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That Tomlin Swag

Swag isn't something you can just mimic. It's not easily recreated or transferable through any medium. It's someone's patented and established way of carrying themselves; Of talking, of walking, of acting. But specifically for Mike Tomlin-it's coaching.


Since his emergence into the league as the sultan of swagger, many have tried and failed to mirror his essence, his style, his culture. They've seen those steely eyes when he trots into Heinz Field on game day. They've envied his pat-on-the-back encouragement after first down completions. They've spent nights staring into the mirror, practicing one liners that don't come close to Mr. Tomlin's glorious fire-spits.

Why wouldn't they want to be like him? Tomlin is the leader of the most successful franchise in Pro Sports. He won a Wuper Bowl in his second coaching year, and he became the youngest coach-second ever African American-to win the biggy. The desirous bunch of unaccomplished coaches have plenty reason to follow his every move, but they can't even touch him. Blinded by the reflection off of his pitch-black shades, they struggle to catch a glimpse of Pittsburgh Potentate.

We all understand why teams are hiring these young, defensive coordinators as coaches. We know why they're looking for that guy that doesn't take any nonsense; the man that has a simple plan-one of few words and hard action. Guys like Mike Singletary and John Harbaugh are reasonable attempts for a team's recreation of the Tomlin Aurora. But they fall short in so many ways. Lombardi trophies, like helium, lift Tomlin and the Steeler Organization over the posing potentials.

 


Singletary proved this past week that he doesn't come close to Tomlin. The main reason?-he tries too hard. His obvious attempt at shooing away Michael Crabtree drama is yet another case of Tomlin mimicry that just doesn't feel right.

Singletary's failed effort sounded like this:
"In terms of Crabtree, when he comes in, he comes in," "Would you love to have him in? Absolutely. You'd love to have him. Do we want him here? Yes, we want to have him in. But until that happens, I just can't sit back and think about the what-ifs. All I can do is concentrate on what is, and control that."

Far too many words Mr. Singletary. It comes no where close to a Tomlin Tag like "Not subscribing to hocus pocus." So much less blabber, yet so much more swagger.

So the posers can pose, the haters can envy, and the hungry can starve. But with Tomlin, "Together we all eat."

His swagger can't be touched.

Read More at The Big Apple and the Burgh

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About Singletary

I dunno. I actually like how Singletary is handling the situation. While I agree with you that Tomlin is the ultimate in awesomeness, I think there are other coaching philosophies and ways of dealing with the media and selfish rookies that are just as successful. Singletary, in my mind, proves that.

by bensmitty234 on Aug 8, 2009 1:08 PM EDT reply actions  

was it Singletary...

… who showed his naked butt to his players last year?

by Bonek on Aug 9, 2009 12:37 AM EDT up reply actions  

Yes, it was. Hey, whatever works.

by gcn on Aug 9, 2009 3:13 AM EDT up reply actions  

Singletary has been around a heck of a lot longer than Tomlin

I think a better example is the guy in Tampa. The Bucs let one up and coming young, black defensive coach get away. What they have now is a cheap imitation.

Also, Tomlin Aurora? Is that similar to the Borealis version?

by CarlWeathersMustache on Aug 8, 2009 2:58 PM EDT reply actions  

He should be on those stupid Old Spice commercials. His nerdy party could be when he was a little child and people used to make fun of him cause his eyes looked like they were going to pop out.

You have to hate losing more than you love winning.

by Mr MaLoR on Aug 8, 2009 3:24 PM EDT reply actions  

**WHAT WOULD TOMLIN SAY??**

..if he were faced with Singletary’s situation???

My guess is something like, “We deal with reality, and he is not part of our reality right now.”

Any other suggestions?

by Homer J. on Aug 8, 2009 4:40 PM EDT reply actions  

Nice.

I like it Homer. How about “Michael who?”

"Whaddya' mean all the beer is gone..?

by OhioYinzer on Aug 8, 2009 5:08 PM EDT up reply actions  

I don't know

he may just stare at the camera and not just say anything then the next thing you hear is that crabtree just singed for the league minimum, because thats how powerful the stare of Tomlin is.

thats all he has to say

by WVPiratesfan on Aug 8, 2009 7:01 PM EDT up reply actions  

My Favorite Tomlinism.

“It’s not what you are capable of doing. It’s what you are willing to do.” Succinct. Simple. Applicable to all aspects of life.

by tjc on Aug 8, 2009 7:06 PM EDT reply actions  

Just noting that...

This article was more praising Tomlin than knocking Singletary.

I’m not saying Singletary isn’t a good coach, or handled the situation poorly, just that Tomlin is quite high above him and the rest. I actually like what Singletary is doing in San Fran, but I don’t see them contending any time soon.

Homer J-i like the hypothetical quote.

http://thebigappleandtheburgh.blogspot.com

by bigappleburgh on Aug 9, 2009 12:00 AM EDT reply actions  

It took me a minute

I gotta admit i was a fan of tomlin at first—-no emotion --no yelling —but i have came around and so has he—one of my fav coaches of all time

by Erin A on Aug 9, 2009 10:00 PM EDT reply actions  

Sorry

Man i messed that last comment all up lol cant figure out how to delete it——what i meant to say is i gotta admit i was not a fan of tomlin at first no emotion no yelling but i came around and so has he one of my fav coaches of all time

by Erin A on Aug 9, 2009 10:05 PM EDT reply actions  

Tomlin rocks

Tomlin offers and accepts no excuses. He has the tradition of all those trophies to draw from proof that the Steeler way is the best way.

by thefirst3peat on Aug 10, 2009 3:16 AM EDT reply actions  

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