Kicked Out, He Was a Fair Catch : Charger Opponent: Traded from San Diego to Washington, Ralf Mojsiejenko leads the National Football League in punting average.
SAN DIEGO â Ralf Mojsiejenko isnât gloating. He is too nice a guy to do that.
Still, the punter who was no longer wanted by the Chargers canât help but feel a special sense of satisfaction as he awaits his first meeting with his former team as a member of the Washington Redskins. He will go into Sundayâs game in Washington with the best punting average in the National Football League.
While the Chargers have tried two punters in a vain effort to find a replacement, Mojsiejenko, 26, has averaged 44.3 yards on 53 punts, including a 74-yarder that ranks second only to the 91-yard bomb by Philadelphia quarterback Randall Cunningham last Sunday.
Lewis Colbert, who beat Mojsiejenko for the Charger job, was such a dismal failure that he was released after two games. He averaged 33.3 on eight punts. Hank Ilesic then was imported from Canada and has made some spectacular kicks but has been inconsistent. He ranks 13th in the league with a 41-yard average.
The Chargers raised many an eyebrow by trading Mojsiejenko to the Redskins on Aug. 29 for a seventh-round draft choice. He had averaged a career-high 44.1 yards last year and gone to the Pro Bowl the year before, but the Chargersâ new coaching regime wasnât happy with him.
The reason public consumption was that Dan Henning, who had succeeded Al Saunders as head coach, and Joe Madden, who had taken over as special teams coach after Wayne Sevier went to the Redskins, preferred a different type of punter.
Steve Ortmayer, the Chargersâ director of football operations, said after trading Mojsiejenko that Colbertâs style--angling the ball away from the returner as opposed to kicking it as far as possible--would fit in better with the Chargersâ scheme.
âWe feel that Colbert will give our defense a chance to operate many times inside our opponentâs 15-yard line,â Ortmayer said.
Henning added, âWeâre looking for position and coverage. Not that we didnât think the other guy (Mojsiejenko) could do it, but Colbert is more accurate.â
As it turned out, Colbertâs punts were neither long nor accurate. And since Ilesic arrived, he has put the ball inside the 20 only nine times--an AFC low--compared to 17 for Mojsiejenko on eight fewer punts.
But whatever the importance of the accuracy factor, it was only part of the story behind Mojsiejenkoâs departure. He passed up the Chargersâ minicamp, saying that Ortmayer had reneged on a promise to renegotiate his contract.
Not surprisingly, both Ortmayer and Henning denied that this had anything to do with their decision to trade Mojsiejenko.
When Ortmayer was asked about its impact, he said, âAbsolutely zero.â
When the same question was put to Henning, he said, âThere is no hassle. He has a contract.â
Mojsiejenko didnât buy those denials, and he still doesnât. He talked about the reasons behind the trade in a telephone interview.
âA lot of it stems from the dispute, or disagreement, with Mr. Ortmayer,â Mojsiejenko said. âI held out at minicamp, and that offended him. When I came into the regular camp, I still thought weâd get something done, but he didnât go for it.
âThat was disappointing, since he had pushed for it in â87, when I had my Pro Bowl year. He mentioned that he wanted to redo my contract, and I was happy.
âThen he never did anything. It was like giving me candy and taking it back.â
Mojsiejenko said his agent, Steve Weinberg, had attempted for months before minicamp to strike a deal with Ortmayer but had gotten nowhere.
âSteve tried weekly,â Mojsiejenko said. âBut Mr. Ortmayer didnât return phone calls, and he didnât return letters. We were talking to nobody.
âWe felt that we were being treated unjustly, and thatâs why I skipped minicamp. We felt that they were ignoring me, so I ignored them for a week. By that time, they werenât sure I was going to show up at the regular camp.
âBut I did show up, and when they told me I was traded, I was shocked. In spite of the contract business, I didnât expect anything at all. It took me a couple of weeks to adjust to the change.â
As for managementâs criticism of his type of punting, Mojsiejenko said he had argued the point without success.
âThey wanted me to angle the ball to the sidelines, like Lewis (Colbert) was doing,â he said. âI told them that doesnât work in the NFL anymore. I told them sometimes you do that and you donât even get it inside the 20.
âThe fans want long punts, not punts that go to the sidelines all the time. You canât have good stats that way. If Iâd had a 38-yard gross average and a 34 net, I wouldnât be here. I would have ended up doing what Lewis Colbert ended up doing and gotten cut.â
Mojsiejenko pointed out that punting for distance creates the possibility of big plays that can turn a game around.
âIâve had at least three plays this year that wound up with big net yardage,â he said.
Sevier, a San Diego State alumnus who had coached the Redskinsâ special teams from 1981 through 1986 before spending two seasons with the Chargers, is strongly in favor of Mojsiejenkoâs style.
âI was happy with Mojo in San Diego,â Sevier said. âHeâll line drive a little more than go for hang time, but thatâs OK with me. In most cases, I prefer driving the ball to getting it higher. I like the fact that he might get you a 70-yarder and back up your opponent.
âHe has kicked over the top (past the return men) three times this year, and all three return men ran it out of the end zone. I never had that happen before.â
Sevier did admit that Mojsiejenko could improve his position punting.
âItâs not one of his strong points,â Sevier said. âHe has a ways to go, but heâs improving every year. His ratio of 20s (punting inside the 20) to touchbacks gets better every year.
âHe was very consistent in San Diego. He drives the ball once in a while and allows the opposition to get into a return, but that doesnât happen often. And thereâs always the chance that heâll get off a real long one.
âI think itâs unfair to criticize him. In clutch situations he comes up with some great punts, and thatâs really what youâre looking for.â
In returning to the Redskins for a second term, Sevier, 48, has been reunited with Coach Joe Gibbs, who was a teammate at San Diego State in 1961 and 1962. Sevier also had two hitches on the Chargersâ staff, the first having been in 1979 and 1980.
Sevierâs wife is Gibbsâ secretary.
âI grew up in San Diego,â Sevier said. âMy four kids and six grandkids have grown up there. I miss it. I thought I had a chance to be the head coach (after Saunders was fired), but Joe (Gibbs) talked to me right after they made the change. He allowed me to pursue the opportunity to be the head coach, but said if I didnât get it, I could go back to the Redskins.â
The play of the Chargersâ special teams has deteriorated since Madden moved into Sevierâs old job, but Sevier had kind words for Madden.
âMadden is a good coach,â Sevier said. âI went against him head-to-head for five years when he was with the Detroit Lions, and it was always a great matchup.
âWhat happens is, your special teams can play great for 16 plays, and if they have one bad one, thatâs all anybody remembers.â
Sevier pointed out that Madden needed time for his system to work.
âIt took me two years,â Sevier said. âI look for the Chargersâ special teams to be great. They scare me to death. The kickoff that Anthony Miller ran back a few weeks ago was a thing of beauty. Heâs scary.â
Sevierâs input helped the Redskins decide to deal for Mojsiejenko.
âI thought if he was ever available, Iâd like to get him,â Sevier said. âI never thought that would come up, and when it did, I was excited. We didnât really have a punter, and we were looking.â
Mojsiejenko considers rejoining Sevier a big break.
âIf I was going to be traded, this was the best scenario,â Mojsiejenko said. âI know his system and he knows what to expect of me.â
Another trip to the Pro Bowl is a strong possibility, but Mojsiejenko said he wasnât counting on it. He noted that three other NFC punters were also having big seasons--Sean Landeta of the New York Giants, Rich Camarillo of the Phoenix Cardinals and Jim Arnold of the Lions.
Turning his thoughts to his four-year stay with the Chargers, Mojsiejenko said, âIf you see Mr. Ortmayer, tell him Mojo says âHi.â âGive my best to the fans out there. I didnât have a chance to thank them for all their support.â