I can understand why a room full of grown men might not respond well to daily dressing downs, particularly from a new head coach not much older than than they are. But that's the situation in Kansas City. Herm Edwards got his walking papers after a 2-14 effort last season, which, inexplicably, was only half as many games as he won the year before. Scott Pioli, who replaced Carl Peterson as the team president and general manager, hired former Cardinals offensive coordinator Todd Haley to help turn things around.
The Chiefs got right to work on the rebuilding: they sent a second-round pick to the Patriots for Matt Cassel, giving them a franchise quarterback and somebody for Haley, whose success in Arizona landed him this gig, to build the team around.
But Haley's from the Bill Parcells coaching tree, and his brusque manner sometimes rubs people the wrong way. Like, say, Terrell Owens. (I know, I know, it's T.O., but just hear me out.) In 2006, as the Cowboys' wide receivers coach, Haley got into an argument with T.O. during a team meeting, Haley apparently leaked word of it to the media, and Owens didn't appreciate it because, according to this Oct. 2006 AP story, "Haley vowed since training camp that all internal matters would stay behind closed doors."
Owner Jerry Jones even thought about disciplining Haley at the time (though, ultimately, he didn't).
And then, last season, Haley and Anquan Boldin exchanged words during the NFC Championship game, and the year before, Haley got into it with the patron saint of tackle football, Kurt Warner.
All three incidents proved to be nothing; more media creations than legitimate issues between player and coach. But the biggest difference between those examples and Haley's situation with the Chiefs: the Cowboys and Cardinals were winning (or, in the case of the '07 Cards, much improved from the year before under Denny Green). Kansas City has mustered six wins in 32 games. Sgt. Hartman is the cautionary tale for what can happen when you antagonize the wrong guy. Or if you're Haley, when you regularly go off on a group conditioned to losing.
"One coach has a little bit more personable style," veteran safety Jon McGraw says of Edwards, "and the other coach goes about it in a little bit different way."If Haley decided that forcing Brodie Croyle to run the scout team in a dress was in the best interest of the team -- and they were winning -- nobody would care. Parcells made a career out of pushing his players' buttons, and he's got two Super Bowl rings. But Haley's young and unproven, and this is his first go-round as a head coach.
Haley and guard Brian Waters reportedly shared a fiery confrontation in March that, as of last week, hadn't been resolved. Long practices end with relentless running sessions. Players who report overweight are grilled by coaches, dogged by trainers and dangled to the media. Other players have questioned whether Haley's no-nonsense, one-sided approach can work - and whether it will work in time for the Chiefs to keep the faith.
I'm not suggesting he won't be successful -- frankly, I have no idea -- just that if the Chiefs start the year 1-4, we'll be hearing about how Haley is on the hot seat. Just warning you now because it's coming.





















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-14-2009 @ 11:04PM
Ski said...
SHUT UP RYAN!!!! You nust not had anything else to write about.
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6-14-2009 @ 10:35PM
Wade said...
Anything is better than Herm. The fans won't turn on Haley this season.
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6-14-2009 @ 10:41PM
harrill7 said...
Haley won because he had a great QB and a developing offense peak with the Cards. He will find that Cassell is not Kurt Warner-who was a great part of the success Haley had last year. As for the tough stance he is taking, I am all for going by the rules, but withholding pay will make a bigger impression that physical training methods. If a player is over weight just don't pay him until he is at the agreed weight, and if a guy can't get the job done set him free to enter real life. The worst thing for NFL coaches is guaranteed money, but Haley has yet to have the respect he needs to get in the face of a guy 150 pounds bigger than he is, and expect results. I would imagine a guy who can't get along with Warner has a personality flaw of his own to deal with. I would not look for a great deal of improvement from the Chiefs next season.
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6-15-2009 @ 9:28AM
tipcpup01 said...
I'm sorry, but these pansy-@ss Chief players need to quit whining. 2-14??? Yeah, they're losers, by every definition of the word, meaning they don't deserve any say whatsoever in how they get treated. I don't care if Haley has a ring or not. He's the boss, and they're fat, lazy, sloppy pieces of crap. They deserve, nay, they NEED every bit of degradation he has to offer, and when THEY start winning, then they can speak up.
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6-15-2009 @ 11:35PM
gricter said...
At 2-14 and 4-12 the prior two years, any change is an improvement! Players need to button it up and win some games!
Reply
6-19-2009 @ 4:54PM
Dennis said...
quick bitchin...buckle up and show the nfl the chiefs are the best....if you cant do the job...next man up..
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