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Toussaint: its still hard to this day

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2016-03-23 6:04 AM | Teresa Varley steelers.com
Toussaint: 'It's still hard to this day'
It's been a little over two months and there are still times when the thoughts enter Fitzgerald Toussaint's mind.

"I think about where we might have been," said Toussaint. "It's crazy. It was hard. It's still hard to this day. I think about it."

The Steelers were holding on to a 13-12 lead over the Denver Broncos in the fourth quarter of the AFC Divisional playoff game and the offense was moving the ball. On second-and-four, Toussaint went around left end and was hit by cornerback Bradley Roby, the ball popped free and DeMarcus Ware recovered. The Broncos got the ball back, took a 20-13 lead and never looked back.


"It was tough to get over," said Toussaint. "Fumbling is not what I do. I never had a problem with that. For that to happen, to a team like this that worked so hard, that's what I was disappointed about. It was never personal. It was never about me, or anything, it was about the team. I let the team down. I didn't care about anything else. I knew how hard Coach (Mike) Tomlin worked for this.

"I am a new guy. I am new to all of this. I am trying to make a mark here and I got in the way a little bit with that situation. I feel like I owed them something. I have something to prove. They might not feel like that, but I feel like that. Any work I put in is going to be towards fixing that situation and not letting it happen again."

Toussaint said the best thing for him was the reaction from his teammates, who showed him support when he was down.

"It was beautiful to hear from everyone," said Toussaint. "Ben (Roethlisberger) talked to me multiple times after the game. That made me feel good; that was a breath of fresh air. He made me feel like I put in some good, quality work and that helped with the situation. Overall the love was tremendous.

"I could count on my fingers how many times someone talked negative, but it's out of this world how much love I got."

* * *

Where most of the support for Toussaint came from, the love, the strength and inspiration was from his family. Mainly his mother, Elaine Edwards, who he gets his fight from.


"She has been a waitress for 29 years and raised five kids off of tips," said Toussaint. "That was hard on her. She has been through so many things. The way she fought through adversity made me feel that toughness. I really take pride in that. Most guys get their toughness from different areas, or some athletic source. I get mine from home."

Toussaint sat quiet for a second, and you could tell there was more on his mind. More on why she inspired him so much. And then he opened up, about a car accident several years ago that almost took Edwards life. About the night a car hit her from behind, flipped over her car and almost exploded.

"She almost died in a car accident," he quietly shared. "They weren't sure what happened, if the other driver was tired or drunk, I still don't know. She almost died. I was at school and she didn't tell me for a couple of days because she didn't want me to mess up my mental state. I found out and the three to four hour drive from Michigan was the fastest drive ever. When I got there it was sad to see my mother in that position. It hit home for me.

"Doctors don't know how she wasn't paralyzed from that situation. Just the way she recovered from that was drastic. It was crazy, it's unbelievable. It's like it never happened. She fought. She still tried to go to work. Even to this day, I give her a little something to help, but she still wants to go to work and do things on her own. I look at that as motivation for sure."

And there is more.

"She was diagnosed with lupus as well and she still fought," said Toussaint. "Once you see her, you would never be able to tell she has been through so much because she is so tough."

* * *

Toussaint's road to the NFL was not an easy one. He wasn't drafted, wasn't even signed as an undrafted free agent in the days following the 2014 NFL Draft. Instead he was offered a tryout with the Baltimore Ravens, and shortly thereafter got a call back to come in because they needed some depth at running back. He was released by the Ravens before the start of the regular season, signed to the practice squad, added to the active roster, released, signed back to the practice squad, added to the active roster again, released again, and back to the practice squad. All in less than a month. He finished that season on the active roster, but was eventually let go before the start of the 2015 season.

It would be enough to make anyone want to just pack it in, the ups and downs and the emotional rollercoaster just too overwhelming. But that isn't what Toussaint is made of. That wasn't the fight his mother put inside of him.

Toussaint was signed to the Steelers practice squad just two days after the Ravens released him for the final time, and added to the active roster on Nov. 27. For him, this season has been the opportunity he was waiting for.


"I am a very patient guy," he said. "I work hard until my opportunity comes. That is why when an opportunity does approach, I am confident because I put in the work that I need. It was very valuable being on the practice squad this season. I was able to sit back and learn from those guys. I wasn't getting the physical reps always, but I was getting the mental reps."

He heeded the advice given to him by veterans like DeAngelo Williams, who encouraged him to stay focused and always lay everything on the line, but all the while have fun. He kept his head in the playbook, both while he was at work and in his free time. And when his turn came, when he outplayed veterans ahead of him and worked his way onto the active roster, he was ready.

"The confidence is there," said Toussaint. "It's something I worked for. I never take it for granted. I just go out there and work hard and lay it on the line every day.

"When you are a kid it's something you always dreamt of. A guy like me who has scratched and clawed, it's definitely a tremendous feeling. That is every man's dream and it's all God."
 
Good kid. Tough break, but we aren't Bengal fans!

He played a good game.
 
I don't regard that game and fumble as the end of the world. 1) Last year our defense wasn't good enough to get to or win the SB, and 2) If we beat Denver we would have been scorched by the Cheating Bastiges From New England the next week anyway. I'd rather lose to Five Head.
 
Godbless Ms. Elaine Edwards, wish there were more like her
 
I don't blame him. It was a helluva strip by Roby and to be honest at that point if we would have had Brown we'd been up by 3 td's. I have a feeling he worked on ball security this offseason. :)
 
I really don't want to hear it. He screwed up. I'm not gonna waste time hating on him, but I'm not gonna feel all sorry for him either. Do your job. You screwed up. I, too, feel we'd have lost in NE the next week, so I am not obsessed over this F up (if I thought it cost us a ring, I'd be more pissed). Take care of the F-ing ball. Our D actually played well enough to win. We had that game. I feel more sorry for the rest of the team, who showed resilience and fight all season long, especially down the stretch.
 
I don't regard that game and fumble as the end of the world. 1) Last year our defense wasn't good enough to get to or win the SB, and 2) If we beat Denver we would have been scorched by the Cheating Bastiges From New England the next week anyway. I'd rather lose to Five Head.

I disagree with number 2. I think we would have beat the cheats. Hell, we shoulda beat them week 1 except Tomlin/Haley included sticking their heads up their ***** as part of the opening drives scripted plays.
 
It was a fourth quarter turnover that killed our chance in 2010 of winning number 7. But it was unfortunate, the season is over, and we'll come back better next year. We will be the favorites to dethrone NE and possibly win the SB next year.
 
It was one of the the more devastating plays in Steelers post season history.

Right up there with the Mendenhall fumble, no doubt about it.

The Steelers, despite an injured Ben, no AB and two huge drops from Miller and Bryant, had that game against the eventual champs, but the kid fumbled it away.

However, I like Toussaint. He showed much more talent than I anticipated, leaving me to believe he can be a solid #2 RB in the future, and I like how he's using his fumble as motivation going forward.
 
I don't dislike the kid, I just hope in a critical situation that it comes down to hoping he will hold onto the rock. Stay healthy Bell and Williams please.
 
I don't dislike the kid, I just hope in a critical situation that it comes down to hoping he will hold onto the rock. Stay healthy Bell and Williams please.

That can happen anytime even to the best. When Bettis fumbled against Indy he was like the #1 or #2 LEAST likely running back to fumble. Someone gets a lucky hit in the right place, **** can happen.
 
It was a big play but games are not one or lost on one play very often. I could be mistaken but the defense had opportunities to get off the field twice on the subsequent drive and didn't. The kid played far better than I and most of us expected.
 
He was carrying it like a loaf of bread. Terrible technique. I'm sure he's a great guy but it's still valid to criticize the play. My God. It cost us the game after all. I believe we win the Super Bowl if he holds onto the ball there. So...
 
Didn't Willie Gay drop one right in his hands after. I might be wrong about that, but for sure the defense stood there with Manning on the ground and did nothing. Had one guy even made a move at him, he would have stayed there. Now way he gets up.
 
Did you even read the article POP? I figure you didn't. But great contribution to the thread.

I read it until it started to get all boo booey and "family member X has _______ disease."

Going that route is so tired. Every person has some family member suffering. I am sick of it being forced down our throats.
 
That can happen anytime even to the best. When Bettis fumbled against Indy he was like the #1 or #2 LEAST likely running back to fumble. Someone gets a lucky hit in the right place, **** can happen.

Thing is Bettis had a bigger body of work. You knew he wasn't prone to fumbling.

Croissant hasn't been around long enough to know either way. But moving forward I don't want to see another fumble in limited play....
 
I read it until it started to get all boo booey and "family member X has _______ disease."

Going that route is so tired. Every person has some family member suffering. I am sick of it being forced down our throats.


i like rise above, stories. Nothing is shoved down your throat ( well what you do on your own time is your business) as you usually read it and then it's back to the football side of things. Not like it is really repetitive in nature. I get it you lack empathy, your parents must be proud.
 
I don't dislike the kid, I just hope in a critical situation that it comes down to hoping he will hold onto the rock. Stay healthy Bell and Williams please.

Well he was our 4th or 5th stringer....Tombert probably should of had better option on our roster. Damn the front office and coaching staff.
 
Eh get over it kid. Experiences learned come back stronger. Don't sit on your mistakes. He did good thtoughout
 
Eh get over it kid. Experiences learned come back stronger. Don't sit on your mistakes. He did good thtoughout

It was a terrible mistake. Football is all these guys do; there is no excuse for a back carrying a ball like that in such a crucial moment of such a big game. DO YOUR JOB. It would be different if he did everything right and just had a bad break. This isn't the case; he carried the ball sloppily and with poor technique. He should have had his **** together better, being it is his PROFESSION.
 
POP;233478[B said:
]It was a terrible mistake. Football is all these guys do; there is no excuse for a back carrying a ball like that in such a crucial moment of such a big game. DO YOUR JOB.[/B] It would be different if he did everything right and just had a bad break. This isn't the case; he carried the ball sloppily and with poor technique. He should have had his **** together better, being it is his PROFESSION.

So you NEVER make any mistakes at work? I do.......Even if he was carrying the ball correctly you would still probably *****. Look at Mendy in the SB. Two guys hit him at the exact same time a second after he gets the hand off. If Johnson(Mendy's lead blocker) just blocks one of the defenders Mendy probably doesn't fumble, but Johnson doesn't block either. He runs right between them and Mendy gets blamed for the fumble. Everyone makes mistake sooner or later. It is just unfortunately the kid made it at a very important spot of the game.
 
It was a terrible mistake. Football is all these guys do; there is no excuse for a back carrying a ball like that in such a crucial moment of such a big game. DO YOUR JOB. It would be different if he did everything right and just had a bad break. This isn't the case; he carried the ball sloppily and with poor technique. He should have had his **** together better, being it is his PROFESSION.

The exact same can be said for the defender who made the play; it's all he does. Dude made a nice play, it happens. After all, that's what defenders are paid to do.
 
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