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Moss Departure A No-Brainer? ‘Homecoming’ Aug. 14
The
“welcoming committee” will likely be friendly and probably forgiving
when bad boy Randy Moss returns to the Metrodome on Monday night
August 14.
At
least that’s the opinion of WCCO Radio’s Dark Star who scooped
his media brethren forecasting the Moss trade to the Oakland Raiders
weeks before it happened in 2005.
Star
predicts applause for Moss, adding that fans loved the Viking wide
receiver and don’t hold a grudge against him. “He was the most exciting
Viking ever to watch,” Star explained.
Moss, 29, was a super star receiver with the Vikings but injuries and
ineffective quarterback play produced a mediocre season in Oakland in
2005. He holds the NFL record for most 1,000 yard seasons by a
receiver in his first seasons, topping that mark in each of his first
six years with the Vikings, according to statistics from Wikipedia
encyclopedia. Three times in his seven year career with the Vikings he
caught 15 touchdown passes or more and entering this season his career
average of 12 + touchdown passes per year is the best in NFL history.
He
and Daunte Culpepper
were going to become the two-some leading the Purple to the Super Bowl,
or was it supposed to be Super Bowls? Star was among their admirers.
“They were as good as I ever saw in my lifetime. Nobody threw it up in
the air better than he (Culpepper) did and nobody could get to it faster
than Randy Moss could. With Culpepper’s arm and Randy Moss’s speed and
hands it was the best combination I ever saw.”
Star
had a solid source with the NFL who assured him there was interest in
sending Moss to Oakland. “We had this about a month before it happened
and anytime you get the drop on Sid Hartman it’s a lot of fun,”
he said.
Why
did the Vikings part with Moss? Legions of fans can recite his troubles
including exiting the field in 2004 before the game against the
Washington Redskins ended.
“I
think he was traded because it was time for him to go somewhere else and
earn his living,” Star said. “I think you get to a point where you wear
out your welcome. He’s a gifted kid, a tough kid, a street kid. He
never got in a position where he was coachable to the point where they
could handle him being around. And when they got to the end of it, I
think they said I don’t care how much talent he’s got, he’s got to go.”
The
Raiders won four games last season and prospects for better results in
2006 may not be much better. With all those seasons of NFL pounding,
and maybe not as much desire, perhaps prospects for Moss are not so
bright either.
Star
said he feels sorry for Moss. “Randy is probably cooked. He might be
at the end of it. Sometimes the real good ones like Randy Moss they
play for five-six years and all of a sudden they are not that interested
in playing. I don’t think this kid wants it as bad as he used to. And
he’s in a bad situation in Oakland and I just expect him to go dog
city.”
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