Raiders sign former Bengals LB Vontaze Burfict
March 19, 2019 - 5:42 pm
Updated March 19, 2019 - 7:37 pm
OAKLAND, Calif. — The first phone call Vontaze Burfict made Monday upon being released by the Cincinnati Bengals was to his mother. The second was someone who may as well be family, a father figure of sorts who fostered Burfict’s entrance into the NFL.
That was Raiders defensive coordinator Paul Guenther.
Or, as Burfict calls him, “Paulie G.”
Guenther did not answer the first several calls, Burfict told Raiders reporters Tuesday with a laugh. But the two eventually connected in a meaningful way. Burfict visited the club Tuesday and signed a one-year contract. He immediately adds edge to the position — and a nasty history with much of the league, including now-teammate Antonio Brown.
Burfict, 28, signed with the Cincinnati Bengals in 2012 as an undrafted free agent from Arizona State.
Guenther, his linebackers coach and later coordinator, took a hands-on approach toward his development. He logged late-night hours to teach Burfict the craft while regularly opening up his home.
"Once Pauly [Guenther] came here, I called my brother like, ‘Man, my defensive coordinator left me. He went to Oakland.'
"He was like, ‘I told you, you’re going to be there one day.'"
Why @King55Tez says joining the Raiders is "a dream come true": https://t.co/HnhBeKGCMb pic.twitter.com/unKbtJwqlI
— Oakland Raiders (@Raiders) March 20, 2019
“It’s just been a close relationship,” Burfict said. “I know his kids. I know his wife. We go out to dinner and all that stuff.”
This is the softer side to Burfict.
Then, there is the other side, a highlight reel of hits the NFL would prefer were left in the 20th century.
Burfict is widely regarded as a dirty player, if not the dirtiest in the game today. His style of play has drawn several fines and multiple suspensions over the course of his career, resulting in millions of dollars in lost wages. In 2017, for example, he initially was suspended five games for an egregious hit he delivered during an exhibition against the Kansas City Chiefs.
That suspension later was reduced to three games, a sentence that was nothing new.
In early 2017, Burfict received a three-game suspension for a brutal blow delivered to Brown during a Bengals playoff loss. Brown scaled up for an incomplete pass. In came Burfict, helmet dipped. Brown suffered a concussion that sidelined him for the ensuing week’s game, a 23-16 loss to the Denver Broncos.
Denver went on to win the Super Bowl.
Burfict, whose lengthy medical issues include his own bout with concussions, insisted he is “not a dirty player.” He noted that Guenther told him he cannot hit Brown on the practice field like he did when the players were AFC North rivals.
“It’s all positive, man,” Burfict said. “He’s a great player. He’s going to be in the Hall of Fame one day. Honestly, I’m just going to approach him like I do all my other teammates, introduce myself, all that good stuff. There’s nothing negative over here. We’re all on the same team. We’re trying to win a championship over here. … Honestly, we might be the closest friends on the team, you know what I mean? So, just got to go along with it, and I can’t wait to meet him.”
At 6:57 p.m. Wednesday, Brown posted on Twitter that he and Burfict just spoke on the phone.
Just talked @King55Tez black and silver baby #RaiderNation #BullySeason
— Antonio Brown (@AB84) March 20, 2019
“Black and silver baby,” Brown wrote. “#RaiderNation.”
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Contact reporter Michael Gehlken at mgehlken@reviewjournal.com. Follow @GehlkenNFL on Twitter.