Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Suh Sacks Mike Valenti and Terry Foster

Ndamukong Suh, a Nebraska football standout turned defensive tackle for the Detroit Lions, poses for a picture in a headlock with Bobbie Hill, of Comstock, during an autograph stop at the Children's Hospital and Medical Center in Omaha on July 22, 2010.


Mike Valenti and Terry Foster are radio announcers for 97.5 the ticket in Detroit, flagship for Lions football. The announcers' weekly interview with Lions DT Ndamukong Suh went south when the interviewers got stuck on trying to expose Suh's personal issues.

The questioning seemed like a trick play to get Suh to reveal all, but Suh outmaneuvered the interviewers by staying calm, collected and courteous while the interviewer(s) unraveled in frustration and ended in what sounded like a hissy fit. They simply didn't get what they wanted out of Suh and stubbornly missed out on letting Suh give fans what he was willing to.

Long after Suh decided to amicably end the interview the interviewer(s) continued to try justifying their position on how they conducted themselves, claiming they did not try to overly pry when it was obvious that's exactly what the interviewer(s) did and exactly why Suh ended it. Whatever happened to professionalism in broadcasting? Was Sarah Palin right about media only being interested in the "gotcha" moment?

Mike Valenti believes he was asking the tough questions because that's what the fans want to know. Well Mike, it was plain to everyone but you that you asked either the wrong question, as Suh tried to tell you, or posed it the wrong way. It's not always what you say but how you say it.

It took a more levelheaded Terry Foster to calm Valenti down and ask him to "let people critique what just happened." On that note the call-in number was given, and the station went to break.

And that my friends is a perfect example of the new age broadcasting style. No tact, no integrity and very little respect for guests on their shows. Anyone and any subject are fair game to blast away at until the interviewee either says something that shocks and bumps ratings or takes the high road and does as Ndamukong Suh does and gentlemanly walks away.

Suh is not as off his rocker as the media is making him out to be. He might have difficulty saying what he truly feels and saying what folks wanna hear, but after interviews like this one I understand why. When does "No Mean No" in broadcasting? I hate to say it but here it is bluntly and uncensored; Suh just escaped a radio rape with his balls unmolested. Suh gets my vote for Real Man of the week.




Now if only my Raiders can do on the field what Mike and Terry couldn't off the field; rattle Suh and get him to make mistakes come this Sunday.


And I still say interviewers are not privy to all the thoughts and personal postgame conversations players may have with teammates, coaches or organization personnel. Professional interviewers know how to conduct themselves and adjust when an interviewee deems their questions too personal or off limits.  Unfortunately, these guys came across as unprofessional and amateur while Suh kept it together.

After leaving the Detroit Lions, Ndamukong Suh, who the interviewers and disgruntled Lions fans refer to here as "The Guy," went on to play in three Super Bowls. "The Guy" won a championship with the 2021 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 

As of 2026, the Detroit Lions are one of four NFL teams to never reach a Super Bowl game. I suppose they are blaming "The Guy" for that.

3 comments:

msb said...

are you serious?
Mike and Terry asked the questions I would've asked him. Did you hear Suh's excuse after the incident from Thanksgiving? How lame and without character was that? Get your facts together before writing such a bad article

Anonymous said...

Nice story. Just add real facts and it may be readable. You couldn't even get the station right.....

RaiderLegend said...

G-O-T-C-H-A!!!