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madlithuanian

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Everything posted by madlithuanian

  1. I was simply shocked it did not go to the booth for review.
  2. I hear you... I wouldn't mind an attempt at a restructure. I think he can be valuable as a nickel for sure... Drop his price, and he's a good guy to have around. Maybe health issues have been the crux of his problems and they right themselves...
  3. Heck, other than the possibility of Urlacher...there's really no one else in remote recent history that would rate high enough to have the jersey retired... Although, they should retire 89...Ditka's!
  4. I'm actually all for it! There are still more than enough number to go around! Whether a couple guys in camp and pre-season have the same number, it doesn't bother me... I just never recall on the Bears, 2 guys in the regular season having the same number...
  5. I thought they did! That's is a shame! Go w/ the trifecta! Retire all 3!
  6. The Bears should retire his jersey! That might help nudge things in...
  7. Thanks for keeping us posted! I really hope they iron out the old players issue... It's a pain going in and re-doing names and all that of the former players. I'd also really like to see some more flexibility in player/team creation
  8. Always nice to see when the good these players do gets some press vs some bone-head getting in trouble at a club...
  9. I'm from the old "bearstalk" forum... But, I too, like it here!
  10. Honestly, I think there's a reason Smith is taking over Babich's duties. Smith seems to be a strong delegator and seems to stay out of the way. So, maybe it was Babich.
  11. http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/footb...,5360504.column chicagotribune.com SUPER BOWL XLIII CARDINALS VS. STEELERS 5 p.m. Sunday, Tampa WMAQ-Ch. 5, WSCR-AM 670 Mike Ditka, Rocky Bleier get message out in Tampa veterans hospital Ditka, Bleier offer hope on visit to veterans hospital David Haugh On the Bears January 30, 2009 TAMPA — "Steelers" was the second word Kevin Kammerdiener spoke once he came out the coma that lasted six weeks. " 'Hi' was the first, and 'mom' came way later," Leslie Kammerdiener said Thursday as her eyes gazed at her son in his wheelchair. "He has 25 words in his vocabulary right now." "Thanks" is near the top of that list. That was the word Kammerdiener tried to speak several times to Mike Ditka after "Da Coach" signed a football and posed for pictures Thursday during a visit to the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital. After exchanging fist bumps with Rocky Bleier, who had signed a yellow "Terrible Towel," Kammerdiener mouthed the same words of gratitude toward a legend from his favorite team, the Steelers. "I've been here 243 days, and this is one of the better ones," Leslie Kammerdiener said. Her son, an Army private in the 173rd Airborne Brigade deployed in Afghanistan, lost a significant part of the left side of his brain May 31 when a suicide bomber drove into his Humvee. The explosion blasted Kammerdiener 35 feet into the air, sending his helmet flying. He landed on his head. Doctors expected Kammerdiener, 20, to be in a vegetative state the rest of his life if he ever woke up at all. "So he's doing phenomenal for somebody we never thought would be here," Leslie Kammerdiener said hopefully. She hails from East Brady, Pa., an hour north of Pittsburgh, and she's homeless now because she had to quit her job to take care of her son. For the last five months she has lived here at the Fisher House residential polytrauma center. Super Bowl week means different things to different people across America. For Kammerdiener and the 20 other families living in this facility, it has meant the chance to hear from people such as Ditka and Bleier, who have stopped by to offer hope in a place where it can be hard to find. "This is better for me than it is for them," Ditka said. "It brings me back to reality. I'm a great patriot. I love this country, and anybody who served this country like these guys did, I'll do anything for them." You won't find patriotism on any NFL injury reports. Its health around the league never has been better. When the Steelers won the AFC title at Heinz Field, one of the first things Ben Roethlisberger did was thank the U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Ditka's group, Gridiron Greats, recently aligned with the Special Operations Warrior Foundation to increase fundraising and awareness for retired NFL players in need. Look no further than Thursday's announcement that Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the U.S. Central Command, will toss a ceremonial coin before Super Bowl XLIII for more evidence. With the former team of Pat Tillman, whom some have compared to Bleier, in the Super Bowl, the flag-waving has intensified. All week the tragic tale of Tillman has been revisited to pay tribute to a man who gave up the NFL to defend his country and ultimately lost his life in 2004. Perhaps no living soul symbolizes the connection between the NFL and the military more than Bleier, who was drafted and sent to Vietnam after graduating from Notre Dame. On Aug. 20, 1969, Bleier's platoon was ambushed in a rice paddy, and he took shrapnel in his right leg from an enemy grenade. Bleier spent eight months in Ft. Riley, Kan., recovering in a hospital similar to the one he visited Thursday. His four Super Bowl rings in tow, the former Steelers running back made eye contact with every wounded soldier he met and delivered his patented message: Never give up. "I can have empathy for what they're going through," Bleier said. "They don't want you to feel sorry for them. They just want you to understand and treat them as a normal person." So Bleier spoke to Lukas Shook, a 21-year-old Army private, like a guy who pulled up a bar stool next to his wheelchair. He laughed when Shook asked what position he played. "Have you heard of Terry Bradshaw? Have you heard about Franco Harris?" Bleier said. "I was the other guy." Shook smiled. He was on duty Nov. 30 in Baghdad when a rocket exploded about 15 feet away. All he remembers was being dragged back to a bunk and feeling blood roll down his face. "That's when I thought I was going to die," Shook said. He suffered a head injury and vertebrae fractures so severe that doctors told him he would never walk again. He still wears a breastplate that covers his entire torso. But as Shook firmly shook hands with Bleier, he reported he has begun walking as much as 50 feet without crutches. On the other side of the room, Ditka was visiting with Jeremy Miller's wife. Miller was flying a Black Hawk helicopter during a routine training exercise at Ft. Campbell, Ky., when it collided with another chopper. He sustained a traumatic brain injury and spinal damage that confines him to a wheelchair. That was 13 years ago. "What can I do for you?" Ditka asked. At that point Ditka stepped aside so he wouldn't block a picture of soldier Mark Lalli posing with Bleier's four Super Bowl rings on his fingers. Lalli, 23, also was wearing two bracelets on his right wrist that belonged to the pilots who didn't survive his helicopter crash. It happened in Aviano, Italy, after Lalli had spent a year in Iraq. Though a Cleveland native, Lalli was among the first to start chanting "Rocky! Rocky!" as Bleier began to head for the door. Outside the room, Ditka's face turned redder than usual as he marveled at the progress Kammerdiener, in particular, had made since Da Coach's last visit a few months ago. "Incredible … his head was basically, half of it was gone," Ditka said. "They'll probably never get back to 100 percent, but the love and cheer they get here, that's special. Not to honor these people and not to remember them this week would be a disgrace."
  12. The waiting is the hardest part...
  13. Agreed... I'd consider a first only if we got something back like a 2nd...
  14. Overall, I think it's a good idea and good insurance since St. Clair can play a few positions. And I don't think the cost would be ridiculous.
  15. Enjoy it! The 10 years goes faster than when you were 20!
  16. Heck, I'm pushing 40, love Slayer, and still think Frank and the gang blows 'em all away!
  17. And in all seriousness, Sinatra is mega light years more hip than Usher will ever dream to be! Class never goes out of style!
  18. I could go an list all the various posts that are not negative, but you only really remember the negative ones. And, there are indeed more. And the surprise of that is...? Something tells me, if we were in the SB vs looking at FA and the draft, we'd be a bit more positive. Go back to 2005, if it were possible given that the bearstalk site got taken down, but you'd see a lot of positive talk...with yes, some negative concerns as well. Good deal. I'm glad you get it. And I get that you are more satisfied with our situation than I. There are other posters on this board that are more in agreement with myself, and don't get upset about discussing it as such. Oh, my pain under Wanny and Jauron was far greater. I just didn't have an outlet other than the bar to unload my angst... Has Smith really brought our franchise back to relevance? When's the last national article that spoke highly of our franchise other than talking about how we lost games because of bone-head mistakes or won because of last minute heroics? No one mentions that Smith coached a great game and made superb adjustments that helped win the game. No, he's not perfect, and no he's not Rod Marinelli etiher. But, I, and many others, want better than pretty good. A SB appearance is, and was nice. But if it's not a win, and there's no growth from it, it is forgettable. You are correct that we aren't a doormat, but nor do we illicit much fear either...
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