Steelers permanently retire jersey number 75

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Steelers to retire Greene's No. 75


Updated: July 30, 2014, 6:16 PM ET
<cite class="source"> By Scott Brown | ESPN.com</cite>



Steelers To Retire "Mean" Joe Greene's Jersey Number

Herm Edwards recalls playing against the Steelers of the "Mean" Joe Greene era.Tags: NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers


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LATROBE, Pa. -- Joe Greene always stood out, even on the Pittsburgh Steelers teams that won four Super Bowls from 1974 to 1979 and later sent nine players as well as coach Chuck Noll to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
[+] Enlarge<cite>Focus on Sport/Getty Images</cite>Joe Greene's No. 75 will become just the second uniform number retired in Steelers history.


And what had been understood since Greene retired in 1981 -- that his No. 75 is off limits -- became official on Wednesday.
Steelers chairman Dan Rooney and team president Art Rooney II announced that the organization will retire the number that Greene made famous during a storied career in which the defensive tackle earned 10 invitations to the Pro Bowl and twice was named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year. The Steelers will honor Greene during their Nov. 2 game against the visiting Baltimore Ravens.
Greene's number will become just the second that the Steelers retire, and the player known as "Mean Joe" will join Ernie Stautner in achieving that distinction.
Stautner, also a defensive tackle, had his No. 70 retired in 1964.
"I think Joe is the obvious person from the '70s teams to go first in terms of having his number retired," Rooney II said. "We're excited to honor him. We really thought about doing this off and on many times but the hesitation was where do you stop?"
Rooney II said the Steelers simply reached a point where they wanted to bestow the greatest honor on Greene, the first draft pick of the Noll era, and that the organization will figure out later which other numbers they will retire and when.
The Steelers talked with Greene in the spring just to make sure he was comfortable with the organization retiring his number.
"Very surprised and I almost fell out of my seat," Greene said in a series of quotes released by the Steelers. "It's just overwhelming to think about. Retiring jerseys is not something that the Steelers do. That makes it even more significant."
Dan Rooney called Greene "the cornerstone" of the teams that transformed the Steelers from also-rans into perennial champions.
"He is a special guy," Rooney said. "He made it what it meant to be a Steeler."
 
NFL Nation Buzz: Steelers

ESPN.com Steelers reporter Scott Brown discusses Ben Roethlisberger's leadership qualities.Tags: NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers


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LATROBE, Pa. -- Pro Bowl wide receiver Antonio Brown and Emmanuel Sanders were teammates for four seasons with the Steelers and remain good friends, but Brown took issue with Sanders calling Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning a "far better leader" than Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger earlier this week.
"That was terrible," Brown said Wednesday. "You don't throw your quarterback under the bus, the guy who makes you who you are."
Roethlisberger and Sanders played together from 2010 to 2013 and the latter signed with the Denver Broncos last March as an unrestricted free agent.
Sanders told 104.3 The Fan Denver on Monday that Manning works tirelessly with the wide receivers after practice and that he doesn't have to "chase down" the five-time NFL MVP to put in extra time together.
The remarks caused a stir and Sanders stood by them when he addressed what he said later on his Twitter account.
Former Steelers running back Jerome Bettis, who played two seasons with Roethlisberger, defended his former quarterback during an appearance on ESPN's "First Take" earlier this week.
"It's not that Ben doesn't lead. He just leads differently than Peyton does," said Bettis, who is an ESPN NFL analyst. "I think [Sanders] misunderstood what leadership is and he misspoke it and I think it was a little bit of a jab. I think if he had a chance he'd take it back."
Brown, who set a Steelers single-season record with 1,499 receiving yards last season, said he hasn't talked to Sanders since his Manning-Roethlisberger comparison.
"Right now I'm just singularly focused on our team, getting better and winning," said Brown, who was drafted by the Steelers in 2010, the same year as Sanders. "When things happen like that ... I don't know. Emmanuel's my guy and I'm sure he feels sorry for those words that he put out."
 
I hate that they tried to turn it into some kind of controversy, like there was a doubt that peyton manning was a better leader than ben Roethlisberger. Seriously? like there was any doubt

NFL Nation Buzz: Steelers

ESPN.com Steelers reporter Scott Brown discusses Ben Roethlisberger's leadership qualities.Tags: NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers


NEXT VIDEO
video2.png





LATROBE, Pa. -- Pro Bowl wide receiver Antonio Brown and Emmanuel Sanders were teammates for four seasons with the Steelers and remain good friends, but Brown took issue with Sanders calling Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning a "far better leader" than Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger earlier this week.
"That was terrible," Brown said Wednesday. "You don't throw your quarterback under the bus, the guy who makes you who you are."
Roethlisberger and Sanders played together from 2010 to 2013 and the latter signed with the Denver Broncos last March as an unrestricted free agent.
Sanders told 104.3 The Fan Denver on Monday that Manning works tirelessly with the wide receivers after practice and that he doesn't have to "chase down" the five-time NFL MVP to put in extra time together.
The remarks caused a stir and Sanders stood by them when he addressed what he said later on his Twitter account.
Former Steelers running back Jerome Bettis, who played two seasons with Roethlisberger, defended his former quarterback during an appearance on ESPN's "First Take" earlier this week.
"It's not that Ben doesn't lead. He just leads differently than Peyton does," said Bettis, who is an ESPN NFL analyst. "I think [Sanders] misunderstood what leadership is and he misspoke it and I think it was a little bit of a jab. I think if he had a chance he'd take it back."
Brown, who set a Steelers single-season record with 1,499 receiving yards last season, said he hasn't talked to Sanders since his Manning-Roethlisberger comparison.
"Right now I'm just singularly focused on our team, getting better and winning," said Brown, who was drafted by the Steelers in 2010, the same year as Sanders. "When things happen like that ... I don't know. Emmanuel's my guy and I'm sure he feels sorry for those words that he put out."
 
I don't mean to cut ya off but um RAVENS NATION ALL MF DAY fuck dem Steelers cuz and that retired jersey yerdmeh lol
 
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