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Tuesday Mailbag: Jim Wyatt Answers Questions From Titans Fans
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Steelers All-Time, All-Rookie Team: Part 3, the Wide Receivers - Behind the Steel Curtain
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Make sense?
When it comes to Steelers digits and the ones that are held sacred and off-limits and those that are exposed to the expansion draft of unknown rookies, nothing really makes much sense.
For example, guard David DeCastro was issued No. 66 immediately after being selected in the first round by the Steelers in the 2012 NFL Draft. I don’t remember there being a whole lot of buzz over this rookie taking the number of legendary guard, Alan Faneca. I realize this was five years after Faneca left Pittsburgh. I also realize that this is David DeCastro we’re talking about. However, what difference did it make in how much time had passed? Wasn’t Faneca more of a sacred cow to the Steelers and their fans even in 2012 than Pouncey is now? In Faneca, we’re talking about the guy who threw the key block to spring Fast Willie Parker on his 75-yard touchdown run in Super Bowl XL. He was arguably the best guard of his era and a candidate for Canton the moment he retired. As for D
Like much of the generation that first learned about football in the 1970s, my friends and I became Steelers’ fans as little kids watching the team rampage through the NFL on their way to four Super Bowl titles in six seasons.
We grew up at the Jersey Shore, on the outskirts of Eagles’ country, but were far enough from Philadelphia that our fandom was not mandatory. That made us free agents and at liberty to choose the most attractive suitor. There were several legitimate contenders at that time. The Minnesota Vikings, whose defense had a cool nickname (the Purple People-Eaters) and who employed a quarterback (Fran Tarkenton) who was a 70s version of Russell Wilson. The Oakland Raiders, who were like a motorcycle gang in pads and whose penchant for cheap shots and dirty play prompted Chuck Noll to famously pronounce that they represented a “criminal element” in the NFL. And the Dallas Cowboys, Oakland’s polar opposite, whose squeaky-clean reputation, pristine uniforms and
Texans Head Coach David Culley s Biography
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