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Archive for September, 2010

NFL – Tribute To Booker Edgerson

30 Sep

It’s long overdue, but on Sunday at Ralph Wilson Stadium, Booker Edgerson will finally be honored by having his name placed on the Buffalo Bills’ Wall of Fame. It’s safe to say that a lot of the fans in the stadium won’t have any idea who Edgerson is or what he meant to the Bills’ franchise when he played. Edgerson was signed by the Bills as an undrafted free agent out of Western Illinois in 1962 and became a fixture for the team at left cornerback for 8 seasons. He was a track star in college and used that speed to blanket the best receivers in the AFL during his career. When the American Football League came into existence in 1960, the game plan for the new league was to offer a wide-open, more exciting alternative to the “three yards and a cloud of dust” NFL. The league featured exciting offense and a lot of downfield passing and more scoring. The AFL’s biggest star in their first few seasons was Houston Oilers’ QB George Blanda, and in Edgerson’s first game ever in ’62, he intercepted Blanda twice, and had 6 picks in all as a rookie. In 1964 the Bills, coached by Lou Saban, dominated the AFL the old fashioned way – with a hard nosed running game featuring bruising fullback Cookie Gilchrist, and a stifling defense. Edgerson was a key player on that defense. Today, Darrelle Revis of the Jets, who is hurt and won’t be playing in the game on Sunday, is celebrated as the best defensive player in the league, as the NFL’s premier “lockdown” cornerback, whose job each week is to cover the opponents’ top wide receiver and take that player out of the game by not allowing him to contribute to his team’s offense. The term “lockdown” corner wasn’t used in the 1960s, but Edgerson was an early version of what Revis is doing in the NFL today. In those days the AFL was loaded with rifle-armed quarterbacks and fleet wide receivers, and the best of the best was Hall of Famer Lance Alworth of the San Diego Chargers. In 1963, the Chargers totally dominated the league behind a wide-open offense designed by coach Sid Gillman and orchestrated by QB Tobin Rote, throwing to Alworth and handing off to RB Keith Lincoln. The Chargers buried the Boston Patriots 51-10 in the title game, and were clearly the class of the new league. In 1964 the Bills proved the old adage that offense wins games but defense wins championships as they shut down the high-flying Chargers 20-7 in the AFL title game. Gillman complained afterwards that the bad field conditions at old War Memorial Stadium, plus the fact that Alworth was out with an injury, was the reason his team lost. Just to prove a point, in 1965 the Bills shut out the Chargers on their own home field, 23-0, to repeat as champs. Thanks mostly to Edgerson’s efforts, Alworth was a non-factor in the game. The San Diego speedster was widely regarded as the fastest player in the AFL, if not in all of pro football, but Edgerson is the only player to ever to catch Alworth from behind. Booker was also a nemesis of another AFL marquee player, Joe Namath of the Jets. In the season the Jets shocked the Colts to win Super Bowl III, the Bills were aging and on the decline, and only won one game. The win was over the Jets. They intercepted Namath 5 times and returned 3 for touchdowns, including one by Edgerson.

In an earlier post I documented players at each position that were not in the football Hall of Fame in Canton but deserved to be, and Edgerson was one of those mentioned. It’s not Canton, but the Bills’ Wall of Fame is still a great honor for the 71 year old Edgerson. He is active in charity work as the president of the Bills’ Alumni Association and can be seen around the stadium or in the field house on game days, talking to fans and just being a great ambassador for the team.  If you’ve seen him you’d probably agree with me that he still looks like he could suit up and play today. Congratulations on a well-deserved honor to one of the Bills’ all-time greats!

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

30 Sep

Logo of a team that played one season, 1934-35,  in the National Hockey League, the St. Louis Eagles. If their logo looks somewhat familiar, it’s because the eagle was copied from a city of St. Louis icon, the Anheuser-Busch Budweiser logo. The Eagles folded after one year, but  for a pretty unusual reason. The team had great attendance in St. Louis, but had been transferred there from Ottawa and had to play in the same division as the old Senators team they were born from – the Canadian Division. The long train rides to cities like  Montreal, Toronto and Boston not only wore out the Eagle players but the travel costs drained the team’s profits. The owners petitioned the league to move back to Ottawa after the ’35 season, but were declined and the franchise was disbanded instead. The Eagles’ captain for their lone season was Hall of Famer Syd Howe, no relation to Gordie.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

30 Sep

1957 Parkhurst hockey card of the late Hall of Fame goaltender Jacques Plante. “Jake The Snake” was known for his longevity – his career lasted from 1947 until 1975 – and for being innovative – he was the first goalie to wear a mask in regular season play, and the first to play the puck outside the crease. He played for Montreal from 1953 through 1963, and the team won 6 Stanley Cups during that era. Plante “retired” in 1965, but when the NHL added 6 expansion teams for the 1967-68 season, he was persuaded to return to the game, signing with the St. Louis Blues for their second season in 1968-69. Amazingly, he won the Vezina trophy as the league’s top goaltender for that season. His name is always in the discussion of top netminders of all time. Plante was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1978 and died of stomach cancer in 1986, at the age of 57.

 

MLB – Reds Return To Postseason

29 Sep

Congratulations to the Cincinnati Reds for wrapping up the National League Central Division title last night in dramatic fashion, with a walk-off home run from Jay Bruce to defeat Houston. It is the first time the Reds will play in the postseason in 15 years, and their successful year is another feather in the cap of their manager, Dusty Baker. Cincinnati has always been one of the great baseball towns in the country, and, even though they haven’t exactly drawn in the fans in droves, it’s great to see a good, young team rise to the top. I wrote a post on this blog after the Reds were swept by division rival St. Louis earlier in the season that pretty much was an obituary for the young team, that they were overmatched by the much more experienced Cardinals and the series sweep was a sign of the big, bad Cards putting the upstart young Reds in their place. I couldn’t have been more wrong, as the Reds pulled it together and ran away with the division as St. Louis traveled in the other direction and fell out of the race. When a team stays on an even keel and rights the ship after being swept like the Reds were, it’s definitely a credit to the manager. Baker has now managed winning programs in San Francisco, with the Chicago Cubs and now with the Reds. It will be interesting to see how far he can take them in the playoffs. In the NL, the Phillies will be overwhelming favorites to make their third straight World Series appearance, and with the NL West teams battling it out amongst each other and tiring each other out, the Reds may emerge as the team with the best chance of dethroning the Fightin’ Phils. Baseball has been fighting to keep fan interest the last few years after the steroid era soured the game for a lot of casual fans, and with some of their playoff games lasting into the late hours of the night when young fans have long been asleep, so here’s hoping there are some exciting surprises in this year’s postseason. It might not be great for the almighty TV ratings, but I think a Reds vs. Rays or Giants vs. Twins World Series would be great for the game, and would be a great stage to showcase rising stars like Joey Votto, David Price, Evan Longoria, Tim Lincecum, Buster Posey, Joe Mauer, etc.

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

29 Sep

Logo of the United States Football League’s Los Angeles Express, who made big news in their second year in the league by signing QB Steve Young to a huge contract that included a $1 million per season annuity that he is still collecting on today. The team had made attempts to make a big splash in the L.A. market in 1983 by almost signing Eric Dickerson and Dan Marino, but both players changed their mind and opted to go with the established NFL.  The team never took hold in the Los Angeles market, since at the time there were 2 NFL teams there, the Rams and Raiders, and folded along with the rest of the league after the 1985 season. Ironically, there are currently no professional football teams playing in the L.A. market.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

29 Sep

1962 football card of the player who was the Dallas Cowboys’ first marquee star, halfback Don Perkins. Perkins was one of the first players signed by the team when they joined the NFL as an expansion team in 1960, but a foot injury sidelined him for that season. He became the Cowboys starting halfback in 1961, and was the first player in team history to rush for over 100 yards in a game that year. He was an NFL All-pro in ’62, and had a solid 8 year career with Dallas in the franchise’s formative years as coach Tom Landry began to put together “America’s Team”.  He retired at the top of his game, after having his best 2 seasons in 1967 and ’68. Always an underappreciated player in the Cowboys’ long and storied past, Perkins still ranks third on the team’s all-time rushing list, behind Hall of Famers Emmitt Smith and Tony Dorsett.

 

R.I.P. George Blanda

28 Sep

It was really sad to hear of the passing on Monday of one of the great legends of pro football, George Blanda, at the age of 83. He retired from the game in 1975 and still holds or shares at least 10 NFL records, but rattling off statistics wouldn’t do Blanda’s story justice. His journey in pro football is a remarkable one, and his 26 year career is almost, well, like 3 separate careers. After playing college ball at Kentucky under Paul “Bear” Bryant, he started with the Chicago Bears in 1949 and played with them until 1958. He was a quarterback, placekicker and also saw time as a linebacker, then in 1953 became the Bears’ regular signal caller. An injury forced him out of the lineup, however, and he never regained the starting position. While in Chicago he had a tempestuous relationship with owner/coach George Halas. Finally, he decided to retire in ’58 when Halas insisted that he give up quarterbacking and devote his career to  becoming a full time kicker. Those 10 years in Chicago would be considered a successful career for almost any player, but it turns out Blanda was just getting warmed up.

George Blanda with the Chicago Bears in the 1950s.

In 1959, the “Foolish Club”, a group of millionaires led by Lamar Hunt who were frustrated in attempts to acquire NFL franchises, decided to form a new league. Blanda came out of retirement to sign with the Houston franchise because, as he said, “I knew Bud Adams (Oilers’ owner) had a lot of money”. After battling over every dime with the cheap Halas in Chicago, George followed the money. He wound up becoming the new American Football League’s first star player, leading the Oilers to the first 2 AFL championships while orchestrating a wide-open, pass-happy offense that turned out to be the trademark of the new league. Despite his success, Blanda became the target of the media at that time who belittled the new league as a “Mickey Mouse” operation, and mocked the Oilers’ QB as an “NFL reject”. Blanda continued to be the face of the Houston franchise, as the AFL gained more respect into the mid-’60s, until he was released by the team in March of  1967. Again, had Blanda decided to actually retire at that point, his football career would have been considered a huge success.

Blanda with the AFL’s Houston Oilers in the 1960s.

However, Oakland Raiders’ owner Al Davis still saw a lot of value in Blanda, and signed him for the ’67 season as his kicker and backup quarterback to the “Mad Bomber”, Daryle Lamonica. With the Raiders, Blanda was pretty much relegated to the role that he had resisted in Chicago, as the team’s full-time kicker. He led the AFL in scoring in ’67 with 116 points. The 1970 season, however, turned out to be a magical one for the ageless wonder. It was the first season after the AFL and NFL merged so it was technically a return to the NFL for Blanda after 12 years. During that season, he had a remarkable run of winning games for the Raiders with clutch kicks and also as the quarterback, relieving Lamonica when he was injured or ineffective. His clutch play helped the team make the playoffs where they reached the AFC title game against the Baltimore Colts. When Lamonica was hurt in that game, Blanda replaced him and at 43 became the oldest QB to ever play in a championship game. He threw 2 touchdown passes and kicked a 48 yard field goal to almost single-handedly keep his team in the game, but the bubble burst when he threw 2 interceptions late in the game as the Colts pulled away and won. He continued on as the Raiders’ kicker, one of the last straight-ahead kickers in the game, before finally actually retiring in 1975, at age 48, after playing pro football in four different decades.  

Blanda quarterbacking the Oakland Raiders in the 1970s.

A humorous story that pretty much sums up Blanda’s career involves an episode of the 1970s television show Happy Days. The show was set in the 1950s in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In the episode, Richie Cunningham and his friend Ralph Malph are watching a Packers-Bears game on TV, and debating whether Blanda is any good as a quarterback or whether he is washed up and should just quit. If you were a football fan, of course you got the joke, because at the time the show aired Blanda was STILL playing in the NFL.

Rest in peace, George Blanda, a true American sports legend.

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

28 Sep

Logo of a charter member team of the old American Basketball Association, the Pittsburgh Pipers. The Pipers won the ABA title in the league’s first year of existence in 1967-68, behind ABA legend and future NBA star Connie Hawkins. True to the transient nature of the teams in the ABA in those early years, the Pipers, despite having decent attendance numbers and a championship team, moved to Minnesota the next year after the original Minnesota franchise, the Muskies, moved to Miami. It turned out to be a bad move, and after only one year in Minnesota the club came back to Pittsburgh, played one more season as the Pipers, then were renamed the Condors. Besides Hawkins, some notable former Piper players were John Brisker, George Thompson, Mike Lewis and James Silas.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

28 Sep

1975 Topps basketball card of former NBA star Cazzie Russell. Russell played 12 seasons in the league and his most successful years were spent with the New York Knicks. He was chosen first overall in the NBA draft following a stellar college career at Michigan, where he led the Wolverines to the Final Four twice. Russell was with the Los Angeles Lakers at the time this card came out, but helped the Knicks beat the Lakers for the NBA title in 1970.

 

NFL – Bills’ Game Review

27 Sep

Over the course of New England’s 14 straight wins over the Bills there have been games when Tom Brady looked like he was involved in a non-contact 7-on-7 practice drill rather than a live game, and yesterday was one of those games. During the broadcast the announcers said that the Pats focused all week on themselves, and straightening out their own game after losing to the Jets last week, rather than worrying about the Bills. It’s unfortunate that Buffalo had to be scheduled to face Brady under those circumstances, because, like Peyton Manning, he is virtually unstoppable when he feels like his team is in a must-win scenario. One thing coach Chan Gailey and the Bills can feel good about is the decision to make a change at quarterback. Ryan Fitzpatrick clearly gave them the spark they needed, and the fact that he guided the offense to 23 points with the same exact players that Trent Edwards had is an indictment of Edwards. He is in his fourth NFL season now and is not a bonafide starting quarterback in the league. Fitzpatrick may not be the ultimate answer, and he did throw 2 costly interceptions that squelched any chance of a Bills’ comeback, but in the course of the game the Bills offense was alive. He distributed the ball well, as Lee Evans, Stevie Johnson, Roscoe Parrish, Jonathan Stupar and C.J. Spiller all made plays in the passing game. Spiller returned a kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown and Marshawn Lynch ran well again, and the Bills, on offense, now have something they can build on. One thing that they need to work on is getting Fred Jackson a little more involved, but Fitzpatrick being the starter at least gives the fans hope that this team can start to string together a few wins and salvage this season.

The most disappointing thing about the loss to the Pats has to be the play of the defense. It was one of those games where they didn’t stop the run, got zero pressure on Brady and never seemed to have anybody covered in the secondary, although I still believe the team has some decent players back there, and the time Brady had to find his receivers was why the Pats offense made it look so easy. The switch to the 3-4 defensive scheme may have something to do with the Bills’ struggles on that side of the ball, but I think the team really just lacks playmakers. You would’ve thought that with the offense clicking like it did, that the defense would have risen to the occasion and at least slowed the Pats down enough to pull off the upset. But that’s why the Bills have been a losing operation for a decade. They find new and creative ways to lose every week. When a team is involved in a game like yesterday’s and needs the defense to make a play here and there to change the momentum, they turn to their studs that they drafted and invested in for just these types of situations. So, what high draft picks do the Bills have to turn to when they need a big play on defense? Mediocrities like Donte Whitner, Leodis McKelvin, John McCargo (who can’t even play his way onto the game-day active roster) and Aaron Maybin. These guys all have zero impact on the outcome of games. Even last year’s one defensive playmaker, safety Jairus Byrd, never seems to be in position to have a positive impact on the game. Granted, it’s a tough spot to be in when you’re still learning a new scheme and you have to face a highly-motivated Tom Brady, but so far, this new scheme has taken a defense that was one of the league’s best in creating turnovers last year, and produced one takeaway – a fumble recovery in yesterday’s game. They are just not an aggressive defense, and certainly not a physical one. The tackling was atrocious on Danny Woodhead’s touchdown run in the game, as they made Woodhead, a Jet reject and special teams player, look like Adrian Peterson.

All Bills’ fans can do now is focus on the positives – an offense that has a chance to score some points, and the play of Spiller – as they move on to the next challenge, a home contest against another tough division rival, the New York Jets.

 
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