djnemo65
09-04-2008, 12:02 AM
Seriously, this excerpt from Wojo's season preview cracked me up:
17: The most underpaid person in the NFL is …
Whoever had to write Matt Millen's bio in the 2008 Lions media guide. Millen probably gave the author a choice: scrub the Ford Field roof with an Oral B toothbrush or write the bio.
Excerpts from the bio:
• For Lions President and CEO Matt Millen, success in the National Football League is simple: "The team that wins the Super Bowl is successful and the other 31 teams are not."
(Well, isn't that convenient logic. So Millen is saying that the Lions' 7-9, nonplayoff 2007 season was the equivalent of the Patriots' 18-1 record -- all because neither team won the Super Bowl? Uh, Matt, Lions fans would eat artificial turf if you'd guarantee them a Super Bowl loss. These people haven't seen the Lions in the playoffs since 1999, and haven't seen them win a postseason game since 1991.)
• Millen also believes that no team can achieve that success without the proper leadership from its head coach …
(He should know; he hired three of them in his first six years.)
• … and that is why the decision to hire Rod Marinelli in 2006 may prove to be the very best move Millen has made during his tenure as team president.
(Or not. The author left some wiggle room there.)
• During the Lions' head coaching search, Marinelli distinguished himself as the type of individual Millen believed was clearly needed to lead the Lions.
(Millen to Marinelli during interview process: "What type of individual are you?"
Marinelli to Millen: "The type who believes I'm clearly needed to lead the Lions."
Millen to Marinelli: "You have distinguished yourself.")
• Millen saw in Marinelli a head coach who would emphasize the game's vital elements, including what Marinelli refers to as the "non-talented characteristics" that players must possess in order to be successful in the NFL. Since then, Millen and Marinelli have worked in concert to formulate a roster of players who embody the "football character" qualities Marinelli adamantly deems are necessary for success in the NFL.
(Seriously, $100 to anyone who can tell me what the hell they're talking about.)
The full preview is available here: ESPN - Sneak peek at what you'll see in the NFL this season - Columnist (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=wojciechowski_gene&id=3565175&sportCat=nfl&lpos=spotlight&lid=tab2pos2)
17: The most underpaid person in the NFL is …
Whoever had to write Matt Millen's bio in the 2008 Lions media guide. Millen probably gave the author a choice: scrub the Ford Field roof with an Oral B toothbrush or write the bio.
Excerpts from the bio:
• For Lions President and CEO Matt Millen, success in the National Football League is simple: "The team that wins the Super Bowl is successful and the other 31 teams are not."
(Well, isn't that convenient logic. So Millen is saying that the Lions' 7-9, nonplayoff 2007 season was the equivalent of the Patriots' 18-1 record -- all because neither team won the Super Bowl? Uh, Matt, Lions fans would eat artificial turf if you'd guarantee them a Super Bowl loss. These people haven't seen the Lions in the playoffs since 1999, and haven't seen them win a postseason game since 1991.)
• Millen also believes that no team can achieve that success without the proper leadership from its head coach …
(He should know; he hired three of them in his first six years.)
• … and that is why the decision to hire Rod Marinelli in 2006 may prove to be the very best move Millen has made during his tenure as team president.
(Or not. The author left some wiggle room there.)
• During the Lions' head coaching search, Marinelli distinguished himself as the type of individual Millen believed was clearly needed to lead the Lions.
(Millen to Marinelli during interview process: "What type of individual are you?"
Marinelli to Millen: "The type who believes I'm clearly needed to lead the Lions."
Millen to Marinelli: "You have distinguished yourself.")
• Millen saw in Marinelli a head coach who would emphasize the game's vital elements, including what Marinelli refers to as the "non-talented characteristics" that players must possess in order to be successful in the NFL. Since then, Millen and Marinelli have worked in concert to formulate a roster of players who embody the "football character" qualities Marinelli adamantly deems are necessary for success in the NFL.
(Seriously, $100 to anyone who can tell me what the hell they're talking about.)
The full preview is available here: ESPN - Sneak peek at what you'll see in the NFL this season - Columnist (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=wojciechowski_gene&id=3565175&sportCat=nfl&lpos=spotlight&lid=tab2pos2)