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2024 Hall of Honor Class

Good class no doubts. A little shocked Lebeau wasn't already in. Frankly he is the constant btw. Cowher’s SB and Tomlin's. And to to be honest, I'd be surprised if the guys on those defenses didn't respect Lebeau more then either HC.


I too was shocked Dick wasn’t already in. Can’t say enough about him, not only as a coach but also as a MAN. His players would go through a fire wall for him.

James Harrison can thank him over and over for that defensive TD run of his as Dick instilled that the entire defense needs to block for interceptions and fumble recovery returns. That play showed that they listened to him in every aspect of the defensive job.

T’was the night before Christmas……………………………….


Salute the nation
 
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The donger! With his Amazonian girlfriend.😅
Many years ago Jason Gildon was known as "Gildong" or "The Donger" on the old Stillers.com board. He was regularly bagged on for getting a hand on a QB as he was being sacked and thereby getting credit for a sack or half sack, a la Ray Lewis, and it became known as the "Dong Sack".
 
Many years ago Jason Gildon was known as "Gildong" or "The Donger" on the old Stillers.com board. He was regularly bagged on for getting a hand on a QB as he was being sacked and thereby getting credit for a sack or half sack, a la Ray Lewis, and it became known as the "Dong Sack".


Gilding also ran himself out of the play quite often.

He wasn’t as bad as many wanted to believe, but he did get a lot of free-be’sssss.


Salute the nation
 
Many years ago Jason Gildon was known as "Gildong" or "The Donger" on the old Stillers.com board. He was regularly bagged on for getting a hand on a QB as he was being sacked and thereby getting credit for a sack or half sack, a la Ray Lewis, and it became known as the "Dong Sack".
Stillmill is still at it present day. 😉
 
Many years ago Jason Gildon was known as "Gildong" or "The Donger" on the old Stillers.com board. He was regularly bagged on for getting a hand on a QB as he was being sacked and thereby getting credit for a sack or half sack, a la Ray Lewis, and it became known as the "Dong Sack".

Ding Dong, The GilDong's Gone !!​

May 31, 2004 by Still Mill​


flopper-frontal.bmp
Ding Dong, The GilDong's Gone !! (June 2nd, 2004)​


It's hard to believe...but alas, it's true -- Jason GilDong is GONE !!

The most overpaid fraud in Steeler franchise history is finally hist-o-ree !! The Kong of Dong is done!

No more will Stiller fans have to endure watching Jason getting bulldozed by a fullback�.or watching Jason getting bamboozled on the naked bootleg�.or watching Jason stumble and bumble while back in pass coverage�..or watching Jason loop around the Horn of Africa in his feeble attempts to harass the QB�.or watching Jason flop n' flail with tackling technique more befitting a 3rd grader on the school playground. Jason GilDong is gone! He's done! He's outa here!

Sure enough, before the ink dries on this article, you'll see a plethora of articles from card-carrying members of The GilDong Apologists Association (GAA), such as Ron Cook, Jerry DiPaola, Gerry Dulac, Teresa Varley, and Bob Labriola, who will wail and lament the loss of Big Jason GilDong. And you can bet that pom-pom waving fans sites, like SteelerGayNation, will cry and sob at the loss of Big Jason. The fact of the matter, however, is that Big Jason was an over hyped, overrated, overpaid slouch, who benefited enormously from scheme; playing amongst many great players; and cheesy Dong Sacks and stack jumps. The biggest mistake this franchise ever made was lavishing Jason with the incredible largess of a $24M contract in early 2002, unbelievably before the FA period ever began.

Every Steeler media outlet and fan site lauded that signing of Big Jason, sans one: Stillers.com. Stillers.com stood apart from the crowd and, as usual, was dead-on accurate in its analysis that Jason�s signing was a horrific blunder. Sure enough, you'll hear babble about, "Jason was good when he was signed, but then he slowed down." Make no mistake -- Jason never "slowed down". He's no slower today than he was in 1998. He was the same clueless, oafish, clumsy, duck-footed 1-trick pony then as he is now. This is a man who has never, ever sustained ANY kind of injury, and, combined with his being in very good shape, he is no slower now than he was 5 years ago. It's simply that the truth has finally caught up to this overpaid, over hyped, stack-jumping fraud, albeit 4 years too late. Nothing more, nothing less�.regardless of whatever weak-assed rationalizing you may hear from the likes of Dale Lolleygag, Jim Waxall, John Skawski, and other small-minded simpletons.

No longer will Stiller fans have to endure Jason's pitiful, putrid, softee style of play. And Stiller fans can now begin to eradicate from their memories, horrific game-losing plays in the playoffs, such as Jason's stumble & bumble while covering Shannon Sharpe on the game-clinching 3rd & 6 in the Jan. 1998 AFC title game, or Jason's outright quitting while getting abused by David Patten for the key TD reception in the Jan. 2002 AFC title game.

Join together everybody, and sing along!

Ding Dong! The GilDong is gone. Which old Dong? The Gilded Dong!
Ding Dong! The GilDong is gone.
Wake up - sleepy head, rub your eyes, get out of bed.
Wake up, the 6 Million Dollar Dong is gone. He's gone where the goblins go,
Below - below - below. Yo-ho, let's open up and sing and ring the bells out.
Ding Dong' the merry-oh, sing it high, sing it low.
Let them know
The Gilded Dong is gone!

Actually, although Jason is linked to the Wicked Witch by virtue of the words in this song, Jason most closely resembled The Tin Man. Why? Because neither had a heart. Jason -- a complete joke of a team captain -- played a gutless, heartless style of football, in which he avoided contact; turned his back to blockers, and did little more than titty-fight with opposing blockers. Oh, sure, Jason loved to act menacing by woofing and barking and prancing after a meaningless Dong Sack or a meaningless stack jump, but that was just an act, and a very weak act at that. The reality was that this proud Steelers franchise has never had a softer, weaker, more heartless & gutless coward start at LB for so many seasons as did Jason GilDong.

The further reality is that Peter King, the Sports Illustrated columnist who recently proclaimed, �I know this: Gildon's a great leader who will play hard until he keels over,� obviously hasn�t spent more than 2 minutes watching any of Jason�s play the past several seasons. Absolutely nothing could be further from the truth than King�s outrageous balderdash. I know this: Jason has been an overtly poor leader. Real leaders -- like Rod Woodson, Greg Lloyd, and Hines Ward -- lead by example, playing with hustle and gusto on every snap in every game. �Plays hard until he keels over��.? One of the most outrageous statements made thus far in this century. I know this: they don�t call him �Joggin� Jason� for nothing, and the only �keeling over� Jason does is lazily flopping onto the stack of a well-stuffed ballcarrier in hopes of gaining some more cheese statistics, or flopping to the turf with his patented Flop n� Flail technique. And I do know this: Peter King totally embarrassed himself with such bald-faced poppycock. Lest anyone forget, GilDong played in virtually every play in every game in 2003, yet finished a pitiful 8th on the defense in tackles. Yup�.that sure sound like a �great leader who will play hard until he keels over.�

Apparently, King must have seen plays such as the ones below from the 2003 season, and this is King�s idea of �playing hard until he keels over� --

Game 4 @ Tenn: He played so hard that he had 1 solo the entire game. As Eddie George cruises by, here�s Jason �playing hard until he keels over� -- he's flat on his back, with his *** and feet up in the air, imitating an upside-down crab.



Here�s Jason �playing hard and keeling over� -- on all fours like an advocate for homosexual marriage.



Jason keeling over�..after yet another whiff on the Flop n� Flail�

3dongsd24.jpg


Another classic �working hard till he keels over� by Jason GilDong�.

3dongbrowns52.jpg


Here�s Jason keeling over -- back onto his *** � after getting mauled and manhandled by Shannon Sharpe�.

3dongdenv26.jpg


Another superlative keel-over by Big Jason�..and yet another burial.

3dong9ers28.jpg


And yet another keel-over�.and yet another burial.

3dongrav9.jpg


On this 51-yard TD play, Jason rrrreally played hard until he keeled over�.

3dongbengs12.jpg


Gee, I�m really impressed with all of the keeling over by Big Jason GilDong.

In keeping with the analogies from the big screen, Big Jason very closely resembles The Puss In Boots from the movie, Shrek. Jason's softee, kitten-like play had long ago given him the nickname Puss In Boots, long before Shrek made its millions. It's actually quite conceivable that the creators of Shrek created their Puss In Boots character with Jason GilDong in mind.

At any rate, join together and rejoice! The Gilded Dong is Gone!! Bye-bye, Jason! Don't let the door hit ya in the ***!

(To review the 2003 Season-in-Review GilDong Report, click here.)

In memory of Big Jason GilDong: in random order, his long list of monikers includes:

The Paper Tiger
Joggin' Jason
The Kong of Dong
The Flopper
The Princess of Cheeze
The $23M Fraud
The Gilded Dong
Mister Cheeze (taken from Lynrd Skynrd's Mr. Breeze)
Jason The Gimcrack
Roadkill Gildon
The Duckfooted Boy Blunder
The Floppy Dong
Puss In Boots
The 6 Million Dollar Dong
The Bullshitting Bullrusher
The Bully of Bullrushing
 
Stillmill is still at it present day. 😉
Yeah, he writes some good stuff. I started out on the original Stillers board but after a while it went to hell from lack of moderation. Got carpet bombed with spam and all kinds of non-football stuff. You'd report it but nothing would happen.
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Almost forgot about that site. GilDong was hated. And were calling for Bill to be fired very loudly.
Brings back old memories.
Yeah, puts the lie to the Tomlin Fan Club's opinion that all white fans loooved Bill Cowher because he's white and want The Greatest Coach In The History Of Football Who's Never Had A Losing Season fired because he's black.
 
Yeah, puts the lie to the Tomlin Fan Club's opinion that all white fans loooved Bill Cowher because he's white and want The Greatest Coach In The History Of Football Who's Never Had A Losing Season fired because he's black.


Do they ever acknowledge all the “Gaffs” of the Tomlin ?

Not just hiring O’Canada, but retaining him for the duration. NO playoff wins in 7 years, just to mention two very big red flags. There are more, but you get the drift…………………..


Salute the nation
 
Yeah, puts the lie to the Tomlin Fan Club's opinion that all white fans loooved Bill Cowher because he's white and want The Greatest Coach In The History Of Football Who's Never Had A Losing Season fired because he's black.
lol…….go to that Stillers site and read the Bill Cowher stuff he wrote. He tears Bill a new one nonstop. Many,many fans including me were calling for his removal. I think fans forget how disappointing some of those playoff losses were. The legend that Bill could do no wrong is more after he retired,not during his career certainly. And hey….i loved Bill but even he was getting stale. Bit of a trip down memory lane.
 

Hope the mods don’t mind. It’s off-season and some of the comparisons are quite similar. Not to mention it brings back some really disappointing memories of those losses


Billy Cowher’s Playoff History​

January 09, 2005 by Still Mill​


Billy Cowher�s playoff history

Intro:
Because the memory of the typical Pittsburgh sports fan lasts only about, oh, 5 months, it's always prudent to reinforce the real facts of history. As we have long seen, both in sports and in international relations, those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat the same failure. That said, herewith is the compilation of Billy Cowher's illustrious playoff history. (See this link for a condensed tabular version of the Cowher playoff history.)

Jan. �93
- Despite securing the top seed and home field advantage throughout the playoffs, Cowher�s team gets thoroughly whipped and embarrassed by the Bills, 24-3.

Jan. �94
- The Stillers visited a very ordinary Chiefs team, and lost a very winnable game because of two chronic problems: dropped passes, including one by Jeff Graham that could have sealed the game, and special teams fiasco caused by a blocked punt. On the game-tying do or die TD by Kansas City, the Stillers played vanilla, rushing just 4 men and allowing Joe Montana 7 seconds to scan the entire field.

Jan. �95
- Cowher finally got his first playoff win by beating Cleveland, a team they�d already waltzed through twice during the regular season. Cowher then allowed his players to conduct Super Bowl video practice in the week leading up to the AFC title game in Pittsburgh. As a 10-point favorite over the weak SD Chargers, the Stillers lost in one of the most shameful, pitiful playoff losses in franchise history, to one of the weakest teams to ever make it to the Super Bowl.

Jan. �96
- The Stillers easily disposed of an aging, decrepit Bills team in their first game, 40-21.

Then, thanks to a KC loss, the Stillers managed to get another home-field AFC title game, this time against a very weak, ordinary Colts team that was ravaged by injury. Not only was star RB Marshall Faulk out, but backup Zack Crockett was also hobbled from the KC game, meaning the running chores belonged to 3rd stringer Lamont Warren. Despite overwhelming talent at virtually every position on the football field, the Stillers were behind late in the game, and had CB Willie Williams not abandoned his assignment and chased down Warren from behind on a late 3rd & 1, the Colts would have salted away nearly all of the scant remaining time. O�Donell then hit Hastings on a huge 4th and 3, and with less than a minute left, Bam crashed in for the winning score. Still, the Colts came back against a softee defense, and had a legit shot at a Hail Mary that was just barely incomplete in the EZ. In a sheer fit of luck and fortune, the Stillers avoided what would have been their most shameful playoff loss ever, even worse than the previous year.

In the Super Bowl, Cowher arrived on gameday to a soggy, sloppy, soupy, mucky field in Tempe, and nevertheless insisted on starting & playing scatback Erric Pegram for the first 20-some minutes. Pegram, of course, was the same back that struggled mightily in the win on a soggy, soupy Cleveland field back in week 12, slipping and sliding as though he were wearing dress shoes. Unfazed and undaunted, Cowshit insisted on giving Pegram nearly exclusive playing time the first 20 mintues, and Pegram responded with exactly zero productivity in the ground game. On top of that, the entire Stiller defense came out in a fog, totally befuddled and bewildered by the size and brawn of the Cowboy offensive line. By the time Bam Morris finally entered the game, and by the time the defense adjusted to the Cowboy offense, Dallas had a comfy lead they should have never been given. Then, with Morris ripping through the soft Cowpoke defense for nice chunks of yardage, with gobs of time left, Cowher insisted on going pass-happy and putting O'Donnell into an undesirable situation against a Dallas blitz and his favorite underneath receiver, Hastings, hobbled by a busted shoulder.

Jan. �97
- Stillers beat a woeful, injury-ravaged Colts team 42-14. The Stillers then faced an ordinary New England team in the fog of Boston, and in a complete fog, got thoroughly whipped and embarrassed, 28-3. The ineptitude of the team�s woeful preparation was never more evident than the Stillers� first play from scrimmage -- a play that is practiced at least 15 times leading up to the game --- which was flagged for having 2 men in motion at the same time. This was as severe an assbeating as the NFL has ever seen in modern-day playoffs.

Jan. �98
- At home, the Stillers faced a weak, injury-ravaged Patriots team, so beat up that not only was star RB Curtis Martin on the shelf, but his backup was as well, meaning little-used 3rd string RB Derrick Cullors had to start at RB. Despite the home field advantage; the fact that they'd already played and narrowly beaten the Pats 1 month prior; and superior talent all over the field, the only TD the Stillers could muster all day was a fluke 40-yard scamper by Stewart, made possible only because a NE LB pulled away in fear of a personal foul flag as Stew was tight-roping the sideline. The Stillers eked out a totally uninspiring win, 7-6, one of the sloppiest, ugliest, ****-laden playoff games ever played by the black-jerseyed team in the history of 3 Rivers Stadium. After the game, all Bilbo Cowher could say was, "I'm a young coach, and I screwed up," the Pittsburgh Steelers coach said, admitting his gamble on fourth-and-goal the 1-yard-line against New England Saturday was the wrong call. "I made a mistake and they bailed me out." Young coach�.? At the time, the man had been the head coach for SIX regular seasons and FIVE playoff seasons. Not young; just dumb as a rock.

They then faced a Denver team that they�d beaten the month prior, but in the rematch Coach Mike Shanahan�s adjustments allowed the Broncs to pull off yet another playoff upset of the Stillers at home. While the ignorant place blame on Kordell Stewarts 2 INTs (the 3rd was a useless Hail Mary as time expired), it was Billy Cowher that once again put a player into an entirely undesirable situation, especially on the 2nd INT, which was a play from the Denver 3-yard line designed to hit a slant pattern amidst TRIPLE coverage. The coaching imbecility of Bill Cowher was never more evident than the key 3rd & 7 play that occurred right after the lengthy 2-minute warning timeout, in which Cowher�s defense rushed only 4 men at Hall of Fame QB John Elway, while covering the most likely pass recipient (Shannon Sharpe) with a LB (Gildon) who, at the time, almost never dropped into coverage. The Broncs completed the pass and salted away the final 1:54, and went on to easily beat an average Packers' team while Billy Cowher once again went into a late-January hibernation in order to avoid further embarrassment. (Sure enough, though, less than 2 months later, Billy Cowhard -- still under contract -- had the gaul to demand a payraise, lest he was fleeing to Cleveland to coach a team that, at that time, did not yet exist.)
OL
Jan. '02: Convincingly beat rival Baltimore, 27-10, in one of the very rare, strong all-around efforts by a Cowher playoff team.

The Stillers then hosted the NE Patriots in the AFC Title game. The Pats limped into Heinz Field as 10-point underdogs, and most experts, sans this one, assumed NE would be just happy to show up and go back to Foxboro without getting embarrassed too badly. The only embarrassment was on the beet-red face of Coach Bilbo Cowher, whose team slopped and slathered en route to a horrifying, despicable defeat, 24-17. Special teams, a bugaboo since the 2001 opener in Jax, plagued the Stillers, allowing a punt return for a TD and a blocked FG return for a TD (the latter essentially a 10-point swing, assuming the FG would have been good). It wasn't only spec teams, of course. The offense stunk, "led" by Big Jerome Bettis, who was entirely unproductive and worthless. The defense allowed Brady to pick them apart, and even when Brady briefly left the game, the Softee Defense allowed a cold Drew Bledsoe to complete a clutch 3rd & long, and soon thereafter hit WR David Patten for a TD while Jason GilDong, grossly overmatched in single coverage, literally quit on the play. (Yet another example of Billy Cowhair placing a player into a totally undesirable situation.)
 
The continuation of above article.

Jan. '03: The Stillers faced the hapless Clev Browns in the first round, a team they'd already beaten twice in the '02 season. Clev came into the game with no running attack, an utterly horrible offense line, and a mediocre stable of RBs "led" by Will Green and Jamel White. Nonetheless, facing this entirely ONE-dimensional offense (Holcomb 429 yards passing in this game, Green 1.2 YPC on 25 rushes), Cowhard's defense got shredded right from the get-go, and the Browns were up 14-0 before most fans at the stadium could buy a post-kickoff beer. The Browns built their lead to 24-7, and only by the good graces of Maddox and a dropped 3rd down pass by Denny Northcutt did the Stillers eke out a 36-33 win. The epitome of Cowher's shoddy preparation was the 2nd play from scrimmage, in which his defense had to call a timeout due to befuddled confusion because -- gasp -- the Browns went no-huddle and used a 4-WR formation. Had the Stillers lost this game -- and they came within a gnat's eyelash of doing so -- this might very well have been the most embarrassing loss in the entire history of the Stillers franchise.

The Stillers then traveled to Tennessee to face the injury-ravaged Titans. Going into the game, all the so-called experts, sans this one, insisted the Titans would run the ball and eschew the pass, because the Titans' WR corps was so battered and ravaged. Undaunted, the Titans took ballboys and added them onto their roster as WRs, and then proceeded to SHRED the Bily Cowher Softee Defense to the tune of 338 passing yards by Steve McNair. Indeed, facing an offense with a banged-up QB; the star RB who was lost of the game on the 1st play of the 2d half; the primary and only backup RB shaken up badly; a starting guard shaken up and removed from the game; and the opponent's best WR shelved for the season a few weeks prior to the game, Billy Cowher, the supposed defensive mastermind, was entirely unable to stop the Titans.

The ignorant fan blames DeWayne Washington's roughing-the-kicker penalty as the prime reason for the loss, but the reasons were many, many more than that -- especially a defense that couldn't stop a turtle with a shotgun, and the man responsible to oversee tactics and execution was the head coach, Bilbo Cowher.


There you have it -- 11 years of Billy Cowher's playoff futility and gross underachievement. Poor preparation; loads of befuddlement; sloppy execution; meek, uninspired play; pitiful special teams; stubborn refusal to adjust tactics and schemes; placing players in entirely undesirable situations; and the never-ending failure to rectify glaring problems -- all a trademark of a Billy Cowher playoff team, and all comprising the reason why Cowher, along with his father, Marty Shittenheimer, are widely regarded as the worst playoff coaches in modern NFL history. Fans saw what Marty Sr. did on Saturday, choking away yet another home-field game with ultraconservatism in the loss to the Jets. Fans have also seen the same from Billy Cowher and his play-not-to-lose playoff antics.

In all, the Stillers have never beaten a favored team in the playoffs, and have woefully lost -- or won weakly despite playing like manure -- as a favorite several times. It's no longer a coincidence that Cowher's team has stunk and sputtered in the playoffs against vastly inferior teams -- it's a proven trend, with 11 years of proof and evidence. No coach does less, with more, in the playoffs than Little Billy Cowher.
 
Do they ever acknowledge all the “Gaffs” of the Tomlin ?

Not just hiring O’Canada, but retaining him for the duration. NO playoff wins in 7 years, just to mention two very big red flags. There are more, but you get the drift…………………..
No, never. Never a losing season, greatest coach ever, QBR.
 
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