mykc14 wrote:I wonder if it will turn out that all of them will realize that their individual greatness was really a result of their ‘team’ and not the fact that any of them (besides ET and maybe Wags) were truly HOF’ers. Throw in PCs scheme and you have a recipe for for a truly historic defense, that in the end created too many egos that couldn’t handle the ‘normal’ treatment of a top level NFL QB by the team (although Avril and Kam more than likely would have remained team guys if not for their injuries).
None of us know how accurate the accuasations are of Pete treating his franchise QB differently than other team members. Sherman and Bennett's comments could be influenced by sour grapes after having been discarded like yesterday's newspaper.
However, IF their accusations are true, if Pete was not calling out Russell in team meetings, practices, press conferences, for his mistakes while calling out others, then I could understand...without agreeing with..how an attitude of resentment started to fracture the locker room. And I reject the premise that it's uncommon for coaches to call out their franchise QB's. Mike Holmgren used to go ballistic on his QB's (Favre and Hasselbeck). Bellichek and Brady have had their sideline confrontations. I've seen Ron Rivera get on Cam's case.
I'm reminded of an interview I saw a long, long time ago of Willie Davis, one of the first black players on the Green Bay Packers of the '60's. Someone put a question to him, asked him if Lombardi was prejudiced. Davis's response:
"No, he treats all the same. Like dogs."Being the subject of a coaches' wrath can be a unifiying experience in that misery likes company.