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07-18-2009, 10:41 PM | |
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Bill Reiter: Is Cassel the one player the Chiefs have sought all these years?
Is Cassel the one player the Chiefs have sought all these years?
By BILL REITER The Kansas City Star The last true franchise quarterback to wear a Kansas City Chiefs jersey is already here, sitting where important men sit: in a nearly enclosed, oversized booth, watching waitresses with pleasant smiles hum by and men in business suits strain to catch his words. “They’ve been unable to draft or develop a quarterback,” Len Dawson says. “They’ve tried. They’ve just been unable.” This is how far back you have to look to catch a glimpse of what Matt Cassel might become: All the way to the 1960s and Lenny The Cool, he of the Super Bowl ring, the bronzed-tan glow of the good life, the loving looks of folks who remember winning ways and the special place you get to inhabit if you earn the mantle of franchise quarterback. A franchise quarterback also happens to be the one ingredient any general manager hoping to play alchemist needs if he’s to turn a 2-14 embarrassment into a winning organization. “How important are franchise quarterbacks? You aren’t successful without one!” Dick Vermeil says. “You get by, but you don’t get better. You don’t win big.” Former Chiefs center Tim Grunhard agrees: “That’s what young people are looking for. They want a hero, a hero they can believe in, a guy they can go in the backyard and when they play football say, ‘I’m Matt Cassel.’ We’ve been told time and time again that these guys were going to come in, be the guy, be the face, be the resurrection of the Kansas City Chiefs. And it’s never worked. Never.” Dawson was the last player to have come in, been the man, resurrected the franchise and brought home the trophy. Joe Montana was very good at the end of his career, and Trent Green put in five very fine — at times fantastic — full seasons. But Montana could only take the Chiefs to the AFC Championship, and Green led his team to only two winning seasons. But those names don’t matter anymore. One does: Matt Cassel, he of one good season in New England, a college career without a single start and a contract reportedly worth $63 million, designating him the guy who must lead this town’s football team until at least 2014. “He hit the mother lode, huh?” Dawson says with a raised eyebrow and quick smirk. The old legend nods his head and lets his blue eyes go back in time to when he — like Cassel — hovered between obscurity and greatness. The smirk fades. Something closer to a man knowing how much luck plays a part in life emerges in its place. “You’ve got to earn some respect,” he says. “You’ve got to have some talent around you. You have to have some ability. You’ve got to have the chance to play.” Dawson wants to say how his story offers hope that Matt Cassel can be the real deal, but first we must acknowledge that the Chiefs’ history since Dawson requires — to say the least — some cautious optimism. Let’s start there. ••• Jack Steadman laughs with the rueful insight of a man who’s made his choices and learned to live with them. He had just been asked the question that’s haunted this team off and on — mostly on — since Dawson retired in 1975: What went wrong with finding the next long-term Chiefs quarterback? “That’s been our fault, frankly, since our Super Bowl in 1970,” Steadman says. “We just never developed a franchise quarterback. And that has been a major concern of mine with our scouting staff and coaching staffs ever since.” Those years cover some rather unpleasant ground, a space of history comprised of players such as Mike Livingston, Tony Adams, Bill Kenney and Steve Fuller. “This is interesting for me, because Marv Levy and I really argued about that,” Steadman says. “He just didn’t think that the quarterback position was as important as other positions. But the interesting thing is: Once he got to Buffalo, he had a franchise quarterback who went to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.” That and four Super Bowl appearances. Which gets us to 1983, a place that — if you were mapping out Matt Cassel’s road to $63 million and a Kansas City-area ZIP code — may well mark the starting point. Ronald Reagan was president, “Billie Jean” had just slipped from the Billboard 100 No. 1 spot, and “Beat It” would soon take its place. Dan Marino and Jim Kelly were still available when the Chiefs made their selection with the No. 7 overall pick in the NFL draft. This was to be John Mackovic’s crowning moment, the birth of his empire. He had been brought in to develop a franchise quarterback, to give the Kansas City Chiefs a Lenny Dawson redux, and the greatest QB draft in history happened to pop up in his first year as head coach. One little problem. “Our scouts were really, really high on Marino, but John decided he wanted to meet with the players and find out which was going to be his franchise quarterback,” Steadman says. “So he went to meet with Marino and (Todd) Blackledge in Pennsylvania. And Marino stiffed him. Marino didn’t show.” This is where a quarterback’s chutzpah — that chip on the shoulder that stars are supposed to have — might have altered the arc of his career and the history of the franchise that didn’t choose him. “That made John mad,” Steadman says. “So then he went the next day to meet with Blackledge, and Blackledge showed up with a coat and tie on. And that’s who we selected.” Stedman again laughs ruefully. “And Blackledge just didn’t develop as the franchise quarterback.” So as Kelly, drafted at No. 14, was helping Levy dominate his division, and as Marino, drafted No. 27, began one of the finest careers in football history, the Chiefs became a sometimes good, never Super Bowl-capable, often rudderless franchise with a knack for filling stadiums and making do with three kinds of quarterbacks: •The first-round picks who just didn’t work out: Fuller and Blackledge and, later and deeper in the draft, Brodie Croyle. •The older quarterbacks with a strong pedigree — and some winning ways — but not enough years left to plan an organization around for the long term or win a Super Bowl in the short term: Steve DeBerg, Montana, Green. •The hot free-agents — the next big things — who, it turned out, weren’t: Think Elvis Grbac and the brief Warren Moon experiment. What the Chiefs didn’t have, ever, was that guy to build around deep into the future. ••• Until, perhaps, now. “It’s so important to have a person who your younger guys can say, ‘This is my guy I’ll have around for four or five years,’ ” Grunhard says. “And for the older guys, it shows a commitment to a guy the organization is behind. On both fronts, for the young and old guys, it sets a precedent. I’m hoping Matt can take that responsibility and be that guy for a long time, like Lenny was.” There’s an interesting comparison between Dawson and Cassel, one Dawson himself suggested. “For any of us, you’ve got to get your chance,” he says. Both men saw limited action in their first professional seasons: Dawson threw the ball four times; Cassel, 24. Dawson’s next two years saw him throw the ball only 13 times. For Cassel, years two and three produced 15 pass attempts. Both men languished in obscurity, known more for the men they played behind than their own play. And both men shared the prospect of sudden opportunity meeting a sign of great faith. For Dawson, who was nearly out of football, it came in the form of a last-ditch effort with the Dallas Chiefs and an injury to Cotton Davidson, whom Lamar Hunt then traded away — the first and only trade the former owner made. For Cassel, it was Tom Brady going down, having a breakout season and having millions of dollars heaped onto him. “I had to have an opportunity to play, and Cotton got hurt — kind of like Brady,” Dawson says. “If the guy’s winning and playing well, then you don’t make changes for the sake of changes. But (the Chiefs) were looking for a quarterback and knew the skills I had.” That’s because Hank Stram — a man who had coached Dawson in college, who had seen him prepare and play — was the team’s head coach. And Cassel, off his breakout season, had a similar patron in Scott Pioli. “If Brady hadn’t gotten hurt,” Dawson says, “(Cassel) still wouldn’t be playing.” The old legend smiles. Yes, he knows a thing or two about being underestimated — and about seizing that one chance, that one last hope, after you thought it would never arrive. Is Cassel the answer, finally, to the Kansas City Chiefs’ quarterback riddle? Dawson thinks just maybe. “Apparently, the preparation is there, from what I understand,” Dawson says. “He is prepared. And it starts with that, that he understands what they’re trying to accomplish. After that, leadership has to come with performance. On that, we’re going to find out.” |
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07-19-2009, 08:01 AM | #16 |
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There were also drug rumors surrounding Marino before he was drafted. It really hurt his draft status. Going into that draft, Marino was second only to Elway in terms of raw talent, but the character issues surrounding Marino made people consider him to be a risky choice. Blackledge was considered to be big, tough, a leader, and a winner. If he would have panned out, he would have been a Roethlisberger type -- win ugly.
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07-19-2009, 08:01 AM | #17 | |
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i admit it all seems more clear cut in retrospect, but hearing that we picked the loser for non-football reasons pisses me off....."he didn't use a salad fork! draft Ryan Leaf!"
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07-19-2009, 08:49 AM | #18 |
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I always get a chuckle when people say "Lenny the cool" Len Dawson faced "the cool" in a Championship one time and his name was Bart Starr. Why people use Bart Starr's nickname on Dawson is beyond me. Not a slam on Dawson it is just strange.
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07-19-2009, 08:54 AM | #19 | |
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I've never heard Bart Starr referred to as "The Cool"
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07-19-2009, 09:00 AM | #20 |
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you must be young. Starr was well known as Bart the cool.
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07-19-2009, 09:03 AM | #21 |
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While true, but be honest, the name never really stuck with Starr over the years the way it has with Lenny.
Starr had it, but Lenny has owned it.
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07-19-2009, 09:12 AM | #22 |
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I have always thought of him as Bart the cool. NFL films refers to him the same, it is listed in his bio. It was because of his unflappable demeanor on the field. To Chief fans Dawson may own it but IMO I think most other fans would disagree. I guess it is like the tomahawk chop. Chief fans think of it as theirs most everyone else FSU comes to mind.
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07-19-2009, 09:18 AM | #23 | |
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I think if you were to go to other team sites and ask "Who is known as 'The Cool'?", the majority would answer Lenny Dawson.
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07-19-2009, 09:20 AM | #24 |
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Google says:
Results 1 - 8 of 8 for "bart the cool". (0.23 seconds) Results 1 - 10 of about 304 for "lenny the cool". (0.12 seconds) I thought there would be a lot more than 304 hits for "Lenny the Cool" |
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07-19-2009, 09:27 AM | #25 |
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That would be interesting, it would have to be older fans who were around when they played. Heck if you asked most of the younger fans what QB was known as the Snake they would answer Jake Plummer. I think you may be surprised how many people think of Starr as the cool. I am certain 100% of Chief fans would say Dawson. It was Starr's nickname first and it would be neat to have a poll on ESPN.com asking the question.
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The Trump campaign and Black Lives Matter movement are perfect for each other. Both sides filled with easily led and angry nitwits convinced they are victims~ Last edited by RNR; 07-19-2009 at 09:33 AM.. |
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07-19-2009, 09:35 AM | #26 | |
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07-19-2009, 09:45 AM | #27 |
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It's obvious Marino didn't want to come to KC. You can't blame Mac, especially when Marino had a mediocre off Sr. yr with Cocaine drug use rumors flying around and then to get stiffed at a job interview? Only then to see Blackledge with a great Sr. yr show up in suit and tie. Don't blame Mac. I think most of us presented with these same circumstances would have made the same decision.
But as the ol saying goes hindsight is always 20/20. |
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07-19-2009, 09:49 AM | #28 | |
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07-19-2009, 09:50 AM | #29 |
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07-19-2009, 09:52 AM | #30 |
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Didn't say they were the only team to miss the pick.
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