
|

|
AP Photo
|
Troy Aikman is gone. Who will replace
him?
|

| Cowboys would be foolish to trade for Ryan
Leaf March 13, 2001 Print it
I finally have convinced myself that Dallas owner Jerry Jones was
right about Troy Aikman's health, and I can see why he had to let go
of Chad Hennings and Erik Williams. This team needs rebuilding, and
it has to start somewhere. But just because he is out there, this is
no time for the Cowboys to be thinking they have to turn over a new
leaf, especially not Ryan Leaf.
That is just the kind of crazy move we would expect Jones to make
because it is the one that makes the least amount of sense. Jones
loves reclamation projects, and Dallas has become a wayward home for
the NFL's downtrodden. We are the Dallas Cowboys. Send us your
big-headed, your suicidal, your aged. We will feed them and give
them a good home. They will leave us richer than when they straggled
through our door.
Leaf was taken by San Diego in what was the great QB sweepstakes
of the 1998 NFL draft. Indianapolis took Peyton Manning first and
has pounded on the playoff door ever since. The Chargers took Leaf
with the second pick and have paid a terrible price to this day.
After being benched halfway through his rookie season, Leaf
missed all of 1999 with a shoulder injury. Following a strong
preseason in which he won back his starting job in 2000, Leaf stunk
up Qualcomm Stadium with five interceptions against just one TD in
the first two games before getting the hook once again. He came back
to start the final six games, much to the disgust of his fellow
teammates. He had totally lost their respect.
Leaf's boorish behavior was amazingly worse than his all-around
bad play in his three seasons out West. His temper tantrums began
after just three games as a rookie when he blew up in the face of a
locker room reporter and video crew. That was the beginning of a lot
of hard feelings in Charger Town.
While injured in '99, Leaf performed once again before the
cameras, not heaving passes mind you, but exchanging salty language
with a fan visiting the Bolt training camp. He was suspended without
pay last November after a lively profane exchange with his own
general manager Bobby Beathard. It was later learned that he
reportedly went out and played golf at a time when his wrist was too
sore for him to join his teammates at practice.
Even though every football man in the NFL will admit that Leaf
still holds a well of untapped potential inside himself, he dug his
own very deep well to climb out of. "During my career I've never
seen a player that had so much talent do so little with it," said
Beathard of the young, wayward quarterback.
But Leaf is no longer San Diego's Excedrin headache No. 16. For a
measly 100 bills he is now an excess acid inducer for the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers. May they have the strength to endure. Please don't give
in to temptation and trade him to Jones and the Cowboys. You need to
try to save this boy yourself, Tampa Bay. Where's the faith, Tony D?
San Diego didn't receive any offers for Leaf and wasn't sad to
see him go. Most of his offenses against the NFL fraternity were
against his own. He wouldn't sleep in the player dorm at training
camp. He wouldn't wear team-issued gear on the sidelines. He butted
heads with team officials and plainly exuded a blatant "I don't
care" attitude.
Even with all of this, its not surprising that Leaf landed
somewhere. The NFL is that kind of crazy fraternity. If a man has
problems and he looks his teammates in the eyes and admits them,
then he and his strong arm are welcomed back into the fold. Leaf has
lots of talent, and somebody was going to pay him millions to see if
they could tame the beast within him. Just thank our lucky stars it
was the Bucks and not the Pokes.
All of this coast-to-coast movement has taken place while Leaf
has been somewhere in the South Pacific honeymooning. For the
record, he hasn't apologized for anything or looked anybody in the
eyes and admitted he was wrong. Still, the NFL is slow to condemn a
man who stands about 6-5 and throws the pig a mile.
So let's hope that Jones can let a fallen Leaf lie. Let us hope
that Tampa Bay sees through the worthless pile of castoffs that
Jones offers. Let those East Coast shrinks try to tap that hidden
potential. The Cowboys must turn over a new leaf. Please just don't
let it be this one.
|