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Gholston Motivated to Succeed................
New Bears DE Gholston: 'I'm self-motivated"
Vernon Gholston in action. (Jeff Zelevansky / Getty Images photo)
By Vaughn McClure, Tribune reporter 2:22 p.m. CDT, July 30, 2011
BOURBONNAIS -- Newly signed Bears defensive end Vernon Gholston is fully aware of the label that follows him to training camp: bust.
The former sixth-overall pick of the New York Jets failed to record a sack in three seasons before being released. He often heard criticism and tried to tune it out.
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"I'm self-motivated,'' Gholston said Saturday while leaving the Bears' dining hall. "Obviously, outsiders can motivate you, too.
"It's one of those things where people tend to go by what they know and what they see. With not being on the field much, not playing much, (being a bust) is the natural assumption about me. That's why I'm here, to try and change things around.''
Gholston played both defensive end and outside linebacker with the 3-4-oriented Jets after recording 22.5 career sacks as a 4-3 defensive end at Ohio State. In New York, he was switched back to defensive end after the linebacker experience failed but didn't have much success at end, either.
"As you go through your career, you look for consistency, and that's what hasn't been there for me. One year one coach, another year, another coach,'' Gholston said. "I had about three (position) coaches.
"To become a good player, you need to find something you can hang your hat on, something you can put your foot in the ground and say, 'This is what I do well.' That's what I haven't found yet.''
Gholston believes he can find his way with the Bears under the guidance of Lovie Smith and defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli.
"Initially, when I talked to the Bears coaches, they were adamant about me,'' he said. "That's what I was looking for was someone to feel good about me coming in and playing. And I feel good about playing for them.''
And Gholston is fully aware of the media scrutiny he'll face here in Chicago. Playing in New York prepared him well.
"I hope it's not worse than in New York,'' Gholston said with a laugh. "You can't get much worse than that. New York's a big city, though. Chicago's a big city, too. I'm sure you guys have your same ways.''
vxmcclure@tribune.com
Twitter @vxmcclure23
Copyright © 2011, Chicago Tribune
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I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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Maybe I should go easier on this guy and on this acquisition in general but I wish these guys would come up with a new line besides, "I'm so motivated". It's makes me wonder why it just appears out of nowhere when it has been so obviously absent throughout their prior years in the NFL.
I think Gholston was very motivated in college (22.5 sacks) because he was playing for the shot at a multi-million dollar NFL 1st rounders contract but once he cashed that big bonus check it seems that motivation disappeared. Funny how that happen so often with these guys and why the owners insisted on scaling back rookie compensation. That was mostly due to guys like you Vernon.
Vernon blames this on both playing out of position and the lack of consistency in his coaching but despite that strongly "self-motivated" individuals such as yourself usually succeed anyway Vernon. Apparently the Bears are buying this story (along with a few members) and I am first and foremost a very loyal Bears Fan so I'll find something good in this afterall.
At least now the Bears are dumpster diving for a higher class reject than in the past. We are now pursuing former 1st rounders instead of mid rounders who were probably never all that good or promising to begin with or they wouldn't likely to have been mid rounders. I'll agree with some guys around here that I do truly respect and say if Rod Marinelli can really polish a turd then we just got one of the best bargains in this teams history.
When he came out of OSU he had every reason to believe that he could set the league on fire. He had incredible strength and quickness so there was no way he shouldn't have been putting up double digit sacks from the get go. The trouble was that he was drafted by the Jets who saw him as an OLB type rushbacker and not the 4-3 DE he'd been so successful at in college and he absolutely sucked at it.
So here he is now with a team who intends to let him do what he does best which is rush the passer out of a three point stance as a DE and I will hope that he does that very well because we need another guy who can do that very well. And I do agree with you guys when you say that we risked little but the lost opportunity to have found a better solution if he doesn't make it. I put a lot of emphasis on lost opportunities because they've always cost me money and I try to avoid them. So please forgive me if until Gholston proves differently that I will still see him as that piece of shit broken ass car that wouldn't start for me the morning I lost that job, LOL.
Last edited by soulman; 07-31-2011 at 11:33 AM.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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Originally Posted by
soulman
Gholston played both defensive end and outside linebacker with the 3-4-oriented Jets after recording 22.5 career sacks as a 4-3 defensive end at Ohio State. In New York, he was switched back to defensive end after the linebacker experience failed but didn't have much success at end, either.
Hmm..a 4-3 DE forced to play LB, fails...then switches to 3-4 DE, fails at that? I dont know much about Gholston or the Jets, but i do know playing a 4-3 DE in a 3-4 system isnt a recipe for success. Here's hoping he does better in a system he shouldve been drafted for.
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Think about the onfield dynamics,I believe this will open up the pass rush,and force teams to pick their poison.
This is one reclaimation project worth doing. Young,strong and fast;Marinelli can do a lot with him IMO.
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Originally Posted by
Jimmors
Hmm..a 4-3 DE forced to play LB, fails...then switches to 3-4 DE, fails at that? I dont know much about Gholston or the Jets, but i do know playing a 4-3 DE in a 3-4 system isnt a recipe for success. Here's hoping he does better in a system he shouldve been drafted for.

Originally Posted by
claymore58
Think about the onfield dynamics,I believe this will open up the pass rush,and force teams to pick their poison.
This is one reclaimation project worth doing. Young,strong and fast;Marinelli can do a lot with him IMO.
I concede the guarded optimism that comes with a guy like Gholston but how often do we invest in these reclamation projects as opposed to how often it works? If the guy is truly motivated to continue his NFL career in better surroundings then Marinelli may be able to do something with him, that's true, but if he's still as unfocused and lazy as he was in NY it's a wasted effort and a lost opportunity to go in a different direction.
I suppose that it didn't hurt to sign him but if he can't make some noise in camp I wouldn't waste a roster spot on him hoping that someday he might finally realize that he has to put effort in at this level to succeed. I think that's been far more of a problem with him than just playing out of position.
Last edited by soulman; 07-31-2011 at 08:45 PM.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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Originally Posted by
soulman
I concede the guarded optimism that comes with a guy like Gholston but how often do we invest in these reclamation projects as opposed to how often it works? If the guy is truly motivated to continue his NFL career in better surroundings then Marinelli may be able to do something with his, that's true, but if he's still as unfocused and lazy as he was in NY it's a wasted effort and a lost opportunity to go in a different direction.
I suppose that it didn't hurt to sign him but if he can't make some noise in camp I wouldn't waste a roster spot on him hoping that someday he might finally realize that he has to put effort in at this level to succeed. I think that's been far more of a problem with him than just playing out of position.
also have to remember he will be lining up opposite of Peppers, so if he cant make the most of this opportunity, then yeah...hes a bust.
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I wish Vernon Gholston the best of luck. I don't know if his lack of success is because he is lacking in self-motivation or if he's not trying hard enough. I remember back in August of 2000 I auditioned to become a member of the University of Tennessee Pride of the Southland Marching Band on the trombone. I was an All-State caliber trombonist in high school, the first chair trombonist in the band, and arguably the best marcher in the entire band. Yet, when I got to UT and had to marching at faster tempos, I couldn't keep up the pace because of my feet - they are flat, I have extra bones in them, and I'm pigeon-toed. As a result, I was never given a place on the field to march in UT's nationally-recognized Pregame show, and the only reason I was allowed to be in the band is because I was a Music Education major. To give you an idea of how they dealt with keeping me, they placed me as the 32nd, and last, alternate position just to say that I was in the band.
Something was holding Gholston back, and I don't know what it was, but I doubt seriously that it was a lack of effort and self-motivation. When you get to this point in your career, effort and self-motivation can only take you so far. Just look at my experiences with the UT Marching Band and correlate it with Gholston's.
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I look at it this way: as long as they're being cheap with young backups on the d-line that are in all likelihood gonna be rotational/situational players, and can give them more than their money's worth (which under their new contracts, would be the same as they did with their previous teams), it's gonna be a good move. Do i think it's gonna work? Yeah, but I don't expect them to replace Peppers or Idonije anytime soon, but I also don't see disappointment like with Mark Anderson or Ogunleye..
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Originally Posted by
Henry Burris
I look at it this way: as long as they're being cheap with young backups on the d-line that are in all likelihood gonna be rotational/situational players, and can give them more than their money's worth (which under their new contracts, would be the same as they did with their previous teams), it's gonna be a good move. Do i think it's gonna work? Yeah, but I don't expect them to replace Peppers or Idonije anytime soon, but I also don't see disappointment like with Mark Anderson or Ogunleye..
It will be hard to replace Peppers and Idonije. Both of them were so key to our defensive line's success last year. They might not have had great sack totals, but they made life hell for opposing quarterbacks. If Gholston can even be like Corey Wootten, I will be pleased, but if he turns out to be something far greater, then I'm going to be ecstatic.
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Originally Posted by
Dagan81
Just look at my experiences with the UT Marching Band and correlate it with Gholston's.
Im sorry, but i laughed when i read that.
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