
01-02-2005, 09:26 AM
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Head Coach
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http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?C...&ID=200750&r=0
Quote:
Ex-Buckeye Vrabel left Steelers for Patriots and chance to start
Sunday, January 2, 2005 By STEVE DOERSCHUK Repository sports writer
NEW ORLEANS Mr. and Mrs. Vrabel had a good laugh at the weird turn on their road to the Super Bowl.
Mike Vrabel played for the Steelers from 1997-2000 and would have stayed had they made him a good offer. They didn’t, and the linebacker from Walsh Jesuit High School escaped to New England via unrestricted free agency.
The Patriots and Steelers wound up colliding in the AFC Championship game.
“My wife (Jen) told me, ‘Well, I guess you get to find out if you made the right decision,’ ” he said.
He guesses that he did. He was speaking Thursday from New Orleans, where the Patriots are preparing to face the Rams on Sunday.
“It’s a Super Bowl,’’ Vrabel said. “It’s the world championship ... the most watched sporting event in the world. This is not just another game.’’
Who knows if he could have made a difference for the Steelers had they kept him. The fact remains he’s in New Orleans with New England.
Part of what made the Patriots attractive was playing time.
“I knew Bill Cowher wanted me back,’’ Vrabel said. “Not the way he wanted Jerome Bettis or somebody like that, but he said he wanted me. I also knew the role that was waiting.’’
He had played 51 games in Pittsburgh under Cowher without ever starting.
“I knew there were gonna be more opportunities for me in New England.’’
Have there ever. He has started 14 games, including both playoff victories.
He had a great game against the team he grew up rooting for, making 10 tackles against the Browns, including one that threw James Jackson for a two-yard loss, and one that sacked Tim Couch.
That helped erase a 2-year-old memory of a game against the Browns in which he was the goat. The Browns trailed 15-13 and seemed not to have enough time to reach field goal range. However, a late hit by Vrabel on Couch gave the Browns 15 valuable yards. They won on a 39-yard field goal on the game’s last play.
Vrabel grew up in Stow, attending Browns games coached by Cowher, an assistant in the late 1980s, and Belichick, the head man from 1991-95. Now, he has played for both in the NFL.
“Cowher was a motivator and a high-drama guy,’’ Vrabel said. “That was his personality, and he let it show. Bill (Belichick) is more reserved and behind the scenes. But he’s the coach of a championship football team.
“They don’t pay him to entertain us. He does it by getting his team to play his scheme. If you’re a professional athlete and you can’t get motivated, you won’t be a professional athlete for long.’’
Vrabel is an Ohio guy through and through. He loved playing for Walsh Jesuit and has fond memories of playing at Massillon.
“If you want to talk about a big high school game,’’ he said, “playing in front of 15,000 in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium is it.’’
At Ohio State, he set records in sacks with 36 and tackles for loss with 66. He was Big Ten defensive player of the year in 1996. At 6-foot-4, 250 pounds, he was judged too small to play end and maybe too slow to be a linebacker in the NFL; thus, he slipped to the third round (No. 91 overall) of the 1997 draft.
He had his moments in Pittsburgh, none bigger than against the Patriots in the 1997 playoffs, when he forced Drew Bledsoe to fumble inside the two-minute warning, preserving a 7-6 win. But he was a backup who dreamed of being a starter.
Vrabel was interested in joining the Browns. However, the new head coach, Butch Davis, was known for turning safeties into linebackers because they could offer good speed. Vrabel went the opposite direction in Pittsburgh, having been converted from end, his position at Ohio State, to linebacker.
“My agent said the Browns were looking for a guy like Dwayne Rudd to play on the weak side,’’ Vrabel said. “They had somebody to play over the tight end in Jamir Miller.
“It would have been nice. Some things don’t work out.’’Some things do. The Patriots added several key players, including Vrabel, who helped turn around a team that went 5-11 last year.
“We struggled early, got to 5-5, then got on a big roll,’’ Vrabel said. “We’re a bunch of has-beens and never-will-bes. We became a team, and here we are.’’
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