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If fescoe wants to be taken seriously he would get the inside scoop on the song the Weis wrote that is about dealing with losing a football game. It's called Cheerio Princess. That's all he ever tells about it though is the title. It's a very senstive issue with Charlie but he likes to write songs.
Also Haley is fascinated with the idea of taking the words from Funky Cold Medina and incorporating them into the verbiage of the plays in the playbook. He sits up hours upon hours in the offseason watching old steelers highlights and trying to make the words of the offense fun for everyone. you won't hear those hard hitting insights in your local pizza parlor. |
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Some of you tards just continue to make me laugh. Fresca reporting that Haley took the... I cant even finish keying that sentence w/o LMAO
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I hope this information is not a repost:
Source: Charlie Weis called every play By Adam Schefter ESPN January 10, 2011 Despite speculation to the contrary, Chiefs offensive coordinator Charlie Weis called all of Kansas City's plays during Sunday's wild-card loss to Baltimore, according to a team source. 610 Sports in Kansas City reported Monday that Chiefs coach Todd Haley stripped Weis of play-calling duties at halftime of the loss. However, a Chiefs source insisted that Haley did not take over play-calling duties from Weis and that Weis called every play in the game, including the controversial fourth-and-inches call that was stopped for a loss. Weis and Haley got along for most of the season, but lately their relationship had deteriorated to the point where it would have been difficult for each to work with the other for another season. Weis recently accepted a job to become offensive coordinator at Florida, where he also will get to work with his son Charlie, a freshman at the school. But one Chiefs source with knowledge of the team's play-calling said Sunday that any idea that Haley stripped Weis of his responsibilities was "just outright lies." Adam Schefter is ESPN's NFL insider. http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6009184 |
Regardless of what happened with the playcalling duties... the Chiefs as a team became unhinged in the second half and that falls on Haley.
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I can't believe that people aren't realizing that the biggest reason for Wies' departure is the fact that his son is attending the university of Florida. There has been little more than hear say that indicates that Haley was unbearable to work for. The fact that he and haley didn't get along is not that shocking considering Weis carries the resume he does.
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Whitlock was on PFT Live today and said that Haley had taken away play calls from Weis a lot during the season and that was one of the main reasons he left. He did say though that he is hesitant to believe anything that KC Radio reports because they throw stuff at the wall all the time, but said that that 4th and 1 call had "Haley written all over it"
He said that Haley is insecure and wants a puppet who he can scream at and blame things on when things don't go right. Also said that the reason Jamaal Charles doesn't get many carries is because Pioli and Haley have problems with guys drafted by Carl Peterson and Herm Edwards. Here is the link. It is in Part 2 of PFT live so just fast forward through the first segment and then click on the Whitlock interview at the end. http://hqplayer.nbcsports.com/Player.html?PID=44 |
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Why did they sign 2 of them to extensions this year? Whitlock has no connections to KC. All he did was complain how he couldn't get access to anything last year. So I'm supposed to believe that he, while living in California now has access to information? Child please. |
"Weis and Haley got along for most of the season, but lately their relationship had deteriorated to the point where it would have been difficult for each to work with the other for another season."
That's the biggest problem right now. |
It's hilarious that Whitlock cautions taking anything from the KC media serious, when guys like Fescoe are simply following the Whitlock formula of any attention is good attention.
It's like the "I learned it by watching you" drug commercials that were on Saturday mornings as a kid. |
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