Outlaw Heroes
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nyc-cowboy;4587523 said:Well if your only going for the RKG - I don't know if you would be able to field a very good team - like I said, not too many of those guys around. Lee and Ware types (RKG and talent) get scooped up pretty quick.
Remember the 09 draft.. I remember reading how a few of them were captains on their teams and how they are hard workers ect. - how did that work out...
Look at our 90s team - they certainly weren't saints - you do remember the "White House" - not all of them could be a Moose or Troy.
The NFL and a team is a microcosm of society your gonna have all types.
I have yet to see a team full of RKGs.
Is Dez the RKG? maybe not but he sure has some natural talent and ability and with some work could be one of the best. Sometimes you have to take a shot with guys like that. Not saying I agree or disagree but thats just the way things are.
We disagree on the number of RKGs available out there. You're never going to populate a team entirely with guys like Ware and Lee, but that's more a function of how rare their talent is than it is a function of how rare their character and work ethic are.
The Cowboys entire 2012 and 2011 draft class appears to be made up of RKGs, based upon scouting reports and media reports. Most of those guys will not have the level of talent that Ware and Lee have displayed (though a few, like T. Smith and Mo may) but that can't be the standard. That would be too high a standard even if you ignored RKGs and drafted nothing but guys like Quinton Coples and Janoris Jenkins. There's still plenty of opportunity to draft talented RKGs that don't rise to the level of talent of a DeMarcus Ware or a Sean Lee.
The '90s Cowboys, for all of their off-field indiscretions, were full of RKGs. Irvin was probably one of the ring-leaders of the White House crew, but he was also, by all accounts, the hardest working player on the team and a guy who put team success above personal glory.
There seems to be an assumption that, when we associate the RKG with "character", what we mean is that he doesn't have any off-field issues. The type of "character" we should be concerned with, however, has less to do with whether the player gets himself into the occasional off-field scrape than it does with whether the player is a team-first guy, willing to do whatever it takes to win and ready to put the interests of the team ahead of his own immediate interests. That's why I can claim that Irvin was a RKG but that a guy like T.O., who (so far as I know) has never been charged with drug possession or been accused of sexual assault, wasn't. T.O.'s conduct on the field, on the sidelines and in the locker room were disruptive to every team he played on. Getting arrested with a few grams of cocaine, while perhaps drawing unwanted media attention, could never have done as much damage.
Now it's probably true that guys with significant off-field issues are more likely to be the kind of guys that disrupt a team because of their behavior on the field or sideline (or in the locker room). But Irvin serves as a compelling example of why this shouldn't be assumed to be the case.
Dez looks more like Irvin than like T.O. to me.
