| Mad World
The Blame Game
By Mark Madden
I once wrote that Penn State quarterback Anthony Morelli could
throw a football through a car wash without getting it wet.
Morelli might be advised to learn the inner workings of his
local auto laundry. Given recent examples of his abject stupidity,
it could offer one of Morelli's strongest possibilities for sustained
post-graduate employment.
Morelli recently went on a well-publicized tirade regarding
his supposed mistreatment at the hands of his high school coach,
Neil Gordon of Penn Hills. Morelli accused Gordon of sabotaging
his recruiting, of withholding recruiting letters, and of spreading
rumors about his lack of smarts, football and otherwise.
Just about every football college that matters recruited Morelli.
So as saboteurs go, Gordon probably isn't Al Qaeda material.
As for Morelli putting the "duh" in dumb, consider this: Morelli
says Gordon bashed him during the telecast of this year's WPIAL
Quad-A championship game. Gordon is supposed to have said that
Penn Hills sophomore quarterback Tom Fulton was ahead of Morelli
at this stage of his development.
But Gordon didn't give that interview. It was Woodland Hills
coach George Novak.
So Morelli, while trying to defend his intelligence, failed
to recognize a man he saw on TV as not being the coach he had
seen every day throughout his scholastic career. That's not really
making a strong case, counselor.
Morelli also called Fulton a "little kid" who will "never get
my records." I don't know if the college football big-timer belittling
the high school sophomore is a sign of stupidity. But it undoubtedly
shows a lack of class.
Fulton may never get Morelli's records. But he got Penn Hills
to a WPIAL final. Morelli never did. Fulton may not have Morelli's
arm or athleticism. But it's easy to imagine him being a better
teammate and leader, to say nothing of more cerebral.
Morelli says Gordon tortured him. But many say Morelli-and his
family-often made Gordon's life miserable.
Morelli's father was/is a Little League dad to the extreme.
Morelli's section of supporters would verbally abuse Gordon at
Penn Hills games for not throwing more, demanding aerial pyrotechnics
regardless of score and situation. Personal achievement mattered
more than team goals to Morelli. As a result, Penn Hills underachieved
during Morelli's tenure at quarterback.
Morelli didn't throw a ton at Penn Hills. Did Gordon have Morelli
throw less out of spite? Some say yes. Some also say Gordon merely
repaid like with like.
Morelli is currently Penn State's starter. The offense sputtered
badly during his first year on the job as the Nittany Lions went
a disappointing 8-4 without a signature victory. Can Morelli use
his last year of college eligibility to play his way into the
NFL?
Probably not. But when the man with the million-dollar arm and
the 10-cent head fails, he'll know exactly who to blame.
Somebody else.
Mark Madden hosts a sports talk show
3-7 p.m. weekdays on ESPN Radio 1250. |