Terrell Owens

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Terrell Owens is an ex-Cowboy

Terrell Owens is an ex-Cowboy

By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports
2 hours, 8 minutes ago


Terrell Owens is an ex-Cowboy.

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So Terrell Owens finally is gone. Rip up that Dallas Cowboys star from midfield ? the personal stage he couldn?t resist. Roll it into a steel barrel and seal it with concrete. Then bury it beneath the Texas Stadium parking lot, and for the sake of the next na?ve NFL franchise, pray that Owens? fading career is laid to rest with it.

This can?t happen again. Not after three franchises, three quarterbacks and untold exclusive interviews, all in which Owens sermonizes about how we must understand that he?s merely misunderstood. Even Cowboys owner Jerry Jones can see it now ? the reality that in the end, T.O. is nothing more than the NFL?s decaying nuclear reactor: a seduction of heat and energy and power ? until it inevitably leaves a bitter nuclear winter in its wake.

Make no mistake, this is what happened Wednesday. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones finally realized the needle on the Geiger counter had gone too far into the red, and he dispatched Owens in the first move of a cleanup that could take several seasons. Finally, the owner who fiercely values his own opinion opened his mind and let the outside world change it. Maybe it was the coaching staff or the players or the nagging sliver of doubt in his brain. Whatever it took, Wednesday was Jones finally admitting that he was wrong.

Now it?s up to the rest of the NFL to sit up and take notice. Because some Super Bowl-contending team undoubtedly will wonder what Owens will look like in its scheme. Scores of fans will daydream for a moment, wondering what T.O. would look like next to Randy Moss, or catching passes from Eli Manning, or matching his charisma with Ray Lewis. But what everyone should be seeing at this moment is the most radioactive player in the NFL ? a natural disaster just waiting to corrupt the course of another franchise.


Three years ago, Jones took that fantasy and made it a reality. He looked at Owens? personnel file and never got past the gaudy r?sum?. It was all about the numbers and the glitz. He scoffed at the notion of trouble, even though Owens? history screamed of it. He even fractured his relationship with former coach Bill Parcells over it. All Jones saw was a dynamic talent who had the potential to spark a bygone Cowboys era ? a player who could dominate a game, while simultaneously justifying added drama by capturing the entertainment spotlight, too. But what he failed to consider was that while Dallas benefited from bad boys like Michael Irvin and Charles Haley, the championships the Cowboys reaped didn?t come at the expense of a divided locker room.

Therein lies what should scare off the rest of the NFL and summarily end Owens? career this week: the fact that he can?t help but create his own little fiefdoms inside a team. One former Dallas coach said as much at this year?s combine, relating stories about how Owens would go beyond typical dissatisfaction. While almost all NFL wideouts complain at some point about their roles, coaches or quarterbacks, most find a way to problem-solve without destroying a team. Instead, Owens works to build a consensus of disdain among teammates ? effectively turning locker rooms into staging grounds for coups d??tat.

By the time he forced his way out of San Francisco, he already had turned on quarterback Jeff Garcia privately ? an ugliness Owens eventually made known in a variety of ways, including an interview with Playboy Magazine in which he questioned Garcia?s sexuality. Philadelphia was supposed to be the fresh start, complete with a big-armed quarterback and a great supporting cast. But it only took one year for Owens to start a raging forest fire in the Eagles locker room, undermining quarterback Donovan McNabb, disrespecting then-offensive coordinator Brad Childress and even coming to blows with former teammate Hugh Douglas.

Then came 2006, in what was supposed to be the final reclamation project. This would be where Owens finally would capture his Super Bowl ring and lay to rest all his transgressions. We were supposed to believe that maybe Owens had been miscast before and that a bigger stage and a bigger circus was exactly what he needed to blend in. And after Parcells and then-wide receivers coach Todd Haley departed, we were led to believe he had it all: a laid-back head coach in Wade Phillips, an encouraging position coach in Ray Sherman and a quarterback in Tony Romo who was as even-keeled as he was talented. Lest we forget, Owens also had the lucrative long-term contract he was deprived of in Philadelphia.

But what was supposed to be nirvana was nothing short of disappointing. Three years later, the T.O. era in Dallas ends with as many playoff wins as Super Bowl rings ? zero. Instead, it was marked by annual controversy and, finally, the seemingly mandatory meltdown. Media reports out of Dallas over the course of last season read like an unchanging manual of self-destruction, complete with Owens allegedly showing an uncanny ability for chirping and bitching and stirring up other teammates.

A former Cowboys coach told Yahoo! Sports last month that he saw Owens do it with fellow wideouts Miles Austin and Patrick Crayton. Other media reports indicated Owens did the same with newly acquired wideout Roy Williams, too, all the while creating a familiar divide between his recruits and some of the familiar targets: the quarterback, the head coach, the wide receivers coach, the offensive coordinator and others. Like his situations in San Francisco and Philadelphia, it wasn?t just Owens having his own problems. It was T.O. convincing other players they should have a problem, too.

So now Jerry Jones finally has stepped in to do some disaster management before all he has left to manage is a smoldering heap of ashes. And Owens will move on without moving on, lobbing hand grenades from wherever he goes next. Perhaps the only thing that can stop the cycle of destruction is the 29 unscathed teams realizing some basic facts.

Maybe teams finally will look past the Hall of Fame r?sum? and see a malcontent with enough red flags to decorate every porch in China. Maybe they will see a player who is three years older, with skills in a state of decline. Maybe they finally will see Terrell Owens for what he is: a distracting dream of the heat and the energy, followed by fallout that will linger long after he?s gone.

Charles Robinson is a national NFL writer for Yahoo! Sports. Send Charles a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
Updated 2 hours, 8 minutes ago
 

kneifl

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Wow, I'm shocked.

We are probably better off without a locker room lawyer. Now Romo can concentrate on all of his various offensive weapons on the field a bit more. Got to look at this as a good thing. I am very anxious to see who picks him up? He won't be a free agent for long.

kneifl
 

CartersCubs

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i wish the colts would pick him up for a 1 year deal.... hes always amazing his first year with a new team. after that he becomes cancer
 

SIMON

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I am greedy as well - Would like Eli Manning throwing TD's to him. After Plax gets acquitted - that would be a great tandem.

I say acquitted because if Kobe can beat a rape rap - Plax can beat a simple gun felony.
 

vinnie

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ProFootballTalk.com, though, is keeping a list of teams that have made it known to them through "league sources" that they have no interest in Owens. :sadwave:
As of right now, that list includes:

The Dallas Cowboys.
The New York Giants.
The Washington Redskins.
The Baltimore Ravens.
The San Francisco 49ers.
The Minnesota Vikings.
The Atlanta Falcons.
The Cleveland Browns.
The Philadelphia Eagles
The Miami Dolphins
 

IE

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would look good on the opposite side of devin hester for the bears.
 

spartan

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I could defenitely see him in a raiders uniform, al davis must be foaming at the mouth :mj07:
The bad guy on the badass team with the sick mother fuking fans :142smilie
 

THE KOD

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When asked about now cutting the receiver, one Cowboys source said, "It was the right thing to do," alluding to the fact that the team is trying to create a more harmonious locker room.

Dallas also released safety Roy Williams on Thursday. Despite his reputation as a hard-hitter, teams never hesitated throwing his way in recent years because he struggled in coverage. After Owens, Williams likely was the second most divisive figure among Cowboys fans ? especially after Dallas already got rid of Adam "Pacman" Jones and Tank Johnson.

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OK they got rid of all their thugs and despots.

The real problem in Dallas is Jones. He needs to do like Arthur Blank and turn the team over to a real football mind. Until then, with Jones making all the decisions and draft picks, the Cowboys are doomed to not win a playoff game for another ten years.

:sadwave:
 

dickiesports

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finally whacked, TO has been cut according to ESPN, that cancer needed to go...

happy day............:00hour

Now maybe Romo can be a leader in the huddle and off the field

here is the link:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=3953647


HHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA

BAHAHHAHAHAHAAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAAHAA

Now that fraud Romo will exposed for just how bad he truly sucks. Owens made him look good at times and when TO didnt have a great game he looked ordinary or horrible.

Ya TO is a headcase as most stars are........but talent is one thing TO has alot of while.......ROMO is nothing more than a good looking image with avg skills for the image of the COWBOYS !

Romo will have his WORST YEAR EVER in 09-10'.

Bet it Bank it ! It is a lock !
 

THE KOD

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HHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA

BAHAHHAHAHAHAAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAAHAA

Romo will have his WORST YEAR EVER in 09-10'.

Bet it Bank it ! It is a lock !
.............................................................

I have to agree with that

especially since they got no draft picks in the first few rounds that I am aware of.

and alot of needs
 

kneifl

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Maybe Romo will have a bad year, maybe not. If I had to bet on it I would say he will have an above average year next season.

One thing is for sure though - TO will not last more than one season in Buffalo - if he even manages to last the entire season. You saw how he acted in San Fran, Philly, and Dallas when they had a few consecutive losses. Too much of a locker room lawyer and whiny little player that demands the ball on every single play.

kneifl
 

THE KOD

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kneifl

he signed a one year contract.

I honestly think that TO has a mental problem.

No one is that argumentative and unreasonable.

He can't be controlled. Its a shame because he could have easily been in the HOF with that talent. I doubt he makes it.

You are the optimist about Romo. I have seen about enough of him and his poor play.
 

THE KOD

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We'll see. Owens and Lee Evans (last three seasons: 200 catches, 16.0 yards-per-catch) could be a formidable duo, but Edwards is going to find out early that he'll need to throw the ball to Owens more than Evans. Everyone will say Edwards just needs to hit the open guy, but I don't buy it; it hasn't been that way for Owens since 2000, when Rice was on the other side of the field, and it's not going to happen even though Evans is a borderline star receiver. Can Edwards cope with Owens' demands? Jeff Garcia, Donovan McNabb and Tony Romo could -- for a while -- but eventually it overwhelmed the quarterback, the play-callers and the locker rooms.
.........................................................

I would be fawked if I would say ahead of time how many times I would throw to TO.

Get the fawk open and I will throw it to you.

otherwise dont talk to me bitch. Just run your plays and dont be late.

Geeez Louise.
 
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