JG13
Hiker trash
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2016
- Messages
- 4,217
I don’t know. I bet a few people would argue Rae carruth as the scariest wr
I don’t know. I bet a few people would argue Rae carruth as the scariest wr
As a fellow Vikings fan, this is all correct and where @DMoney keeps losing the narrative with his Moss argument. The Vikings traded him because McCombs was cheap and trying to trim payroll to sell the team. The Wilfs (GREAT owners) thought they were getting a superstar and were not looped in on the deal.As a lifelong Vikings fan, I blame Red McCombs. He wasn’t a good owner. I think McCombs being cheap, not getting a stadium paired with some of Moss’s antics made that trade happen.
Firing Green was the beginning of the end for Moss in MN imo. McCombs really screwed that whole situation up and I personally think it fueled some issues. Not absolving Moss of his problems off the field, but he has spoken candidly multiple times about what Green meant to him. And McCombs firing probably our best coach not named Bud Grant after his first losing season ruined the relationship between the FO & Moss.
Because he didn’t need to. That argument is like saying Steph Curry doesn’t shoot enough mid ranges.Even in that clip, Belichick was joking about how Moss refused to go over the middle.
I’ll take a guy who may only be 95% as talented but can do everything and doesn’t need to be treated like a child.
Moss signed with Notre Dame. He went to FSU. He ended up at Marshall. He dropped in the first round. The Vikings let him go in his prime. He quit on the Raiders. There’s a pattern there.As a fellow Vikings fan, this is all correct and where @DMoney keeps losing the narrative with his Moss argument. The Vikings traded him because McCombs was cheap and trying to trim payroll to sell the team. The Wilfs (GREAT owners) thought they were getting a superstar and were not looped in on the deal.
Besides firing Green, the end of Moss in Minnesota began with, sadly, the tragic death of Korey Stringer in training camp 2001. He was Moss' best friend on the team and he never recovered from that. This also aligned with both Green (father figure) and Cris Carter's (mentor) last year in Minnesota. There was zero talk about Moss being a distraction prior to these events. He still is responsible for his actions thereafter, but between Stringer, Carter, and Green, everything fell apart for him over the course of about 6 months and he didn't have the mental fortitude or support needed to overcome it. That's a lot to overcome all at once. Once he got to a stable organization and team in New England, look what happened.
or Don BebeWho dreams of being Steve Largent
He obviously needed to be handled with delicate gloves. But so do a lot of superstars. I do agree, had the Wilfs been the owners from the jump he probably doesn’t leave MN in his prime.As a fellow Vikings fan, this is all correct and where @DMoney keeps losing the narrative with his Moss argument. The Vikings traded him because McCombs was cheap and trying to trim payroll to sell the team. The Wilfs (GREAT owners) thought they were getting a superstar and were not looped in on the deal.
Besides firing Green, the end of Moss in Minnesota began with, sadly, the tragic death of Korey Stringer in training camp 2001. He was Moss' best friend on the team and he never recovered from that. This also aligned with both Green (father figure) and Cris Carter's (mentor) last year in Minnesota. There was zero talk about Moss being a distraction prior to these events. He still is responsible for his actions thereafter, but between Stringer, Carter, and Green, everything fell apart for him over the course of about 6 months and he didn't have the mental fortitude or support needed to overcome it. That's a lot to overcome all at once. Once he got to a stable organization and team in New England, look what happened.
Luka was also traded in his prime and wanted to be there, so it's really a terrible argument.Moss signed with Notre Dame. He went to FSU. He ended up at Marshall. He dropped in the first round. The Vikings let him go in his prime. He quit on the Raiders. There’s a pattern there.
Randy Moss was a 27-year-old man when Minnesota let him walk. Why did he need a father figure and a mentor to act like a grown up?
Fitzgerald was in a much worse franchise in Arizona and never caused problems. All he did was finish second in yards all time (ahead of Moss), lead that franchise to the Super Bowl, dominate the playoffs and excel at every aspect of playing receiver.
Give me that kind of guy every day if my job is on the line.
Or Fred Bilitnikoffor Don Bebe
And if Luka follows that up by quitting on the Lakers and telling reporters “I only try when I feel good,” how do you think that would impact his GOAT case?Luka was also traded in his prime and wanted to be there, so it's really a terrible argument.
He played 45 more games than Moss, I’d hope he’d beat him yards and receptions. He was 35 TDs behind Moss.Moss signed with Notre Dame. He went to FSU. He ended up at Marshall. He dropped in the first round. The Vikings let him go in his prime. He quit on the Raiders. There’s a pattern there.
Randy Moss was a 27-year-old man when Minnesota let him walk. Why did he need a father figure and a mentor to act like a grown up?
Fitzgerald was in a much worse franchise in Arizona and never caused problems. All he did was finish second in yards all time (ahead of Moss), lead that franchise to the Super Bowl, dominate the playoffs and excel at every aspect of playing receiver.
Give me that kind of guy every day if my job is on the line.
And your response to his quote shows how you absolutely bought into the media-twist of his quote. Some context...And if Luka follows that up by quitting on the Lakers and telling reporters “I only try when I feel good,” how do you think that would impact his GOAT case?
Moss didn’t lose three people. One guy died (which impacted the whole team) and a couple of other guys got new jobs. Grow up. You’re a 27-year-old professional.
What other GOAT needed a baby sitter?
His quote about quitting matched the film of him quitting. Look at his production at Oakland, and then compare it to guys like Calvin/Fitz/Andre who played their entire careers with franchises like Oakland.And your response to his quote shows how you absolutely bought into the media-twist of his quote. Some context...
Boyyyy...I know people in Philly that wont even talk about this guy in private.
(going to be a sophomore). Has the OSU offer already. But its a business with Marvin...so obviously a heavy lean but no lock just yet.
And yet you continually ignore that I have said he is accountable for his actions. We can agree to disagree on the weight of it all.The quote about quitting matched the film of him quitting. Look at his production at Oakland, and then compare it to guys like Calvin/Fitz/Andre who played their entire careers with franchises like Oakland.
When you need to make excuses for a player at every stop since college, he’s probably the problem.
I agree, although Calvin is close.But let's stop pretending he isn't the most athletically talented WR to ever do it.
Well then we can both agree to root for Jefferson because that guy is the epitome of hard work, production, and making his teammates better.I agree, although Calvin is close.
I’m just a big believer that championship sports is about talented players with character. Not personal life stuff, but team character. Michael Irvin was a maniac off the field but he was the ultimate team guy and a winner. That’s why he’s a lifelong Cowboy wearing three rings.
The Spurs and Patriots were boring but won everything. Nick Saban prioritized football character in recruiting during his dominant run. The Chiefs have some nut jobs but they play the game hard, practice hard, and have an elite intangible guy driving the ship. LeBron and Steph Curry never cheat the game.
That’s what greatness is to me.