Commanders staff hands out Washington rally towels to Steelers fans

Washington is trying to copy the great tradition of the Terrible Towel but they are doing it wrong.

There is no more iconic image at NFL games than to see a crowd of Pittsburgh Steelers fans waving those beautiful Terrible Towels. So you can’t fault the Washington Commanders for trying to copy one of the greatest traditions in the NFL when they decided to hand out their own rally towels before taking on the Steelers.

However, they perhaps should have let their staff know to be more selective about who they gave their faux towels to. As you can see from the video below, Washington staffers handed out towels to Steelers fans entering the stadium. With what is projected to be about 1/3 Steelers fans in the stadium, you can bet those towels aren’t getting waived.

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Commanders to distribute burgundy towels to Washington fans

The Commanders have a plan for the “terrible towels.”

Former Washington Redskins head coach Otto Graham was credited with saying, “Don’t throw in the towel, use it for wiping the sweat off of your face.”

Sunday’s battle between the 6-2 Steelers and the home team Commanders (7-2) looks to be a tough contest. The Commanders have yet to face a defense as good as the Steelers, and the Steelers’ defense has yet to face an offense as efficient as Washington’s.

Speaking of towels, the Steelers have been known for some years to have their fans show up in attendance with their gold towels to wave during the game, exhibiting their support for the Steelers (black and gold).

Meanwhile, the burgundy and gold commanders have apparently determined that they will distribute a burgundy towel to the Commanders’ fans.

Former Redskins running back Brian Mitchell (1990-99), now an employee of 106.7 The Fan in Washington, evidently was the originator of the idea, calling upon the organization to supply burgundy towels to create some more home-team atmosphere at Northwest Stadium, Sunday.

“I need whoever the powers that be — I need you all to get burgundy towels to every fan coming into the stadium,” Mitchell said, underscoring the need to keep the Commanders’ presence strong. “We know the Steelers are going to come with their yellow, so we’re going to mix them together. It’s going to be burgundy and gold all through the stadium.”

On Wednesday, the Commanders emailed fans announcing the towel giveaway with an exciting message: “These giveaways steel the show! We’ll be handing out limited-edition rally towels and Salute to Service hats presented by Verizon this Sunday for our game against the Steelers. Let’s Command Our House and create a home-field advantage by packing Northwest Stadium with burgundy.” (Fox 5 D.C.).

Steelers fans have taken over Allegiant Stadium

The Pittsburgh Steelers have arrived in Las Vegas, and it appears they brought the entirety of the ‘Steel City’ with them.

With Terrible Towels taking over in Las Vegas, Steelers fans watching their team’s Week 6 contest against the Raiders on national television would assume this game was in Pittsburgh.  While the ‘Steel City’ is notorious for traveling well, the Las Vegas Raiders were once known for having one of the most passionate fan bases in the NFL.

However, it appears the home team left the majority of their dedicated fans back in Oakland, as Pittsburgh has packed the stands with black and gold.

The Pittsburgh Steelers will appreciate the much needed support, as they have produced two straight losses and need a win in Week 6 keep up with the AFC North title race.  The Baltimore Ravens are tied with the Steelers for the number one spot in the division, and face tough competition from the Washington Commanders this week.

The Las Vegas Raiders host their AFC rivals, the Pittsburgh Steelers, in a game that is sure to live up to the rivalries standard, on October 13th, at 4:05 PM EST.

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3 causes for concern as Raiders face the Steelers Week 6

There are a few areas that are no doubt pretty worrisome for the Raiders against the Steelers Sunday.

While there are some reasons for optimism for the Raiders as they get set to face the Steelers this Sunday, there are also plenty causes for concern. Here are three I’m looking at.

Turnover differential…differential

With these two teams, you have nearly opposite ends of the spectrum when it comes to turnovers. The Raiders have literally the worst turnover differential in the league (-7). While the Steelers have the fifth best tunover differential (+4).

Just once has a Steelers QB thrown an interception this season. Meanwhile, the Raiders are tied for the most interceptions thrown in the league (6).

It seems kind of funny, then, that both teams are talking about switching quarterbacks. Clearly the bar for QB play with each team is set at very different heights.

Down two number one receivers?

That’s what the Raiders could be looking at in this game. Davante Adams is set to miss his third game with a hamstring/trade request situation. His fellow starter — and number one receiver replacement the past two weeks — Jakobi Meyers is dealing with an ankle injury that has his status in doubt as well.

The past couple weeks they turned to DJ Turner as their third option behind Meyers and Tre Tucker. If Meyers is out too, Turner could start and it’s hard to say who else will step up considering the only other wide receiver on the roster is Tyreik McAllister. And Tucker, Turner, and McAllister are all very similiar types of receivers.

Suffice to say their options are limited and depth is a huge concern.

Terrible Towel Takeover

Word is this game is a hot ticket. And you can bet it isn’t because Raiders fans are simply much more eager to see their team take on this old rival. It’s because Steelers fans are coming. And with them the Raiders lose anything resembling home field advantage.

Expect Allegiant to be inundated with Terrible Towels. Yeah, the idea that a piece of cloth would be intimidating is laughable. But, really, it’s not about the towel. It’s about the noise of the fans attached to them. And in a covered stadium like this, it will get extremely noisy.

Broncos gift fans orange rally towels for Steelers game

The Broncos are giving fans orange rally towels for Sunday’s game, which should offset the visiting “terrible towels” with Steelers fans.

The Pittsburgh Steelers have one of the best traveling fan bases in the NFL, and they bring their signature “terrible towels” with them to every stadium they visit.

Perhaps in part to offset the yellow terrible towels that might show up at Empower Field at Mile High on Sunday, the Denver Broncos are gifting each fan an orange rally towel for Sunday’s game against the Steelers.

The Broncos placed the rally towels on all 76,125 seats at their stadium ahead of the matchup with Pittsburgh:

They are pretty cool towels:

https://twitter.com/MaseDenver/status/1835384496885055735

This is something Denver has been doing for several years, and not exclusively for games when the Steelers visit, but it’s a smart tactic to offset the terrible towels that will undoubtedly show up at Empower Field at Mile High today.

Elsewhere on the pregame front, Pittsburgh quarterback Russell Wilson was spotted chatting with Broncos backup quarterbacks Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson ahead of Sunday’s game:

Wilson (calf) is listed as questionable on the injury report, but he is not expected to play, according to ESPN.

Denver’s game against the Steelers will be regionally televised on CBS and available to stream on fuboTV (try it free) for in-market fans at 2:25 p.m. MT. The Broncos are considered betting underdogs despite playing at home.

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Jacksonville QB Trevor Lawrence disrespects all of Pittsburgh with ‘little yellow towels’ comment

Trevor Lawrence is going to see plenty of those little yellow towels on Sunday.

Shots fired.

On Thursday, Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence spoke to the media ahead of their showdown with the Pittsburgh Steelers. He decides, right out of the gate, to disrespect perhaps the most iconic image in all of Steelers lore. Steeler Nation swinging those Terrible Towels and the sea of yellow

“I know what they are,” Lawrence said. “Those little yellow towels they swing around.”

Little yellow towels, eh? I guess no one told Lawrence that the curse of the Terrible Towel and players who disrespect them are doomed to fail. Now that Lawrence has done this, he has surely sealed the fate of the Jaguars before they even get to Pittsburgh.

The Steelers head into this week’s game at 4-2 after a huge comeback win over the Los Angeles Rams last week. Meanwhile, the Jaguars sit at 5-2 and are coming off of the bye week. This game would be the playoff matchup if they started this week with the Jaguars as the No. 4 seed and the Steelers would be the No. 5 seed.

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This one’s for the Towel: The Curse of the Terrible Towel on the Tennessee Titans

Revisiting the curse put on the Titans in 2008, and how the curse got started.

What better time to revisit the Curse of the Terrible Towel than Tennessee Titans week? The yellow rally towel has been revered by Pittsburgh Steelers fans worldwide since it was invented by the late broadcaster Myron Cope in 1975. That year, Pittsburgh went on to win the first of four Super Bowls in five seasons.

The curse not only condemns the team that disrespects it but also gives some kind of energy to the Steelers. And the curse did just that in 2008.

At the conclusion of the Week 16 win over the Steelers, Titans linebacker Keith Bullock and defensive end Jevon Kearse stomped, spit on and kicked the Terrible Towel. Running back LenDale White would also celebrate their win by stomping on the Towel in front of the cameras.

“They came into the Titans arena waving those ugly yellow flags, and I stomped on one,” White told NFL.com. “If they wave it again, I’m going to stomp on another one. I’m the Terrible Towel Stomper forever. If people don’t like it on this team or anywhere else, whatever.”

Post-stomping, the 13-2 Titans went 0-2 to finish their season.

Meanwhile, Pittsburgh won its next three games and went onto the Super Bowl, which the Titans watched from their couch.

Pittsburgh defeated the Arizona Cardinals (more below on how Phoenix mayor’s dishonor of the Towel may have cursed his Cardinals).

But that wasn’t it for the Titans. The team would go winless for a total of 10 weeks, including a Week 1 overtime loss to Pittsburgh the following season.

In a ceremony honoring former Steelers player and coach Tony Dungy, Titans head coach Jeff Fisher said to an amused Dungy, “I need to know the mystery of this Terrible Towel. Last December, a couple of my knuckleheads stomped on it and we haven’t won a game since… Will you tell the Rooneys I have one enshrined in my office, I have one hanging in my house, I’ll do anything I need to do with that towel.”

At the behest of former Titans tackle Brad Hopkins, White and Bulluck autographed a Terrible Towel and mailed it to Pittsburgh’s Alleghany Valley School. AVS, a nonprofit that provides homes and services to individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, owns the rights to the towel is (more on AVS below).

The players’ gesture seemed to have reversed the curse as the Titans went on to win their next five games to close the 2009 season at 8-8.

History of the curse

Fisher obviously was not aware of the Curse of the Terrible Towel, though it had been well-observed — in many cases, opponents’ disrespect of the towel led to imminent doom.

The latest victim was the Cincinnati Bengals. In 2016, running back Jeremy Hill found paydirt to put the Bengals up 17-3 over the Steelers. He chose to celebrate by twice trying to rip the cloth in half before throwing it to the ground.

The Bengals promptly gave up a 14-point lead.

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After rushing for 44 yards in the first half, Hill was bottled up with -1 yard on six attempts in the second, and the Steelers won, 24-20.

Later, Hill later posted this tweet:

Hill removed the post after I’m sure what was a firestorm from Steelers Nation. With that, he claimed he was hacked.

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Hill wasn’t the first Bengal to dishonor the Towel. After beating the Steelers in Week 13 of the 2005 season, wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh wiped his cleats with it. The Curse of the Terrible Towel was activated with a single swipe.

At 9-3, the Bengals were favorites to win the AFC. With the curse set in motion, Cincinnati lost three of the next five games, including a Wild Card loss to… the Steelers, 31-17. That same game, quarterback Carson Palmer suffered a serious knee injury.

After Hoosh’s Towel taunting, it would be four years before the Bengals again reached the playoffs after seasons of 8-8, 7-9 and 4-11-1.

The Steelers, however, never lost another game in 2005 and finished off the season as Super Bowl champs.

Washington Football Team

Weeks before Hill attempted to rip the towel, in the 2016 season opener in Pittsburgh Washington punter Tress Way’s mother burned a Terrible Towel. Washington lost, 38-16.

Cleveland Browns

In a 1994 playoff game, Browns running back Earnest Byner stepped on the towel and proclaimed, “We don’t care about your towel. We’re going to beat you this time.” Cleveland lost, 29-9.

San Diego Chargers

In 1994, after the San Diego Chargers beat the Steelers in the AFC Championship game, several players grabbed Terrible Towels and mock-waved and stomped on them. The Chargers then lost the Super Bowl, 49-26, to the San Francisco 49ers.

Arizona Cardinals

One of the most recent incidents harmful to a Steelers opponent was in 2008.

At a send-off rally for the Cardinals, their mascot Big Red wiped his furry armpits with the Terrible Towel. Then things got downright serious. Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon blew his nose into the Towel and threw it to the ground.

Former Steelers offensive coordinator and then-Cardinals head coach Ken Whisenhunt warned Gordon not to disrespect the Towel. Whisenhunt knew all-too-well the power of the curse. But Gordon did it anyway, and Pittsburgh defeated Arizona in the Super Bowl.

Terrible Towel for a good cause

In 1996, Myron Cope gave the rights of the Towel to Merakey Allegheny Valley School, who benefits from Terrible Towel proceeds. Cope held the nonprofit close to his heart — his son, who is autistic, has lived most of his life at AVS. Proceeds from Terrible Towel sales have netted the organization over $3 million.

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