Bill Polian Explains Faulk Deal, & Drafting James Over Ricky Williams

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  • #11339
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Bill Polian Explains Marshall Faulk Deal, Drafting James Over Ricky Williams

    Thursday, November 6, 2014

    http://www.thepostgame.com/blog/throwback/201411/bill-polian-game-plan-building-winning-football-nfl-colts-bills-carucci

    The most significant move after our first season, and a highly controversial one, was when we traded Marshall Faulk. That was quite the controversy, and I’m not sure that the story behind it has ever been fully told. Marshall, who would go on to become a Hall of Famer, was phenomenal with the ball in his hands. He was perhaps the best route runner of any back I have ever seen.

    Marshall was darn good at running the football because he had home-run speed and he could make people miss. The only thing that he couldn’t do as a runner was short-yardage and goal-line power running because he wasn’t that big. Also, the way that Tom Moore, our offensive coordinator, and Howard Mudd, our offensive line coach, had constructed the offensive system, there were times when the running back was a blocker, which wasn’t Marshall’s strong suit, either. But he was a Hall of Famer in every respect.

    The problem we had with Marshall was his dissatisfaction with his contract, and I couldn’t blame him. It was excessively long and bound him in ways that his agent surely regretted after it was signed.

    Marshall was a much, much better player than the deal had called for. But we couldn’t renegotiate it because the money he wanted, or anticipated getting under the cap, would have squeezed us terribly. To Marshall’s credit, he played his heart out for every single game through the ’98 season. He never indicated any lack of intensity or effort on the field.

    Not surprisingly, his agent approached me soon after the seasonto let me know there was going to be a holdout. Knowing that it was coming and that it wasn’t going to be pleasant and that it would have been devastating for a young team to handle, we decided to see if we could trade Marshall, who was at the peak of his career. We were asking for a one and a two and I inferred that less than a one, with some other combination, would do it. Surprisingly, we didn’t have many takers.

    We finally ended up trading Marshall to the St. Louis Rams for second- and fifth-round draft choices. The trade was announced the day before the 1999 draft, and other than Jim Irsay and Jim Mora, not many people in the organization knew it was coming. When word got out about the deal, it was earth-shattering news at our facility. The building was very small by the standards of NFL team headquarters today, so I could hear some people yelling, “What? No! They can’t do that!”

    But that was only the first half of what would initially be seen as a very unpopular doubleheader. The next day, we used the fourth overall pick on the lesser known of the two top running backs in the draft: Edgerrin James of the University of Miami. Ricky Williams, the Heisman Trophy winner from Texas, was the household name that most people thought we would select. Instead, the New Orleans Saints chose him with the next pick, which they acquired by trading their entire draft (plus their first- and third-round picks in 2000) to the Redskins, because that was how badly they wanted Ricky Williams.

    As we were just getting ready to wrap up for the day, Dom Anile, our personnel director, tossed his car keys to Tom Telesco, one of our scouts, who is now general manager of the Chargers.

    “Here, Tommy, go start my car,” Dom said. We all laughed at the implications of that statement.

    Despite the public outcry, Dom and I had no hesitation about our pick whatsoever. The reason media analysts and fans knew a lot less about Edgerrin than they did about Ricky was because the NCAA had placed Miami on probation and, therefore, the Hurricanes’ only nationally televised game the previous season was against UCLA. In our mind, there really was no comparison between the two.

    For one thing, the way Ricky carried himself, the way that he lived his life, was entirely inconsistent with being a good football player. Second, we weren’t convinced that he really cared about football. Third, when you broke it down, Ricky was good, but not great, and that was what he turned out to be as a pro — good, but not great. I don’t know whether or not his love of football held him back because he had great gifts, but he obviously didn’t distinguish himself.

    Edgerrin, on the other hand, had incredible gifts to go along with a clear love for the game and desire to excel. Although he was a scholarship player at Miami, Edgerrin had to earn his playing time. He told us that if it weren’t for some bad luck for Frank Gore and Willis McGahee with injuries, he might not have ever gotten a chance to play. Edgerrin also described Frank as the most gifted running back he had ever seen, and Frank has subsequently demonstrated as much during his career with the 49ers.

    Edgerrin’s interview with us was tremendous, while Ricky’s was the complete opposite. We decided to meet with Ricky at our facility because we were told that he really didn’t like going out to restaurants. We catered a big dinner for him from St. Elmo’s, the famous Indianapolis steak house, in a conference room. Ricky walked in, sat down and was essentially non-communicative.

    On top of that, Ricky had done very poorly in his pre-draft workout. He ran something like a 4.75-second 40-yard dash. He certainly didn’t match up with Edgerrin in terms of the numbers and that told us that he wouldn’t be a good fit in our offense. We used a zone-blocking scheme, which means the blockers are moving laterally and are essentially taking defenders where they want to go. The running back has to have patience, wait to see the hole open, and then tremendous vision and acceleration to get through the hole. He has to go from a geared-down state to a hundred miles an hour.

    Ricky’s acceleration in the hole was average at best. He was much better suited to a power running system, where he would use all of that body mass that he had and the explosion he had to get to the hole and maybe run over people. Then, when he was out in the open, he could throw it into fourth gear.

    Adding to the initial criticism we received for choosing Edgerrin over Ricky was the fact that before signing his contract, Edgerrin held out for a couple of weeks, which caused him to miss our rookie camp. We played him sparingly in the first preseason game, but he saw more extensive action in our second, at New Orleans.

    I was seated in the Superdome press box with Dom and Chris. We were one booth away from the owner, so we could see Jim Irsay and Jim could see us. With the offense down in the red zone, we ran an outside stretch play to the right, and Edgerrin ripped off about a seven- or eight-yard gain. We ran the very same play again, and this time Edgerrin made two guys miss before running about 15 yards for a touchdown.

    I looked over at Jim, he looked over at me and gave the thumbs up.

    We wound up going 13–3 in our second season, a complete reversal of our first year and the biggest one-season turnaround in league history.

    #11344
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Ricky Williams was an inter esting character.

    w
    v
    S.I. Vault

    http://www.si.com/vault/2000/03/20/276809/lone-star-ricky-williams-was-hailed-as-a-savior-when-he-arrived-in-new-orleans-but-his-hearts-still-in-texas-and-his-heads-someplace-else-far-away-in-a-world-of-his-own
    ……
    ….Williams, who says only winning will improve his attitude, also
    would prefer to “take all the guys from UT and put them on the
    Saints. It’s not just the quality of the players, it’s the
    quality of the people they were and the way they played for each
    other. There was a deep sense of pride [at Texas]. Like my
    linemen–they were so proud. When they missed a block and I got
    hit in the backfield, they would be right there and say, ‘I’m
    sorry, Ricky.’ You could see in their eyes that it really hurt
    them. In New Orleans when I got hit in the backfield, they’d
    pick me up but I never once heard anyone say, ‘I’ll get them
    next time,’ or anything at all. I don’t know what the problem
    was. I think they were too worried about themselves.”

    …What hurt most, he says, was not that he’d negotiated a bad
    deal, but that he felt as if his teammates had lost respect for
    him and didn’t think he was smart for signing such a contract.
    “Hopefully the Saints will come to me and address [the
    contract],” he says. “But I don’t think they will. Last season
    it bothered me to the point where I thought I would feel better
    playing if I had a better deal. Because we had a tough season,
    it made the contract even worse. I think if I was healthy, I’d
    have hit those numbers. I thought I had a chance until I hurt my
    toe [in mid-November].” Williams shakes his head. “I got zero
    help,” he says, referring to his teammates.

    …Williams traveled to New
    Orleans to check on his house and to meet Jim Haslett, the
    former Pittsburgh Steelers defensive coordinator who was hired
    to replace Ditka. “He doesn’t say, ‘How’s your elbow?'” says
    Williams. “He says, ‘Have you been working out?'” (The answer to
    that question is no. Williams, still nursing his injuries,
    hasn’t worked out at all since the season ended.)
    “His questions bothered me,” Williams says. “And the way, if you
    ever meet a football coach, they always look you up and down
    before they say anything to you. It’s their job, I guess, but it
    didn’t make me feel like a person.”

    “I was in there and Coach Haslett says, ‘Ricky, I’ve heard so
    many things about you, it’s hard not to prejudge you before I
    meet you,'” says Williams. “He said, ‘I don’t want to do it, but
    I’ve heard from people upstairs and the p.r. staff that you come
    whenever you want and do whatever you want, and Coach [Ditka]
    never did anything about it, never punished you or anything.’ He
    said, ‘Ricky, with me that’s going to have to change.’ I looked
    at him and said, ‘It’s not that bad, Coach.'” …. see link..

    #11345
    sdram
    Participant

    He says “We wound up going 13–3 in our second season, a complete reversal of our first year and the biggest one-season turnaround in league history”

    Peyton Manning also played his second season which is comparable to every season since his rookie season before the 13-3 if memory serves correctly.

    • This reply was modified 10 years ago by sdram.
    #11359
    sdram
    Participant

    So, I read what I wrote earlier – it made no sense to me either. So, I’m still norminal right?

    Peyton Manning playing his second season was part of the turn around I would think.

    #11362
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    So, I read what I wrote earlier – it made no sense to me either. So, I’m still norminal right?

    Peyton Manning playing his second season was part of the turn around I would think.

    Well i understood the first post,
    but not this one.

    Anyway, only abnorminal posters
    post here.

    w
    v

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