Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, of course, has been accused of rape by a casino hostess, who claims in her civil suit the alleged attack took place one year ago in Roethlisberger’s room at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe.
Yesterday, making his first public comments since the news broke over the weekend, Roethlisberger read a statement at Steelers headquarters denying any wrongdoing, saying he will have no further comment on the matter as he fights the “reckless and false” allegations. Thus, given there has yet to be a criminal complaint filed, there is really nothing about these developments we wish to address here. Who knows? Maybe we’ll have something to say down the road when more information is known, or when and if all of this is settled.
In the meantime, the good people of Pittsburgh are dumbfounded, feeling a sense of bewilderment, perplexity and outrage all at the same time; more so now over the allegations against Roethlisberger, but until those allegations surfaced, just as much so over the nationwide garage sale known as the Pirates.
Some kind of direction for the current plan needs to come into the picture quickly, for even feelings of outrage determine some sort of interest. At the current pace of the bail-out Bucs, even more damaging feelings will soon emerge from the fanbase, if it hasn’t already: complete indifference.
A season after the Bucs traded Jason Bay and Xavier Nady, Nate McLouth was sent to Atlanta after signing a multi-year contract extension. Nyjer Morgan was sent to Washington, and now the slumping Adam LaRoche will join his former teammate Bay in Boston.
On top of this, shortstop Jack Wilson and second baseman Freddy Sanchez are on the clock. This after the Pirates pulled back their contract extension offers to both players. All sides say they remain open to new negotiations, but there is no indication any are forthcoming.
Each player rejected the team's initial offer late last week, with Wilson's being for two years and $8 million, plus a club option for 2012; Sanchez's for two years and $10 million, plus the voiding of his existing 2010 vesting option that could pay him $8 million if he makes 600 plate appearances, which appears to be a foregone conclusion.
Wilson himself has a club option of $8.4 million for next season, meaning the Pirates could unilaterally keep both players another year at those prices if they choose. General manager Neil Huntington says they don’t.
Meanwhile, pitcher Ian Snell, who had been struggling all season in the majors, actually requested to be sent down to AAA Indianapolis last month and has been tearing up minor league hitting. Yet he has no desire to be called back to the Pirates because he is battling depression and says there is nothing in Pittsburgh that will help him overcome that.
Depression is no laughing matter, so here’s hoping Snell one day soon will be able overcome or at least find a way to deal with his.
Through it all, the Pirates have somehow managed to stay just 7 1/2 games out of first place, which, whether or not is an indictment on the National League Central, has many of the remaining Pirates fans wondering how much closer they would be had the club not traded off their best and most popular players. Yet there are some Pirates fans who look at these trades and say they understand why they’re being made. The Pirates need to build a farm system, and since they are among the smallest of the small-market big league teams they are trying to acquire as many young prospects as they can by dealing players with big league value whom they feel they can’t afford to pay.
Maybe the club would be a little closer to first place in the Central sans firesale, but likely not by much. So that puts Huntington directly behind the 8-ball. What other choice does he have? The Pirates simply cannot afford to maintain the status quo, yet they are walking the very fine line of running off what little revenue they are generating at PNC Park by trading fan favorites in droves.
I wouldn’t want Neil Huntington’s job; would you? For the foreseeable future he, being the guy who pulls the strings, is in a no-win situation, even though he is the one who inherited this haven’t-won-in-16-years-soon-to-be-17 situation.
On the whole, I would rather be in Indianapolis.
Mike Burke is sports editor of the Cumberland Times-News. Contact Mike Burke at mburke@times-news.com.
Mike Burke - Sports
For now, just say it’s Bleaksburgh
- Mike Burke - Sports
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Somewhere over the rainbow starts here
During a break in the program Sunday night, former Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Bob Robertson sat at a table backstage sharing some stories from the day when he played some of the finest defensive first base and hit some of the longest home runs in the major leagues in helping the Bucs to the 1971 world championship.
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Ronnie Cage’s life was deeds, not words
It was right they observed a moment of silence at the Allegany-Fort Hill basketball game. And I hope they observed a moment of silence at all of the games this week — boys and girls, men’s and women’s — in all the area gyms — Maryland and West Virginia.
That’s because Ronnie Cage worked them all. And before that he played them all. -
No plus-one would have come out of this Orange
Having never been what one would call a big West Virginia fan, I nevertheless find myself entertained by Mountaineers head football coach Dana Holgorsen whenever I take in a WVU game.
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Daumie No. 51
It’s difficult and it’s unsettling — something we’re not ready to come to terms with, really — when we lose Larger than Life.
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At Fort Hill, they’re all in it together
They still decorate their homes and neighborhoods with red and white streamers and signs. They hang football helmets with jersey numbers on telephone poles and trees, and they leave them there until it’s pretty much time to decorate for Christmas.
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Let’s keep lips zipped and just go about our business
The worst part about snow, other than shoveling it, of course, is being surrounded by all the moaning and groaning about how much it’s going to snow before a flake even touches earth and then having to put up with the same moaning and groaning once it begins to snow.
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There are no queens on the sports page
Some high school football seasons it is easier to tell when big things have happened and when big things are ahead by some of the phone calls and letters we receive here in the Times-News sports department. There just seems to be more of a chippiness some years than in others, and this year has been one of those years.
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K.C. latest Laffey Tour over America destination
As of now it appears Aaron Laffey will be wearing royal blue again — Kansas City Royals blue, that is — as the Royals acquired the former Allegany High School left-hander from the New York Yankees in a waivers claim on Tuesday.
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In America ...
Of course you remember where you were when you heard.
What you really remember is how you felt when you realized it wasn’t just a bad pilot or an airplane malfunction when you saw the second plane go into the second tower.
Until the day we are no longer here, the realization that we had just been attacked — somehow, by somebody — will stay with us and move us. -
Keyser, Fort Hill clash tonight
Fort Hill and Keyser, both coming off lopsided season-opening victories, will square off at Greenway Avenue Stadium, while Frankfort entertains Grafton in the Falcons’ home opener in two of seven high school football games featuring nine area teams taking place tonight.
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