Post by TheShadow on Dec 24, 2005 21:33:00 GMT -5
espn.go.com
By Pat Toomay
Special to Page 2
Editor's Note: In Part 7 of his series on playing with the defending
Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders, Toomay described how he failed as
"Keeper of the Tooz," and how John Matuszak's subsequent problem behavior
had everybody worried about the Silver and Black's chances of winning
back-to-back Super Bowls.
Having failed in my duties as "Keeper of the Tooz," the job next fell
to a young staffer, a street-smart kid off the streets of New York whose
family connections, I believe, had landed him a marketing job with the club.
I'll call him Jeff Levy. Jeff was popular with the guys, ran errands for
them, hung out, and was generally well-respected. As he put it to me over
burgers at a greasy sthingy near the practice field one weekday afternoon not
long after the Cleveland game, Jeff had been asked to focus his attention
specifically on Tooz. Jeff's task, as he understood it, was to hang with
Tooz and make sure if he got messed up, he did so early in the week, so he
wouldn't hurt the team on Sundays. Jeff took his assignment seriously. In
fact, he performed his job so well that by the end of the season, the last
thing anybody was worried about was Tooz. Tooz had settled down. We'd made
the playoffs. Everyone was eager for a shot at a second consecutive
appearance in the Super Bowl.
In the first round of the playoffs, we beat the Colts in Baltimore
37-31 in the now famous "Ghost to the Post" double-overtime extravaganza.
That victory set the stage for the AFC Championship Game against the Broncos
in Denver. As we took the field for pregame warm-ups, my primary concerns
were the weather and the field. Was the field frozen? What cleats should I
wear? Outside, I walked around, kicking the turf. It was sunny and cold;
the field was partially frozen, but I was wearing the right cleats. There
was traction. I wouldn't have to change them.
Coach Dahms called us up. As usual, the defensive linemen had
assembled in a corner of the endzone. "Let's get some starts," he said.
This was our customary first drill. T.D., facing us, would crouch over the
football. Calling cadence, he would snap the ball. Firing out, we would
sprint 10 yards before returning to do it again.
As the first group moved to the line, I was wondering how much I would
play. As the regular season had wound down, opponents had adjusted to our
designated rusher strategy by running quick traps and screen passes instead
of throwing conventional dropbacks. We had shifted tactics accordingly, so
that those blow-and-go opportunities so prevalent earlier in the year had
gradually disappeared. Although I'd picked up a sack against Baltimore, I
wondered what would transpire on this day. Since our last meeting with
Denver, they'd cut that rookie I'd run around all day and acquired a
seasoned veteran. A repeat of my four-sack performance seemed unlikely.
In front of me, Tooz was dropping down into his stance. Right foot
back, he settled in, digging his foot into the turf. Abruptly, he toppled
over sideways in a heap. I stared at him. At first I thought it was a
joke. But it wasn't a joke. Tooz wasn't moving. He was groaning, but he
wasn't moving. "Jesus Christ," said Dahms. A couple of us moved to him,
shook him. Tooz stirred. Then George Anderson arrived on the scene. We
got Tooz to his feet. George took him into the locker room. Get ready, I
told myself.
Back in the locker room, I found out that Tooz had gotten wasted the
night before, that he'd trashed his room and was just sitting there
shirtless in a stupor when some of the guys came back from a movie at about
11. Evidently, he'd kept it up for the rest of the night, drinking, popping
Quaaludes. What would happen now? Would we pull the switch again, with
Sistrunk playing left end for Tooz while I took over Otis' position on the
right side? Maybe, I thought. Certainly, that's what would happen on most
teams. But then I realized the political implications of such a move. From
a PR standpoint, it would be a disaster. After all, Tooz, by now, was the
poster boy for Raider reclamation. Successfully rehabbing the league's
rejects was one of Al Davis' biggest weapons in his ongoing battle with NFL
commissioner Pete Rozelle. The rejected, rising up, slay the rejector. It
was a powerful story, one of almost mythical dimensions. In a way, it was
the story of Al himself. Would he risk besmirching it by benching Tooz?
Probably not, I thought. Not on this stage. Not in an AFC Championship
Game. If Matuszak could play, he would play. Or at least he would line up
to play. There was simply too much at stake. For Madden, this might have
been the vise critics had pointed to.
As the game started, having fortified himself with caffeine and other
chemicals, Tooz somnambulantly jogged out on the field and took his position
on the defensive line. For a while, I watched him closely, but soon the ebb
and flow of the action overwhelmed my interest in the nuances of this
side-drama.
The first half was mostly a lot of sparring. All told, we ran 41
plays to Denver's 19, but we couldn't put the ball in the end zone. Denver
led 7-3. The score was still 7-3 midway through the third quarter when we
fumbled at our 17. Denver recovered and drove to our two. But then Bronco
fullback Rob Lytle was smacked in midair by Jack Tatum as Lytle dove over
the pile, and the ball popped loose. Mike McCoy, a defensive tackle who
played on goal-line defense, scooped it up and was running for a touchdown
when the play was whistled dead. Although replays clearly showed that Lytle
didn't have possession before he dove, officials ruled no fumble. We were
penalized for arguing the call. Denver scored on the next play.
But the game was far from being over. In the fourth quarter, Snake
hit Ghost with a 12-yarder to make it 14-10. The defense held, but an
interception was returned to our 14 and Denver quickly put it in. But Snake
came back again, hitting Casper with a 17-yard touchdown pass, and we were
only down 20-17 with three minutes left to play.
Momentum had shifted. You could feel it. Another Raider miracle
finish was more than in the cards -- all we had to do was stop them. But we
couldn't do it. Repeatedly, the Broncos gobbled up yardage by running
off-tackle, straight at Tooz. Barely able to breathe in Denver's rarefied
air, Tooz was more than sluggish. He seemed a count behind in every move.
He could barely get out of his stance, much less shed a block. It was
painful to watch him. Later, it came out that a hotel employee had tipped
the Broncos about Tooz's all night pregame "party." Evidently, the Broncos
were exploiting that information now. As the Denver drive continued, our
players started getting on Tooz to try to wake him up, but to no avail.
Finally, during one timeout, our captain begged our coordinator to get Tooz
out. The coordinator, while more than sympathetic, shook his head and
nodded toward the press box where Al Davis was sitting. "It ain't gonna
happen," he said. And it didn't. Denver ran out the clock. We straggled
into the locker room.
In the locker room, as reporters circulated, players expressed rage
about "that call." For many, it was only the most recent example of an
important game being decided by an official's decision rather than by
players on the field. By contrast, Madden took the high road, complimenting
Denver's defense, saying the Broncos earned the championship. But even
Madden had difficulty restraining himself when a reporter asked about the
fumble.
"Hell yes, it was a fumble," he said. "How can it not be a fumble
when one of my guys comes out of there with the ball like that?"
Nearby, a TV was showing yet another replay. "I'm not saying anything
else about it," Madden said. "But look at that. Twenty million people saw
it. Let them make their own judgements."
While Madden appeared devastated as he fielded questions, Al Davis had
gone somewhere else inside himself. Surprisingly, he told reporters that he
wasn't upset with the officials' mistake. Officials are human, he said
gently. He wasn't slamming Ed Marion, the head linesman who'd made the
call. It's a difficult job and it has to be done by men. No instant
replays. It has to be a decision made by fallible men.
"But they say things as if we were ever-loving idiots," Davis said.
By "they," Davis meant NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle and his aides,
who were seen conferring in the press box after Denver scored. A few
minutes later an announcement was made in the press box: Lytle's forward
progress had been stopped, and he was being pushed back when the ball came
loose. Of course, replays showed otherwise.
"The point is, these mistakes happen," Davis told reporters. "But
what I don't like is when they come up with policy explanations. The Big
Lie . They sent one of their guys down and told the official what the ruling
ought to be."
Of course this was speculation on Davis' part, but it was a big piece
of a mindset that never went away. Twenty-four years later, Davis would
again suspect collusion after a controversial call kept his Raiders from
defeating the Patriots in a Foxboro blizzard and move on to a shot at Super
Bowl XXXVI. In the New England game, the so-called "tuck" rule was
intentionally misinterpreted, Davis felt, to reverse the real outcome -- a
Raider recovery of a Tom Brady fumble that would have given the Raiders the
game. Davis' New England accusations, however, were publicly vague or
veiled. Thus, he avoided the whispers that dogged him after the Denver game.
Back then, you'd hear it everywhere. Yes, the Raiders got jobbed, but Al
Davis was delusional. He was paranoiac. A crybaby.
Whatever the validity of Davis' feelings about the Commissioner's role
in the Lytle fumble (and I'm inclined to be sympathetic), something deep in
the Raider heart changed that day in Denver. Raider warmth and exuberance
ossified. A chill descended in its place. For those of us in its
proximity, the shift felt cataclysmic.
Two moments were emblematic. One involved Dave Casper, who'd
performed brilliantly that day, as he had throughout the playoffs and the
entire season. After the game, Casper, while passing Davis in the locker
room, uttered a typical Casper remark: "Well, we're still No. 1 for a week."
By that, Casper meant we'd played hard, we'd lost, it was a tough game
against a good team, Tooz had messed up, and that was the end of it, except
we'd still have the title until a new champ was crowned after the Super
Bowl. Al just looked at him. Uncharacteristically, it was a hostile look.
Not his usual "water off a duck's back" response to irreverent comments by
players. Later, when Davis traded Casper to Houston, Casper's remark would
be cited by some as one reason why Casper wasn't allowed to play out his
career with the Raiders. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, I don't know. But
I do know this. Something changed deep in the Raider heart that day.
Suddenly, the old Raider ambiance seemed in danger of vanishing. And then,
in an instant, it was gone.
It happened right in front of me. I was sitting in my locker, packing
up my equipment. Across the way Snake was doing the same. By now, most of
the other players had departed. Between us, Al Davis was pacing the floor,
back and forth, deeply preoccupied, sucking his teeth, as ball-boy Run-Run
Jones scurried around picking up towels and husks of discarded tape.
Run-Run Jones was another one of those interesting Raider staffers
like Ken Bishop. He'd gotten his nickname, I believe, from his days in
Roller Derby, a sport in which he'd excelled. Now retired, Run-Run worked
part-time for the Raiders, keeping track of footballs during practice,
generally helping with the clean-up afterwards. A squat, thick-bodied
man-child with big eyes, Run-Run had a ruddy complexion and a thick mane of
prematurely gray hair. As Casper once said of him: "Run-Run's never going
to live long enough to look his age."
Run-Run, then, was a sweet, harmless guy, whom everyone liked, and now
he was kneeling beside me as he picked up a towel. In front of us, Al Davis
was pacing. Abruptly, as Davis wheeled, he paused and gestured at Run-Run.
On a knee beside me, Run-Run caught the movement and looked up. He watched
as slowly Al pointed at his mud-splattered boots. Run-Run sighed. Glancing
up at me, he sadly rolled his eyes. Taking a deep breath, he crawled over
to Al. With the towel, he wiped off Al's boots.
After that, everything changed. In the offseason, Al fired a popular
defensive coach who refused to resign and replaced him with a disciplinarian
from -- of all places -- Denver. The resulting chemistry made oil and water
look like a harmonious mix. In May the spiral deepened when Madden was
hospitalized with ulcers. Madden himself attributed his condition to the
Lytle fumble, but one had to wonder about the pressure he was under as
Raiders head coach. The following August, Madden blew away critics forever
with his response to Darryl Stingley after Darryl was paralyzed by a fluke
hit in an early exhibition game. Unquestionably, it was John Madden's
finest hour. Not only as a coach, but as a man. But that's another story.
For me, my most memorable season ever -- my first tantalizing taste of what
pro football could really be like -- had ended. But it wasn't merely the
end of a season. That aborted game in Denver marked the end of an era.
Former NFL defensive end Pat Toomay played in the league for 10 years
(1970-79) with the Cowboys, Bills, Bucs and Raiders. He is the author of two
books, The Crunch and the novel On Any Given Sunday.