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Classic Sports Card of The Day

05 Sep

62toppsatkins

1962 Topps football card of former NFL defensive end Doug Atkins, a massive 6’8″ man who enjoyed a long, successful 17 year career in pro football. He was a 10 time All Pro, made the Pro Bowl 8 times and was selected to the All Decade Team for the 1960s. He played most of his career with the Chicago Bears, helping them win a pair of NFL titles, in 1954 and 1963. He finished his playing days with the expansion New Orleans Saints, and despite playing only 3 seasons there, made the Pro Bowl in ’68 and had his jersey # 81 retired by the franchise. Atkins, who passed away in 2015, was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1982.

 
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NFL 100 – Jim Brown

04 Sep

He played only 9 seasons in the NFL, but what an impactful 9 seasons they were. I’m talking about our next NFL 100 subject, former Cleveland Browns’ back Jim Brown. After a record-breaking college career at Syracuse, where he starred in both football and lacrosse (and reportedly was better at lacrosse than football), Brown was drafted by the Browns for the 1957 season. He won NFL Rookie of The Year that season and proceeded to 1.) lead the league in rushing 8 of his 9 seasons 2.) be named first or second team All Pro in all 9 seasons 3.) become the only player in NFL history to average over 100 yards per game for his career and 4.) be named NFL Most Valuable Player 3 times. Brown’s combination of size, speed and toughness were almost unheard of in the era he played, and it could be argued that he is one of just a handful of former players from earlier days who could play with the much larger, more athletic players of today. In fact, in 1983, Sports Illustrated did a story on the possibility of Brown making a comeback at age 47 with the Los Angeles Raiders, with the legend claiming he could dominate the players of the day even at his advanced age.

 

1983_jim-brown-of-the-raiders

A Jim Brown comeback at 47? It didn’t actually happen but nobody doubted that it could’ve

Another amazing fact about Brown’s career, and a major difference between the game of the 1960s and today, is that he actually played fullback. That position is all but forgotten in today’s game, or at best considered a blocking back spot. There are 6 players considered to be true fullbacks in the Hall of Fame, the most recent being Larry Csonka, whose career ended in 1979. Brown was both charismatic and controversial as a player, but above all he was his own man. He was at odds with his coach, NFL legend Paul Brown, at times due to Paul Brown’s rigid coaching style, and reportedly was behind a player revolt that got the coach fired prior to the 1963 season. Determined to prove his team could win without that rigid coaching, Jim Brown led the Browns to the NFL championship in 1964, still the most recent title the Browns have won. There was a story that during his playing days Brown brought a brief case into the locker room and when reporters asked him what it was for, he replied “I’m a businessman.” He was ridiculed in the press for that remark, with football players mainly being considered Neanderthals at the time, but Brown wasn’t kidding around. He became involved, along with other black athletes at the time like Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell and Kareem Abdul Jabbar, in the Civil Rights movement. He also became involved in movies. He was in a movie during his playing days called Rio Conchos, and in early 1966 was filming the movie The Dirty Dozen in London. Bad weather delayed the filming to the point that Brown would have to miss some of training camp, which angered owner Art Modell. When Modell threatened to fine his star fullback $1,500 a day for his absence, Brown abruptly announced his retirement from the game. He claimed the decision was easy, since he was making more money doing movies than playing in the NFL. He was in quite a few successful films, including Ice Station Zebra and 100 Rifles, where he actually had top billing over Burt Reynolds and Raquel Welch.

jimbrowndirty12

Jim Brown in The Dirty Dozen

Jim Brown is still my favorite football player of all time, a childhood hero of many who grew up in the 1960s. He is still regularly named the greatest player of all time by various surveys over 50 years after his playing days ended. There’s an argument to be made for the likes of Jerry Rice and Tom Brady but for overall impact to the sport, Jim Brown tops my list of greatest players in the NFL’s 100 year history.

jimbrownmud

Another day at the office for Jim Brown

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

04 Sep

browns4858

Logo of a team that plays in the National Football League, the Cleveland Browns. This “Brownie” logo has been associated with the team since 1948, but this particular version, with the Brownie elf wearing a champion’s crown, was used during their years in the All America Football Conference, when they won all 4 titles in the league’s existence, through 1959. They also won the NFL title in their first year being incorporated into the established league in 1950 under their founder and coach, Paul Brown.

 
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Classic Sports Card of The Day

04 Sep

61fleerjimbrown

1961 Fleer football card of the greatest NFL player of all time, Cleveland Browns’ fullback Jim Brown. He played only 9 seasons in the league before retiring to make movies, but those 9 years were amazing. Brown led the league in rushing 8 of his 9 seasons, was Rookie of The Year in 1957, was a three time NFL MVP, named All Pro all 9 years of his career, was named to the All Decade team of the 1960s and led the Browns to an NFL Championship in 1964. He used his fame to help the cause of the Civil Rights movement in the ’60s and still champions causes to help troubled youth today. He also enjoyed a successful acting career, and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971.

 
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NFL 100 – George “Papa Bear” Halas

03 Sep

The National Football League is celebrating it’s 100th season in 2019, and Rayonsports.com, in addition to our annual weekly Throwback Thursday features each week, will publish articles, as many as 3 per week, highlighting topics and people that played important roles in developing the game that has grown into America’s Game, the true national pastime. This week, the opening week of the season, the NFL chose perhaps the 2 most iconic franchises, and long time rivals in the league, to open it’s historic season – the Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers. Our initial “NFL 100” post will therefore feature the father of pro football, Bears’ founder, owner and coach George “Papa Bear” Halas. Halas’ daughter, Virginia McCaskey, is still the Bears’ principal owner to this day, and the Halas family name dates back to the origins of the pro football league.

 

1920hupmobile

At Hays’ dealership, you could buy a 1920 Hupmobile, or a pro football franchise

The legendary story of the founding of the NFL will be told many times by many media outlets during this 100th season. It all started with a meeting of representatives of various barnstorming football clubs of the era, who played in different regional leagues with different rules, at a Hupmobile dealership in Canton, Ohio. The dealership was owned by Ralph Hays, who also owned the highly successful Canton Bulldogs football club. In a pair of meetings held at the dealership in August and September of 1920, the American Professional Football Association was formed. It would later evolve into what is now the National Football League. One of the 11 teams that was part of the newly formed professional league was the Decatur Staleys, and their founder and owner was Halas. After a hip injury ended a brief pro baseball career (17 games as a New York Yankee outfielder), he joined the Staleys as a player/coach. He moved the club to Chicago in 1921 and after baseball’s Chicago Cubs agreed to let the gridiron team use Wrigley Field as its’ home stadium, Halas changed his team’s name to the Bears as a tribute. To say this man was a giant of the game is an understatement. He was Bears’ owner for 63 years, and their coach for 40 of those years, winning 8 championships. He won his last title in 1963, and was a member of the inaugural Pro Football Hall of Fame class in 1963 also, even though the Hall generally has a 5 year waiting period for eligibility. Halas passed away in 1983, but gave the Chicago franchise one last gift in 1982 when he made a controversial hire to be the team’s next head coach – former Bear tight end Mike Ditka. Ditka turned out to be the right man for the job as he guided the 1985 “Super Bowl Shuffle” Bears to the Super Bowl championship, the team’s first title since Halas’ last in ’63.

Halas’ name is forever etched in NFL lore, as the National Conference champion each year is awarded the George Halas Trophy. Also, the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton is located on George Halas Drive.

 

george-halas-1_original

George Halas, NFL legend

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

03 Sep

bears100

Not many National Football League teams can boast that they have a special 100 year logo for this historic season, but the Chicago Bears are one of those rare teams. Founded by George “Papa Bear” Halas in 1920 as the Decatur Staleys, the “Monsters of The Midway” are one of the league’s most iconic franchises. They have had many great players don their uniforms over those 100 years, including the most Hall of Famers, 28, of any NFL team. That list includes Halas, Sid Luckman, Bronko Nagurski, Red Grange, Bulldog Turner, Walter Payton, Dick Butkus, Gale Sayers, Mike Ditka, Bill George, Doug Atkins, Mike Singletary, Dan Hampton and Richard Dent. The team has also had a number of memorable players who were not Hall of Fame caliber, like Jim McMahon, William “The Refrigerator” Perry, Brian Piccollo and Devin Hester.

 
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Classic Sports Card of The Day

03 Sep

49leafluckman

1949 Leaf football card of a National Football League legendary quarterback, Sid Luckman of the Chicago Bears. After a stellar college career at Columbia University, Bears’ owner George Halas wanted him for his team, but Luckman initially wasn’t interested in pro football, preferring to go work for his father’s trucking company. Halas convinced him otherwise, and Luckman went on to revolutionize the pro game running a T-formation offense that won 4 NFL titles in the 1940s. Besides being a four-time champ, Luckman was a five-time All Pro, NFL MVP in 1943, was named to the All Decade team for the 1940s and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1965. He passed away at the age of 81 in 1998.

 
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NFL – Bills’ 2019 Draft Picks

02 May

After signing 19 (and counting) players in free agency this off-season, the Buffalo Bills added more ammunition for the 2019 season in the recently held NFL draft of college players. General manager Brandon Beane showed patience in some spots, and was aggressive in a couple of others to get players he felt would fit the team’s “DNA”. Here’s our assessment of the players drafted and a few who are expected to sign as undrafted free agents:

 

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  1. Ed Oliver, DT, Houston – Beane was patient with his first round pick, standing pat at ninth overall instead of trading up, and the player he wanted in Oliver fell into his lap. With veteran Kyle Williams retiring, this pick is not only a classic “best player available” choice but also fills a big need along the defensive front. Williams was a warrior and a classic overachiever in his time with the Bills, but if Oliver lives up to his potential, his insertion into Buffalo’s D-line rotation should be an upgrade.cody-ford
  2. Cody Ford, OL, Oklahoma – the Bills are completely rebuilding their offensive line this off-season, and even after signing a number of reinforcements for this unit in free agency, Beane stayed patient again after considering trading back into the first round to grab Ford, and instead held steady and got him with his second round pick, only giving up a fifth rounder to climb 2 spots. The big Sooner is penciled in to compete at right tackle to start, and many draft analysts say he has the potential to develop into an All Pro type of player.DevinSingletary
  3. Devin Singletary, RB, Florida Atlantic – most Bills’ fans were surprised by this pick, with wide receiver apparently being seen as the biggest need and plenty of candidates at that position still available here. But Beane insisted that the team stuck to its’ draft board and Singletary stood out as the player to be chosen. To me, Beane showed he is thinking long term as well as improving the team this season with this pick. LeSean McCoy and Frank Gore are both aging and on one year contracts at this point so Singletary could emerge as a major contributor in 2020 if he pans out.dawsonknox
  4. Dawson Knox, TE, Mississippi – this choice was actually 3A as Beane dealt both of his fourth round picks to move back into the third round for Knox. The Bills must think highly of him to give up that draft capital for him. There is definitely a lot of untapped potential with the Ole Miss tight end, as he played in an offense that also included a number of wide receivers who were highly regarded by NFL scouts. Jim Nagy, who puts together the rosters for the annual Senior Bowl game, insists that Knox is not that far off talent-wise from Iowa’s T.J. Hockenson, a first round pick by Detroit.voseanjoseph
  5. Vosean Joseph, LB, Florida – after dealing both fourth round picks to get Knox, the Bills had to wait until round 5 to make their next selection, and most analysts feel they got a pretty good player in Joseph, an undersized linebacker who looks like a safety. With his main positive traits being speed and hitting ability he might be a great candidate to start his career as a special teams gunner, but with Lorenzo Alexander possibly playing his last season in 2019, there could even be an opening in the starting lineup soon if Joseph turns out to be the real deal.jaquanjohnson
  6. Jaquan Johnson, S, Miami,Fla. – the Bills used their sixth round pick on the first of 2 consecutive Johnsons, this one a safety from the Miami Hurricanes. The Bills are pretty set at safety as far as starters are concerned and late round picks are usually up against it when it comes to winning roster spots, so he will likely have to play special teams and then compete with the likes of Rafael Bush and Siran Neal at the backup safety spots.darryljohnsonjr
  7. Darryl Johnson Jr., DE, North Carolina A&T – Buffalo took a flyer on a small school prospect with this pick, but Johnson did dominate at the MEAC Conference level so he is a legitimate player. It’s always a roll of the dice with players who haven’t competed at a high level in college, but there are many players in NFL history from historically black colleges who have not only played in the NFL but excelled.tommysweeney
  8. Tommy Sweeney, TE, Boston College – a lot of draft analysts had Sweeney going much higher than the final round. He is considered a one dimensional, in-line blocker style of tight end, which in today’s pass-happy NFL has fallen somewhat out of vogue. Buffalo, however, likes to play an offense that features a strong rushing attack so Sweeney could easily find a spot on the roster if he plays that role well enough.

 

As far as undrafted free agents, the Bills were aggressive in signing a number of them, and a few are interesting prospects who could find their way onto the final roster this season. With no wide receivers drafted and the position seemingly in need of help, David Sills V of West Virginia and Iowa’s Nick Easley will get good looks in camp. Cornerback Cam Lewis from Buffalo was a surprise signing, but the other UB prospect, QB Tyree Jackson, was a real surprise. First off it was stunning that he wasn’t drafted at all, and his addition to an already crowded quarterback room is a bit of a head scratcher. Still, if he performs up to what his potential is, he could be an excellent developmental candidate as a future backup. There were a number of offensive line players signed also, but with that unit being stacked already those players are mostly training camp fodder. As is usually the case, a free agent kicker was signed to compete with the incumbent, in this case Steven Hauschka. Hauschka did struggle toward the end of the season after sustaining an injury, so he could be given a run for his money. The kicker signed was Chase McLaughlin of Illinois, who was the Big Ten kicker of the year. He was perfect on extra point attempts and had a school record of 5 50 plus yard field goals made.

 

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

02 May

FAU9404

Logo of a college football team that plays in Conference USA, the Florida Atlantic Owls. The school plays in the Football Bowl Subdivision and the program has been in existence since 2001. Currently coached by former Oakland Raider coach Lane Kiffin, the Owls have sent a few players on to NFL careers, including Ed Newman, Alfred Morris, Lucky Whitehead and current Buffalo Bills’ draftee Devin Singletary.

 
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Classic Sports Card of The Day

02 May

64toppsdunaway

1964 Topps football card of former pro football defensive tackle Jim Dunaway, who played 10 seasons in the AFL and NFL, all but one with the Buffalo Bills. He was a four-time AFL All Star and spent his final pro season in 1972 with the undefeated Miami Dolphins. He was a teammate for 3 seasons of O.J. Simpson, and like Simpson, was charged but never found guilty in the murder of his ex-wife in 1998.

 
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