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| From | "The BIG Mouth That Wrote Bad Checks" <cam.newton@naacp.org> |
|---|---|
| Subject | Cam Newton, Face of Panthers, Showed Zero Grace in Defeat |
| Message-ID | <80ca0ad00f5e7a55bc39419178bf0016@dizum.com> (permalink) |
| Date | 2016-02-13 07:40 +0100 |
| Newsgroups | alt.sports.football.pro.houston-texans, alt.sports.football.pro.cleve-browns, triangle.bizarre, ba.general, dc.politics |
| Organization | dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider |
Cross-posted to 5 groups.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — There was no humiliation to be found in Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton’s performance on the field at the Super Bowl. The Denver Broncos’ defenders charged like banshees and werewolves, coming over and under and hurtling around the Panthers’ blockers. The young quarterback was sacked six times, and fumbled when the man-mountain known as Von Miller tossed him to the turf. He scrambled gamely and tossed some brilliant javelin throws. But if his was a less than stellar night, that can happen on the grandest of stages. His humiliation came after the game, however, and it was self- imposed. Newton, 26, an ebullient, intelligent, gifted quarterback, decided to act in his moment of truth like a 13-year-old. He slouched into the interview room late, well after many of his teammates — rookies and veterans alike — who gamely answered painful questions. He took a seat, a blue sweatshirt hood pulled low over his face. He made eye contact with no one. What did he make of the game? Was he surprised? How could he explain? ... The reporters’ questions, not a surprise in the batch, were framed gently, as if put forward by dimwitted therapists. For more than a minute, Newton stared at the floor, scratched his chin and sulked. Anything he would do differently? “No.” What did his coach tell the team? “He told us a lot of things.” Did the Denver defense take away Carolina’s running lanes? “No.” He offered a few more monosyllables and walked away. It was as if Newton was intent on taking his magical season, his jumping jacks and dabs and evident leadership, and poking a hole in its side. He let his charisma and leadership drain away, to be replaced by a soup of the sour and the petulant. And in doing so, he confirmed the judgment of more than a few Broncos defenders, who spoke afterward of trying to push him off his game psychologically. The postgame news conference can be a numbing rite of passage, when aching and bruised and torn men must take a round of questions before leaving their season in the rearview mirror. Some questions can be cringe-worthy, although most are matter-of- fact. The Panthers rookie wide receiver Devin Funchess took question after question. “It was playoff ball, man, they exploded off the ball,” he said. “It hurts.” And their big defensive end, Charles Johnson, spoke of not having “the energy we usually have.” “We didn’t execute like we usually do,” he added. Over in the corner of the interview room, only the top-paid player on the team, the marquee man, came up short. So often we feed our perceptions through the desultory sausage maker of race, and Newton’s postgame performance is being treated on Twitter as a referendum on such questions. This is unfortunate, not to mention silly. Newton’s Panthers teammates and coaches who stood and answered questions, painfully, gamely, were black, white and Latino, veteran and rookie alike. Grace in defeat observes no racial litmus test. The white Detroit Pistons center Bill Laimbeer was a graceless cad in defeat. Dwyane Wade and LeBron James, to name two, were sterling gold. Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich has turned surliness into a shtick that should be beneath him. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady behaved well two weeks back, as did Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson the week before that. And so, on and on it goes. It’s simply pleasing to come across an athlete who in the face of, yes, inevitable and not terribly interesting questions, and on the heels of a tough defeat, carries himself well. And it can be a part of the elixir that constitutes leadership, as the Broncos defenders suggested. Newton did not put up a particularly poor effort in the game, which was hardly one for the ages, this penalty-strewn, butterfingered, butter-toed exercise in Denver outlasting its opponent. Peyton Manning, the ancient mariner of a Broncos quarterback, was reduced to gesturing and fakes, and little more. His team was inert, the offense consisting of a mind- numbing set of nowhere runs and Manning passes that went a yard or two, or three. Manning’s throws resembled whiffle balls; one hung so softly in the air that defensive end Kony Ealy simply reached out and intercepted it with a single hand. The Broncos’ defense was brilliant, except when its cornerback Aqib Talib grabbed at an opponent’s face mask and tried to twist his head off like a mad farmer with a chicken. Talib received three flags in the first half; in most sports, he would have been sent to the showers. He said those penalties were a bunch of nonsense, although he said it in stronger terms, adding, “One I just did on purpose, and I just had to show him.” Then Talib talked about how special it was that his children watched him that night. That passed for a heartwarming N.F.L. moment. The mesmerizing figure, however, was Newton, who is prodigiously talented. As an ESPN writer noted, Newton, at 6-foot-5 and 245 pounds, is bigger than any player on the Green Bay Packers’ championship team in Super Bowl I. He reads offenses with intensity, and he is that rare pocket passer who can dodge and break off loping runs. He can be, in other words, an awful lot of fun to watch. He resembled a water bug in a jar Sunday, jumping this way and that; he was game in taking on that relentless Broncos defense. For long stretches of the second and third quarters, he was the most exciting player on the field. He finished 18 of 41 for 265 yards, and he fumbled twice. By the final quarter, however, his body language spoke to demons taking possession of his house. Denver linebacker DeMarcus Ware laid him out. As Newton bounced off the turf, he gave an annoyed look, a princeling not accustomed to such tough handling. He wandered to the Panthers’ sideline. The Panthers trailed just 16-7. Three weeks ago, I had watched Newton rally his team, doing jumping jacks, leaping and exchanging chest bumps with his receivers and runners. Not now. He wandered down the sideline and stared into space. Then he put his hands on his knees and stared at the ground for 14 seconds. Later, slowly, he wandered back to his bench. He walked to his offensive line — a porous lot this night — and slapped two hands. Then he wandered off again. Afterward, the Broncos said this was the Newton, the young star too easily rattled and perhaps not yet equal to his moment, they hoped to unleash. “Hey, when things don’t go his way, we see the body language — it’s obvious,” Broncos safety T.J. Ward said of Newton. “That’s what we wanted to do. That was our intent: to come in this game and get the body language going. We didn’t want the happy, fun- spirited, dabbing Cam. No, we want the sulking, upset, talking to my linemen, my running backs, ‘I don’t know what’s going on’ Cam Newton — and that’s what we got.” CONTINUE READING THE MAIN STORY 528 COMMENTS And that on-the-field Cam was prologue to the postgame denouement. This need not be Newton’s epitaph. Newton has fine mentors from whom he can learn grace, among them the Hall of Fame quarterback Warren Moon, who endured years of racially tinged self-imposed exile in Canada in the 1980s before an N.F.L. team consented to allow him to take snaps and lead a team. Newton’s talents are many and varied. His challenge is to prove himself equal to leading his fine team to the Super Bowl. Comments: Skydog Sky Woodland hills ca 11 minutes ago So much for the " very explosive offense" a lot of naysayers were saying the broncos were the underdogs Ayyy? Superman met his kriptonite! !!! Who's laughing now???? Reply Recommend myes1958 Chgo 11 minutes ago Physical talent, yes, of course. Maturity, professionalism and/or leadership traits? He whiffed. Grab some bench. Reply Recommend Dadof2 New Jersey 11 minutes ago To be fair, Cam Newton was battered and shell-shocked by the 2nd quarter, with his mouth open trying to get enough air. And yet, when the game was over, he was gracious to the Denver Broncos, and exchanged kind words and smiles with Peyton Manning. It was only after, when attacked by the piranhas, er, I mean reporters that he was sullen, giving them even more grist to gleefully post to their newscenters. But he's young yet, and, hopefully, will learn. He's had a GREAT season, an awesome season, but the Superbowl went badly for him because it went badly for his offensive line, who were simply beaten by the amazing Denver defensive line and linebackers. Even the young Joe DiMaggio was known to be sullen and sulky after losses. Reply 3Recommend Sixofone The Village 11 minutes ago “One I just did on purpose, and I just had to show him.” This is a big reason why I stopped watching football years ago, except for the occasional Super Bowl. Not that poor sportsmanship and unnecessary brutality are anything new, but they just seem uglier to me with each passing year. So maybe I'll tune in again for SB LII or LIII. Then again, maybe not. Reply Recommend James Bland Alberta, Canada. 11 minutes ago Hubris was a theme of the ancient Greeks so clearly Mr. Newton is not the first to fall its victim, though admittedly he does provide a pretty spectacular example. Although it's been said that adversity doesn't build character but rather reveals it, it's reasonable to believe that he will ultimately benefit from this experience. And if he's looking for role models he need look no further than his head coach, whom I expect was no happier with the game than was Mr. Newton but whose own comments in a post-game interview epitomized sportsmanship in defeat. Incidentally, if Warren Moon would ever like to visit his land of "exile" those of us fortunate enough to have watched him play here "on the cold western prairies" would be thrilled. Reply Recommend Marin H Chicago, IL 11 minutes ago You conveniently left out when Cam answered "we were outplayed.....we had missed opportunities..." to suit your article. And the question that caused him to walk off was inquired how Cam felt about his team, which we all know is a bait to get Cam to point fingers or place blame. The media would've loved any answer that would give them the opportunity to spin it into "Cam doesn't like his team". So he did the right thing, said "I'm done" and walked off. Sometimes saying less is more. Tracy McGrady did the same thing when asked similar questions after his team was eliminated from the playoffs. I appreciate when players protect one another from such baiting and trolling. That's being a team both on and off the field. It's easy to claim you know how you'd react (apparently with smiles and joy about "the blessing of playing in the SuperBowl"?) when you've never been in Cam's shoes. It's obvious Cam wears his emotions on his sleeve and is equally passionate about both winning and losing. I'll take his somber short answers over fake exuberance or a finger pointing, profanity laced tirade any day of the week. FlagReply 1Recommend http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/09/sports/super-bowl-carolina- panthers-cam-newton.html?_r=0
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Cam Newton, Face of Panthers, Showed Zero Grace in Defeat "The BIG Mouth That Wrote Bad Checks" <cam.newton@naacp.org> - 2016-02-13 07:40 +0100
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