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JCDavey
11-15-2006, 12:18 PM
http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_4653735

Gates in "team" mode
By Anthony Cotton
Denver Post Staff Columnist
Article Last Updated:11/13/2006 11:51:12 PM MST

Cincinnati - When does the best tight end in the NFL become even more dangerous? When he realizes there's more to the game than looking out for No. 1.
"Maturity sets in," Antonio Gates was saying Sunday, not long after his San Diego Chargers had won a 49-41 slugfest at Paul Brown Stadium. "You realize, as a tight end, I've done, statistically, basically everything that a tight end who's ever played this game could do. I've scored touchdowns, I've caught 80-some passes in a season, I've caught passes for 1,000 yards. It's all good, and individually they were all goals, but collectively, we weren't getting one thing done.
"It's one of those things where you have to sacrifice for the good of everybody. I want to win a Super Bowl - it's the only thing on my mind."
Which was why Gates was all smiles after a game that should both encourage and terrify the Broncos as they begin their preparations for Sunday night's showdown at Invesco Field at Mile High. This despite seemingly being the only offensive player for San Diego not to score a touchdown.
As swarms of reporters gathered around rookie Malcolm Floyd from Wyoming, Gates quietly put his equipment into his travel bag, then knotted the tie on his tailor-made suit. (Memo to Larry Coyer: In your haste to double-team Gates or take Keenan McCardell out of the equation, you may want to keep an eye out for Floyd, who's averaging a team-leading 15.3 yards per catch, with three touchdowns in 13 receptions.)
Gates reflected on an attitude adjustment that, when permeated throughout a locker room, often spells the difference between winning teams and more talented squads that are putting the footballs away come the playoffs.
"Do you want to play well?" Gates asked rhetorically. "Of course you do, but sometimes you understand, you might not play well, but you win the game - and is that more important to you than playing well and losing?
"I look at (Bengals wide receiver) Chad Johnson. He's a (great) player and I understand where he's coming from. He wants the ball; I understand that - trust me, I understand. But that maturity has to set in. He got all the stats he needed today, but he didn't win. You set a single-game team record, you catch bombs, score touchdowns, but then you realize there's still some emptiness there.
"When you win, there's no emptiness there. And you know you played a part in it, whether it showed up in the statistics or not."
At some point, perhaps when New Orleans' Joe Horn reached for his cellphone and Terrell Owens began shaking a pompom and pulling Sharpies from his socks, receivers supplanted quarterbacks as the NFL's biggest divas. Earlier this season, when he wasn't getting the football as much as he thought he should have been, Gates wondered if he too should up his me-quotient.
However, as he looked about the locker room, Gates said he realized the Chargers have a chance to accomplish something special. The feeling reminded him of his days at Kent State, when he starred on the hardwood, not the gridiron.
"The best basketball team I ever played on went to the (NCAA) Elite Eight," Gates said. "I averaged 15 points, this guy averaged 15, that guy averaged 14. Then the next year I averaged 21 but we didn't even get into the tournament - now what season would I rather have, the one when I averaged 21 and was breaking all the records, or the other one?
"At the end of the day, you're only going to look at the winner. You look at the Steelers last year, and you're going, 'They don't have nobody with big-time stats.' But they were the best team in the league, so somebody had to be doing something. Hines Ward doesn't catch as many passes as a ton of those guys, but he'd get my vote, because I know he plays a role in what happened with that team."
At this point, Gates knows his reputation is set, the respect he engenders around the league unassailable. So if that means playing the decoy Sunday night in Denver, next week against Oakland, and all the way to Miami and Super Bowl XLI, that's OK by him.
"As a young player, you think your stats is the way you affect a game. But that's not necessarily the case. You look at films and you see how teams may double-team me, but this guy is wide-open, so throw the ball to him.
"That's how you become a complete player - taking the selfishness away from 'you' and saying, 'This is about us, this is about we."'

perryao
11-15-2006, 12:27 PM
Aint it great to be a Charger fan! With guys with attitudes like Gates' it makes it even more pleasurable when they do well. The others on this team like that on this team include LT, Rivers, McCardell, LoNeal, Castillo, Igor, etc, etc. Go Chargers.

pao

Toad
11-15-2006, 12:30 PM
Cincinnati - When does the best tight end in the NFL become even more dangerous? When he realizes there's more to the game than looking out for No. 1.

"Maturity sets in," Antonio Gates was saying Sunday, not long after his San Diego Chargers had won a 49-41 slugfest at Paul Brown Stadium. "You realize, as a tight end, I've done, statistically, basically everything that a tight end who's ever played this game could do. I've scored touchdowns, I've caught 80-some passes in a season, I've caught passes for 1,000 yards. It's all good, and individually they were all goals, but collectively, we weren't getting one thing done.

"It's one of those things where you have to sacrifice for the good of everybody. I want to win a Super Bowl - it's the only thing on my mind."
Which was why Gates was all smiles after a game that should both encourage and terrify the Broncos as they begin their preparations for Sunday night's showdown at Invesco Field at Mile High. This despite seemingly being the only offensive player for San Diego not to score a touchdown.

As swarms of reporters gathered around rookie Malcolm Floyd from Wyoming, Gates quietly put his equipment into his travel bag, then knotted the tie on his tailor-made suit. (Memo to Larry Coyer: In your haste to double-team Gates or take Keenan McCardell out of the equation, you may want to keep an eye out for Floyd, who's averaging a team-leading 15.3 yards per catch, with three touchdowns in 13 receptions.)

Gates reflected on an attitude adjustment that, when permeated throughout a locker room, often spells the difference between winning teams and more talented squads that are putting the footballs away come the playoffs.

"Do you want to play well?" Gates asked rhetorically. "Of course you do, but sometimes you understand, you might not play well, but you win the game - and is that more important to you than playing well and losing?

"I look at (Bengals wide receiver) Chad Johnson. He's a (great) player and I understand where he's coming from. He wants the ball; I understand that - trust me, I understand. But that maturity has to set in. He got all the stats he needed today, but he didn't win. You set a single-game team record, you catch bombs, score touchdowns, but then you realize there's still some emptiness there.

"When you win, there's no emptiness there. And you know you played a part in it, whether it showed up in the statistics or not."

At some point, perhaps when New Orleans' Joe Horn reached for his cellphone and Terrell Owens began shaking a pompom and pulling Sharpies from his socks, receivers supplanted quarterbacks as the NFL's biggest divas. Earlier this season, when he wasn't getting the football as much as he thought he should have been, Gates wondered if he too should up his me-quotient.

However, as he looked about the locker room, Gates said he realized the Chargers have a chance to accomplish something special. The feeling reminded him of his days at Kent State, when he starred on the hardwood, not the gridiron.

"The best basketball team I ever played on went to the (NCAA) Elite Eight," Gates said. "I averaged 15 points, this guy averaged 15, that guy averaged 14. Then the next year I averaged 21 but we didn't even get into the tournament - now what season would I rather have, the one when I averaged 21 and was breaking all the records, or the other one?

"At the end of the day, you're only going to look at the winner. You look at the Steelers last year, and you're going, 'They don't have nobody with big-time stats.' But they were the best team in the league, so somebody had to be doing something. Hines Ward doesn't catch as many passes as a ton of those guys, but he'd get my vote, because I know he plays a role in what happened with that team."

At this point, Gates knows his reputation is set, the respect he engenders around the league unassailable. So if that means playing the decoy Sunday night in Denver, next week against Oakland, and all the way to Miami and Super Bowl XLI, that's OK by him.
"As a young player, you think your stats is the way you affect a game. But that's not necessarily the case. You look at films and you see how teams may double-team me, but this guy is wide-open, so throw the ball to him.
"That's how you become a complete player - taking the selfishness away from 'you' and saying, 'This is about us, this is about we."'

Dare I say that the leadership qualities ascribed to Philip are beginning to be distributed to his teammates? This type of attitude can do nothing but propel the team down the road to Miami!! :Cheers: Great thinking AG :85: The Rivers era HAS begun!

PS: I sure hope Chad/Terrell/Randy/Kellen aren't listening. Nah...not a chance!!! HAHAHAHA!

Waylon138
11-15-2006, 12:31 PM
GREAT ARTICLE!!!.....Not only is Gates a team player...I think that the same could be said about our entire team....our whole team chemistry is about winning, doing your job, and performing when you are asked to.

I couldn't be more happy right now....The Chargers are the complete package.

Tomlinson21
11-15-2006, 12:47 PM
My respect for Gates went up like a million notches. No, really it did.

Him downplaying the Winslow II BS in the Cleveland match up a few weeks back really got my attention that entire week, now this article just makes me believe Gates is really all about team. The whole team is, really - a team. You have your ups, you have your downs and this team has been through the lowest of lows and plenty of highs....but still keeping it real.

Sometimes I wish we didn't get all this pub but without it, we wouldn't have great articles like these. Good job JC.

Boy...sky is the limit.

Gates - u da man. :Beer:

rammerjammer
11-15-2006, 12:47 PM
Great article! Gates is a stand up guy. The more of those you have on a team, the more it rubs off on everyone. Great attitude.

benji929
11-15-2006, 12:52 PM
Wow, I honestly could not believe what I was reading. Great article, great player, great guy. This is someone who gets it, unlike a lot of the guys around the league.

Whagr01
11-15-2006, 12:59 PM
GATES 4 PRESIDENT!!!!!

Great article! Just to re-affirm everyones thoughts on this topic of selflessness... My girlfriend who knows as much about football as I know about "hair products" (nothing), has really started to like the CHARGERS sincerly and not just because I do? Because she notices their "humble" character, and there selfless demeanor off the field in pre/post interviews! And, she hates the Raiders (which is a pre-req for anyone i date!).

wck3
11-15-2006, 01:09 PM
Great article! Just to re-affirm everyones thoughts on this topic of selflessness... My girlfriend who knows as much about football as I know about "hair products" (nothing), has really started to like the CHARGERS sincerly and not just because I do? Because she notices their "humble" character, and there selfless demeanor off the field in pre/post interviews!

I agree with this completely. My wifey loves the Chargers because of :21: and :85: being humble despite their superstar performances. She likes :17: cause he's good, somewhat of a mile a minute talking goober but she still likes him. She likes the hitting that :56: puts out, when he's on. I'm slowly introducing her to more and more players, and the game in general, as she watches more games. Castillo being absent was noticed even by her in the Cincy game. I think she enjoys the game more because of these factors.

Ultimately, it's not a common occurence in today's professional sports to see a team of professionals.

JerryinCA
11-15-2006, 01:50 PM
I'm glad this article was done, although it's really not surprising to me as Gates always has seemed to be a great teammate and ofcourse the best TE in the league IMO no matter what the individual receiving stats say.

MadMadigan
11-15-2006, 02:40 PM
Gates is yet another Class act amongst many on this team, The football gods may just be saving his Greatest games of this year for the postseason! yes thats a prediction!

NorCalBoltBrain
11-15-2006, 02:54 PM
Remember training camp 05, when Gates was holding out at the advice of his agent. Then Gates finally said "forget it" and signed the damn contract, citing mainly his desire to be around his friends and teammates.

jubei
11-15-2006, 02:55 PM
AG and TG are the only real "class" TEs. Look at Shockey and KW II, they are the complete opposites. I dunno too much about Algae Crumpler or Todd Heap, though. I hate the Chiefs but I gotta give respect to TG as well.

Whagr01
11-15-2006, 03:22 PM
AG and TG are the only real "class" TEs. Look at Shockey and KW II, they are the complete opposites. I dunno too much about Algae Crumpler or Todd Heap, though. I hate the Chiefs but I gotta give respect to TG as well.

Shockly and KW II went to Miami. This might be a stretch, but that is probably why they have the attitude they have? That program has very little class as a whole!

Tomlinson21
11-15-2006, 03:39 PM
AG and TG are the only real "class" TEs. Look at Shockey and KW II, they are the complete opposites. I dunno too much about Algae Crumpler or Todd Heap, though. I hate the Chiefs but I gotta give respect to TG as well.
Shockey and KW II are from the same mold in college...they were even teammates so the "math" is there. I remember when Ken Dorsey and Willis McGahee were still kicking ass in the NCAA with those 2 knuckleheads...

cap808
11-15-2006, 03:43 PM
Awsome article. Gates is perfect for this team and for the NFL...

Just think, we could have Kellen Winslow II saying how he's a "Soldier" and he wants the @%$#'n ball! Haha. :)

Big Bolt Dawg
11-15-2006, 04:01 PM
What a great article about a great team player.

X-Factor
11-15-2006, 04:07 PM
No, I want him to be selfish. I want him to want the ball. I want him to score 4 TDs a game like LT.

.... Of course, I have my own selfish reasons, he's on my fantasy football team.

nvcharger
11-16-2006, 01:13 PM
I love the fact that most if not all of the players on our team have class. CLASS!!!! No whiny me me me players, just a team who enjoys eachothers company and are winning games. Somebody pinch me is this possible? Hell yes we are going to superbowls thats right bowls not bowl

SP17BOLT
11-16-2006, 01:39 PM
Gates is a teamworker and this article was great. Gates for the pro bowl.

SDFaiderHater
11-16-2006, 02:03 PM
the best part about this article, is you could take out Antonios name and insert just about every player on this team...and it would still be a credible article.

Big'D'inSD!#56
11-16-2006, 04:02 PM
:Cheers: gates For Pro Bowl!! Gates For Pro Bowl!!




:crazy: WARNING! WARNING! "LIGHTS OUT" COMING SOON.

DEboltsfan
11-16-2006, 04:50 PM
That is one of the best articles I've ever read about Gates. He has been very quiet lately but just when a team sleeps on him he is going to light them up. Someone else mentioned Rivers' leadership permeated throughout the team....I just think this team is full of classy leaders who have one goal in mind and that is THE GLEAM!!