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Archive for October, 2013

Classic Sports Card of The Day

10 Oct

72toppsgreenwood

1972 Topps football card of former Pittsburgh Steeler L.C. Greenwood, who passed away recently. Although he was overshadowed by his more famous teammates like Mean Joe Greene, Jack Lambert and Mel Blount, Greenwood was a key player  on the “Steel Curtain” defensive units that dominated the NFL during the Steelers’ run of four Super Bowls in the 1970s. Known for wearing gold spikes during games (which would get him fined in today’s NFL), he was a six time Pro Bowler in his 13 year career. Greenwood was a member of the All Decade team for the 1970s, and has been a finalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame a couple of times, but has yet to be voted in.

 

NFL – Bills’ Game Review

05 Oct

As with their previous four games so far in the 2013 season, the Buffalo Bills’ Thursday night encounter in Cleveland was entertaining, and the team had a chance to win right down to the wire. They entered the game hobbled by injuries to key players, but most of those players – Fred Jackson, C.J. Spiller, Marcell Dareus, Stevie Johnson, Mario Williams – all played and made contributions to the effort. It was a typical workmanlike effort from rookie QB EJ Manuel, as he was efficient and mistake-free, but unfortunately for him and the team his night ended early in the third quarter when he injured his knee while scrambling for a first down. Backup Jeff Tuel, also a rookie, finished the drive Manuel started by drawing an interference penalty on an end zone throw, setting up Jackson for his second short TD run of the night. But Tuel wasn’t up to the task the rest of the way, as the offense sputtered and then self-destructed as Tuel threw a pick-six interception to Browns’ safety T.J. Ward to seal the 37-24 win for Cleveland.

The Bills’ special teams had a rough night. Punter Shawn Powell continually booted line drive punts to speedy Browns’ punt returner Travis Benjamin, who set a team record for punt return yardage and ran one back 79 yards for a back-breaking touchdown. Powell has been inconsistent since he replaced Brian Moorman last season, and the team’s patience with him ran out on Friday as he was released. Buffalo’s defense proved once again that they are an improving unit. They have put together consistently good efforts in every game this year, but in both road games the team has played, that effort was ruined by the secondary giving up huge pass plays that cost the team the game. Against the Jets, Justin Rogers was the pigeon who got toasted. On Thursday, it was Aaron Williams’ turn. In his defense, Williams was switched to safety this year and had to move back to the corner because of injuries to other players. He had a great first game at corner against Joe Flacco and the Ravens, but got burned consistently by Cleveland. Still, the unit has done a good job of stopping the run, generated a decent pass rush and gotten great play from individuals like Dareus, Mario Williams, Manny Lawson and especially rookie Kiko Alonso.

Buffalo now has 10 days to regroup before returning home to face Cincinnati, and when they do they’ll have to do it without Manuel, who is out for at least a couple of weeks. The starting QB in that game may be Tuel, or it may be someone not yet on the roster. They also have to find a new punter and figure out who will be the team’s holder on extra points and field goals, a job Powell held.

 
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Posted in Football

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

05 Oct

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Logo of a college football team that was once a powerhouse in the old Southwest Conference, the Southern Methodist University Mustangs. The team’s heyday came in the early 1980s when they featured the “Pony Express” backfield that included future NFL players Eric Dickerson and Craig James. They were NCAA co-champions in 1981. However, numerous NCAA violations led to the program being hit with the “death penalty”, which forced the school to completely terminate its’ athletic program. SMU has since rebuilt the team, and now they are members of the Football Subdivision (FBS), playing in the American Athletic Conference. Other famous players from the school’s history include Heisman Trophy winner Doak Walker, Kyle Rote, Raymond Berry, Forrest Gregg and Don Meredith.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

05 Oct

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1966 Topps football card of former Buffalo Bills’ flanker Elbert Dubenion. After attending tiny Bluffton College, Dubenion was drafted by the Cleveland Browns in 1959 but opted to sign with the Bills and the new American Football League. Nicknamed “Golden Wheels”, he was one of the AFL’s most prolific downfield receivers, and helped lead the Bills to consecutive league titles in 1964 and ’65. Dubenion holds the AFL’s record for the longest pass reception TD in a playoff game, set in 1963 when he caught a 93-yard scoring throw from Daryle Lamonica. After retiring as a player, Dubenion was a successful talent scout for Miami, Atlanta and the Bills.

 

NFL – Throwback Thursday: The Hit Heard ‘Round The World

03 Oct

One of the matchups on this week’s NFL schedule is an NFC East clash between two long-time rivals, the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles. This week’s Thursday Throwback features a famous game played between these 2 rivals on November 20, 1960, at Yankee Stadium, when a play that became known as “the hit heard ’round the world” took place involving a pair of future Hall of Famers, Eagle linebacker Chuck Bednarik and Giant running back Frank Gifford. The game was a must-win situation for the Eagles, who were enjoying a rare season where they had a shot at dethroning the 2 dominant teams in the NFL’s Eastern Division, the Giants and Cleveland Browns. They were hanging onto a 17-10 lead late in the game and the Giants were beginning to mount a comeback when Bednarik laid out Gifford with a hard, clean hit as the Giant back was attempting to catch a pass over the middle. The hit was so hard it knocked Gifford unconscious, and he had to be carried off the field on a stretcher. He suffered a concussion, with symptoms so bad that he was out of football for 18 months, and wound up retiring.

The two players involved were polar opposites of each other. Bednarik, whose nickname was “Concrete Charlie”, was a hard-nosed intimidating player who took pride in the fact that he was the last of the NFL’s two-way players, playing both linebacker on defense and center on offense. Gifford was a “golden boy” back who played his college career at USC and became a media darling there on the West Coast, then moved onto the pro stage on the other coast, under the bright lights of New York City, where he garnered endorsement deals and, after winning the NFL MVP Award in 1956 while helping the Giants win the league championship, became a player the league tried to push as the face of the NFL. There’s no question that at the time, Bednarik relished in the fact that he knocked the “golden boy” out cold, but as time passed, grew to respect Gifford, especially after the Giant star defended the hit as clean when Bednarik began to get a reputation for being a dirty player.

The iconic photo pictured below of the hit appears to show Bednarik celebrating over Gifford’s prone body, but the Eagle Hall of Famer always insisted that in that moment, he wasn’t even aware of the injury, and was actually celebrating the fact that the hit forced Gifford to fumble, and the Eagles had recovered to basically put the must-win game away. It turned out to be a huge win for Philadelphia, as they went on to win an improbable NFL title, handing Green Bay a 17-13 loss in what turned out to be Vince Lombardi’s only postseason defeat. Gifford’s retirement turned out to be temporary, as he came back in 1962 and switched positions to flanker. As the pro game began evolving the third running back into a second wide receiver, other star runners of that era, like Bobby Mitchell and Paul Warfield, were doing the same. Gifford became an All Pro at that position also, then retired again following the ’63 season to go into broadcasting.

 

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Chuck Bednarik celebrates over the prone Frank Gifford

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

03 Oct

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An early logo of the National Football League’s Philadelphia Eagles, used from 1948 until 1968. The club won 3 NFL titles during the era of this logo, in 1948 and ’49 behind Hall of Famer Steve Van Buren, and in 1960. The ’48 and ’49 teams are the only ones in league history to win back-to-win titles by shutouts, defeating the Chicago Cardinals 7-0 in a blizzard, then downing the Los Angeles Rams 14-0 the next season. Besides Van Buren, other Hall of Famers who played for the Eagles in this era are Bob Brown, Chuck Bednarik, Norm Van Brocklin, Sonny Jurgensen, Pete Pihos and Tommy McDonald.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

03 Oct

60toppscampbell

1960 Topps football card of former NFL defensive end Marion Campbell, who played eight seasons in the league with the San Francisco 49ers and Philadelphia Eagles. His real name is Francis Marion Campbell, so he was appropriately nicknamed “The Swamp Fox” during his career. The highlight of his playing days came in 1960, when he helped the Eagles win a surprising NFL championship, handing Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers their only postseason loss of the Lombardi era. Campbell had a long coaching career after he retired as a player, serving as head coach of the Eagles and two different stints as head man for the Atlanta Falcons, but unfortunately has the third lowest winning percentage in NFL history among coaches.

 

MLB – The Francona Effect in Cleveland

01 Oct

The Cleveland Indians completed an amazing regular season journey in the American League this weekend by sweeping the Twins in Minnesota to clinch the top AL wild card spot. The team hired Terry Francona as manager prior to the season and his presence has been the main factor in the team qualifying for the postseason for the first time since 2007, when they blew a 3 games to 1 lead in the AL Championship Series and lost in 7 games to Francona’s Boston Red Sox. Francona, whose father Tito played for the Indians in the 1960s, instilled a winning attitude in a club that really lacks star power. Their starting rotation does not have the one horse who serves as a stopper when things go bad during the season, like the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw for instance, or Tim Lincecum with the Giants. Their closer, Chris Perez, was a train wreck at the end of the year and looks like he has lost his job, and their lineup lacks a .300 hitter or a real power hitter. However, they played like a team all year and won together, with different heroes emerging on different nights. The addition of free agent Nick Swisher, an Ohio native, changed the atmosphere in the clubhouse, while Swisher also was a major contributor on the field. The emergence of young stars like Jason Kipnis, Carlos Santana, Asdrubal Cabrera and pitchers Danny Salazar and  Corey Kluber all helped the Tribe to a surprising finish that has them hosting the AL Wild Card. Justin Masterson, who led the team with 14 wins and started the season as the closest thing the Indians had to a # 1 starter, may wind up in the closer’s role if the team advances past the wild card game.

If the Indians can manage to beat Tampa Bay in the Wild Card game on Wednesday, it will set up an interesting divisional round series that will match the team against the Red Sox, the team Francona led to a pair of World Series titles before being fired in 2011. As it stands now, the Tribe will go with the rookie Salazar in that wild card game. He has been an outstanding power pitcher in his few starts since joining the team. Out of all the teams in the majors still playing in October, the Indians are the most surprising, considering this was supposed to be a rebuilding year.

 
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Posted in Baseball

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

01 Oct

Logo of a former minor league baseball team that played, of all places, in Havana, Cuba – the Havana Sugar Kings. They played in the AAA International League from 1954 until 1960, when Fidel Castro and his Communist government took over the country, forcing the franchise to move to Jersey City. The Sugar Kings’ roster included several Cuban players who would go on to play in the major leagues, including Elio Chacon, Luis Arroyo, Tony Gonzalez, Cookie Rojas, Leo Cardenas and Mike Cuellar.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

01 Oct

A couple of classic baseball cards featuring a father and son duo who both played for the same franchise – a 1962 Topps card of former Cleveland Indian Tito Francona and a 1989 Topps Tiffany card (courtesy of www.CheckOutMyCards.com )of his son, Terry, who played briefly for the Tribe and is their current manager. Tito was mostly a journeyman player, spending six of his 15 years in the major leagues with the Indians as a first baseman/outfielder. He played for 9 different teams in those 15 years. Terry’s playing career was similar to his father’s, as he played 10 seasons for 5 different teams, one of those years coming with the Indians. He has made his mark after retiring as a manager, winning 2 World Series titles with the Boston Red Sox.