Ray Lewis said that his favorite hit of the year was against Mendenhall
Ray Lewis said that his favorite hit of the year was against Mendenhall
Quote:
Don't Mess with Ray Lewis!!!!!!
<!-- / icon and title --> <!-- message -->I was watching this ray interview, and he was asked to pick his favorite plays of the season, his choices were
1. His hit on kellen winslow
2.His hit on Mendenhall, (ending his season)
3. His two picks against houston
4. His sack on Jason Cambell
When asked which was his favorite, He picked the Mendenhall hit.
I didn't know this, but These were his exact words...."Sometimes you just play the game...but some people make it personal...And then you know what every body knew about the text message to ray rice, and all that....Even when i told him i enjoy your game or whatever...and he said something else, so i was like wow...So its gonna be that type of game"...
Here's the link...start it from 4:49...but i recomend you watch the whole interview, its great.
http://www.baltimoreravens.com
This shows that when you mess with Ray Lewis you get a broken Arm..
===end of quote===
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24 comments
Comments
Send this to the Steelers
Let them post this news up on their locker room
This is war!
by lightningrod on Jan 16, 2009 3:14 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
My favorite hit of the year
is the blow the Ravens take when they don’t get the ticket to Tampa.
by Hochuli loves Broccoli on Jan 16, 2009 3:29 PM EST reply actions 1 recs
Ray Lewis
is a freaking donkey! All the bama does is scream and yell and make a fool of himself. There are other much more serious threats on the team.
by Cdsumm on Jan 16, 2009 3:40 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
You can't break all their arms.
When I say who dey, you say we dey.
by sn0wballz on Jan 16, 2009 3:43 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
O my god Ray!
Mendenhall was jokingly talking trash to a friend, STOP BEING AN IDIOT and claiming it was personal.
by shleeve on Jan 16, 2009 8:36 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
F**k Ray Lewis
I’m getting my game face on…
by SteelerMike on Jan 16, 2009 9:21 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Bart Scott just threatened Hines Ward
Mentioning Ward heats up rivalry
Friday, January 16, 2009
By Ron Cook, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
OWINGS MILLS, Md. — There are any number of unpleasant incidents that define the Steelers’ long, bitter, hateful rivalry with the Baltimore Ravens, but the most recent involving Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward and Ravens linebacker Bart Scott seems like the perfect place to start this morning.
When the teams last met Dec. 14 in Baltimore, Ward tried to throw a crackback on Scott during a scramble by quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. At the last instant, Scott saw Ward coming and ducked. Ward missed him.
“They put a bounty on me and then he ducks,” Ward said with just the right amount of disdain after the Steelers’ last-minute, 13-9 win.
“He saw Hines coming and he was scared!” teammate Santonio Holmes piped in from two lockers down.
You’re probably shocked to learn that someone asked Scott about that this week with the teams to meet again Sunday in the AFC championship game at Heinz Field.
Hey, I couldn’t help myself.
“Yeah, I’m scared of a 200-pound man,” Scott said. “I deal with the big guys every play, but I’m scared of him. Yeah, right. Put that down. I’m scared of him.”
Scott’s smirk matched Ward’s best on any day.
“It’s almost comical,” he said.
Thing is, Scott wasn’t laughing. He never laughs when Ward is the topic of the conversation. He refuses to even call him by name. The two have become the faces of the nasty rivalry, arguably the meanest in the NFL. It was Scott who threatened to “kill” Ward after Ward sent him flying with a block in the game at Pittsburgh last season, telling him “that payback is a [bleep].”
Scott stopped short of that this week.
Just short, actually.
“His time will come. He’ll get his,” Scott said of Ward. "He’ll come across the middle one day and someone will hit him or take out his knee. The guy will be fined and [Ward] will be gone. No one will care. No one will even care. No one will send him any cards saying they’re sorry. Not to that guy.
“You reap what you sow.”
Over the years, the Ravens have worked up a good case of dislike for a number of Steelers. Former linebacker Joey Porter comes to mind. “He’s [a bleep],” cornerback Chris McAlister called him after he pushed down Ravens injured tight end Todd Heap in ‘04. Former wide receiver Plaxico Burress also was despised here. “Plexiglass,” then-Ravens tight end Shannon Sharpe called him after he maligned the Ravens’ great defense in ‘01 by saying, "They’ve got one good player" — linebacker Ray Lewis — “and the rest are just followers.”
But the Ravens’ hatred for Ward is off the charts.
It goes back to the ’01 season when Ward popped Hall of Fame-bound safety Rod Woodson with a block, bloodying his nose. After the game, Woodson threatened to get even and was so angry that he temporarily scuttled a proposed business deal he had for Ward to promote his Pittsburgh automobile dealership.
It was during that season that Ward first spoke of an alleged bounty the Ravens had on him and Burress. Just this season, Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs went on a national radio show and said his teammates had a bounty on Ward and Steelers rookie running back Rashard Mendenhall. The ferocious Lewis ended Mendenhall’s season when the teams played Sept. 29 in Pittsburgh by breaking his shoulder with a brutal — but clean — hit.
“Hines Ward is definitely a dirty player, a cheap-shot artist,” Suggs said in that radio interview.
With so much at stake Sunday, the Ravens tried to be politically correct this week, downplaying their animosity toward the Steelers in general and Ward in particular. Linebacker Jarret Johnson went so far as to say he’d like to have Ward on his team. “Anybody who’s that competitive and wants to win that badly, you’d love to have him as a teammate.”
What a crock, you know?
But Scott didn’t play those games. “I have no comment about [Ward],” he growled, initially. But, after being reminded of Ward’s block attempt in the last game and Holmes’ colorful description of the play, he had plenty to say.
“My little son could stand behind you and poke you in the eyes when you turn around and hurt you,” Scott said. "Is that being tough?
“Is hitting someone when they’re not looking being tough? To me, that’s no better than taking out a quarterback’s knees.”
Scott mentioned Ward’s block on him last season. “I had pulled up because [running back] Willie Parker was going out of bounds. I’m sure he’s glad I did because I could have taken a cheap shot at him. I chose not to, but [Ward] chose to take a cheap shot at me. That’s the way he is.”
In that same game, Ward knocked All-Pro safety Ed Reed on his fanny with a block. “That block on Ed had nothing to do with the play,” Scott said. "The play was over. [Ward] hit him anyway because he wasn’t looking. He likes to hit people when they aren’t looking …
“Go ask Keith Rivers what he thinks about that.”
Rivers, a rookie linebacker for the Cincinnati Bengals, had his season end when Ward broke his jaw with a crushing block Oct. 19.
Scott didn’t want to hear that Ward wasn’t penalized on that block or on the ones on him and Reed last season.
“Tell me, do you think they were legal hits?” he asked. “Is it a legal hit when a receiver comes across the middle and I hit him when he’s defenseless? If you think it is, tell it to the league so I don’t have to send them my money the next time it happens.”
This is just a guess, but Scott probably would welcome getting a shot at Ward Sunday.
Not that he’s anticipating one.
“He’s a wide receiver. He’s on the outside. I’m a linebacker. I’m on the inside,” Scott said. "He only comes into my world when he chooses to …
"That’s the difference between him and Joey [Porter]. Joey’s in the box with the men. He’s not on the outside looking to hit people only when they aren’t looking. If Joey wants to be tough, he has to deal with [former Ravens All-Pro offensive tackle] Jon Ogden. Now that’s tough. So what if Joey pushes down Todd Heap? He has to answer for it.
“Who does [Ward] have to answer to?”
Not to an angry linebacker, that’s for sure.
Sadly, for that angry linebacker.
“That’s OK,” Scott said. “The more [Ward] does, the more we’ll just turn it up on their other guys. We’ll make it tougher for Willie Parker.”
Or maybe Roethlisberger.
Somehow, though, it just won’t be the same.
by lightningrod on Jan 16, 2009 9:35 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Rays says....
…that it was his fav hit because Mendenhall said something bad to him after Ray tried to give him respect for his game. So he feels it was a personal thing.
Whatever……who cares what his favorite hit was.
The Ravens should stop whinning about things and just shut up and play. They say Ward doesn’t have to answer to anyone??? Everytime he runs a route someone can hit him good, but so what….our man Hines gives out more than he takes…if they can’t handle they should go play golf or something. They’d probably complain about how Tiger Woods gives a fist pump too.
Ravens going down and ray ray can go dance at the club…..
L!
by Ragnar808 on Jan 17, 2009 10:52 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
According to bart scott Ward “doesn’t have to come inside” and never comes over the middle. Bart Scott clearly spends most of the game looking at the ground.
by steelguy99 on Jan 17, 2009 11:02 AM EST up reply actions 1 recs
absolutely
To the tune of the classic children's song "This Old Man" (the part with nick nack patty whack)
Big Snack, Silverback, take the Dawg Pound's Bone, the Black and Gold sent the Brownies crying home.
by HighSchoolSteeler on Jan 17, 2009 11:04 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
RAY LEWIS
so sick of hearin him run his mouth like he is the reason the nfl exists, and i nearly vomited when i heard th enfl network talking about whether he was the best linebacker ever- however if he was the one saying he was going to KILL someone, well we have seen that story before with ray
by indianasteelers on Jan 17, 2009 11:00 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Come on Lighting Rod
Good post, and two good articles, but don’t defend the Ravens. Sure you mess with Ray Lewis something bad is probably gonna happen. By the sounds of it Ward’s messed with Ray Ray and the whole Ravens team for over a decade and hasn’t had anybody hurting him. Just goes to show what a bunch of low class criminals the Ravens are. You keep losing and you whine and bitch about it and act all tough, the fact of the matter is that you’re still losing.
To the tune of the classic children's song "This Old Man" (the part with nick nack patty whack)
Big Snack, Silverback, take the Dawg Pound's Bone, the Black and Gold sent the Brownies crying home.
by HighSchoolSteeler on Jan 17, 2009 11:03 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
I don’t think he’s defending the ravens, btw, he is just quoting.
by steelguy99 on Jan 17, 2009 11:32 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
yea
i could be wrong but I think that was his own personal thoughts, but if it wasn’t i apologize.
To the tune of the classic children's song "This Old Man" (the part with nick nack patty whack)
Big Snack, Silverback, take the Dawg Pound's Bone, the Black and Gold sent the Brownies crying home.
by HighSchoolSteeler on Jan 17, 2009 10:28 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I copy/pasted and provided the links. Click on the links
I am not defending the Ravens. I am a Steeler fan
And what they did to the Titans Chris Johnson was also dirty.
by lightningrod on Jan 18, 2009 2:01 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Then I apologize
I knew you were a Steelers fan, I was just bewildered by that statement.
To the tune of the classic children's song "This Old Man" (the part with nick nack patty whack)
Big Snack, Silverback, take the Dawg Pound's Bone, the Black and Gold sent the Brownies crying home.
by HighSchoolSteeler on Jan 18, 2009 9:14 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Talk about whining
This post and all your comments are making me signal for the “wah-bulance” for you guys. So who cares that one of his favorite hits was on Mendenhall. It was a hard hit, not a purposeful attempt to injure. At the same time, every time a defensive player puts a hard lick on the opponent, tell me he doesn’t want to take their heads off? Just not literally. No one in the league has more respect for the game than Ray. To make as if he was purposely trying to hurt Mendenhall is such a sour graps, whining, poor attempt at trying to convince yourself or others. Perhaps you’ll all drink the kool-aid in Pittsburgh, but everywhere else we are all laughing at that.
Rexx
by Rexx on Jan 17, 2009 7:35 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Not Sure About That...
Not really sure what you’re talking about man. I’m out in Vegas and I can’t stand Ray Lewis. I guess I can’t speak for everyone in Pittsburgh but I don’t think he tried to break Mendenhall’s shoulder on purpose. Just like I don’t think Hines tried to break Rivers’ jaw. But its’s football. Get over it. People in Pittsburgh know about physical football. But Ray makes this hit on some rookie almost half his age and immediately gets up and starts talkin and yellin and dancin around like he always does. Apparently now he’s still talkin shit about it. That’s what gets under my skin about him and the rest of their D. Last week they had some shady hits on Chris Johnson which eventually took him out of the game.The Pittsburgh D is ranked #1 but you don’t see/hear anybody on that team screaming and dancing and clapping after they make a tackle. Talk is cheap. The facts are the Steelers are 2-0 against the Ravens this year, and the Ravens hate it just as much as they hate Hines’ smiling face. Nobody has sour grapes more than the Ratbirds. I know even after the Steelers win this Sunday that Bart Scott or Ray Lewis will find something to complain about officiating or some other shit. The media keeps talking about how identical these teams are, whcih in many ways is true. But honestly, the Steelers act like they’ve been there before (because they have) while the Ravens act like a bunch of pansies all the time. I’m laughing at you if you’re a fan of the Ravens and are calling Steelers fans “whiners.” I’ll still be laughing after we’re holding the Lamar Hunt Trophy this Sunday night too
by RoethlisCrosby on Jan 17, 2009 8:32 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Lewis
Was gunning for Mendenhall no doubt about it. I’d say at least a quarter if not half of the hits made on Mendenhall that game were from Ray Lewis.
To the tune of the classic children's song "This Old Man" (the part with nick nack patty whack)
Big Snack, Silverback, take the Dawg Pound's Bone, the Black and Gold sent the Brownies crying home.
by HighSchoolSteeler on Jan 17, 2009 10:30 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
No one is whining
About the hit on Mendenhall. No one on this thread has said it was a dirty hit. It was a good tough clean hit. That’s it, end of story. Or at least it would be, if Lewis wasn’t still stroking himself over the memory of it. The Lewis on-field personna is to be the preening bully, to threaten carnage and gloat over the bodies. I guess that works in Baltimore but it’s old and tiresome to everyone else. It just makes beating him, like the Steelers have all year and will do again Sunday, all the sweeter.
by steeler.lifer on Jan 18, 2009 2:40 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Bigger than a sixty minute game
Ever notice how announcer always say you never want to see a guy suffer a serious injury? I think that’s most NFL players sentiments. These guys played together in college, in the pros (lots of switching teams), and are in the same union. Guys want to play hard but they don’t want to see those they share so much in common with get seriously injured. Some things are bigger than a sixty minute game.
Apparently, this does not apply to Ray Lewis. I don’t think there was anything dirty about the hit, just a man who relishes breaking another’s bones, leaving him in an endangered physical condition, and endangering his livelihood. It’s easy to forget that the guys on the fields are real people with lives, families, and loved ones. What if Rashard has kids? You want to call your “wah-bulance” when he can’t pick his son up to play because of a broken scapula?
Injuries suck but they’re part of the game: you can’t avoid them. But to relish another human’s misfortunes is wrong in more ways than one. And it goes beyond some stupid football game.
by CarlWeathersMustache on Jan 18, 2009 10:53 AM EST up reply actions 1 recs
Correction
That should say “degraded” physical condition.
by CarlWeathersMustache on Jan 18, 2009 10:54 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Big hit
It was a big hit for sure. Definitely one Ray should be talking about two months after the fact.
Ya know what my favorite hit was? The one Harrison laid on Johnny Unitas Flacco. The one he fumbled, which was recovered and run in for a touchdown.
We won the game because of it, and it became a staple on the highlight reel of the Defensive Player of the Year. What did Ray’s hit accomplish?
Mendenhall will be back next year. The Ravens still lost that game.
by ncoolong on Jan 18, 2009 12:10 PM EST reply actions 0 recs

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