Colorado University Athletics
Former CU QB Kordell Stewart Retires A Steeler

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Will Graves, AP Sports
Writer
PITTSBURGHGÇöKordell Stewart's
phone stopped ringing with offers from NFL teams years ago.
Still, Stewart never officially
retired. Not even after landing on his feet by getting a football
analyst gig at ESPN in 2008.
When his father died in March of
last year, Stewart knew he needed to get some closure in parts of
his life, football being among them.
Though Stewart spent his last two
seasons with Baltimore in 2004-05, filing his retirement papers
while wearing purple-and-black just didn't feel right.
Stewart wanted to come home to
Pittsburgh, where he became a sensation in the late-1990s as
"Slash" Stewart, part-time quarterback, part-time running back,
part-time wide receiver, full-time excitement.
"This where it all started, this
where all my success was," Stewart said on Wednesday just before
signing a one-day contract so he could retire as a member of the
Steelers. "This was the closure I wanted to have and needed to have
with my career."
The 39-year-old Stewart played
his first eight seasons in Pittsburgh, making a splash as "Slash"
in 1996 while helping the team to the Super Bowl before beginning
an enigmatic career at quarterback. He made the Pro Bowl in 2001
after leading Pittsburgh to a 13-3 record but never really
recovered after getting injured at the start of the 2002
season.
Stewart became a touchstone in
football-crazy Pittsburgh. For every fan who marveled at his
athletic brilliance, another bristled at his inconsistent
play.
There were death threats GÇö not of
which he took seriously GÇö and boos. There were also raucous
celebrations and a solid record of 46-29 as a starter in the Steel
City.
"It was an ebb-and-flow type
career that I had," Stewart said, "one where I had tons of highs
and tons of lows. I'm at the point if you understand anything in
life that's what you will have."
The Steelers drafted Stewart in
the second round of the 1995 NFL Draft after a spectacular career
at Colorado, where he's best remembered for his thrilling
last-second heave to Michael Westbrook that lifted the Buffaloes to
an unlikely victory at Michigan.
He impressed teams with his arm
strength GÇö the pass to Westbrook traveled 75 yards in the air GÇö
though the Steelers saw something more.
When a rash of injuries left the
team decimated at several positions during his rookie year in 1995,
Stewart went to coach Bill Cowher and volunteered to carry a
heavier workload. The league didn't know what hit it. Stewart
blossomed into a dynamic playmaker who was a threat whenever the
ball was in his hands.
Stewart caught a touchdown pass
in the AFC championship game that year against Indianapolis before
getting shut down by Dallas in the Super Bowl loss. His numbers
were even better in 1996 GÇö 171 rushing yards, 329 receiving yards
and eight combined touchdowns GÇö before the team turned to Stewart
to replace Neil O'Donnell in 1997.
A series of up-and-down years
followed. He led the Steelers to the AFC championship game in 1997
before enduring three mediocre seasons in which he struggled to
stay healthy.
Stewart hung tough GÇö "got my oil
up" as he put it GÇö and in 2001 put together a career year, passing
for 3,109 yards and tossing 14 touchdowns as the Steelers went
13-3.
It came to a screeching halt in
the AFC championship against New England. Stewart threw three
interceptions and the Steelers fell 24-17.
Things were never the same. He
was injured early in 2002 and ended up losing his starting job to
journeyman Tommy Maddox. Stewart moved on to Chicago in 2003 hoping
to revive his career.
It didn't happen. He went 2-5 as
a starter before landing in Baltimore, where he never threw a pass
as a backup in 2004-05.
He stayed in shape waiting for a
call that never came. In the end he decided to give Steelers owner
Art Rooney II a ring asking for the chance to file his retirement
papers.
His career has been over for
nearly a decade. Now Stewart knows he can move on. He joked he
could "maybe" take a snap or two during the camp's organized team
activities, but with his 40th birthday less than five months away,
he knows he belongs in the TV booth instead of on the field.
"Being here in this city, a lot
of great things happened," Stewart said. "All the other stuff was
just a part of the game."