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Archive for October, 2014

Classic Sports Card of The Day

09 Oct

89scoreflutie

1989 Score football card of former quarterback Doug Flutie, who had a long pro career in the old USFL, Canadian Football League and the NFL. After winning the Heisman Trophy playing for Boston College, he joined Donald Trump’s New Jersey Generals in the USFL. After that league folded, Flutie played briefly, and rather unsuccessfully, in the NFL with Chicago and New England. He then moved to the CFL, where he enjoyed an eight year stint with three different teams, winning three Grey Cup championships. That success sparked a comeback in the NFL, where he played eight more seasons, mostly for Buffalo and San Diego. He was a Pro Bowler and NFL Comeback Player of The Year in 1998 with the Bills. Flutie currently works as an analyst on college football broadcasts.

 

NFL – Bills’ Game Review

06 Oct

When Detroit’s Rashean Mathis intercepted Kyle Orton’s pass early in the second quarter of Sunday’s Buffalo Bills’ clash with the Lions in Detroit, returning it for a touchdown to give his team a 14-0 lead, it looked like Bills’ coach Doug Marrone’s decision to bench EJ Manuel in favor of the veteran Orton wasn’t going to work out very well. Detroit’s formidable defense had shut down the Bills’ offense to that point, and it appeared this game could descend into a blowout. Just as Houston’s J.J. Watt had tormented Buffalo’s offensive line the previous week, Detroit’s All Pro defensive tackle, Ndamukong Suh did the same in this game. The Bills’ rushing attack had its’ worst showing of the season, with Suh and his defensive linemates stuffing the Buffalo backs all day. With Orton showing rust from not having seen any live game action since last season, it looked like the Bills were in for a long day. Luckily, Orton shook off the rust just enough to rebound and lead his team to a stirring 17-14 comeback win, highlighted by a 58 yard game-winning field goal by the reliable Dan Carpenter in the dying seconds. While Orton found his bearings and guided Buffalo to the win, hitting some timely passes on the four scoring drives he needed to secure the final result, it was the Bills’ defense that was the headliner of the day, for the fifth straight week this year. With Kyle Williams out with a knee injury, Marcell Dareus lifted his game and delivered his best effort of the season, dominating the Lions’ offensive line and recording 3 of the Bills’ 6 sacks of Lion QB Matthew Stafford. The efforts of the defense are the main reason the Bills have a winning 3-2 record so far this year, and Sunday’s game was especially sweet in that it came against defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz’s former team. Now the Bills return home for a divisional game against rival New England, and the hope is that the defense can put together another consistent effort against Tom Brady while Orton continues to improve and gain more familiarity with his offensive teammates.

 
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Posted in Football

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

06 Oct

BethuneCookmanWildcatsMEAC

Logo of a small college football program that plays in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, the Bethune-Cookman Wildcats. The school has won two small college national championships – in 2010 and 2013. The program has existed since 1925, and their alumni who’ve gone on to play in the NFL include Larry Little, Rashean Mathis, Boobie Clark and Alvin Wyatt.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

06 Oct

89toppsbennett

1989 Topps football card of former NFL linebacker Cornelius Bennett, who played for 14 seasons, nine of them with the Buffalo Bills. When he was selected in the NFL draft second overall out of Alabama in 1987, he became the highest selection from the school since Joe Namath in 1965. He was an outstanding player, being elected to the Pro Bowl 5 times. He was also named to the NFL All Decade team for the 1990s and the Bills’ All Time 50th Anniversary team. Bennett was fortunate to play in five Super Bowls, four with the Bills and one with Atlanta, but unfortunately lost all five of them.

 

NFL – Throwback Thursday: Monday Night Dawg Pound In Philly

02 Oct

On the week five National Football League schedule is a game between two NFC clubs, the Philadelphia Eagles and St. Louis Rams. “Throwback Thursday” for this week will be a contest played on a Monday night – Monday, November 5, 1975 to be exact, between these two franchises. It was a lop-sided game played between 2 teams headed in opposite directions at the time. It was in the relatively early years of Monday Night Football, when each week’s game was a nationally televised spectacle with the broadcasting team of Frank Gifford, “Dandy” Don Meredith and Howard Cosell providing as much entertainment as the game at times. At a prior appearance in Philly in 1973, Cosell was supposedly drunk during the broadcast (he had been drinking in an attempt to stay warm) and disappeared from the broadcast booth late in the game after he apparently threw up on Meredith’s cowboy boots. The Ram franchise was still located in Los Angeles, and the team was a powerhouse in the NFL, as they wound up losing only 2 regular season games that year. The Eagles, on the other hand, were mired in a miserable year under coach Mike McCormack, and coming into this prime time clash had lost 5 of their previous 6 games. In an interview prior to the game, McCormack made a comment to the media that his roster contained “some dogs”, and the notorious Philadelphia fans came to the game loaded for bear that night. The fan base in Cleveland, nowadays, has all but copyrighted the title of “Dawg Pound” at their home games, with an end zone section of the stadium nicknamed that, as fans come dressed in dog masks and pelt the field with dog biscuits. It’s become a tradition in the city.

On this November 1975 night in Philly, however, the Eagle fan base pre-dated Cleveland with their own version of the pound, as they picked up on coach McCormack’s remarks by wearing dog masks, parading around Veteran’s Stadium carrying a giant Alpo dog bone and tossing biscuits at the team’s bench. With their home fans turning against them, the Eagles didn’t show much fight. Ram quarterback James Harris had a great night, throwing for 207 yards and 3 touchdowns, 2 of them to former Eagle Harold Jackson. Roman Gabriel, a legend when he played for the Rams in the late 1960s, had been traded to Philly for Jackson and had a terrible night, throwing 2 interceptions before backup Mike Boryla came in and threw 2 more. The Ram defense polished off the night by returning 2 of the picks for scores in the final quarter, with Fred Dryer and Isiah Robertson doing the honors. The Rams walked away with a 42-3 victory, and that type of blowout usually ended with the Monday Night broadcast team filling the airwaves with whatever nonsense they could come up with. I’m sure Cosell was his usual obnoxious self, and Dandy Don probably sang his trademark “turn out the lights, the party’s over” very early that night.

 

75eagles

 Coach McCormack with Harold Carmichael, Roman Gabriel (photo courtesy of philly.com)

 

 
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Posted in Feature Stories, Football

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

02 Oct

oklahoma5266

Logo of a major college football program, the Oklahoma Sooners, used from 1952 until 1966. Oklahoma’s football program began in 1895 and is one of the most successful of all time. They’ve won 7 national championships, 44 Big 12 Conference championships, and produced 154 All Americans and 5 Heisman Trophy winners. The Sooners have been coached by such legends as Bud Wilkinson, Barry Switzer and current coach Bob Stoops. There are almost too many Oklahoma players who’ve gone on to the NFL to mention, but some of their most memorable pro players are Steve Owens, Tommy McDonald, Lee Roy Selmon, Billy Sims, Brian Bosworth and current players Adrian Peterson and Sam Bradford.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

02 Oct

74toppsharoldjackson

1974 Topps football card of former NFL wide receiver Harold Jackson, who enjoyed a 20 year playing career in the league spanning 3 decades. A six-time Pro Bowler, he played for  five different clubs, and did 2 different stints with the Los Angeles Rams and New England Patriots.  Jackson joined the coaching ranks after retiring as a player, and worked for various pro and college teams over the years as a wide receiver coach and offensive coordinator. In 2014 Jackson was hired as head coach at his alma mater, Jackson State.