Silver and BlueBlood

A Rich Heritage…A Royal Bloodline

Greg Ellis Proves Me Right

Posted by Cap'n Blueblood On July - 13 - 2009
Poor Baby!

Poor Baby!

During the 2008 off-season, I began to call for Greg Ellis to be cut. I contended that, rather than being the leader he was purported to be, he had become a locker room cancer. In a recent radio interview – while on his way out of town to play for the NFL joke known as the Oakland Raiders – Ellis confirmed that he is more than just a selfish whine-bag: he is a moron, as well.

Here’s what the Dallas Morning News reports Ellis as saying:

“It’s a disgrace when DeMarcus Ware comes off the field just so I can get in the game and when the coaches tell him to come on the field, he tries to hide so I can play,” Ellis said during an appearance on ESPN 103.3’s Michael Irvin Show. “And you’re telling me we’re trying to win the Super Bowl?”

“On his own,” Ellis said. “He would say, ‘G, come on.’ And I would tell him, ‘No, DeMarcus, go ahead, man. You’re coming up on your contract year. Don’t mess that stuff up. Go ahead and do you, and we’re just going to do what the coaches, or whoever the powers that be, what they want to do.’”

This is wrong on so many levels.

First, I want you to notice that subtle nuance in paragraph two: the intimation that the only thing this is ever about is your own contract. I know this is professional sports and the man’s livelihood, but for four years, Ellis has made it crystal clear that he puts his own concerns above the team’s one hundred percent of the time. The guy was never underpaid. In fact, his compensation (that commisserate with a first-rounder) was more than adequate to reflect his performance and value to the team.

Second, a few days later on Sports Radio 1310 (the Ticket), I listened to an interview with DeMarcus Ware. He did not out-and-out call Ellis a liar, but he didn’t get his back either. He said, “I think I was in there like 95% of the time.” He said every time he happened to be on the sideline for a play, it was for a valid reason. Ware was certainly in there enough to record twenty sacks on the season!

Third, Ware being off the field has no bearing on Ellis being on the field. They do not play the same position. Ellis doesn’t back up Ware or vice versa. One is strong-side; the other weak-side. Ware won’t say it, so I will: Ellis is either twisting the truth, misinformed, or making up stories.

Fourth, Greg Ellis has to be a moron to think that the media would just bob their heads and accept whatever he said at face value, as though they don’t watch the games themselves, as though they don’t have access to the other player in question. And even if the media let it pass, knowledgeable fans will not.

For years, every time a Cowboy fan saw Ellis on the field, he was reminded of the player the Cowboys bypassed in order to draft him. That would be Randy Moss. While Ellis has enjoyed a career as a serviceable – but never a standout – player, Moss has stretched defenses, caused offensive coordinators nightmares, and established himself as a top five player at his position.

For four seasons, Ellis has spent every off-season bitching and posturing. If it wasn’t money, it was the team switching to the 3-4 (the move that helped finally make him a Pro Bowler for at least one season). Or, it was team management. It was always something. Then, the season would begin and he would be hailed as a team leader. No wonder they have gone nowhere in a dozen years. Leaders like that never take an organization to the pinnacle of success.

So, good riddance to poor, mistreated Greg and good luck to the Raiders.


Popularity: 8% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Is Greg Ellis Really the Good Soldier?

Posted by Cap'n Blueblood On April - 1 - 2009

Honestly, I am weary of hearing and reading about what a “good guy” Greg Ellis is, how he is a leader in the locker room, a team guy, a good soldier. The past three – four off-seasons have shown us a side of this guy that is annoying at best and destructive at worst.

First, he whines and intimates how he wants to be traded when the Cowboys announce they are going to the 3-4 defense and moving him to outside linebacker. After that proves to be a possibly career-saving move, and one that lands him in his first Pro Bowl, he quietens down about that issue. But then, he has this mysterious injury that lingers and lingers while he is in contract talks (“dispute” is more accurate, actually) with Jerry. As soon as the contract is hammered out, he is miraculously healed and ready to go. He later admits that the “financial limbo” made him reluctant to return from the injury.

Every offseason, Ellis complains about the contracts HE signs. He points fingers at management. He shows himself to be a me-first athlete. How on earth can he be a leader of anything? And if he is a leader, where exactly are they going?

Now, in an interview with WFAA (ABC affiliate in Dallas), Ellis seems to blame the Cowboys’ late-season fade last year on management. His reasoning is that they didn’t take care of guys’ contracts and it created a distraction:

“We players love football, we wouldn’t be playing, but you have a responsibility to your family, so those contract things come into concerns,” Ellis said. “That’s typically why owners or GMs don’t let guys, or even coaches, they don’t let you get to that last year because they want you to know you’re either in or you’re out.

“They’re making their business decisions, which sometimes in my opinion is a negative thing, and in my opinion last year it was a negative thing, when it came to our football season.”

Excuse me? Which contracts are we talking about? Haven’t most people accused these Cowboys of being too fat and happy because of the big-time, long-term, and, in some cases, premature, lavish contracts? Is Ellis intimating that he and others were dogging it to protest their contractual situations? Is he saying that financial worries weigh so heavily on the minds of these men who are paid millions to play a game that they just cannot bring themselves to give their all on the field?

Greg Ellis, if he is a leader, is the wrong kind of leader for this team. How can his whining and complaining be any more productive than T.O.’s me-ness?

In the interview, Ellis essentially invites Jerry to cut him. Here’s hoping Jones accommodates him. The guy is not championship material. He has served his purpose: filling his spot on underachieving teams for eleven years. Let him go. Let him find those greener pastures and graze until he is fat and happy.

Please!

Popularity: 2% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

VIDEO

TAG CLOUD

Sponsors