Steven Nelson is
thrilled to be here, which is the stance virtually every free-agent signee
takes at his introductory news conference. But an endorsement from the
new Pittsburgh
Steelers cornerback seems timely after a turbulent six months.
The Steelers want -- scratch that, need -- players who want
to be in Pittsburgh, because lately it's trendy to find a way out of here.
Le'Veon Bell forced
his way into free agency in pursuit of guaranteed money, even though the team
is convinced Bell did not take its five-year, $70 million offer last offseason
because he wanted a fresh start elsewhere.
Antonio Brown forced
a trade, also in pursuit of guaranteed money, though his issues with
quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger, Coach Mike Tomlin and the organization played a
role.
Morgan
Burnett forced his April 1 release in pursuit of a role as a
starting safety instead of dime linebacker, though some inside the building
believe Burnett suffered from culture shock after eight seasons with the Green Bay
Packers.
The parallel among all three: They wanted out and got their
way.
The Steelers can say these were unique circumstances that
won't permeate the locker room, and that's probably true. But multiple
high-level defections in one offseason is hardly a sustainable model for
success.
While Burnett's departure is more in line with routine NFL
business -- signing Mark Barron to
a two-year, $12 million contract made Burnett expendable anyway -- there's
reason to believe the team will learn from how it handled Brown and Bell.
The Steelers didn't have to tag Bell in back-to-back years
only to remain unmoved on guaranteed money during negotiations.
The Steelers didn't have to trade Brown. They could have
kept him on the roster and fined him during training camp until he showed up
ready to work. Clearly the Steelers didn't want that distraction, but they gave
up the game's best receiver for a third- and fifth-round pick -- less than
ideal, even for a player who sabotaged his own trade value with bizarre
behavior.
Perhaps guaranteed money attached to the last three years of
Brown's deal would have kept him in Pittsburgh. Either way, the Steelers clung
to their traditional contract model, and two high-profile players challenged
it.
In the aftermath, the Steelers are hoping for calmer waters.
They know Pittsburgh is still a desirable place to work. Barron said Tomlin's
blunt approach to coaching was a draw for him. New receiver Donte
Moncrief cited the chance to play with Roethlisberger as a
catalyst for his two-year deal.
The Steelers will want more of these stories in the
foreseeable future, so much so that team president Art Rooney II told a small
group of longtime Pittsburgh beat writers that it's time to
move on from Brown and Bell.
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