This is being written just after Cleveland losing to that team in Maryland on December 30. I had originally planned on writing about something totally different, but that is not possible. My mind is going faster than my fingers can type. Ugh!!!! The season is now over…probably. Tennessee and Indy need to tie but that never happens, right? So, when you read this we are either complaining about the ten thousand different reasons why we didn’t make the playoffs or celebrating the unbelievable miracle that even Franco Harris wouldn’t believe. This team stresses me out. All week long on my Twitter account, @VintageSteelers, EVERYONE was giving their opinions and reasons why we would make the playoffs and why we would not. Here’s my reason why we didn’t, or would not, make the playoffs…JUST BEAT OAKLAND!!!!! Are you kidding me. We can’t beat the freakin’ Raiders. That is totally inexcusable. Many will blame Coach Tomlin. Many will blame Chris Boswell (psst…Roy Gerela missed more FGs). Many will blame the referees. There sure was a ton of drama surrounding this team this year.
Category: All Articles
In His Own Words: Jovon Johnson
Hi my name is Jovon Johnson, a former player for the beloved Pittsburgh Steelers. Being a professional player for 13 years has given me a much deeper understanding of the sport. An understanding you’d have to experience to truly understand so I decided to think a little deeper from experience.
I come from an era where the best players are supposed to play, but that’s not the case here. We are intertwined with a time where sports politics are ridiculous. Where in fact the best players don’t always play, but instead investments are more important. It’s not what you know, but in fact who you know and your relationship with that team or individual.
The Steelers of ’69
So around Thanksgiving of 2017 I’m hanging out with my lovely wife and we’re both screwing around on our smartphones. I’m messing around on Twitter scrolling through the hundreds of tweets that the people and accounts that I follow were putting out that day. I had just created my own Twitter page so I was new to this Twitter thing. It’s amazing that there is a Twitter page for virtually everything…dead presidents, cars, favorite sports teams, etc. If you want someone’s opinion about anything, and I mean ANYTHING, you just need to search on Twitter for it.
Anyway, as I was thinking to myself that there is an account for everything it dawned on me that there was something not out there that I couldn’t believe wasn’t actually being discussed. Not one account for the greatest sports team in the history of the NFL, the 1970s Pittsburgh Steelers. Could it be? I told my wife this and she told me to start one. How do you start an account on Twitter that you are not associated with? Has to be some sort of law being broken. So on that day @VintageSteelers was born. How hard can it be? Throwing things out there about the greatest dynasty in NFL history. There’s an endless supply of photos on the internet and ideas in my head. To me, the 70s Steelers, and their success, started in 1969. So, let’s take a look back at 1969.
Exclusive with Steelers Linebacker Donta Jones, 1995-1998
First, can you let us know what you’ve been doing with yourself since your time in the NFL?
Well, I’m still around football. I’m helping raise my family – I have a son who just finished playing football at Maryland. I was coaching but I took off the past four years to officiate games at the high school, middle school and college and semi-pro level.
Does being an official give you a new appreciation for what NFL officials go through?
It definitely does. It gives you a different perspective. You learn a lot of things you can get away with – things you wish you knew when you were playing. Like what the officials do and don’t look at on the field and with players. Continue reading “Exclusive with Steelers Linebacker Donta Jones, 1995-1998”
Video: 1992 Week 4 Pittsburgh @ Green Bay
1992 Pittsburgh versus Green Bay highlights. Despite a big day by Barry Foster, Pittsburgh scores just three points and loses 17-3 to Green Bay. The team went 1-12 on third downs and Brett Favre threw two touchdown passes – including one for 69 yards to Sharpe. .
Continue reading “Video: 1992 Week 4 Pittsburgh @ Green Bay”
In His Own Words: Chris Kolodziejski
What does a retired NFL athlete who played tight end for Pittsburgh Steelers have in common with the cosmetics industry? Much more than meets the eye. As the Founder and CEO of Chella, I made a special connection between my time playing professional football for the Pittsburgh Steelers and the success my mother found when I was growing up.
When I put on that uniform, I became a different person. I felt this tremendous confidence as a man and as a part of a team. It transformed me. I watched my mom transform from a single mother working two jobs into a real estate developer who retired early. It hit me one day, when she put on makeup, she was doing what I was doing when I put on a football helmet: she was transforming, too. announcing her power and her confidence.
Stuck between a Gronk and a Steel place
By Joe Lafferty,
Author of Justin Time, A memoir of Faith and Fight for Life.
Who do you cheer for?
Born and raised in Pittsburgh there are only a few who aren’t diehards for the black and gold of every sport. Steeler Nation is only rivaled by the followers of our Boys of Winter.
Championship success breeds that kind of loyalty and passion. Don’t tell me The black hole Raider fans have more fervor than the black and gold Terrible Towel waivers. That franchise hasn’t won a Super Bowl since Michael Keaton made famous the words “Yeah. 220, 221, whatever it takes,” as Mr. Mom.(1983)
Summary, there are very few places with fans like Pittsburgh. I’m one of those fans.
But there is an exception to every rule.
Exclusive with Former Steelers Quarterbacks Coach Tom Clements, 2001-2003
First, can you let me know what you’ve been doing with yourself since you retired?
Well, I stopped coaching in 2016 and am living in L.A. now with my family. I’m now working with a real estate company with a guy I’ve known for fifty-plus years and went to school with.
What got you into coaching, and as a coach, anyone help influence your style as a coach?
I played thirteen years professionally, twelve in Canada and one in Kansas City. I retired in ’87 after going to law school in Chicago during the offseason. I became a lawyer in Chicago for four years but I missed football. A quarterback coaching job opened up at Notre Dame then and interviewed with Lou Holtz and got the job and worked with him for four years before getting an NFL job.
Continue reading “Exclusive with Former Steelers Quarterbacks Coach Tom Clements, 2001-2003”
The Year of the Bull – Remembering Bill Fralic
1984, the Year of the Bull
By Joe Lafferty,
Author of Justin Time, A memoir of Faith and Fight for Life.
When you get cancer as a kid everybody looks at you differently. I was only eight years old but I knew pity in other’s faces. They didn’t mean it but childhood cancer in the early 80’s, even in Pittsburgh, was rare. It was non Hodgkin’s lymphoma and it came with a 70% chance of survival. Great odds if you’re betting $5 bills at the Rivers Casino but when it’s the life and death of your kid, those odds suck.
Continue reading “The Year of the Bull – Remembering Bill Fralic”
In His Own Words: Larry Gagner
Staking Out Your “Terrytory”
My girlfriend whom I had been dating for quite some time, lived out by the Greater Pittsburgh Airport. I had been recuperating from my automobile accident at the time and still living in Pittsburgh, but I would frequently visit her. Terry Bradshaw, the Steeler’s number one pick in 1970, just happened to rent an apartment his rookie season in the very same complex as hers. One day she excitingly mentioned that she had met Terry Bradshaw at her apartment complex, and that he had invited her over to his apartment to watch “game films” some evening at her convenience. Naturally, I hit the roof when she informed me.