Pittsburgh
Post Gazette
Sunday September 18, 2005
Ron Cook, columnist
If it's a big play,
it must be Farrior
The
hit was made, and the big crowd gasped. The runner went one way,
the ball another. In an instant, both were on the Heinz Field
turf. The Steelers didn't just recover the fumble; they took control
of the game. The ball carrier picked himself up slowly and walked
to his bench, head hanging, all the while wondering where the
train came from.
You don't
have to guess who made the play for the Steelers.
You know
it was James Farrior.
Doesn't
he always make the big play for the Steelers' defense?
Farrior
said he wants to have a better season than last year, when he
was the Steelers' Most Valuable Player and first team All Pro
and played like it in the 34-7 victory against the Tennessee Titans
last Sunday. His defense had a rough start, allowing the Titans
to take the opening drive for a touchdown. After the Steelers
answered with a touchdown, the Titans were moving again when Farrior
changed the course of the game.
He stood
up running back Travis Henry in the hole over right guard, knocking
Henry backward and the ball flying. Ike Taylor recovered for the
Steelers, who turned the gift into a field goal and never looked
back.
"You
never know when big plays are going to happen so you have to go
hard every play." Farrior said.
The man
has a gift for making them.
There
wasn't a better all around inside linebacker in the NFL last season.
Farrior's versatility showed in his statistics: a team high 119
tackles, three sacks, four interceptions, four forced fumbles
and three fumble recoveries.
He made
the biggest play of the season in Game 6 at Dallas, turning a
sure loss into an unlikely win when he forced a late fumble by
quarterback Vinny Testaverde, his second sack and third forced
fumble of the day, for which he was honored as the AFC Defensive
Player of the Week. Who knows what would have happened the next
Sunday against New England if the Steelers had lost that afternoon?
As it was, they crushed the Patriots, finished 15-1 in the regular
season and made it to the AFC Championship game.
Only Bill
Cowher knows how the voting went for team MVP, but Farrior should
have been the unanimous choice. With all due respect to Hines
Ward, Alan Faneca and Ben Roethlisberger, there shouldn't have
been a close second.
"I
didn't always play great games," Farrior said. "If you
sat in the film room with the coaches, you'd see I made mistakes."
What?
Did Farrior
forget to tie his shoelaces one play?
Did he
mess up a high-five with Joey Porter?
Was he
in the bathroom for one of Cowher's halftime talks?
"No
player has every played the perfect game," Farrior said.
"There's always room to improve and ways to get better. That's
what I'm working to do."
As a Steelers
captain, Farrior takes that same never-good-enough approach with
the defense. It didn't matter that the titans didn't score after
the first drive. "We gave up a couple of long runs and a
couple of long passes," he said. "If we're going to
be the type of defense we want to be, we can't do that. We expect
more out of ourselves. We're a prideful group. Against a better
team - a team that's a little more explosive - those big plays
could hurt us."
It could
happen today against the Houston Texans, but it's not likely.
The Texans managed just one touchdown, 25 passing yards and 120
total yards in a 22-7 loss at Buffalo last Sunday. Quarterback
David Carr was sacked five times, continuing a horrible trend
that's had him sacked 145 times in his first three-plus seasons.
The poor guy could be wearing Farrior by the time the day is done.
Of course,
the Texans will be looking for Farrior. He might have sneaked
up on a few teams last season. Certainly, he didn't get the recognition
that fellow All Pro inside linebacker Ray Lewis of the Baltimore
Ravens did, even though he's twice the player Lewis is at this
stage of their careers.
But that
was then.
This is
now.
"It's
going to be my most challenging season," Farrior said. "I'm
no secret anymore. Teams are going to be game-planning for me,
looking to take me out of the game."
The Titans
tried and failed.
Don't
be surprised if most teams fail with Farrior.