouts is almost like saying that Colbert and Khan negotiating a deal with Max Starks after week 4 breaks the precedent that the Steelers have to not negotiate contracts after the regular season starts.

        The precedents are that the Steelers will not negotiate extensions for anyone under contract who is not in camp, and will not negotiate extensions for anyone at all once the regular season begins. If the Steelers can negotiate with the unsigned unrestricted free agent Max Starks in the midst of the season without that setting a new precedent, they should be able to negotiate with the signed restricted free agent Mike Wallace in the midst of camp without setting a new precedent.
        I'd go along with this thinking if the Steelers reduced the tender which in retrospect, they probably should have done when Wally didn't sign it.

        Technically the Steelers have already done more than they needed to do with Wally. I'd seriously try and extend Sanders next while he's gonna be super cheap.
        sigpic

        Comment

        • hawaiiansteel
          Legend
          • May 2008
          • 35649

          Lame Duck: Will Wallace Limp Through 2012 For Steelers?

          Jul 29th, 2012 by CraigSteelers


          Looks like Steelers Mike Wallace is quickly running out of options. When a president or someone ‘large and in charge’ is about to head out the door, it is often referred to as a ‘lame duck’ from that point on. Leadership and effectiveness are often put into question as the person out the door decries in their own head, ‘Who gives a rat’s butt?’

          In the case of Mike Wallace, he’s one and a half feet out the door of the Steelers organization. Sure, he could sign his $2.7 million tender. But, with the Steelers practically offering up Wallace’s cash to Antonio Brown, surely there is bad blood a brewin’ between Wallace, the Front Office, and maybe even Brown. That kind of dynamic will more than likely result in an unhappy locker room. Unhappy locker rooms equate into poor performances on the field…. you see where this is going.

          There’s no doubt that Wallace is a goat. Staunch defenders of him will say this is nowhere near his fault. But if the reports are true that the Steelers offered him up $10 mil a year, then he has been damned by Steeler Nation. Will all of this cause a bad case of head games for #17? Will it weigh on him as he reflects on his selfishness and poor decision making?

          So my question to all of you is: Even if Wallace joins the Steelers – whether it’s now or partway through the season – will he even make a difference for the Steelers and for himself?

          Will Wallace be a lame duck in 2012?

          Yes (71%, 73 Votes)

          No (29%, 30 Votes)

          Total Voters: 103

          [URL]http://nicepickcowher.com/2012/07/29/lame-duck-will-wallace-limp-through-2012-for-steelers/[/URL]

          Comment

          • RuthlessBurgher
            Legend
            • May 2008
            • 33208

            People condemn Wallace for his lackluster 2nd half to the 2011 season. He had 29 catches for 393 yards and 3 TD's in those games. By no means awesome, but not awful either. Reasonably solid.

            Compare that to the first half of his rookie season in 2009...25 catches for 437 yards and 3 TD's. Reasonably solid. The second half of his rookie season in 2009...14 catches for 319 yards and 3 TD's. Reasonably solid. The first half of his second season in 2010...22 catches for 405 yards and 5 TD's. Reasonably solid. His numbers in the last 8 games that we all consider to be sub-par are actually on par with the numbers that he was putting up in the first year-and-a-half of his NFL career.

            Why do the most recent numbers seem so bad now, when it seemed like Wallace was a blossoming star early in his career? Expectations. As a 3rd round pick, expectations were not all that high for him entering the NFL, especially considering that the team already employed Hines Ward and Santonio Holmes at the time. Any production that we got out of this young speed demon early on was essentially gravy. For him to put up reasonably solid NFL numbers as a #3 WR on a team that has been traditionally run-oriented was awfully impressive.

            Then, starting in the middle of the 2010 season, Wallace went on a absolute tear of historic Hall-of-Fame-type levels (no, really, I'm serious here...keep reading). In the second half of the 2010 season, Wallace had 38 catches for 850 yards and 5 TD's, then followed that up with 43 catches for 800 yards and 5 TD's in the first half of the 2011 season. Put those 16 games together and you have 81 catches for 1650 yards and 10 TD's...with an average of 20.4 yards per catch! If that 16 game stretch occurred within a single season rather than over the course of 2 seasons, it would be top-10 all time season in terms of receiving yardage (Jerry Rice holds the all time record for receiving yardage in a single season with 1848 yards in 1995, but the greatest receiver of all time did not top 1650 yards in any of his other 20 seasons). After a 16 game stretch like that, expectations were now through the roof, and a reasonably solid remaining 8 games simply felt like a tremendous letdown.

            If we sign Wallace, the best case scenario is that he lives up to those incredible 1650 yard, 10 TD expectations. The worst case scenario is that he continues to put up reasonably solid numbers, but in doing so, he also draws coverage shaded toward him to prevent the big play, thereby opening things up for our other underneath receivers and our running game to be more successful.
            Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

            Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

            We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

            We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

            Comment

            • Oviedo
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 23824

              Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
              People condemn Wallace for his lackluster 2nd half to the 2011 season. He had 29 catches for 393 yards and 3 TD's in those games. By no means awesome, but not awful either. Reasonably solid.

              Compare that to the first half of his rookie season in 2009...25 catches for 437 yards and 3 TD's. Reasonably solid. The second half of his rookie season in 2009...14 catches for 319 yards and 3 TD's. Reasonably solid. The first half of his second season in 2010...22 catches for 405 yards and 5 TD's. Reasonably solid. His numbers in the last 8 games that we all consider to be sub-par are actually on par with the numbers that he was putting up in the first year-and-a-half of his NFL career.

              Why do the most recent numbers seem so bad now, when it seemed like Wallace was a blossoming star early in his career? Expectations. As a 3rd round pick, expectations were not all that high for him entering the NFL, especially considering that the team already employed Hines Ward and Santonio Holmes at the time. Any production that we got out of this young speed demon early on was essentially gravy. For him to put up reasonably solid NFL numbers as a #3 WR on a team that has been traditionally run-oriented was awfully impressive.

              Then, starting in the middle of the 2010 season, Wallace went on a absolute tear of historic Hall-of-Fame-type levels (no, really, I'm serious here...keep reading). In the second half of the 2010 season, Wallace had 38 catches for 850 yards and 5 TD's, then followed that up with 43 catches for 800 yards and 5 TD's in the first half of the 2011 season. Put those 16 games together and you have 81 catches for 1650 yards and 10 TD's...with an average of 20.4 yards per catch! If that 16 game stretch occurred within a single season rather than over the course of 2 seasons, it would be top-10 all time season in terms of receiving yardage (Jerry Rice holds the all time record for receiving yardage in a single season with 1848 yards in 1995, but the greatest receiver of all time did not top 1650 yards in any of his other 20 seasons). After a 16 game stretch like that, expectations were now through the roof, and a reasonably solid remaining 8 games simply felt like a tremendous letdown.

              If we sign Wallace, the best case scenario is that he lives up to those incredible 1650 yard, 10 TD expectations. The worst case scenario is that he continues to put up reasonably solid numbers, but in doing so, he also draws coverage shaded toward him to prevent the big play, thereby opening things up for our other underneath receivers and our running game to be more successful.
              Ruthless--perhaps Wallace should hire you as his agent because his current one has screwed him. No one disagrees with you and believes that Wallace is not a good player. The whole issue is whether Wallace is a good player that we can afford to keep? Wallace knows what the Steelers cap situation agent is and he seems to be deliberately asking for more than they know the team can afford. If that continues to be the situation then sooner or later you have to move on.

              I'd love to keep Wallace but I'm not sure Wallace wants to stay. Personally I don't think he likes the attention that Brown has gotten. We heard some rumors (Unconfirmed of course) last year that he was pouting as Brown's performance took off last year. If any of that is true and he is letting this be about ego it just may be better to move on.
              "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

              Comment

              • Slapstick
                Rookie
                • May 2008
                • 0

                Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
                If we sign Wallace, the best case scenario is that he lives up to those incredible 1650 yard, 10 TD expectations. The worst case scenario is that he continues to put up reasonably solid numbers, but in doing so, he also draws coverage shaded toward him to prevent the big play, thereby opening things up for our other underneath receivers and our running game to be more successful.
                To me, not living up to the incredible numbers would not justify the salary demands...if you are going to ask for more than $10 million per year, you need to have those incredible 1650 yard, 10 TD seasons, IMO...

                And, you need to produce in the playoffs...
                Actually, my post was NOT about you...but, if the shoe fits, feel free to lace that &!+€# up and wear it.

                Comment

                • RuthlessBurgher
                  Legend
                  • May 2008
                  • 33208

                  Originally posted by Oviedo
                  Ruthless--perhaps Wallace should hire you as his agent because his current one has screwed him.
                  I'll take it! If I convince him to show up for camp and sign the $2,742,000 RFA tender, do I get my standard 3% take from that? I could use a sweet $82,260 now, and then more when we work out a long term deal.
                  Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                  Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                  We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                  We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                  Comment

                  • flippy
                    Legend
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 17088

                    Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
                    I'll take it! If I convince him to show up for camp and sign the $2,742,000 RFA tender, do I get my standard 3% take from that? I could use a sweet $82,260 now, and then more when we work out a long term deal.
                    If you thought more about it, you'd probably have him holdout and wait for the big payday. That would be more aligned with your personal interests. You can always take out an $82k loan now if you need it.
                    sigpic

                    Comment

                    • RuthlessBurgher
                      Legend
                      • May 2008
                      • 33208

                      Originally posted by Slapstick
                      To me, not living up to the incredible numbers would not justify the salary demands...if you are going to ask for more than $10 million per year, you need to have those incredible 1650 yard, 10 TD seasons, IMO...

                      And, you need to produce in the playoffs...
                      Just curious...If Wallace not living up to the incredible numbers would not justify the salary demands, then what has Antonio Brown done to justify his new salary?

                      In Brown's first 8 games of his rookie season, he had 1 catch for 6 yards and 0 TD's.
                      In the next 8 games of his rookie season, he had 15 catches for 161 yards and 0 TD's.
                      In the first 8 games last season, he had 34 catches for 431 yards and 1 TD.
                      In the last 8 games last season, he had 35 catches for 677 yards and 1 TD.

                      That shows steady improvement, which is promising, but where are the incredible numbers to justify his new salary?

                      The second half of last season was Brown's breakout, but even that didn't come close to the 850 yards and 5 TD's that Wallace had at the end of 2010 or the 800 yards and 5 TD's that he had at the beginning of 2011. Brown has shown to be an above average NFL WR, but is by no means dominant at this point in his career (one could argue that the combination of his return skills and receiving skills make him dominant, but since we are taking away many of his return responsibilities moving forward, what is the value of that?).

                      Wallace made the Pro Bowl as a receiver. Brown made the Pro Bowl as a return man. I don't mean to denegrate Brown's receiving abilities, because he is certainly a much better receiver than other return men who are only marginal wideouts like Josh Cribbs or Devin Hester. Brown did emerge as a legit threat for us last season, but Wallace has shown that he is capable of true dominance with that 1650 yard, 10 TD's stretch from the middle of 2010 to the middle of 2011. Brown getting 1100 yards and 2 TD's is nice, but many receivers are able to do that in today's NFL...that is not true dominance...Brown's got to continue to improve to live up to his contract terms. Because he hasn't proven himself over the long term, I'm glad we were able to sign Brown long-term with only a $8.5 signing bonus. Because Wallace has proven himself much more than Brown thus far, I have no problem giving him guaranteed money up to $20 million on a contract in the neighborhood of Desean Jackson.
                      Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                      Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                      We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                      We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                      Comment

                      • Oviedo
                        Legend
                        • May 2008
                        • 23824

                        Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
                        I'll take it! If I convince him to show up for camp and sign the $2,742,000 RFA tender, do I get my standard 3% take from that? I could use a sweet $82,260 now, and then more when we work out a long term deal.
                        I assume with $82K you are buying the beer or other beverages for the "planet"!!!!
                        "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

                        Comment

                        • Oviedo
                          Legend
                          • May 2008
                          • 23824

                          Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
                          Just curious...If Wallace not living up to the incredible numbers would not justify the salary demands, then what has Antonio Brown done to justify his new salary?

                          In Brown's first 8 games of his rookie season, he had 1 catch for 6 yards and 0 TD's.
                          In the next 8 games of his rookie season, he had 15 catches for 161 yards and 0 TD's.
                          In the first 8 games last season, he had 34 catches for 431 yards and 1 TD.
                          In the last 8 games last season, he had 35 catches for 677 yards and 1 TD.

                          That shows steady improvement, which is promising, but where are the incredible numbers to justify his new salary?

                          The second half of last season was Brown's breakout, but even that didn't come close to the 850 yards and 5 TD's that Wallace had at the end of 2010 or the 800 yards and 5 TD's that he had at the beginning of 2011. Brown has shown to be an above average NFL WR, but is by no means dominant at this point in his career (one could argue that the combination of his return skills and receiving skills make him dominant, but since we are taking away many of his return responsibilities moving forward, what is the value of that?).

                          Wallace made the Pro Bowl as a receiver. Brown made the Pro Bowl as a return man. I don't mean to denegrate Brown's receiving abilities, because he is certainly a much better receiver than other return men who are only marginal wideouts like Josh Cribbs or Devin Hester. Brown did emerge as a legit threat for us last season, but Wallace has shown that he is capable of true dominance with that 1650 yard, 10 TD's stretch from the middle of 2010 to the middle of 2011. Brown getting 1100 yards and 2 TD's is nice, but many receivers are able to do that in today's NFL...that is not true dominance...Brown's got to continue to improve to live up to his contract terms. Because he hasn't proven himself over the long term, I'm glad we were able to sign Brown long-term with only a $8.5 signing bonus. Because Wallace has proven himself much more than Brown thus far, I have no problem giving him guaranteed money up to $20 million on a contract in the neighborhood of Desean Jackson.
                          It is because the people who see these guys every single day see something special that they may not see in Wallace. The coaches and scouts didn't fall off the turnip truck yesterday and they see a desire to excel and work to achieve that in Brown that they are willing to commit to him. Heart and desire matter. Look at Hines Ward who became the all-time leader WR with a lot less ability than other players.

                          What they see in Wallace is a emerging prima dona who has had excellent on the field performance but as soon as another player started to take a little bit of the spotlight away went into a "funk" the latter part of last season. Then follows that up with being a jerk this season and deliberately tweaking the nose of the organization when they made it easy for him by giving him some very simple guidance to follow.

                          Who would you reward?
                          "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

                          Comment

                          • Slapstick
                            Rookie
                            • May 2008
                            • 0

                            The sad thing is this...

                            If the problem is guaranteed money, what is the likelihood that the Steelers would have offered a simple restructuring to Wallace in the future? Given the last few years, pretty good, I'd say...
                            Actually, my post was NOT about you...but, if the shoe fits, feel free to lace that &!+€# up and wear it.

                            Comment

                            • RuthlessBurgher
                              Legend
                              • May 2008
                              • 33208

                              Originally posted by Oviedo
                              I assume with $82K you are buying the beer or other beverages for the "planet"!!!!
                              If I get Wallace to report to camp, you guys should be buying me beverages!
                              Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                              Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                              We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                              We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                              Comment

                              • fordfixer
                                Legend
                                • May 2008
                                • 10921

                                Thoughts about Wallace holdout

                                [url]http://www.heraldstandard.com/sports/columnists/mike_ciarochi/thoughts-about-wallace-holdout/article_935d2934-d91d-5dae-8911-ac61da6c62d4.html[/url]

                                Posted on August 1, 2012

                                by jwdzeus

                                LATROBE -- I was listening to sports talk radio a few days ago, but that's my problem, not yours.

                                Anyway, the talking heads were bantering this way and that about the Mike Wallace situation.

                                It got me thinking (although I'd never admit it to them) about the whole scenario. My conclusion was that their conclusion was quite flawed.

                                One of the guys applauded Wallace for using his leverage against the Steelers by holding out. His point was that Wallace was doing the right thing by not allowing the Steelers to control his salary as he enters the prime years of his career in pro football, that Wallace would be shortchanging himself if he agreed to play for less that what he believes he is worth.

                                He went on to say, and his cohort readily concurred, that he agreed with both the Steelers and with Wallace in this matter, that each side was justified with its stance.

                                Well, if you stand back and look at each side in this labor dispute on its own merit, I suppose you could come to that conclusion.

                                But if you know anything about the negotiating history of the Pittsburgh Steelers, all of that goes out the window. Simply stated, the tail does not wag this dog. Two future Hall of Fame players -- Franco Harris and Rod Woodson -- thought they had leverage in negotiations with the Steelers. Both ended their careers elsewhere.

                                On a much smaller scale, I'm not ready to put Wallace in the category of future Hall of Famer. I listened as the talking heads compared Wallace to Arizona's Larry Fitzgerald and I almost wrecked my car. It's easy to look at the numbers and see that Wallace has a slight edge on Fitzgerald in several important categories.

                                But just as important is that Arizona showed Fitzgerald his importance to that team by signing him to a lucrative long-term contract. Fitzgerald is the unquestioned top dog with the Cardinals. Wallace might be the Steelers best receiver, but he's not their most important player. He might not even crack the top five.

                                And, while Wallace has posted some pretty impressive career stats, he fell off the face of the Earth in the second half of last season, when he caught only 25 passes for 325 yards and two touchdowns in the last eight regular-season games before grabbing three for 26 in the playoff loss at Denver.

                                Not to overemphasize the negative, but the Steelers have to wonder whether other teams have found out how to properly defend Wallace. How much would you be willing to invest in him to find out?

                                Which neatly guides us to the crux of the matter.

                                Still on the table for Wallace is the team's $2.7 million tender offer for the 2012 season. They left the option open for Wallace to earn more, this season and beyond. All he needs to do is take pen to paper and sign the tender. Once he does, he can report to camp and work with his teammates while his agent and the Steelers work on a lucrative extension.

                                One other point to make: If Wallace is so worried about the relatively short lifespan of an NFL receiver that he needs to be paid handsomely right now (as the talking heads suggested), how can he afford to leave $2.7 million in the Steelers pocket and sit out even part of a season?

                                No, the next move is definitely Wallace's to make. He either signs the tender or he sits and waits. All the while, his teammates are learning a new offense and getting ready to play the season, with him or without him.

                                Sports editor Mike Ciarochi may be reached at [email]mciarochi@heraldstandard.com[/email].

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