Burleson’s Exit Could Open the Door to Excellence
By Anton at March 5th, 2010.I can stay silent no more.
When Nate Burleson was signed away from the Minnesota Vikings by the Seattle Seahawks and former General Manager Tim Ruskell, it was an obvious “stick-in-the-eye” type move after the disastrous “poison pill” fiasco with pro-bowl lineman Steve Hutchison. The Hawks gave Burleson a 7-year, $49 million back loaded contract to come to Seattle. At that time, he only had one 1,000-yard season on his resume (and that was playing opposite all-world receiver, Randy Moss). Four years later, Burleson’s 1,000-yard resume is the same. He never reached his full potential here – or so the argument goes. Some may lament his exit from Seattle but for me, it’s indicative of what new head coach Pete Carroll and GM John Schneider what to bring back to Seattle: excellence.
It really doesn’t matter how good he was in the locker room – he didn’t produce consistently on the field. The “threat of the big play” is only a real threat when you make a big play more than twice a year. And please spare me the local boy stuff because nobody cares; this is the NFL, not Pop Warner.
After the Hawks were shredded by Frank Gore and the San Francisco 49ers in September last year, I wrote this. And, unfortunately, nothing changed the rest of the season. When a big play happened, Burleson, most likely, wasn’t even on the field. I say good riddance he’s gone and, clearly, Carroll and Schneider had no intention of keeping him around – I’m sure it’s a HUGE relief to get out from under that contract; let someone else pay for mediocrity (does anyone else find it ironic that the Lions signed him?). He should play second or third fiddle to a legitimate Number One receiver. Somehow, the Hawks – under Ruskell – got so screwed up that they believed Burleson could be the Number One receiver they so desperately needed (and still need).
Deion Branch came here and signed a giant contract; he isn’t a Number One-type guy. TJ Houshmandzadeh isn’t a Number One guy, either. Deon Butler – no matter how much of a “feel good story” he is – will never be a Number One. Name any receiver the Hawks have put on the field over the past five years; not one Number One guy in the bunch. We don’t need another non-Number One guy making Number One money: goodbye Burleson.
Allowing Burleson to walk unimpeded out the door to Detroit is a good sign for the Seahawks. Hopefully, it’s a sign of things to come: Coach Carroll and Schneider will not cling to mediocre. Now, let’s sign Brandon Marshall or draft Dez Bryant and get our passing game out of the doldrums.
Tags: Deion Branch, Deon Butler, John Schneider, Nate Burleson, Pete Carroll, Tim Ruskell





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I like the way you ended the article. We need to get either Brandon Marshall or Dez Bryant. We need to get our passing game back to the top of the league. The last two years have not been Hawks football.
I think Dez Bryant is going to be a superstar. Just ask Deion Sanders.
Sadly, I have to agree with your assesment. As much as I would like to hang onto the hometown boy makes good story line that only works if you, in fact, make good. Aspiring for mediocrity and having people talk about your potential year-in and year-out it not a meaningful achievement for an NFL player. Its time to cut bait and find talent that will produce. The same goes for Deion Grant. At this point we are paying him for the fact that he once was a Super Bowl MVP. For all we have paid him what has he produced for us?
I think you mean Deion Branch, but yeah, Branch is a middling number three receiver. He looks so over matched sometimes its silly.
I also feel it was a stick-in-the-eye when they signed away Nate Burleson to the Seattle Seahawks. I feel it’s their loss!!