The Hlog, by Cedar Rapids Gazette Sports Columnist Mike Hlas

Entries tagged as ‘Kurt Warner’

Kurt Warner Remains an Arizona Cardinal

March 4, 2009 · 2 Comments

Kurt Warner and his Arizona Cardinals coach, Ken Whisenhunt, had cheerier expressions today (AP photo)

Kurt Warner and his Arizona Cardinals coach, Ken Whisenhunt, had cheerier expressions today (AP photo)

Well, that worked out just the way Kurt Warner wanted it.

And, I presume, the way the Arizona Cardinals wanted it.

The Cardinals and Warner did a deal Wednesday. The 38-year-old QB by way of Cedar Rapids has agreed to two y ears for $23 million, with a whopping $19 million guaranteed.

That was the basic offer Warner put to Arizona, and the team accepted. His signing bonus is $15 million, and his base salary will be $4 million a year.

Everybody’s happy, except the San Francisco 49ers, who wasted their time hosting Warner last weekend. But that’s sports. Had Arizona been deaf to Warner’s proposal, the Niners would have been in prime position to latch onto him.

Now, the Cardinals have to make wide receiver Anquan Boldin happy. Boldin is under contract for two more years (this is an edit, I originally mistakenly said he was a free agent), but wants an extension.

If the quartet of Warner and receivers Boldin, Larry Fitzgerald and Steve Breaston stay together, the Cardinals’ offense will be must-see TV for another year or two.

Boldin is a must in my mind. He’s a tough, talented ball-catcher. Without him, defenses can key on Fitzgerald a lot more. And, as George Costanza once screamed, the whole system is breaking down.

Pop culture references (even those that are 15 years old) … I hate ‘em.

Anyway, the first time Warner quarterbacked the St. Louis Rams to the Super Bowl, it was followed by a lot more winning over the next two years. Do you see the same scenario playing out in the Arizona desert with the Cardinals?

NFL teams — and I’ll bet this is the first time anyone ever used this analogy with pro football clubs — are delicate flowers. Super Bowl losers seem to have a knack for fading away quickly.

So here’s one of those dandy little polls to gauge your feelings on the matter:

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Kurt Warner: “We’re Done”

February 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Kurt Warner made this announcement last Friday on the Tonight Show.

Meanwhile, Mark Bradley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution has the temerity to suggest a) Brett Favre was overrated and b) Warner is better than Favre was.

http://blogs.ajc.com/mark-bradley-blog/2009/02/12/favre-retires-again-say-its-so-brett-say-its-so/

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Clip of Kurt Warner on “Ellen”

February 13, 2009 · Leave a Comment

America loves a dancing quarterback.

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Warner Did New York Once, But He Won’t Do New York, New York

February 13, 2009 · 2 Comments

Steve Serby, N.Y. Post

Steve Serby, N.Y. Post

Phil Leotardo, The Sopranos

Phil Leotardo, "The Sopranos"

Steve Serby of the New York Post thinks the New York Jets should sign free agent quarterback Kurt Warner of Cedar Rapids and UNI to replace the retiring Brett Favre.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/02122009/sports/jets/make_kurt_plan_a_154702.htm

Before I proceed, know that Serby is not the fellow who played Tony Soprano’s nemesis, Phil Leotardo, in “The Sopranos.” That was an actor named Frank Vincent.

The above photos don’t bear it out, but I saw Serby at the Super Bowl this month, and immediately thought of Leotardo, who met a worse-than-usual demise for a “Sopranos” character.

Anyway, it’s not happening, Phil. I mean, Steve.

Warner isn’t going to start over somewhere else, which is what he’ll be in the 2009 NFL season. It’s remain with the Arizona Cardinals or hang up the pads.

Warner turns 38 on June 4 and has said he doesn’t want to play elsewhere. Knowing that, the Cardinals might seek a discount in negotiations.

“I don’t look at discounts,” (Warner’s agent, Mark) Bartelstein said. “Every deal has its own unique circumstances. I don’t go into it with a preconceived notion. You find what the issues are with your client and for the team and try to agree on something that makes sense.”

The Arizona Republic’s story on the matter, including the previous two paragraphs:

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/sports/articles/2009/02/09/20090209cardswarner.html

What doesn’t make sense is going to New York, where Warner struggled through the 2004 season with the Giants. New Jersey, actually.

The Jets don’t have a Larry Fitzgerald at receiver. They don’t even have a Larry David. OK, that’s not fair to Jermaine Cotchery or Laveranues Coles. But it’s a good excuse to include David, a personal favorite.

Larry David, here for no good reason

Larry David, here for no good reason

But things are shifting seismically within the Cardinals, which is weird for a team coming off a Super Bowl run.

Offensive coordinator Todd Haley’s jump to become head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs is understandable, of course. But Arizona Coach Ken Whisenhunt is changing more than that.

Defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast got fired last weekend. Quarterbacks coach Jeff Rutledge got the sack, pun intended, this week.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/sports/articles/2009/02/10/20090210spt-cardscoaches.html

Cedar Rapids/UNI folks will be interested to note in that story that former Washington Warrior/UNI Panther Dedric Ward may become the Cardinals’ new receivers coach. Ward is a two-year offensive quality control coach for Whisenhunt.

How odd would it be for Warner to be throwing passes to receivers coached by Ward? OK, it might not be odd, but it’s still kind of interesting since Warner was a fifth-year senior passing to a first-year freshman Ward when they were together at Northern Iowa.

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Hlas Column: I Was Wrong About Warner’s Legacy from This Super Bowl

February 4, 2009 · 2 Comments

Adds to his status even in defeat

Kurt Warner: Adds to his status even in defeat

I erred.

In Monday’s Gazette, written in the heat of the moment after Sunday night’s Super Bowl, I suggested the thing Kurt Warner would be remembered most for from the game was the interception that Pittsburgh’s James Harrison returned 100 yards for a touchdown.

A couple of days and a thousand miles removed from Tampa, I withdraw the opinion.

Listening to and reading a considerable number of opinions from people in the national sports media, it is high-def clear that admiration of Warner as a player only rose after his Arizona Cardinals’ 27-23 loss to the Steelers.

Harrison’s pick was one moment gone awry. Warner’s fourth-quarter was a superb piece of work that has deservedly been noted and praised by all sorts of folks.

Had any Cardinal capitalized on any of the team’s multiple opportunities to stop Harrison from reaching the end zone on his return of the interception, Warner is a two-time Super Bowl MVP today.

He would have been on David Letterman’s show Monday, and all sorts of new books about him would have hit the stores by the end of this month.

That’s how the ball bounces in sports.

Warner and Peyton Manning have one Super Bowl ring, but Warner’s 8-3 postseason record dwarfs Manning’s 7-8, and Warner has been to three Super Bowls to Manning’s one.

Would Manning have taken this year’s Arizona team to the Super Bowl? We’ll never know. But we know he has played for several Indianapolis teams that were superior to the ‘08 Cardinals and didn’t get to the big game.

A 1-2 record in Super Bowls isn’t remarkable, but Warner didn’t wilt in any of them. He did quite the opposite with the three top passing-yardage performances of all-time in the game.

The three most-prolific games for passing yardage have come from the same player, on two different teams. That alone says go directly to the Pro Football Hall of Fame five years after retirement.

The most total passing yardage (1,156) in Super Bowls is Warner’s. He had three starts. Joe Montana had four. John Elway had five.

In Warner’s two Super Bowl losses, his teams scored a total of four fourth-quarter touchdowns. They lost on a last-second 48-yard field goal to New England seven years ago and on the straight-to-immortality touchdown catch by Santonio Holmes Sunday.

There was no “choke” by anyone in the most- pressurized football game on the planet, least of all the Arizona quarterback.

“When you come to this game,” Warner said, “you want to be part of the greatest game. I have been fortunate enough to be a part of three great Super Bowl games. I am definitely proud of it.”

Had Warner not played well, those wouldn’t be among the three most-memorable Super Bowls.

I’m in the camp of those who think Sunday’s was the best Super Bowl ever. You could never get a handle on it. Once a team looked like it established itself as the dominator, it started getting dominated.

The offenses and defenses of both squads had stellar moments. The game’s final several minutes were fantastic. Players on both sides rose to the challenge.

The NFL, which knows how to do everything else to rule the world, has somehow finally figured out how to have compelling championship games.

Now, will Warner come back for more football? Some say no. Some say he’s had enough, that his life beyond football is more compelling to him right now, with seven kids at home and his First Things First Foundation that requires time and energy.

Warner is a free agent, but it seems unimaginable he would start over with another team.

He’s doing the wise thing by not jumping to any emotional decision.

The Cardinals will be vilified by their fans if they don’t make a serious effort to re-sign Warner, and the money offered will probably be enormous.

Peter King of Sports Illustrated and NBC says he doesn’t think Warner can retire because he’s playing too well.

But it’s assumed athletes hang on as long as they can for the competition and the money.

Don’t assume Warner is one of them.

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Hlas Column from the Super Bowl

February 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Not the fastest 100-yard dash, but hell take it

James Harrison: Not the fastest 100-yard dash, but he'll take it

 

TAMPA, Fla. — He has worn No. 13 his entire NFL career to show his spirituality defies superstition, but Kurt Warner will forever be bewitched by Super Bowl ghosts.

Warner said last week that he has remained haunted by the last-second 20-17 loss his St. Louis Rams suffered against New England seven years ago.

But this 27-23 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday in Raymond James Stadium, this was worse.

The game was a beauty, easily, a worthy successor to last year’s New York Giants upset of New England, and then some.

But oh, how it will pain the quarterback from Cedar Rapids Regis, UNI and the Iowa Barnstormers, who came 35 seconds from putting a happy ending on one of sports’ great individual comeback tales.

Warner was Hall of Fame-great in the fourth-quarter, amassing 224 of his 377 passing yards and two of his three touchdown passes in the period. He helped bring the Arizona Cardinals back from a semi-catatonic state, back from a 20-7 hole Warner helped dig with the most ill-fated 1-yard pass in pro football history.

That toss, which Pittsburgh linebacker James Harrison almost-impossibly returned 100 yards for a touchdown, was about to become little more than Super Bowl trivia as the longest scoring play ever in a Super Bowl. Or so it seemed.

With 2:37 left in the game, Warner hooked up with the great Larry Fitzgerald for a 64-yard touchdown to give the Cardinals a 23-20 lead, its first advantage of the day.

With Warner running a no-huddle offense and throwing 10 straight completions in one stretch, the Cardinals put three quarters of frustration in their rearview mirrors. They seemed on the cusp of finishing one of the most unlikely championship runs in American pro sports history.

But the Steelers then played like a franchise that has now won more Super Bowls (six) than any of the other 31 NFL teams.

Ben Roethlisberger, winner of two world titles at age 26, teamed with Santonio Holmes on a 40-yard pass to let Pittsburgh go for a touchdown instead of potential game-tying field goal, then hit Holmes two plays later for the game-winner with :35 to go.

Holmes, who admits he dealt drugs in Belle Glade, Fla., as a youth, got all 10 of his tiptoes in the back right corner of the end zone with the ball in his grasp.

He barely stuck a landing in fair territory that would have impressed Shawn Johnson.

Warner and the Arizona offense got the ball back with 29 seconds left, needing to take his team 77 yards to erase its 27-23 deficit. The Cardinals got to the Pittsburgh 44 with :15 and no timeouts remaining, then Warner was sacked and fumbled the ball away in the final few seconds.

They’ll talk about the Holmes touchdown catch, one of the biggest in — here comes a superlative again — Super Bowl lore. It sealed the game’s Most Valuable Player award for the third-year pro from Ohio State, and may have snatched it from Warner.

But just as big was the one 71-year-old Pittsburgh defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau called “the greatest single defensive play in Super Bowl history.”

Down 10-7, Arizona had a first-and-goal at the Steelers 1 with :18 left in the first-half. Out of timeouts, the Cardinals had no choice but to pass, then go for a field goal if they didn’t get a TD toss.

“I thought I had just 1-on-1 on the outside,” Warner said. “Anquan (Boldin) had broken free. James Harrison had stepped up like he was going to blitz and then he popped out. I wasn’t able to see him around my lineman.

“He made a great play, and a great play on top of not only the interception, but to get it all the way back for a touchdown.”

How no Cardinal could collar the lumbering 242-yard Harrison. The chances were there on the return that seemed to take forever. Even Warner had one, but got blocked off the scene before Harrison reached midfield.

Harrison finally landed on top of Arizona receiver Larry Fitzgerald for the final foot or two of pay dirt.

Instead of Arizona being ahead 14-10 or settling for a 10-10 halftime score, the Steelers led 17-7. It took the Cardinals until the fourth-quarter to regain the spark they had shown in the second period until Harrison’s heroics.

The game was reminiscent of that 2002 Super Bowl loss to the Patriots, when Warner’s Rams had fallen behind 17-3 only to tie the game late in the fourth quarter before losing on Adam Vinatieri’s last-second field goal.

But while Warner-to-Fitzgerald for that 64-yard score wasn’t like the 73-yarder Warner threw deep to Isaac Bruce in St. Louis’ 23-16 Super Bowl win over Tennessee nine years ago, the feeling in the stadium was sure similar.

It felt like Warner had again taken the other team’s best defensive shot, then brought home a win. Warner had 414 passing yards that day, 377 on this one.

He became the Super Bowl’s all-time passing leader (1,156 yards). He became the first quarterback with three 300-yard Super Bowls, and has the top three passing-yardage performances in the game’s annals. He tied Joe Montana’s mark for TD passes in Super Bowls, with 11.

He broke his own record for postseason passing yardage with 1,147. But the loss is what will be most-attached to Warner’s effort here.

The four personal fouls and 11 total penalties on the Cardinals? They’ll be forgotten footnotes. But Harrison’s pick and return will be shown on NFL Network and ESPN for decades to come.

“Unfortunately, we made too many mistakes,” Warner said.

The winning quarterback sought out Warner after the game to express his admiration.

“Kurt Warner is Kurt Warner,” Roethlisberger said. “I think he’s a phenomenal football player. He’s a heck of a competitor, and I told him that.

“His autobiography was the first one I ever read, so it was really an honor to play against him.”

Warner rewrote his personal football story this season. It was almost perfect. It was one yard from being so, in fact.

One yard, and 100.

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SUPER BOWL JOURNAL: Warner Knows Who Springsteen Is, But Doesn’t Know His Music

January 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Bruce Springsteen, Steve Van Zandt, Patti Scialfa

Bruce Springsteen, Steve Van Zandt, Patti Scialfa

TAMPA, Fla. — Maybe you want to make a reach that Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner and rock star Bruce Springsteen are kindred spirits, guys who have made it big in life but given back a lot to others who need it.

OK. But Warner couldn’t name a line from a Springsteen song if you spotted him a “Tramps like us …”

“I’m not really a music fan much at all,” Warner said Thursday morning, six hours before Springsteen and his E Street Band were to hold a press conference of their own here to tout their halftime show in Sunday’s Super Bowl.

“It’s not a knock on the Boss,” Warner said, at least knowing Springsteen’s nickname. “Bruce Springsteen and the band, they do a tremendous job. I’m just not a huge music fan. So I don’t listen to a lot of music. I don’t know a lot of songs.

“I know the name, and it’s kind of cool to have him performing at the Super Bowl, but I just don’t know a lot about his music.”

Whether Springsteen knows anything about Warner, we’ll find out this afternoon.

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SUPER BOWL JOURNAL: Al Michaels Knows Cedar Rapids

January 27, 2009 · 2 Comments

Al Michaels (above), who will work his seventh Super Bowl as a network television play-by-play man Sunday night, has family ties in Cedar Rapids.

“My son-in-law went to high school in Cedar Rapids,” Michaels said Tuesday at an NBC Sports press gathering. “He’s about Zach (Johnson)’s age. They got matched up when they were both in high school and my son-in-law beat him head to head.”

 The lad’s name is Jeff Cohn. He attended Kennedy High School, and had a more prominent prep career in soccer, in which he made the all-Metro squad.

Cohn married Michaels’ daughter, Jennifer. They met when attending the University of Southern California.

“Half the guests were from L.A., half were from Cedar Rapids,” Michaels said.

 Seeing “Cedar Rapids Gazette” on my media badge registered immediately with Dan Patrick, also. Patrick is part of NBC’s NFL studio show.

 

Dan Patrick

Dan Patrick

 

 

The aforementioned Johnson was a guest on Patrick’s radio show last week because, Patrick said, fellow Cedar Rapidian Kurt Warner’s Arizona Cardinals won the NFC title the same day Johnson won the PGA Tour’s Sony Open.

“I asked Zach who was more popular in Cedar Rapids, him or Warner,” Patrick said. He said, ‘Oh, Mr. Warner is by far.’ I said ‘You’ve won a Masters.’ He said ‘Yeah, but he’s won MVPs and won a Super Bowl.’

“I said ‘I’ll call Kurt next time, I won’t call you, because he’s bigger than you.’ He said ‘Oh, by far.’ “

I told Patrick I thought Johnson might have underselling himself on that matter.

“That doesn’t surprise me with him,” Patrick said, “because Zach’s a good kid. I asked him who he wanted to win. I was hoping he’d say he was a Steelers fan. Didn’t happen.”

 In a more serious matter, I asked Keith Olbermann what he remembers when he thinks about last January’s Iowa caucuses. Olbermann, whose primary job is host of MSNBC’s “Countdown,” seemed happy to respond.

 

Keith Olbermann

Keith Olbermann

Olbermann called Barack Obama’s win in the Iowa Democratic Party caucuses “an extraordinary and significant stop on a very long path that was an affirmation of something I don’t know everyone was confident of.

“In retrospect, and in the future they’ll have to teach this to people, that there was some doubt whether or not middle America would support a non-white candidate for pres of the US to a significant degree, and it here it was.

“It was an indicator that enough people had moved, whether by their own evolution, whether by society’s evolution, or by dint of the urgency of circumstance, had moved to visualize what was best for them with no racial component to it whatsoever.

Which is really what we’ve all said we wanted. Here it was manifested. It was like here it is, sort of a miniature version of Election Night. Which was, you know, we’ve screwed up race relations in this country for 400 years, roughly. But guess which country was the first of the major Western nations, let alone democracies, to elect and choose an African-American or a man of African descent.

As tortured a road as it might have been, we got there first.”

 

 

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SUPER BOWL JOURNAL: Warner for Secretary of State?

January 26, 2009 · 2 Comments

A Warner follower and then some

Norman Chad: A Warner follower and then some

Norman Chad is a funny writer.

OK, let’s alter that: Norman Chad writes funny stuff.

Ah, either one is right. And he’s fun to listen to on World Series of Poker telecasts on ESPN.

In his syndicated column this week, Chad predicts an Arizona Cardinals win in the Super Bowl. He predicted the Cardinals would get here before the 2008 season began.

He probably wasn’t serious, but so what?

In this week’s column: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/football/397428_chad26.html, Chad tells us what he thinks about the Cardinals and their quarterback. Here’s an excerpt:

I first saw Kurt Warner in 1999 and correctly identified him as a dome-dwelling, touchdown-tossing alien UFO. This is how much I believe in Kurt Warner: You want to fix the economy? Make Warner secretary of the treasury. You want world peace? Make Warner secretary of state. You want to walk on water? Make Warner cross the Mississippi after hopping on his back.

As for Warner himself, he was among a handful of Arizona players interviewed at the Cardinals’ team hotel Monday. Here’s what he said about his fan base in Iowa, and how important it is to him:

“My whole family is still back in Iowa. I love the people in Iowa, they have supported me from day one and it’s been kind of fun from that standpoint. Even though I didn’t necessarily play in Iowa, especially professionally other than arena football, I have a lot of fans there. It’s fun to go back. It’s fun to have something for them to cheer for. They don’t have a professional football team so I hope that wherever I go, they adopt my team and so we pick up some fans along the way. It always means a lot when you can impact a community in any way, shape, or form. For me to be able to do that over the years and have that interaction with the people there has been tremendous.”

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SUPER BOWL JOURNAL: Day 1, at Radio Row

January 26, 2009 · 1 Comment

Why do they call this man Mad Dog?

Why do they call this man "Mad Dog?"

TAMPA, Fla. — So here we are.

It’s been seven years since I covered a Super Bowl, and nothing of significance has changed. They’re still advertising the Bud Bowl. Representatives from future Super Bowl sites are still trying to tell anyone who will listen why their corner of the nation is America’s finest place to be.

And a lot of noise is still being churned out on Radio Row.

At the media center, which in this case is 600,000-square foot Tampa Convention Center, dozens of radio stations set up shop for Super Bowl week at tables in a ballroom. The tables are close together, and guests of any renown usually work their way across the room, making appearances on this show and that show.

It’s a noisy place, full of hot gas.

There’s 1040AM ESPN, and 1080AM ESPN, and 1250AM ESPN, and 710AM ESPN.

There’s WFAN of New York and KFAN of the Twin Cities.

The host of what I presume was a San Antonio radio show was loudly asking how many times the Spurs have won 60 games in a season. It seemed like a question that could have been pondered from San Antonio.

The Sports Edge is here, and the Sports Animal, and probably even the Sports Fry Cook and the Sports Isoseles Triangle.

WDBQ-AM in Dubuque has a table here, though it was unused Monday afternoon. It seems like it might be some sort of scam. I’ll continue to investigate.

I overheard Chris “Mad Dog” Russo doing his Mad Dog Radio on Sirius/XM Satellite Radio. Russo was a New York screamer for many years until he bolted for Sirius. He is a hyper, hyper fellow.

Someone called his show and asked if Kurt Warner should be a Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee one day. Russo strongly said no.

“There were five seasons when Warner was a mess, not a factor,” Russo said.

It’s a minority opinion based on everything I’ve read and heard in the last week from learned football people, but I guess it isn’t good radio to go with the flow. Better to act the loud, uninformed fool.

Although, the Mad Dog was right that Warner didn’t do a whole lot between 2002 and 2006.

So, that was my first hour at the Super Bowl. Tonight will be a time to mosey around, get the lay of the land, and then plunge in Tuesday morning when Media Day is held at Raymond James Stadium.

Y’all come back now, ya hear?

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