who is the most....

Talk about the Washington Football Team here. Do you bleed burgundy and gold?
redskinz4ever
******
******
Posts: 2630
youtube meble na wymiar Warszawa
Joined: Thu Mar 25, 2004 3:55 pm
Location: charlotte nc

who is the most....

Post by redskinz4ever »

who is the most disappointing redskin player of all time? mine would be desmond howard.just becase he went to the lions and did ok as a returner.just wish we would have used him as a kick returner if nothing else.REDSKINZ4EVER!!!
SkinFan 0-16 or 16-0
Hog
Posts: 673
Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2004 8:33 pm
Location: REDSKINZ COUNTRY!!!!!!!!!!!!

Post by SkinFan 0-16 or 16-0 »

HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH HEATH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"Tough times don't last Tough people do."- Marcus Washington, Redskins Linebacker

"Big time Players make Big Time Plays in Big Games !!!"- Santana Moss Redskins WR during an upset by The U over Florida Sate
User avatar
TopHawg
piggie
Posts: 136
Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:06 pm
Location: Spangdahlem AFB, Germany

Post by TopHawg »

Mine would be the FA class of Deion, Bruce, Armstead and Trotter. Though Trotter and Bruce may have done ok none of them lived up to the hype.
"The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his. "

- General George Patton
Redskins1974
------------
------------
Posts: 1822
Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2004 4:58 pm
Location: U Street - DC

Post by Redskins1974 »

Definitely Heath over Desmond. Heath was the Ryan Leaf of his day.
The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject.

~Marcus Aurelius
User avatar
Jake
Junior Hog
Junior Hog
Posts: 11253
Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2003 4:18 am
Location: Mayo, Maryland
Contact:

Post by Jake »

Andre Johnson, Deion, and Heath.
RIP Sean Taylor 1983-2007
RIP Kevin Mitchell 1971-2007
RIP Justin Skaggs 1979-2007
RIP Sammy Baugh 1914-2008

RIP JPFair
RIP VetSkinsFan

#60 Chris Samuels: 6-time 6-time 6-time 6-time 6-time 6-time Pro Bowl left tackle!
redskinz4ever
******
******
Posts: 2630
Joined: Thu Mar 25, 2004 3:55 pm
Location: charlotte nc

Post by redskinz4ever »

who was the higher draft pick heath or desmond?REDSKINZ4EVER!!!
TOUCHDOWN .....WASHINGTON REDSKINS !!!!
BringThePain!
Hog
Posts: 3887
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2004 11:49 pm
Location: inside the matrix... do not unplug

Post by BringThePain! »

is this a pop quiz :hmm:
**SPECIAL EDITION**

CurveBall - "It might be YOUR biggest game of the year but it really doesn't seem to be as big a deal for Dallas fans anymore."

Oopsies! What's that taste like?
oafusp
Hog
Posts: 1977
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2004 4:13 pm
Location: VA

Post by oafusp »

Deion Sanders - Snyder's biggest mistake, his 1 season cost us for years when he retired "dead money" and his signing made all the aging "Names" want to come play for Snyder

His infamous "Redskins" suit at the press conference was the Anti-Core Redskin (Gibbs would have flipped):

Image
Redskins1974
------------
------------
Posts: 1822
Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2004 4:58 pm
Location: U Street - DC

Post by Redskins1974 »

I think Heath was #3 overall and Desmond was #4 overall... We traded up for Howard I believe.
The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject.

~Marcus Aurelius
joebagadonuts
Mmmm...donuts
Mmmm...donuts
Posts: 2400
Joined: Wed Jan 21, 2004 3:15 pm
Location: How much text will they let me fit in this 'Location' space? I mean, can I just keep writing and wr

Post by joebagadonuts »

Redskins1974 wrote:We traded up for Howard I believe.


that makes me feel sick.... :puke:
I'm a jack of all trades, the master of three
Rockin' the tables, rockin' the mikes, rockin' the young lay-dees.
BringThePain!
Hog
Posts: 3887
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2004 11:49 pm
Location: inside the matrix... do not unplug

Post by BringThePain! »

oafusp wrote:Deion Sanders - Snyder's biggest mistake, his 1 season cost us for years when he retired "dead money" and his signing made all the aging "Names" want to come play for Snyder

His infamous "Redskins" suit at the press conference was the Anti-Core Redskin (Gibbs would have flipped):

Image


i agree but did you have to show the picture .... :puke:
**SPECIAL EDITION**

CurveBall - "It might be YOUR biggest game of the year but it really doesn't seem to be as big a deal for Dallas fans anymore."

Oopsies! What's that taste like?
Redskins1974
------------
------------
Posts: 1822
Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2004 4:58 pm
Location: U Street - DC

Post by Redskins1974 »

Read this article - it will make you feel more sick. We traded up for the Bungles pick...

The Draft of 1992 - By Myric Polhemus mp29179@swt.edu
The year was 1992. The Redskins had just won their third Super Bowl title, Joe Gibbs was still the coach, the Posse was alive and well, and Mark Rypien was the second coming of Joe Namath. Life was good for the Redskins--very good. This was a team that had been managed by Charley Casserly for several seasons now, and with the emergence of Brian Mitchell any skepticism about Casserly's draft savvy was temporarily silenced. As Bobby Beatherd's right hand man he had seen and done it a ll. It looked as if he was the right man for the job.

When Draft Day '92 came around the GMs were all a buzz with the likes of Steve Emtman, Quentin Coryatt, and Terrell Buckley. However, there was one player that was the home run hitter every team coveted; Desmond Howard. When the Super Bowl champs traded up with Cincinnati for the forth overall spot they grabbed the most explosive offensive player in the draft. At the time it seemed like a stroke of genius; Charley Casserly was building the team for the future.

The rest of the league gasped in horror. "My God!" they said. "They're an explosive offensive team and they just got better." It indeed seemed that way. The Redskins at that point in time had one of the best, if not the best, trio of receivers in the league. In Monk, Clark and Sanders they had experience, toughness, and the ability to score from any place on the field. Mark Rypien just finished having a career year in which he established himself as the most accurate long ball passer in the league. Add H oward into the mix and it was downright scary. The drafting of Desmond Howard was a pick that 27 other GMs hoped they had made, but the Redskins beat them to it. However, as time would tell, the drafting of Desmond Howard became a shining symbol of the da rk days ahead.

Howard's first year was spent primarily on the bench. If you don't recall during the Gibbs years rookies waited their turn, and Howard was no exception. In fact, Gibbs's players were veterans; not of two or three years but four or five. Gibbs had a long history of bringing up players very slowly or bringing in players that had years of experience elsewhere. For example, Doug Williams played for Tampa Bay from '78 to '82 prior to doing time in the USFL. Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders had also done time in t he USFL. John Riggins spent four years with the New York Jets, and Wilber Marshall played for the Chicago Bears before becoming the NFL's first true free agent and signing with the Redskins. With this in mind Howard would be lucky to have half a dozen pla ys during the season. That year Howard only caught three passes by no fault of his own.

After his rookie year the Redskins and the league went through some significant changes. Joe Gibbs retired and the era of free agency was on the horizon. Over the next two seasons the Redskins would lose most of the intricate parts of its championship se ason of '91 either to free agency or to old age. Therefore, Howard was forced to play a much larger part in the grand scheme of the offensive game plan. Unfortunately, he was unable to fulfill the promise of a stellar college career. His grand total for t hree years as a Washington Redskin came to 66 catches, 1033 yards, and 5 touchdowns.

To put this into perspective we need to take a look at four receivers that were picked after Howard. All of them surpass his numbers for the same three year period. Carl Pickens for Cinncinati picked in the second round, 31st overall: 140 catches, 2018 y ards and 18 touchdowns. Courtney Hawkins for Tampa Bay picked in the second round, 44th overall: 119 catches, 1707 yards, 12 touchdowns. Robert Brooks for Green Bay picked in the third round, 62nd overall: 90 catches, 954 yards, and 5 touchdowns. Torrance Small for New Orleans picked in the fifth round, 158th overall: 88 catches, 1161 yards, and 9 touchdowns. Of course Robert Brooks and Carl "slim" Pickens went on to have stellar years in '95. While Torrance Small and Courtney Hawkins continued to be prod uctive for their respective teams. To say the least Howard was a bust.

Just a final note on Howard. The year after Turner took over as head coach Howard was taken by Jacksonville in the expansion draft. He had complained the Redskins had never really given him a "fair" shot. So when Jacksonville gave him his freedom he resp onded with 26 catches, 276 yards and 1 touchdown. Jacksonville cut him after one season.

Unfortunately, Howard was what accentuated a draft that by all accounts was a total disaster. The Redskins '92 draft reads like the New York phone book; if you recognize one name you're lucky. If you don't recognize the following names don't feel badly, you're not expected to. Round 2; DL Shane Collins, Round 3; OL Paul Siever, Round 5; QB Chris Hakel, Round 6; TE Ray Rowe, Round 7; DB Calvin Holmes, Round 8; OL Darryl Moore, Round 9; LB Boone Powell, Round 10; LB Tony Barker, Round 11; WR Terry Smith, and the only one you should recognize OL Matt Elliott in Round 12. Casserly drafted eleven players and only two are still in the NFL, Howard and Elliott, and neither one plays for the Redskins.

So while the Redskins, then the Super Bowl champs, were drafting cannon fodder, the likes of Green Bay, Dallas, Indianapolis and Pittsburgh were forging a bright future for themselves. Dallas drafted Kevin Smith, Robert Jones, and Darren Woodson. Green B ay drafted Edger Bennet, Mark Chmura, Ty Detmer, and Robert Brooks. Indianapolis drafted Quentin Coryatt, Ashley Ambrose, Rodney Culver and Tony McCoy. Pittsburgh drafted Levon Kirkland, Leon Searcy, Joel Steed, and Darren Perry. To illustrate that, in sp ite of free agency, the draft is still the foundation on which all great and not so great teams are built and maintained, pay close attention to the following facts; Indianapolis, Green Bay, Dallas, and Pittsburgh have been to a combined nine AFC or NFC t itle games and five Super Bowls since the draft of '92. The Redskins have had only one playoff win in that same time. If the Redskins were the Titanic, Charley Casserly's draft picks were the iceberg.

Special Thanks to:
Chris Suh
And Springfield Draft Publications (http://erols.com/sdp1)

Next Time: The Draft of '93
The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject.

~Marcus Aurelius
njskinsfan
Hog
Posts: 485
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2004 11:32 pm
Location: Jersey shore

Post by njskinsfan »

It is hands down Deion and I can give you ten million reasons why for one year.
Andre Johnson (we traded up with Dallas) to get I believe the only first round pick to never even make the team.
Heath .. At least we burned New Orleans by getting a third rounder when we dumped him.
Desmond would have to rank second.
Over! Nothing is over until we say its over. Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor! Hell no! -- Future Sen. Blutarski.
Redskins1974
------------
------------
Posts: 1822
Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2004 4:58 pm
Location: U Street - DC

Post by Redskins1974 »

Andre Johnson (we traded up with Dallas) to get I believe the only first round pick to never even make the team


Now that's sad...
The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject.

~Marcus Aurelius
User avatar
Texas Redskin
swine
Posts: 87
Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2004 2:18 pm
Location: Corsicana, TX.
Contact:

Post by Texas Redskin »

I hated Deon and he was a cancer, but my vote is Desmond. He had the most hype and had absolutely nothing at all. He had no business lining up at receiver. The trio of Sanders, Bailey, and Green did have one of the top rated pass defense in the league. I think it was #1, but I can't remember. I have tried to block those days out of my memory.
Fight for ol' Dixie

Texas Redskin
NC43Hog
Brown in the Hall
Brown in the Hall
Posts: 4304
Joined: Sat Jul 26, 2003 5:26 pm
Location: Carolina Country
Contact:

Post by NC43Hog »

Heathbar Shuler was the most disapointing and Pion Sanders was the most . . . :puke:

Duane Thomas, Desmond Howard, Calvin Mohammad were also in the running for most disappointing.
"Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, son." - Dean Wormer
User avatar
Redskin_fan
swine
Posts: 54
Joined: Tue Mar 02, 2004 7:09 pm

Post by Redskin_fan »

Most disappointing player:
1) Deion Sanders
2) Jeff George
3) Heath Shuler
4) Desmond Howard
5) Bruce Smith

Most disappointing coach:
1) Steve Spurrier
2) Marty Schottenheimer
3) Norv Turner
4) Richie Pettibon
User avatar
ImissRFK
swine
Posts: 93
Joined: Sun Mar 07, 2004 9:55 pm
Location: Northern Va

Post by ImissRFK »

I think Stephen Alexander was a big bust. The biggest bust in free agency had to be STANLEY THE SHERIFF RICHARD. That guy could not tackle anything
COZ
piggie
Posts: 129
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2004 11:04 am
Location: Baltimore (Raisin country - YUCK!)

Post by COZ »

In the late 90's I went with my family to Cherokee NC for a vacation. It seems Heath Shuler was the high school QB hero there and broke all the records. Anyway, my parents are in a shop in nearby Tenn. when they see a picture of Heath in a Redskins uniform. My mother commented how much of a bust he was and how he never proved himself but took all that money. It wasn't that nasty - basically what we all thought of him after his problems. Unfortunately mom was overheard by the owner - Heath's mother. She was actually pretty nice about it and mom did a quick recovery so there were no blows.

So Heath gets my vote as biggest bust since he could have been great. Deon get's my WTF vote because it was such a stupid thing to do. Some have ragged on George which is right on but I saw him at a preseason game warming up. He tossed a ball from his 30 and hit the receiver (DG) on the goal line like it was a 10 yd pass. For all his problems I believe he had the strongest arm in football.
COZ
Hail on the 'Skins!
Fan faithful - Section 312
DEHog
Diesel
Diesel
Posts: 7425
Joined: Mon Dec 15, 2003 8:03 pm
Location: FedEx Field
Contact:

Post by DEHog »

Hands down it was Shuler....Deion was a distant 2nd
"Sean Taylor is hands down the best athlete I've ever coached it's not even close" Gregg Williams 2005 Mini-Camp
Smithian
-----------
-----------
Posts: 2535
Joined: Sun Apr 04, 2004 5:30 pm
Location: Arkansas

Post by Smithian »

I think Rob Johnson.
"I said when he retired that Joe Gibbs was the best coach I'd ever faced." - Bill Parcells
User avatar
NJ SKINSFAN
Hog
Posts: 244
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2004 8:46 pm
Location: Manalapan NJ

Post by NJ SKINSFAN »

Heath Schuler and Desmond hoeard is a close second. I hated Deon.
HAIL TO THE REDSKINS!
welch
Skins History Buff
Skins History Buff
Posts: 6000
Joined: Sat Jan 10, 2004 6:36 pm
Location: New York, NY

Post by welch »

1. Desmond Howard, because they traded two 1st rounders. Needed a big WR to learn from Art Monk, and could have had Carl Pickens. Needed a CB, and could have had Terrell Buckley.

2. Heath Shuler.

3. Wow, Duane Thomas. I had forgotten him. The enigmatic one.

4. Gary Beban.

5. Ray MacDonald, a 1st rounder from about '67: big, strong, fast RB who didn;t like being hit

6. Neon Deion. Was he ever really on the team?

(7. John Riggins when George Allen signed him and used him only as a blocking back. George did not have a special touch with the offense.)
davef
piglet
Posts: 47
Joined: Sat Jan 10, 2004 4:06 am
Location: San Diego, CA

Post by davef »

Desnond - ugh - I remember wanting the Redskins to draft Troy Vincent with their pick...
BossHog
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 9375
Joined: Fri Jun 06, 2003 8:34 am
Location: London, Ontario
Contact:

Post by BossHog »

I put together 15 names because I thought there were a few 'unmentionables' that needed to be mentioned... :hmm:

Andre Johnson
Sean Gilbert
Dana Stubblefield
Deion Sanders
Heath Shuler
Michael Westbrook
Desmond Howard
Bobby Wilson
Bruce Smith
Shane Collins
Tracy Rocker
George Rogers
Al Noga
Alvin Harper

and Steve Spurrier...

I know he didn't play, but I have trouble typing a sentence with the words 'Redskin' and 'bust' in it without working in SOS :shock:
Sean Taylor was one of a kind, may he rest in peace.
Post Reply