So what are local beat writers talking about in the wake of their team’s losses?

Winslow should shut his mouth…but he’s right
Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Winslow Jr. aired out some frustrations to the Plain Dealer on Tuesday:

“Some of the coaches might just be holding us back a little bit,” Winslow said. “I don’t mean to try to go behind their backs or whatever, but let’s go, let’s air it out, let’s run the ball, let’s make plays, let’s be exciting.”

“The Giants run the same system as we do, the Cowboys run the same system as we do and [Jeremy] Shockey and [Jason] Witten are on the field on third down,” he said. “I just don’t understand why I’m not on the field sometimes.”

I can’t argue with what Winslow is saying because he’s right – the Browns offense is inept right now. They need Winslow’s playmaking abilities on the field on third downs, especially with Braylon Edwards dropping opportunity after opportunity. Simply put, Cleveland is in no position to leave any of its weapons off the field in critical situations.

This type of stuff can’t be coming out of Winslow’s mouth, however. The Browns don’t owe him anything after his motorcycle stunt put him on IR for the entire ’05 season and so far has cost Cleveland a lofty draft pick with nothing in return but one touchdown. I thought he said in the offseason that he was a changed person? I thought he was going to stop shooting from the hip with his comments and just play?

Be more of a team guy – a leader – before calling out the coaching staff kid.

If you are not big on Chris Simms, you have to read this column
Possibly one of the funniest columns I have read in a long time was by Buccaneers blog writer Scott Kramer from Tampa Bay Online.com. Kramer completely dismantled quarterback Chris Simms in his latest entry after the Bucs lost to the Falcons 14-3 on Sunday:

…The Falcons also rejected more bad passes than a prom queen at Dragoncon…the Atlanta front four didn’t bother rushing too much. They just watched Simms’s eyes, waited for him to start his throwing motion, went to the sideline for some water and a quick rubdown, then got back to the field in time for him to release the ball and deflect the pass. Did I mention that Chris Simms has the slowest release in all of recorded history?

…But when he needed only four of those yards to get a touchdown at the end of the first half, Simms missed an unbelievably uncovered Ike Hilliard who looked absolutely amazed that he didn’t have a ball in his hands.

…But I’m feeling sorry for Simms, much in the same way I feel sorry for a turtle who has been flipped onto his back. He kicks and struggles and wobbles (all very slowly and without coordination,) but can’t ever seem to get back on his feet. So, I’ll stop piling on Chris. For now.

I wrote a response to Simms in my NFL Power Rankings blog about how bad his mechanics are right now. Jon Gruden blasted Simms on the sidelines virtually every series and now I think his confidence is shaken just as much as his physical skills are right now.

Blaming Reid for Eagles collapse
Sam Donnellon of the Philadelphia Daily News knows who to point the finger towards after the Eagles 30-24 overtime loss to the Giants on Sunday: Andy Reid.

…Because this was his fault. Without exception. Over and over again in the second half, Reid tried to run the ball against an eight-man front, tried safe, short passes, tried to dissolve almost a half’s worth of clock rather than press the clear advantage he owned over New York in his own stadium.

Three and out, three and out – over and over again, especially in the fourth quarter. The Eagles’ defense, already undermanned in the secondary, barely had enough time for a cup of water before it was out on the field again.

It’s interesting that Reid once was the hero coach of the NFL – the guy who could do no wrong and who was a genius in getting his players ready to play every week. Now the title of ‘super coach’ has shifted to Carolina Panthers headman John Fox (the 0-2 start doesn’t help him, but he’s beloved by the media) and national and local media now continuously blast Reid.

Interesting how much the media can turn on a guy.

Time for Daunte to get tough
Ethan J. Skolnick from the Florida Sun-Sentinel is calling out QB Daunte Culpepper’s mental toughness:

…He has already responded in a miraculous manner physically, rehabilitating a traumatic knee injury in record time. Now he must show the same resilience in a psychological sense, or he shouldn’t be out there — personal courage, trade compensation, contract status and medical clearance aside.

…He has appeared antsy and clumsy, immobile and indecisive. He has missed big gains and made major mistakes. He has pressed and, in the eyes of some experts, regressed.

Here’s what I think: the Dolphins face Tennessee and Houston the next two weeks. I bet Miami wins both to get back to .500 and all of a sudden the ‘Culpepper of ‘04’ columns start popping up like advertisements on the internet.