Tim Brown: Bill Callahan sabotaged Raiders in SB XXXVII

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  • ThomasTomasz
    • Nov 2024

    Tim Brown: Bill Callahan sabotaged Raiders in SB XXXVII

    According to receiver Tim Brown, Jon Gruden's Tampa Bay Buccaneers thrashed the Raiders 48-21 in Super Bowl XXXVII because Oakland was "sabotaged" by Bill Callahan, the team's head coach at the time, who changed the game plan at the last minute.

    Brown's comments to SiriusXM NFL Radio on Saturday were reported by ProFootballTalk.com, which was provided audio of his remarks.

    Brown said that when the Raiders got the game plan on the Monday before the Super Bowl, it was a run-heavy attack taking advantage of Oakland's size advantage on the offensive line. However, Brown said Callahan scrapped the plan on Friday to the shock of the team.

    "We all called it sabotage ... because Callahan and Gruden were good friends. And Callahan had a big problem with the Raiders, you know, hated the Raiders. You know, only came because Gruden made him come. Literally walked off the field on us a couple of times during the season when he first got there, the first couple years."

    Brown stressed that he was expressing his opinion and had no proof that Callahan intentionally doomed his own team.

    "You know, can you really say that? That can be my opinion, but I can't say for a fact that that's what his plan was, to sabotage the Super Bowl," Brown said. "He hated the Raiders so much that he would sabotage the Super Bowl so his friend can win the Super Bowl. That's hard to say, because you can't prove it.

    "But the facts are what they are, that less than 36 hours before the game we changed our game plan. And we go into that game absolutely knowing that we have no shot. That the only shot we had if Tampa Bay didn't show up," he said.

    Brown said center Barret Robbins, who disappeared from the team in the days before the game and did not play, begged Callahan not to change the game plan.

    "Barret Robbins begged Coach Callahan, 'Do not do this to me. I don't have time to make my calls, to get my calls ready. You can't do this to me on Friday. We haven't practiced full speed, we can't get this done,'" Brown said.

    Brown wouldn't correlate Robbins' absence from the team with Callahan's decision, however.

    "I'm not saying one had anything to do with the other. All I'm saying is those are the facts of what happened Super Bowl week. So our ire wasn't towards Barret Robbins, it was towards Bill Callahan. Because we feel as if he wouldn't have did what he did, then Barret wouldn't have done what he did," Brown said.

    Brown said "everybody knew Barret was unstable anyway" but the team couldn't fathom Callahan would change plans at the last minute.

    "So to put him in that situation -- not that he was putting him in that situation -- but for that decision to be made without consulting the players the Friday before the Super Bowl? I played 27 years of football. The coaches never changed the game plan the Friday before the game.

    "I'm not trying to point fingers at anybody here, all I'm saying is those are the facts of what happened. So people look at Barret and they say all these things, but every player in that locker room will tell you, 'You'd better talk to Bill Callahan.' Because if not for Coach Callahan, I don't think we're in that situation," he said.

    Running back Zack Crockett, who also was on that Raiders team and is now a scout for the team, said Callahan changed the game plan only because of Robbins' disappearance.

    "He may have known something we didn't know," Crockett told ESPN Radio's "Mike & Mike in the Morning" of Brown.

    Crockett said "everybody was in shock" when Robbins left the team because he made all the offensive calls. He agrees with Brown that "with the offensive line we had, it was going to be a downhill game" if the original game plan was used.

    Oakland rushed the ball only 11 times in the Super Bowl loss to the Buccaneers, and two of those attempts were by quarterback Rich Gannon. Gannon attempted 44 passes in the loss.

    Robbins was diagnosed as bipolar after that incident but regained his spot in the starting lineup the next season after undergoing treatment at an alcohol rehabilitation center. However, the Raiders released Robbins in 2004 after he tested positive for steroids.

    In addition to stays in alcohol and drug rehabilitation programs, Robbins has had several run-ins with law enforcement since the 2004 season.

    Brown's comments about Callahan came just days after he questioned the Bears' hiring of coach Marc Trestman, who was the Raiders' offensive coordinator when Brown was on the team.

    "I don't want to say it was a joke, but I just never saw Trestman as being a head coach," Brown said last week on "The Waddle & Silvy Show" on ESPN 1000 in Chicago.

    Brown had posted nine straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons with the Raiders entering 2002, the year Trestman took over as the team's offensive coordinator. In that 2002 season, Jerry Rice emerged as the team's leading receiver and Brown finished with 930 yards.

    "The year he took over as offensive coordinator is also the year my reign with the Raiders ended because he made Jerry the No. 1 receiver instead of myself," Brown said. "The year before I made the Pro Bowl and caught [91 passes for 1,165 yards] ... and the year afterwards, the year he takes over, I think I came like 50 yards from catching 1,000 yards in 10 or 11 straight seasons.

    "Hey, look, I'm not a selfish player, but come on, if I put the work in, make this happen for me. We had some interesting words about that part of it."

    Brown is one of 15 modern-era Hall of Fame finalists for the class of 2013. The Hall's 46-member selection committee will meet in New Orleans on Feb. 2 to make its selections.

    Callahan is currently the Cowboys' offensive line coach.

    http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/88...wl-xxxvii-loss
  • JimLeavy59
    War Hero
    • May 2012
    • 7199

    #2

    Comment

    • Epidemik
      Commitment to Excellence
      • Jul 2009
      • 10276

      #3
      Did former Oakland Raiders coach Bill Callahan sabotage his team in the Super Bowl a decade ago? Rich Gannon, quarterback of the Raiders at the time, says that assertion is ridiculous.


      Former Oakland Raiders wide receiver Tim Brown raised eyebrows by suggesting over the weekend on Sirius XM NFL Radio that Bill Callahan might have sabotaged the Raiders' chances in Super Bowl XXXVII against old buddy Jon Gruden and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
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      Oakland's quarterback that day, Rich Gannon, addressed the comments Tuesday on his show "The SiriusXM Blitz" with Adam Schein.

      "In terms of Bill Callahan, he's a good football coach. He's a good man. I don't think he would intentionally -- ever (not try to win.) Nor do I think anyone would ever. There was too much in it for all of us. There was too much vested in trying to become world champions. From a selfish perspective, we all wanted to win. I'm sure Bill Callahan was one of them," Gannon said.

      He hit the nail on the head. Callahan could have changed his life with a Super Bowl win. Are we really supposed to believe that Callahan would intentionally pass up millions of dollars in future earnings? It's insane.

      Gannon, who spoke highly of Brown's preparation and intelligence, even questioned the notion that the Raiders dramatically changed the game plan before the Super Bowl. Gannon believes the Raiders were a tired team by the weekend and they all shared in the team's defeat. It didn't help that the Buccanneers knew many of the Raiders' line calls.

      Brown suggested teammates would back him up in his assertion about Callahan, but that hasn't been the case so far.
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      Former Raiders linebacker Bill Romanowski told WPEN-FM in Philadelphia that the accusation made no sense.

      "He absolutely couldn't be further from the truth. So you're saying that a man has a chance to cement himself in history with winning a Super Bowl and he wants to hand it over to his buddy? Give me a break, OK?" Romanowski said. "It couldn't be further from the truth. He doesn't know what he's talking about. I'm blown away that something like that would come out of an intelligent man's mouth."

       

      Comment

      • RosettaStoned
        Throbbing Tebowner
        • Oct 2008
        • 9951

        #4
        Damn, the GOAT dropping it.
        So, metaphorically speaking, our physiology basically has the universe mapped out and you're thinking it needs to be taught addition & subtraction.

        -Alan Aragon

        Comment

        • EmpireWF
          Giants in the Super Bowl
          • Mar 2009
          • 24082

          #5
          So, he waits 10 years to say all this?


          Comment

          • ryne candy
            Aggie C/O '01
            • Feb 2009
            • 4355

            #6
            I don't recall the Raiders being that much of a running team that year. If there is any truth to this, I would think he was told to change it by Al Davis.

            Comment

            • BigBucs
              Unpretentious
              • May 2009
              • 12758

              #7


               




              Comment

              • ram29jackson
                Noob
                • Nov 2008
                • 0

                #8
                heard this today on the radio...just, wow, fascinating.

                But a reality of the human eliment. He didnt help Nebraska either. A pretty bad attitude all around if so about Callahan

                Comment

                • MVPete
                  Old School
                  • Mar 2008
                  • 17500

                  #9
                  Such a terrible god damn story and Tim Brown is a fucking idiot for putting this out there 10 years later. He tried to clear the air down here on the radio talking to Booger McFarland by saying that he didn't consider it a sabotage but that Callahan was a fucking idiot for changing the game plan roughly 36-48 hours before the game. I believe this was the last Superbowl that played a week after the Conference Champ Games, so Callahan might of thought differently than what he had planned at the last minute without that extra week to prepare. I really don't know what would of happened differently if they ran the ball more because they weren't getting anywhere on the ground, and I don't see why a HOF WR(With the GOAT on his other side) who had the league MVP throwing him the ball would be upset if Callahan changed his mind and decided to throw the ball a ton. They made it to that game on the strength of their passing game so I don't see the craziness of the coach having second thoughts of going run heavy and reverting back to what they were best at.

                  Comment

                  • BigBucs
                    Unpretentious
                    • May 2009
                    • 12758

                    #10
                    Jesus Christ could have come up with their game plan a month in advance and it wouldnt have saved them. Our D was simply too good that season.




                    Comment

                    • FirstTimer
                      Freeman Error

                      • Feb 2009
                      • 18729

                      #11
                      Originally posted by BigBucs
                      Jesus Christ could have come up with their game plan a month in advance and it wouldnt have saved them. Our D was simply too good that season.
                      It also helped that they knew all the Raiders plays. NFL films had lynch micd up and he and they entire defense were calling Oakland plays when they came to they line and even when they audibled.out was hilarious stuff

                      Comment

                      • ThomasTomasz
                        • Nov 2024

                        #12
                        Originally posted by BigBucs
                        Jesus Christ could have come up with their game plan a month in advance and it wouldnt have saved them. Our D was simply too good that season.
                        And Jon Gruden knew just about all of their calls. I blame not changing up those for their loss, especially going up against their former coach.

                        Comment

                        • ram29jackson
                          Noob
                          • Nov 2008
                          • 0

                          #13
                          so which Harbaugh brother is letting the other one win ?

                          Comment

                          • BigBucs
                            Unpretentious
                            • May 2009
                            • 12758

                            #14
                            Originally posted by FirstTimer
                            It also helped that they knew all the Raiders plays. NFL films had lynch micd up and he and they entire defense were calling Oakland plays when they came to they line and even when they audibled.out was hilarious stuff
                            Originally posted by ThomasTomasz
                            And Jon Gruden knew just about all of their calls. I blame not changing up those for their loss, especially going up against their former coach.
                            No doubt but you have to have the horses to execute. ATG D vs very good offense..... ATG D wins most of the time. Our horses were better than theirs, collectively.




                            Comment

                            • Mogriffjr
                              aka Reece
                              • Apr 2009
                              • 2759

                              #15
                              and this is the Cowboys new OC
                              Originally posted by Nick Mangold
                              Wes Welker is a great player. He's really taken advantage of watching film. If we don't keep a Spy on him, he could really open the Gate.

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