Baltimore Ravens, NFL, Ray Lewis

A Selective Legacy


The man who told us in 2011 that we would be living in a post-apocalyptic society of violence without an NFL season has decided to not continue his NFL career. 
That’s right, after 17 seasons, Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis is retiring.
And so now begins the piecing together of his “legacy”, if you are into such things. 
A legacy is basically defined as “what is left” by the person. However, with most professional athletes, especially with Ray Lewis right now, we’re selective on what he leaves behind for us.
Notably, Lewis won a Super Bowl with the Ravens, played his entire career for the franchise and has continually led one of the NFL’s staunchest defensive units. There are the 13 Pro Bowls, the seven first-team All-NFL honors and the two Defensive Player of the Year awards. There is also the compliments being paid by former coaches, who noted how prepared Lewis was, what a model teammate he was and how his passion for the game evoked the same in others.
Ray Lewis might possibly be the greatest middle linebacker to ever play in the NFL to this point, a high honor considering that includes the likes of Mike Singletary and Dick Butkus. He’s a shoe-in, first ballot Hall of Famer.
But let us not write the epitaph of Ray Lewis’ career without mentioning the murder and aggravated assault charges in Atlanta in January 2000. He pled guilty to a misdemeanor charge of obstruction of justice after that original indictment.
The details are still sketchy, thirteen years later. But there were two men stabbed to death and the white suit Lewis’ was wearing that night has never been found. His two friends, that he later testified against, were acquitted in June of 2000. 
No one else has ever been charged with a crime in connection to the murders. 
Then, in April 2004, Lewis paid a settlement with the then four-year-old daughter of one of the men who died, preempting a civil lawsuit. He likewise did the same with the other man’s family.
And as many asked then, why? If innocent, why pay damages preemptively? Why can’t he tell anyone where his clothes are from that night? Why can’t he tell us where he was at the time of the deaths?
For those that say this is drudging up the past, it very well may be – but when an NFL legend retires and everyone else wants to do nothing but pay homage to him, it’s at least worth mentioning. This happened. And we don’t really know what exactly it is that happened. He says he didn’t see anything and was involved in earlier confrontations as a peacemaker.
In the years since, Lewis has greatly rehabbed his image. 
He’s been deeply involved with the Baltimore and Miami communities. The Ray Lewis 52 Foundation, a non-profit entity, provides personal and economic assistance to disadvantaged youth. He’s been a big proponent of disabled sports in the U.S. and in developing countries abroad.
But no one who followed the NFL during the 2000 season and subsequent playoffs can forget how awkward it was when Trent Dilfer was given the “I’m going to Disney World” commercial following the Ravens Super Bowl win, despite Lewis being the game’s MVP. No one who remembers that off-season of 2000 can forget how weird it felt to see him touting religion on the cover of Sports Illustrated in 2006.
And thus we’re left with the quandary of how to handle athletes like this. This isn’t someone who was involved in drugs and became clean, like say Josh Hamilton, who’s dealt with the awkwardness and tension for longer than Lewis dealt with his accusation of murder.
As a society, aren’t we doing ourselves a disservice by not covering all of a person equally? Just because the last decade happened, doesn’t mean it didn’t occur. I get that we live in a very forgiving society, where second chances are not only afforded, but extended rather easily, depending on what occurred.
But I find our failure over the past 24 hours to cover the entirety of the man’s legacy as quite a shame.
This is not how history should be written, with one lens. 
It began before he retired, with the “Football Life” video, and media personalities gushing about what a fine person he was. We must be careful to imply that he isn’t a fine person, based on this incident 13 years ago, yet we must be tactful and forthright by mentioning the charges were filed and he plead guilty to obstruction of justice. Those are facts.
We don’t need to go to a re-trail. Debating his innocence, guilt or connection is irrelevant. He’s not being charged with a new crime or on trial for it now. But you would think that in the hours following his retirement announcement, it would be mentioned. It’s relevant to discuss when considering the entirety of his “legacy”.
And thus his legacy will not be defined by all of his actions, but rather who covers and writes about his actions and which ones they select. And that incompleteness actually says more about us and our media hero worship of professional athletes than it does about Ray Lewis.
I can only hope that others, including myself, will be so lucky as to have our legacy defined by others in a selective fashion that picks the good parts. I’d be a Hall of Famer in something, too.
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Andy Reid, Chicago Bears, Chip Kelly, Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, fired NFL coaches, Lovie Smith, NFL, Norv Turner, Oregon Ducks, Pat Shurmur, Philadelphia Eagles, Rex Ryan, Tony Romo

The Firing Squad


Round and round we go.
The yearly – and highly predictable – coaching carousel in the NFL made it’s big return.
Of the 20 NFL teams that began their off-season Monday, half of them made at least one firing of a head coach or front office personnel.
The names and faces change, but not really. They go from place to place. One man’s trash is another man’s treasure, so they say. If you were an NFL coach or general manager fired on Pink Slip Monday, fret not, you’ll most likely have a new job, in many cases the same as your old one, very soon.
Five NFL coaches were fired Monday, including Lovie Smith of the Bears and Andy Reid of the Philadelphia Eagles, two long-tenured coaches with overall winning records. The list also included Norv Turner of the Chargers, Pat Shurmur of the Browns and Ken Whisenhunt of the Cardinals.
Why did these coaches get fired, but not, say Jason Garrett of the Dallas Cowboys? Or Rex Ryan of the Jets? I mean that inquisitively as to the bigger question, not actually why. I get why – most of these coaches failed to do something, like reach the playoffs, win a Super Bowl, change the culture of the locker room – something. So the “why” is there, but not the “why” of “to what point and purpose”?
A friend texted me after Tony Romo turned into Tony “Oh-No!” again Sunday night, asking if the Cowboys would finally do something about Romo and move on. My response was that though it may be better for all sides, why? Romo isn’t a Top 10 quarterback in the NFL, but he is in the top half of the league, right? So if you’re going to “improve” or “upgrade” the position, it better be for someone, well, better, right? Otherwise, what’s the point? And are we sure Romo is entirely the problem?
The point is the same with coaches. Is Lovie Smith one of the top five or 10 coaches in the NFL? No, probably not. Is he better than half? Probably. Was Lovie the problem? How do we even know? He’s the same coach who guided them to a 7-1 start this season. But what has never improved and been a recurring source of problems is the offensive line. It’s downright gross. I don’t like Jay Cutler, but I fear for his future health all the same with the brutality of the hits he takes each year.
Yet it’s easier to fire a coach than it is to suddenly get a brand new offensive line that works. It may be a severely flawed theory, but it’s one all the same: the coach will make these less than mediocre lineman better, either through film, motivation or some other intangible. Basically, he’ll cover the scouts mistakes on draft day.
That’s like arguing that you bought bad fish at the market, but expect the chef to fork over the greatest tilapia you’ve ever tasted. It’s backwards logic.
But, as we’ve covered, it’s just easier. It gives the illusion and appearance that changes are being made and things are going to be different.  
New coaches! New era! Same players!
The culprit in many of these cases tends to be poor quarterback play or a bad offensive line that can’t produce a good ground game or protect said quarterback. But how much of that has to do with the coach? Generally, it seems as though bad coaches can win with good players (see Jim Caldwell’s Super Bowl appearance with Indianapolis), but good coaches have a hard time winning with bad players. There’s only so much a coach, good or bad, can do. I can diagram a terrific play, but if the players don’t execute it, it’s not a terrific play anymore.
Only 12 of 32 teams make the NFL playoffs, that means roughly 60 percent of the league is done now. If the requirements for coaching in the NFL include making the playoffs every year or two, then good luck with any semblance of job security. Some years you just don’t have it. We’ve rapidly increased our intolerance for meeting fan and front office expectations.
Just because something seems like it should be working or winning doesn’t mean it does for a variety of factors. And what about if you’ve been terrible for a long period of time? For example, when I saw the Browns, they just looked different this year. They were competitive, they were going in the right direction. They ended up 5-11, but they feel like a team that could turns the corner next season. They, too, fired their coach.
So it’s been decreed: you must go to the playoffs to keep your job, no matter who you are. In some situations, you must go to the playoffs more than a certain number of times in a certain number of years, but we just can’t tell you exactly what that looks like. And we’d really like you to win the Super Bowl, even though only 7 franchises have won the Super Bowl in the last 11 seasons.
If we aren’t setting realistic expectations, then we’re expecting unrealistic results.
It’s not to say that some shouldn’t be fired. It’s necessary or just time in some cases. But 5-7 coaches every year? What have you done for me lately, Tom Coughlin? Welcome to the 2013 Hot Seat.
After being fired Monday, many of these coaches were rumored for other gigs on Tuesday – like Reid in Arizona or Kansas City. Lovie Smith might end up as a defensive coordinator for some team on the cusp.
And there’s our punch-line to this bad joke: these guys keep finding six and seven figure jobs in other places, within weeks of being let go for failure to accomplish nearly the same tasks in their old employment. If they were CEOs, they won’t sniff another job like that unless they built something else from the ground up, and never for a rival company.
From this perspective, it’s apparent professional sports still can’t decide if it’s a business or not. Less risk, less innovation. Coaches get hired and immediately get conservative. Take Shurmur with the Browns, again. Though I just partially defended his two years in Cleveland as not being long enough, there wasn’t anything revolutionary about his tenure.
Known for his offensive mind after grooming Sam Bradford’s solid rookie season in St. Louis, his players in Cleveland complained last month at how stale and predictable the offense was.
Predictably, Shurmur got the head gig and wanted to keep it and feared that veering too far from the norm as a head coach and trying radically new things would make for a more volatile fan base and negative media coverage. So he reverted to what everybody else did or does as a head coach. His results: much like everybody else.  
So who’s the hot coaching name this off-season? Chip Kelly of Oregon, who’s revolutionized the college game with his speedy offense. Why would Chip Kelly want to do go to the NFL and become like everybody else? Right now, the odds are long that Kelly will take a job. He turned down the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last year, who had a better team than many of this year’s suitors.
Thus without innovation in the NFL, since there’s so much coverage of doing anything “different”, it basically ensures we get the same old candidates popping up, ensuring that the merry-go-round will just continue.
The same thing will happen next year, another 5-7 coaches will be fired, finding similar jobs in different cities. Maybe it’s a reflection of the times – we’re too impatient to build anything anymore. We’re not patient enough to completely innovate something new and give it time to grow. Coaches don’t stay in the same place very long, to the point where 5-8 seasons is considered a lifetime, either by choice or by force.
Are we fans that demanding, that our power sways those in the decision making positions of our favorite teams feel compelled to make swift change for the sake of showing that they care about what we want? If so, why doesn’t this work with our elected officials in government? They are put there by us, unlike professional sports. Shouldn’t it be the other way around?
Regardless, another post-holiday blues begins to settle in as the NFL winds down, once again with the stark realization that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Someone break the cycle – make real changes to who your workers are, invest in innovation, give it time to grow.
Maybe whoever does won’t be looking for a new coach in two or three years.
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