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For all you Jesse James fans out there

http://bleacherreport.com/tb/dh9py
Pittsburgh Steelers TE Jesse James reeling from tragic news on Sunday

Gary Dulac reported on Thursday that Jesse James was grieving the loss of a friend, a tragic circumstance that could have had an impact on his performance in the Hall of Fame game against the Minnesota Vikings. Fans and coaches alike seemed befuddled and unpleasantly surprised with James' two dropped passes, one of which would have been for a sure touchdown.

NFL players are often heroes to their fans, but that does not make them superhuman. Football players experience trials and tribulation just like the rest of us. In this case, it was the death of a friend. A horrible tragedy that would be distressing and distracting for anyone. What happens, though, when your job requires you to stay focused and perform even in the wake of such a tragedy?

In the case of Jesse James, his bad day at work generated a lot of unfavorable attention. Still, though, the NFL is a business, and in the end part of the job is learning to compartmentalize distracting problems and emotions in order to perform effectively on the field. That is a skill he will need to learn just like everything else is his learning as he transitions into the NFL.

Cam Heyward is expecting a baby during the regular season. When asked what he would do if his wife went into labor during a football game, Heyward said, "I'd tell her to hold it." In 2012, Baltimore Ravens WR Torrey Smith played in a game just hours after his brother's fatal motorcycle accident. Life events, joyous and tragic, often come at inconvenient times.

James' draft report cited poor hands and receiving ability as a weakness. So, it is possible that his Sunday mistakes had nothing to do with his personal circumstances. On the other hand, James is only 21 years old. Mental toughness is a skill that often comes with age and life experience.

Does Jesse James deserve criticism for Sunday night's game even though he was reeling from the death of his friend? Yes. He had a job, and he failed to do it well. The difference is, James has a very public job. If he worked in another sector, he probably would not have been given bereavement leave for a friend. He likely would have had to go to work. He likely would have been distracted and sad as he sat at his desk. The difference is, he would not have had an audience of millions judging his work performance as he did on Sunday.

James understands what is expected of him, saying via the Post-Gazette, "You've got to get back to work and focus. You know you've got to make the next play, and even at that, I didn't make the next one. But I'll be back and make the next one." Mike Tomlin reminded the media that Lawrence Timmons had a horrible NFL debut. It's the preseason. There is room for mistakes. Hopefully they will be ironed out by the time the regular season comes around. And, hopefully Jesse James can bounce back and show that he deserves a spot on the 53-man roster.
 
Interesting points Supe. It is telling though that his play did kind of show his predraft weaknesses. I do not see that as a bad thing. He might be what we thought he would be and that is a project at tight end. He does have lots of potential to get better. It is likely that he will with better coaching he will get in the nfl. There have been many guys that get better and are late picks. I suspect this kid will be one of the ones that gets better. Depending on his ability to learn a lot of new things and play against much better competition we might even see lots of improvement through the preseason.
 
http://bleacherreport.com/tb/dh9py
Pittsburgh Steelers TE Jesse James reeling from tragic news on Sunday

Gary Dulac reported on Thursday that Jesse James was grieving the loss of a friend, a tragic circumstance that could have had an impact on his performance in the Hall of Fame game against the Minnesota Vikings. Fans and coaches alike seemed befuddled and unpleasantly surprised with James' two dropped passes, one of which would have been for a sure touchdown.

NFL players are often heroes to their fans, but that does not make them superhuman. Football players experience trials and tribulation just like the rest of us. In this case, it was the death of a friend. A horrible tragedy that would be distressing and distracting for anyone. What happens, though, when your job requires you to stay focused and perform even in the wake of such a tragedy?

In the case of Jesse James, his bad day at work generated a lot of unfavorable attention. Still, though, the NFL is a business, and in the end part of the job is learning to compartmentalize distracting problems and emotions in order to perform effectively on the field. That is a skill he will need to learn just like everything else is his learning as he transitions into the NFL.

Cam Heyward is expecting a baby during the regular season. When asked what he would do if his wife went into labor during a football game, Heyward said, "I'd tell her to hold it." In 2012, Baltimore Ravens WR Torrey Smith played in a game just hours after his brother's fatal motorcycle accident. Life events, joyous and tragic, often come at inconvenient times.

James' draft report cited poor hands and receiving ability as a weakness. So, it is possible that his Sunday mistakes had nothing to do with his personal circumstances. On the other hand, James is only 21 years old. Mental toughness is a skill that often comes with age and life experience.

Does Jesse James deserve criticism for Sunday night's game even though he was reeling from the death of his friend? Yes. He had a job, and he failed to do it well. The difference is, James has a very public job. If he worked in another sector, he probably would not have been given bereavement leave for a friend. He likely would have had to go to work. He likely would have been distracted and sad as he sat at his desk. The difference is, he would not have had an audience of millions judging his work performance as he did on Sunday.

James understands what is expected of him, saying via the Post-Gazette, "You've got to get back to work and focus. You know you've got to make the next play, and even at that, I didn't make the next one. But I'll be back and make the next one." Mike Tomlin reminded the media that Lawrence Timmons had a horrible NFL debut. It's the preseason. There is room for mistakes. Hopefully they will be ironed out by the time the regular season comes around. And, hopefully Jesse James can bounce back and show that he deserves a spot on the 53-man roster.

WTF, did his mother write that article? It sounds like a school absentee note. Signed, Epstein's mother
 
So people are shocked that a 21 year old 5th round pick we knew had awkward hands dropped a few balls? Interesting.
 
In this case it might not take logic or a mod to keep this from going into the rant stage but events themselves may change the topic. Instead of a ***** fest that seems to pull the chain of some folks the discussion might go to look how much he has improved since the terrible first game. He was picked and considered by many to be a project with upside in a draft that seemed weak at his position. It looks like he will be that in spite of the note from Epstein's mother or some other mother. He will get to work with a dedicated position coach as well as a very good some say great offensive line coach. The catching aspect of his game will get better as well. It would be easy to attribute his drops to a tragedy, but just as easy to blame them on his first NFL game and a bad case of the nerves. On some of those plays if he was not looking for the ball when it was thrown he could easily have had a tough time with it. It might have been no more than looking in another direction with just his eyes when the ball arrived. Sometimes these guys are trying to hard to get everything right and it comes back to bite them.

The kid will likely see some action again tonight and hopefully will show some improvement when on the field. Then the thread could go 180 pages over the course of the preseason dealing with his play and the improvements there of instead of a lot of bump threads trying to get to a high page count by some kids.
 
In this case it might not take logic or a mod to keep this from going into the rant stage but events themselves may change the topic. Instead of a ***** fest that seems to pull the chain of some folks the discussion might go to look how much he has improved since the terrible first game. He was picked and considered by many to be a project with upside in a draft that seemed weak at his position. It looks like he will be that in spite of the note from Epstein's mother or some other mother. He will get to work with a dedicated position coach as well as a very good some say great offensive line coach. The catching aspect of his game will get better as well. It would be easy to attribute his drops to a tragedy, but just as easy to blame them on his first NFL game and a bad case of the nerves. On some of those plays if he was not looking for the ball when it was thrown he could easily have had a tough time with it. It might have been no more than looking in another direction with just his eyes when the ball arrived. Sometimes these guys are trying to hard to get everything right and it comes back to bite them.

The kid will likely see some action again tonight and hopefully will show some improvement when on the field. Then the thread could go 180 pages over the course of the preseason dealing with his play and the improvements there of instead of a lot of bump threads trying to get to a high page count by some kids.

What if Ike is his father??? The kid is doomed I say, dooooooooommmmeed!!!!
 
Well he did cat h a couple against Jax.
 
I think James just off of potential makes the 53 man but Miller and Spaeth are safe at 1 and 2. James needs to develop his hands but I can tell he's in phenomena shape from his Penn state days.
 
I think James just off of potential makes the 53 man but Miller and Spaeth are safe at 1 and 2. James needs to develop his hands but I can tell he's in phenomena shape from his Penn state days.

Had a nice rebound catch. I can clearly see his ability to get open. So that's a start.


he will have to focus on consistently catching the ball and of course work on his blocking
 
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