Showing posts with label Houshmandzadeh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houshmandzadeh. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Well, so much for my impassioned plea to keep TJ. We all know the details by now. But here's some day after reaction.

One of the best Bengals web sites is cincyjungle.com. Here's Jason Kirkandall's take on what the Bengals could have done differently in the the TJ saga.

Meantime, over at espn.com, they have the nuts and bolts of TJ's saga.

And according to the Chicago Tribune, they're celebrating in the Windy City, as the Vikings lost out on the TJ Sweepstakes.

Personally, I think the Bengals misplayed this. What they're left with, at the wide receiver spot, is guy who wants out (Ocho Cinco), a guy who shouldn't even be on the roster (Chris Henry), a guy who was drafted in the second round last year and couldn't get on the field (Jerome Simpson), a guy who fumbles the ball a lot (Glenn Holt) and a guy they got in the third round last year who has shown some promise but only played at receiver the final couple of games (Andre Caldwell).

Am I smelling Michael Crabtree with that #6 overall pick? Or if Cedric Benson departs, Beanie Wells? God forbid.

Look, let me say this again: nothing, absolutely nothing happens at any level of football UNLESS YOU PROTECT YOUR QUARTERBACK!

HELLO!

This is what I'm hearing a lot of so called Bengal experts say: Andrew Whitworth moves to left tackle, Anthony Collins moves to right tackle, Nate Livings moves to left guard. This isn't musical chairs. Oh, and by the way, you still need a center. Meantime, we've seen nothing that would lead us to believe that Collins and Whitworth at tackles is a viable option. Don't give me "Collins played well against the Steelers and James Harrison, et al...." The Steelers toyed with the Bengals that night. I was there. Pittsburgh didn't bring its 'A' game. 16 game schedule, completely different story.

I've got more on this whole deal in my latest Broo View Podcast, episode 192. My guest is cbssports.com's Pete Prisco. It's on the front page of my web site: www.kenbroo.com. If you're on the fly, you can download it here.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

I’ve been thinking about this, a lot, the past couple of days. Maybe it’s because as a kid, one of my best subjects was math. Hated math but was good at it. And after all, math is nothing more than problem solving.

I think I’ve got a way for the Bengals to solve a lot of their problems. And as I worked the math, I don’t think it’s going to take much. Certainly not as much as it took the Bengals to dig themselves a hole and bury themselves under 18-years of joke punchlines. The free agent feeding frenzy is upon us. I think your Cincinnati Bengals can start down the road to recovery by signing one player. Just one.

In business terms, since 1990, the Bengals have been a box office sensation and an artistic failure. It’s Broadway backward. They stink, you continue to buy tickets. In a real business, they’d have been out of business a long time ago.

We see a lot of business failing right now, for a lot of reasons. It may seem to the people who own those businesses that i a laundry list of circumstances have done them in. But really it isn’t, and it’s not a laundry list of things that’ve done in the Bengals. It’s two or three bad decisions or cataclysmic events that doom anything. Those usually lead to the laundry list.

So what’s done in the Bengals and who’s this player that can start making things better? Think about this. Three things have torpedoed this team since that glorious Super Bowl season of 1988.

One, lack of championship talent. The Bengals have had a lot of serviceable players in the last 20 years, a sprinkling of some truly outstanding players, and a lot of spare parts. They’ve had players who were long on unfulfilled promise. They’ve had guys that turned out to be flat out busts. I’d put Carson Palmer in the unfulfilled bin. I’d put Akili Smith in the file marked busts.

The Bengals have whiffed, badly, in free agency. Sam Adams ate his way to NFL unemployment. Kendrick Allen, Michael Myers, Ed Hartwell, you know the rest of that sad tune. The Bengals have whiffed in the draft.

David Pollack? Bad luck. Odell Thurman and Chris Henry in the next two rounds of that same draft? Just dumb. We won’t even get into Chris Perry.

Bad scouting, or lack of sufficient scouting, (the Bengals front office is so small it’s hard to tell which it is) and coaches who are forced to become scouts after the season ends can be blamed for a lot of that.

The outstanding players, like Takeo Spikes, Corey Dillon, Lorenzo Neal, they got on the first bus out of here, the minute they could. They didn’t come here with bad attitudes. Bad attitudes are acquired, you’re not born with ‘em.

Here’s the second thing that’s set the good ship Bengals adrift without a rudder: lack of locker room leadership. You ever notice what happens in Bengaldom when a player tries to become the voice of the team? Willie Anderson might be able to fill you in on that, Brian Simmons too. And if you want to get old school, find Boomer. These are smart guys, who came from winning collegiate programs. They know what it takes to win and they weren’t shy about sharing it. This guy I have in mind has great leadership skills. Yeah, he’s got a mouth and he’s not afraid of letting it run a bit. But he speaks the truth. And if you begin your rebuilding process with him, you’re going to win again. Guarantee it.

And now, to complete the mythical trifecta of losing, the third thing that has submarined this team: character. You think everyone around the NFL has forgotten that garbage that went on here three years ago? Really? You think the howling has stopped from Mike Brown giving Chris Henry his fifth chance, tossing his coach under the blocking sled along the way? Get real. All of those arrests and suspensions still stick with this team. They will, until the team starts winning again and can write other headlines. This guy I got in mind who they should pick up, he can go a long way in ending this national perception of the Bengals and our town. He’s a model citizen.

He’s all three: talent, leadership and character.

And if Brown is as smart as I know he is, he gets on the phone, today, this minute and he tells this guy he knows he’s all of that. He tells him he knows his franchise has got trouble, on the field, off and in this economy at the ticket window. He tells him he should have made this phone call a long time ago, last year, maybe the year before. Because he knows this guy and he knows that there aren’t a whole lot like him in professional football.

It’s an easy call to make.

The Bengals have played football in Cincinnati since 1968. But they haven’t been much of a team in the last 20 years. They’ve got a chance to finally get it right. Palmer is apparently healthy again. If they play it right, the draft can go a long way to fixing their offensive line problems.

But it starts with the guy I'm talking about, TJ. Houshmandzadeh It’s not too late. Make the call Mike. Do the right thing.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

You can hate the season the Bengals are having. But you have to love TJ Houshmandzadeh. He's been the best wide receiver on the Bengals roster this season. Today, he was voted to the first team of the AFC Pro Bowl roster. TJ's reaction was dead on: I'd trade my trip to the Pro Bowl if I could get my team into the playoffs.


Wide receivers, by nature, are a selfish bunch. They all want the ball, and there's only one ball on the field at any time. But Houshmandzadeh controls the 'me' game better than anyone. I'm happy for the guy.