Hey, did you hear the one
about the pro athlete who had a good season and
immediately wanted to renegotiate his contract?
Even after he failed to play up to his potential
for the first three years of his career due?
Unfortunately, it’s no joke.
It seems like every year we are subjected to the
whining of athletes who, even though they are under
contract, either want to get a new and improved deal,
get traded, or both.
Thus far, Kellen Winslow Jr., hasn’t issued a
trade demand. But for a guy who has, in my opinion,
already struck out with many Browns fans, a holdout
that includes a demand to be traded would simply by the
icing on the cake.
Winslow, the Browns’ first-round draft choice in
2004, had strike one on him before he ever played in a
game. That’s because he chose to be a holdout
from training camp his rookie season. The only thing he
caught during his holdout was the wrath of then-Browns
quarterback Jeff Garcia, who openly criticized the son
of Hall of Famer KellenWinslow Sr.
Winslow, who had gained a reputation of being a selfish
athlete while playing for the Miami Hurricanes,
certainly did nothing to change those views by his
untimely holdout.
Winslow’s second strike came when he once again
put his own self ahead of the team by recklessly riding
a super-charged motorcycle following the 2004 season, a
season in which he only played in only two games due to
a right fibula injury he suffered in Week 2.
He’s managed to come back from the extensive
injuries suffered in his careless accident, but
he’s admittedly not the same player he was prior
to his ill-advised adventures.
Now, as the Browns approach what promises to be a very
exciting season, it sounds like he’s willing to
take a called third strike by putting his own selfish
desires ahead of the good of the team.
If he misses any time whatsoever due to his hopes to
renegotiate his contract, it will, in my opinion, be
the final straw. It will show once and for all that, no
matter what he has said over the past couple of years
and no matter how good the team might be, that he is
still a selfish, self-centered prima donna who cares
more about himself than his teammates, coaches and, oh
yeah, the fans.
The Browns were concerned enough that general manager
Phil Savage had to mortgage a small part of the
team’s future in order to move up in this
year’s draft to pick tight end Martin Rucker out
of the University of Missouri in the fourth round.
The trade cost the Browns a third-round pick next year.
Not exactly an earth-shaking trade by any means, but
one that apparently the team deemed necessary due in
part of Winslow’s public announcement that he
wants a new contract. To be fair, it was also in part
due to the fact both Winslow and backup tight end Steve
Heiden will probably be limited in upcoming camps due
to off-season surgeries.
It should be noted that Winslow’s surgery was his
fourth that is a direct result of his motorcycle
accident. It also must be noted that he has three years
remaining on his contract. And it also needs to be
noted that he did play in his first Pro Bowl this past
February, albeit as an alternate.
Is Winslow worth more money just because San Diego
tight end Antonio Gates suffered an injury that kept
him out of the Pro Bowl and opened the door for the
Browns’ tight end?
There doesn’t seem to be much logic in that. Nor
is there much logic in tearing up the contract of a guy
who never has and likely never will live up to his
potential due, as previously mentioned, to his own
selfish, self-centered prima donna attitude?
Probably the best thing I can say about Kellen Winslow
Jr., is that at least he’s not as openly arrogant
and as much of a trouble maker as Chad Johnson …
at least not yet.
(cle.scout.com)