Well, we didn't have to wait long to find out who was willing to pay for Terrell Owens' services as a wide receiver.
The Buffalo Bills signed him today, making Owens' tenure on the unemployment line one of the shortest — if not the shortest — of the current recession. The Bills gave him a one-year, $6.5 million contract. Not bad for a 35-year-old wide receiver.
I must admit, I wasn't sure what to think when I heard the news. I had lunch today with an old friend, and we talked about Owens, who had just signed with the Bills within the hour. I observed that Owens loves atmospheres where he can get a lot of media attention, like San Francisco, Philadelphia and Dallas — and there just isn't much media in Buffalo.
Of course, the media will follow Owens to Buffalo and, as long as he and the Bills are winning, the media will stay on the story. But if Buffalo reverts to form and starts losing games in bunches, the media will leave Buffalo rapidly. Who wants to hang around upstate New York with winter starting to move in to cover a football team that isn't going to the playoffs — again?
Clark Judge of CBS Sports thinks Owens and the Bills are a bad match. "Owens joined a team that makes less sense for him than he does for it," Judge writes, "and we're left with one inescapable conclusion: There just wasn't a market for the guy."
Ross Tucker of Sports Illustrated thinks the one-year deal makes sense. Owens typically behaves himself in the first year with any team, and coach Dick Jauron faces "likely his last year in Buffalo" unless he can produce a winner.
Nevertheless, Tucker wonders, "how is T.O.'s flash gonna play in blue-collar Buffalo? I mean, picturing T.O. in Buffalo is kind of like imagining the Queen of England at a monster truck show. Just doesn't seem to fit."
Clearly, Peter King writes for Sports Illustrated, the Bills think Owens is worth the risk.
And he agrees that Owens' history is an argument that favors the one-year deal. "One year is smart," he writes. "More than that, history tells us, is stupid."
Time will tell if the Bills are smart or stupid.
And, while we're waiting for the answer to that one, remember what Forrest Gump said.
"Stupid is as stupid does."
2 comments:
I am originally from Buffalo, so no matter where my life took me I always rooted for the Bills. Now I won't even have that to look forward to. For me two as (Jim Rome calls him) is to the Bills what roids are to baseball which I also stopped following years ago because of Bonds at first, now every player is on something. Well I still have the NBA and the Sabres.
Regards,
Joseph
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Joseph.
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