Every morning, the fine folks at Sports Radio Interviews sift through the a.m. drive-time chatter to bring you the best interviews with coaches, players, and personalities across the sports landscape. Today: the soon-to-be unemployed Haynesworth addresses this.


Albert Haynesworth joined 106.7 The Fan in Washington with Kevin & Rock to give his side of the story and discuss the Redskins deactivating him, whether it was because he was sick, if anyone talked to him about a possible release, if he wants to be released, if he has gone to the coaching staff to say he wants to play more and other players who have been more receptive to the new defensive scheme.


On his side of the story of what is going on:

"I don't know, but like I got people calling me and saying some media people are reporting that I was like hungover and drunk and all this stuff Friday. And then they're like, ‘Well, lots of people said it.' I was like, ‘I didn't know a bunch of people were out with me.' … Yeah, I went out on Thursday but left early because I wasn't feeling good and went home. They want to sit here and say I was hungover and drunk or something like that. You look at my career, you look at my college career, there's never ever been alcohol involved. … For people to make up lies to try to make me look bad, it's ridiculous. I think they're cowards. If they have something to say, they should come to my face."

On the Redskins deactivating him for Sunday's game:

"The bottom line, Sunday, I was ready to play, could've played, wanted to play, and then I come in and my stuff is packed up. They tell me I'm deactivated. That's their choice. I'm here to play. Everybody's saying I'm not committed, I'm committed. I'm ready to play. I've never had an issue with playing. I always play hard, I play hurt. I'll blow out something before I quit playing. I'm still the same player that I was when I was at Tennessee and if they can put me on the field and let me prove that, then I would. Getting 14 snaps a game is not helping anything."

On if he was spoken to about a possible release:

"No, nobody ever came to me and said anything to me. No coach or nothing ever said anything to me about being released or about why I was inactive or anything. Nothing was ever said to me."

On whether, at this point, he would want to be released:

"I'm just happy to have a job. I'm not going to say anything like that as far as I want to be cut. Nobody wants to be cut. But I do want to be treated fairly and I do want to play. They paid me to play, that's what I want to do. I want to show how I can play. They paid me this money. Let me play like I played in Tennessee, I will show you. I made a lot of plays in Tennessee and could do the same thing here. All you've got to do is take off the dag-gone leash and let me loose and you'll see how great I am."


On being a highly paid third-down specialist:

"To me, it's ridiculous, but I do whatever they want. I want to play every down, but what we run here is a 3-4 defense and it's completely something different that I've never ran before. I practice it or whatever, but I'm just not that good at it. It's completely changing the style of my game."

On other Redskins players who have been more receptive to the change to the 3-4:

"Yeah, I mean, I'm sure they are, but you pay me to be the best defensive tackle and then you change my position and you think it's going to be the same production out of me. It's not going to happen. It's something I've done for 20 years then you change me to a nose tackle and you think I'm going to be the same exact person. That's not going to happen."


On whether there's a time that he just goes up to the coaching staff, or even higher, and telling them it's just time to cut the crap and play him more:

"You think at some point that they would get it without me having to go up and say that. You paid me a lot of money. Obviously I can still play the game, the way I've played these last few games. It's kind of the writing's on the wall, it's there, just let me play. I could do a lot of great things for this team. My objective is to win. Win games. That's what I want to do, win games."

This post, written by Eric Schmoldt, appears courtesy of Sports Radio Interviews. For the complete highlights of the interview, as well as audio, click here.


More from Sports Radio Interviews

• Jim Riggleman on the new, free-spending Nats.

• Ron Artest does an interview, this time as himself.

• Adrian Gonzalez is clearly the second coming of Ted Williams.