Jul/10/08 05:55 PM Filed in:
Bernie Kosar
Ron Jaworski said he caught
part of Bernie Kosar's playoff pep talk in the
Gladiators' locker room on cable television
recently. "I gotta write some notes for him," said
the voluble "Jaws," the ESPN analyst and top
football man with the Philadelphia Soul.
Kosar, the president of the relocated and formerly
sad-sack Gladiators, has mastered most of the material
quickly, pep talks aside. "The game's not going to be
won by what's said in the locker room anyway," said
Kosar of Saturday's National Conference Arena League
Championship Game in Philadelphia.
It once would have been hard to coach for Kosar. He
butted heads with the conservative play-calling of
Marty Schottenheimer's staff during his glory days with
the Browns. Bill Belichick fired him for drawing up a
play in the dirt in his last game as a Brown in 1993.
The Browns' story was that Kosar had diminished skills,
but his perceived insubordination was a big part of it,
too. The play in the dirt, by the way, went for a
touchdown.
After some difficult times personally and
professionally, Kosar seems rejuvenated by the
Gladiators' playoff run to the brink of a title game.
Kosar has always had a big ego, which is almost a
necessity at the quarterback position in the NFL, as
well as one of the finest football brains ever to get
knocked around by a blind-side blitz. "I'm not the
quietest guy in competitive situations, even if it was
in my best interests not to talk too much," he said.
For too long, Kosar was estranged from the Browns by
the insecure football men who led the team after its
rebirth. But anyone who has heard Kosar deconstruct the
Browns' offense on television in exhibition games knows
he still sees the field with a wide-angle lens.
Exasperation memorably fought with disdain when he
watched Maurice Carthon's offense.
But he has grown enough as Gladiators president that,
although he sometimes wears a head-set to listen to
play calls on the sideline, he lets Coach of the Year
Mike Wilpolt and his staff run the game.
He would be a plus for the Browns too, although he
would probably have to show more of his developing
restraint to ever get a shot. Toward this season's
Browns, a team that is supposed to contend for a
division championship, Kosar takes the diplomatic
approach.
"Derek Anderson threw 29 touchdown passes in his first
full year in the league," Kosar said. "You're going to
get better if you have a guy like that in your corner.
No matter how it comes out with Derek and Brady
[Quinn], you need two quarterbacks nowadays."
The compact size of the Arena League field speeds up
the decision-making process and accelerates quarterback
growth. The quality of play also rose after NFL Europe
folded, sending many of its 300 players in search of
Arena League jobs.
There were good players in the USFL, some of whom
fueled the Browns' rise to power in the 1980s. The
Arena League developed former NFL Most Valuable Player
Kurt Warner. Even the deplorable XFL provided players
to the NFL.
The same should hold for team executives.
"I've been in this five years, and this is my first
[conference] championship game. Cleveland did it in one
year. Bernie must be doing pretty good," Jaworski said.
(plaindelaer.com)