|
this is a discussion within the Saints Community Forum; Um, I remember the Saints saying that they had changed their defense this past season to feature Sammy Knight. The result was a bad defense... they said Knight did not play up to expectations. Here's a quote from the TP: ...
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
04-10-2003, 03:57 PM | #1 |
5000 POSTS! +
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 5,631
|
Knight
Um, I remember the Saints saying that they had changed their defense this past season to feature Sammy Knight. The result was a bad defense... they said Knight did not play up to expectations. Here's a quote from the TP:
"Knight is the only Saint to start every game the past four seasons. He led the team with a career-high 127 tackles and five interceptions last season. He earned his first Pro Bowl berth in 2001 after making 120 tackles and leading the team with six interceptions and five fumble recoveries. " Now, I know it was Knight who voided his final year, but let's be real. The Saints pre-empted it. I'm just confused. The guy went to the Pro Bowl in 01. In 02, he had one fewer interception and 7 more tackles. How is that getting worse? Also - FOR GATORMAN - Here are some more quotes from Sammy Knight about the Saints. I think you'll see that they are basically the same as what Turley, that crazy loon, was saying. "My feelings are it's kind of a repetitive thing," Knight said. "They let Sam Mills go. They let Wesley Walls go. They let Willie Roaf go. They let Joe Johnson and La'Roi Glover go. And they let Sammy Knight go. "When they traded Willie Roaf away for a fourth-round draft choice, I was sitting there scratching my head. I was just wondering, 'OK, this is a guy who played with us for 10 or 11 years and went to 10 straight Pro Bowls. And they just trade him away like that.' "That's kind of a pattern I picked up on," Knight said. ". . . I thought we had a core (of players) about three or four years back. We kept being promised that we would keep the core together, and the core wasn't kept together." |
Latest Blogs | |
2023 New Orleans Saints: Training Camp Last Blog: 08-01-2023 By: MarchingOn
Puck the Fro Browl! Last Blog: 02-05-2023 By: neugey
CFP: "Just Keep Doing What You're Doing" Last Blog: 12-08-2022 By: neugey |
04-10-2003, 06:07 PM | #2 |
1000 Posts +
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 1,879
|
Knight
i read it too wd. it took many years of head shaking before i accepted it as a business. emmitt did it as best i\'ve seen but also had the chance to......remember they did offer turley the money.......i thought sam mills was great but they all get let go or ousted sooner or later, that\'s why i applaud the ones who do get the money and deserve it. i hope they don\'t shank horn..........smitty
|
04-10-2003, 07:32 PM | #3 |
5000 POSTS! +
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 5,631
|
Knight
I understand that every team will have players who have spent years and made a name for themselves with one team and then get old and get released. That\'s nothing new. What\'s amazing to me though is that the Saints get rid of players before they\'re old or past their prime - In the last two years you could chalk up Glover, Johnson, Turley, Knight, Roaf...
I\'m sure some of you will rush in with that same old argument - but some of these players CHOOSE to leave, like Knight, who voided his contract, or Turley, who turned down an offer. I know that. My point is that other organizations do not lose veteran talent like we do... regardless of the reason. Something is wrong when a team can\'t keep a starter for more than three years. Consider... and correct me if I\'m mistaken, but as far as I know... Fontenot is the ONLY player on offense that was here before Haslett. He may leave this year. On defense, only Howard is left. Our kickers are different. SO is our return man. Now I know turnover in the league is high, but I\'m pretty willing to bet that you can\'t find a whole lot of other teams that are likely to have less than 2 starters in 2003 that weren\'t on the team in 1999. I also know that the Haslett regime is trying to build from the ground up, but come on. Did letting Glover get away help us? Joe Johnson? I\'m just saying that there is something abnormal and I haven\'t heard a lot of people here actually want to recognize that fact. They usually blow it off and attribute it to the crazy ramblings of a mental case left tackle. Well here\'s another example of a solid, pro bowl caliber player saying the same things about the Saints. |
\"Excuses, excuses, excuses. That’s all anyone ever makes for the New Orleans Saints’ organization.\" - Eric Narcisse
\"Being a Saints fan is almost like being addicted to crack,\" he said.[i]\"You know you should stop, but you just can\'t.\" |
|
04-11-2003, 01:42 AM | #4 |
Faqda Falcons
|
Knight
I agree WhoDat. There have been numerous times in the past where I\'ve been left befuddled about the Saints not re-signing players. One of the biggest that always came back to haunt us was Morten Andersen. There have been many others, though. Sam Mills, LaRoi Glover, Joe Johnson, Willie Roaf, Wesley Walls. All have been to Pro Bowls with other teams. What were the Saints thinking in letting some of these guys go and signing players that never amounted to squat? Sometimes I wonder if they WERE thinking. Of all the players the Saints gave up on in the past that I\'m glad they did was Rickey Jackson. Not because I didn\'t like the guy, but if any former Saint deserved a Super Bowl ring, it was that man. Even though it was with the 49ers, I was glad to see him on a championship team. Maybe one day the Saints will see the light on this situation and change their philosophy. We can only hope.
|
People shouldn't be afraid of their government. Governments should be afraid of their people.
|
|
04-11-2003, 06:44 AM | #5 |
1000 Posts +
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 1,879
|
Knight
out of the bunch, as i stated before walls was the last head shaker for me. i could\'nt believe it was just the extra money he wanted that sent him on his way.......roaf was getting up there although still a solid performer, the personal situation is hard to swallow. i guess if you got em all together for a question and answer some may back knight as i probably would, others may have different reasons......every time a team has a coaching change there\'s always a house cleaning and the saints probably lead the league in that. smitty
|
04-11-2003, 09:29 AM | #6 |
Kinder, gentler
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: dirty south
Posts: 3,889
|
Knight
Sam Mills wanted more money than the Saints thought he should be paid. Hell, even I was a LITTLE suprised at how prosperous his career was with the Panthers. Who knew he was going to continue playing at that level. I for one thought he was past his prime. Would I have liked to have seen him retire as a Saint? Yes, but in the back of my head is that voice that is constantly reminding me that this is a business.
The past several years there has been problems in the locker room. Joe Johnson was a big part of that. I have no problem in letting these types go, as they do more damage to your team than good. That\'s why neither Moss nor Owens would ever play on my dream team- too much of a distraction, and I hate that. I\'ll probably never know what all happened between the Saints, Willie Roaf, and Joe Horn, and their personal lives, but Roaf was the one asking for the trade. Apparently things were a little to uncomfortable, and had it been my wife, I can\'t say as I\'d blame him. But this kind of \"As The World Turns\", micky mouse bull****, has no place in the locker room. But this is not written to defend the Saints organization, letting Walls, Glover, and Knight go never made sense to me. I COULD speculate on how evil the organization is for letting these players go, but maybe they didn\'t fit into the defensive scheme. I firmly believe that if Zook was still here, so too would Glover and Knight. But that\'s neither here nor there, people make mistakes, it\'s part of life. The only thing that I am concerned with is someone, anyone, bringing a SB team to NO, by any means necessary. |
The waiting drove me mad....
I don't want to hear from those that know... Everything has changed, absolutely nothing's changed Eddie is a....draftnik? |
|
04-11-2003, 12:07 PM | #7 |
5000 POSTS! +
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 5,631
|
Knight
You know, you can make an argument for anything. Glover couldn\'t stop the run. Roaf was old, injured, and a distraction. Knight is too slow, past his prime, wants too much money. Sam Mills was over the hill.
Bottom line - Glover went to the Pro Bowl last year. Roaf went to the Pro Bowl last year. Knight\'s year last year was as goos as his Pro Bowl year of 2001 - he just played on a terrible defense, and the Saints expected him to be Superman. Sam Mills play didn\'t drop off when he left. He may have even gone to the Pro Bowl after leaving NO, I don\'t remember. That\'s the bottom line to me. You can say whatever you want about these players. To me, I see a team that gave away a fairly young and very talented Pro Bowler at DT and replaced him with Grady Jackson. I see a team that gave away a LT whose been in the league for 12 years and gone to 10 pro bowls for a BIGGER distraction who WASN\'T as talented on the field... who they had to get rid of the following year. I am now watching as they let Knight go. Could Mitchell end up being as good or better than Knight for a long time? Sure. But if there\'s anything we need on defense it\'s talented veterans to hel pteach and control a group of guys that look to be very young and inexperienced. You want to talk business... well you guys tell me, who would have impacted this team\'s success rate more? Who is the better value? Glover or Jackson? Roaf or Turley? Walls or Cam Cleeland... or David Sloan? Have they made good moves? Absolutely. Deuce for Ricky was great. That was a smart decision. But look at of the other less obvious moves. They got rid of Willie Jackson and brought in Jerome Pathon. In \'01 Willie had 81 recptions for 1046 yards and 5 TDs. Pathon had 43 receptions for 523 yards and 4 scores. Yes, I know Stallworth came in and that made a difference... but at least Jackson could go over the middle and not get killed. Every team makes good decisions and bad ones. It seems to me like the current regime is pretty good at the draft and down right bad when it comes to free agency... especially when it involves our higher profile more talented players. |
\"Excuses, excuses, excuses. That’s all anyone ever makes for the New Orleans Saints’ organization.\" - Eric Narcisse
\"Being a Saints fan is almost like being addicted to crack,\" he said.[i]\"You know you should stop, but you just can\'t.\" |
|
04-11-2003, 12:33 PM | #8 |
Kinder, gentler
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: dirty south
Posts: 3,889
|
Knight
There\'s never an easy answer when you are stuck between a rock and a hard place, and nothing you can say would change my opinion on the Roaf incident, because what little I do know is that the general populace will most likely NEVER know the complete story. So how am I to judge when I don\'t have all the facts??? I\'m a Tech grad, and was not happy when they traded Roaf...especially for a conditional pick. You are going to sit there and tell me that when the management was looking over what they could do, they thought the best thing would be to get rid of a 10 time pro bowler??? A monkey could make that decision. And lest we all forget about that tragic year when Ricky Williams was a rookie, Roaf making it publicly known that if things did not change, he wanted out of NO. Can you blame him for not wanting to play on a losing team? No, but that street runs both ways, my friend. Players have just as much right to say they don\'t want to play for a losing team (a team that is also paying their salaries) as the teams does to make statements like, he\'s past his prime, or he can\'t stop the run. All I\'m saying is that there is alot behind the scenes that we don\'t know about. I\'m not pointing the finger at any one person, like I stated previously, I\'m still scratching my head on Glover, Walls, and Knight. But putting all the blame on the organization is...for a lack of a better word dumb. You stating that you can make an argument for anything is broad, and goes both ways. So we can sit here all day long and make an argument for anything and get nowhere. But that\'s a typical day here at B&B boards.
P.S. Bottom line- Glover went to the Pro Bowl last year. That\'s poor, considering every team has at least one player representing them at the Pro Bowl, and he is head and shoulders better than anyone on that team, except Woodsen, who was hurt due to the suspension. Had Glover been with the Saints last year, he more than likely would be sitting at home watching the Pro Bowl on TV, with those decent stats. |
The waiting drove me mad....
I don't want to hear from those that know... Everything has changed, absolutely nothing's changed Eddie is a....draftnik? |
|
04-11-2003, 01:34 PM | #9 |
5000 POSTS! +
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 5,631
|
Knight
I think you\'re taking two situations - the Roaf and Turley situations - in which the players were disgruntled BEFORE they left or were short-changed by the Saints and applying to to ALL situations.
Again - I understand why they let Roaf go. I understand why they\'re doing it with Turley. But, there are two options here. A. Those two cases are special situations and most player that they let go are not distractions or disgruntled players wanting tons of money that they don\'t deserve. If you believe this is true, then the Saints are consistently letting good veteran players with no glaring problems leave, b/c... who knows? They just don\'t want to pay them what they deserve? OR B. Every Pro Bowler and other quality veteran that they\'ve let leave in the last few years IS disgruntled BEFORE he leaves. If that\'s the case then why are the veterans, who have been in the league for a while and know what\'s going on the ones who are always unhappy? Either way it\'s not a good thing. Either this organization screws players and it takes a few years for younger players to realize what\'s going on and once they do they all leave feeling shafted, OR the Saints just give away good players b/c they\'re too cheap to keep them. That\'s lose-lose to me. I guess you\'ll probably say that hindsight is 20-20, but c\'mon. Did you really ever think that letting Glover go was a GOOD idea? Joe Johnson? That would be like them letting Howard and Grant go this year. Those guys were the best two performers on our defense. They were the anchors. Seriously - give me the rational that says, we\'re going to let our pro bowl caliber DT and DE go in free agency this year and replace them with Willie Whitehead or a rookie and Grady Jackson. |
\"Excuses, excuses, excuses. That’s all anyone ever makes for the New Orleans Saints’ organization.\" - Eric Narcisse
\"Being a Saints fan is almost like being addicted to crack,\" he said.[i]\"You know you should stop, but you just can\'t.\" |
|
04-11-2003, 01:58 PM | #10 |
Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 20
|
Knight
I think you guys can complain all you want about who the saints management let go, but you must not forget one thing, this current saints management has made the saints a steady contender for the FIRST TIME EVER! I a huge fan and i have probally spent 18 out of the 20 years of my life watching the saints not being able to compete with the nfl, and i wasn\'t old enough to remember before my time with what i hear resembled current day Bengal status. But it is the Haslet years that has given the saints for the first time the ability to be a STEADY superbowl contender. I truley believe that they have let certain people go for reasons, maybe not all but the majority. I became a huge fan during the ditka years where we won maybe 5 games and the league was probally surprised by that. but now,with our personel, the saints play 9-7 and the critics get mad that the saints dont win the superbowl. hey you take that record and put it on an early saints record and have shocked a bunch of people. All i am saying is that the haslet years started off with a band and then meloded out with horrible finishes but before its all over the saints will play in the big game under the loomis, haslet years,
|