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To: TimF who wrote (13832)10/16/2006 7:18:58 PM
From: sandintoes  Respond to of 90639
 
You were right..

Updated: Oct. 16, 2006, 5:03 PM ET
Polamalu presents big problems now that he's healthy

PITTSBURGH -- Troy Polamalu made so many plays, was so
irritating and unsettling, that the frustrated Kansas City Chiefs
finally did what has seemed inevitable since the All-Pro safety
began wearing his hair down his back.

The Chiefs' Larry Johnson, wasting considerable energy to run
down Polamalu on a 49-yard pass interception with the Chiefs
already down by 31 points, grabbed Polamalu by his long black hair
and yanked him to the turf.


After having an offense-disrupting game Sunday in the reawakened
Steelers' 45-7 rout of Kansas City with 10 tackles, the
interception and three pass breakups, it was easy to see how
Polamalu got into the Chiefs', uhh, hair.

Polamalu's comeback from a shoulder injury that limited his
effectiveness for weeks was as important to the Steelers' defense
as quarterback Ben Roethlisberger's vastly improved play was for
the offense. The Steelers are a different team when the two
playmakers are at their best, as they were Sunday.

The Chiefs never did figure out how to control Roethlisberger
(two TD passes) or Polamalu, who helped limit tight end Tony
Gonzalez to three catches for 15 yards in a Kansas City offense
that did almost nothing.

On some series, it almost seemed as if Polamalu was on offense,
his name was getting called so much.

"He's such an instinctive guy," coach Bill Cowher said. "When
he plays like that, he's all over the field. He makes a number of
plays for you."

Afterward, Polamalu clearly didn't want to talk about the
hair-yanking incident, which he knows will be replayed constantly
on the highlights shows.

"If you know somebody with long hair, you take your hand and
run it through somebody's hair, it's going to get stuck," Johnson
said. "That's what happened. It wasn't like I was trying to jerk
him around after I made the tackle."

Polamalu, a two-time Pro Bowl safety in his first two seasons as
a starter, wears the hair long as a tribute to his Samoan heritage.
He understands he takes the risk of being tackled by it on plays
such as the one Sunday -- just as running backs Ricky Williams and
Edgerrin James once risked the same thing by wearing their hair
long.

"I'm glad it happened," Polamalu said. "It means I've got the
ball in my hands."

That Johnson happened to be the first to yank Polamalu by the
hair seems a curious coincidence. At the 2003 draft, the Steelers
traded up 11 spots in the first round with Kansas City so they
could draft Polamalu. The Chiefs with their lower pick, took
Johnson, who last year led the AFC with 1,750 yards rushing.

"It's the only thing I could get my hands on," Johnson said.

Still, as Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau said at the
Super Bowl, he doesn't care if Polamalu lets his hair grow another
foot as long as he keeps making interceptions.

"If I've got the ball in my hands, they can tackle me all day
like that," Polamalu said. "He can tackle me by my hair or my
ankles. It doesn't matter, I understand that the nature of the game
is that things like that can happen, and there's no bad blood at
all."

Even if there seemed to be some of it on the Chiefs' sideline,
where microphones picked up some intense debates among the players
about why each side of the ball was being pushed around like it
was.

They weren't discussing whether Polamalu should wear mousse or
get his locks trimmed so they fit under his helmet, either.

The Steelers (2-3), now back in the AFC North race after being
well off the lead only a few weeks into the season, can only hope
the rest of their opponents keep coming up empty-handed when they
play them. Or at least clutching at nothing but Polamalu's hair.

sports.espn.go.com