T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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183.1 | I meant Bird and Magic (together) should be #2 | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:30 | 1 |
|
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183.2 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:55 | 28 |
| Depends on the criteria involved. Sounded like most of the people on
the list were in the last 10 years.
My top 10 (subject to debate, no particular order)
Ali
Curt Flood (especially given today's expected announcement)
Billie Jean King
Joe Namath
Bird/Magic
Jordan
Mickey Mantle
Willie Mays
Wayne Gretzky
John Wooden
second 10 includes
Jack Nicklaus
Palmer
Russell
Wilt
Lombardi
Chris Evert
Arthur Ashe
Jimmy Connors
Montana
1980 US Olympic Hockey team
|
183.3 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:56 | 1 |
| Greg Lemond
|
183.4 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:03 | 24 |
| Eh, here's the second 20
Vasily Alexeev
Jim Brown (should be moved up)
Gordie Howe
OJ Simpson
Nolan Ryan
Tommy Smith/John Carlos
Martina Navratilova (probably moved up too)
Joan Benoit
Edwin Moses
Julius Erving
Ken Dryden
Willie Shoemaker
Greg Lemond
Alexander Belov
Bobby Fischer
Reggie Jackson
Roger Bannister
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Dan Gable
Joe Greene
|
183.5 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:06 | 7 |
|
Bobby Fischer? I didn't know Chess was a sport? :-)
Chappy
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183.6 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:16 | 11 |
| How about Joe Cronin? He was influential on several levels. Same with Connie
Mack. And Jessie Owens shook up the world a bit back in 1936. So much for white
supremacy.
Babe Ruth was probably the most influential player in baseball. He came along
at a time when baseball was in real trouble. Fans were really turned off by
the Black Sox scandal and were skeptical about the integrity of the game. Ruth
provided a type of excitement that rose above that and turned the game into
what it is today. Or I should say what it was going into the strike.
George
|
183.7 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:22 | 2 |
| List is for the last 40 years...
|
183.8 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Wed Sep 14 1994 17:00 | 7 |
| I would be surprised to see Russell make the list. He was a
black player in the late 50's early 60's who told society's racists
to kiss his butt. Many of the old time sportswriters still hate
his guts which is why you still see articles that claim it was a
"myth" that Russell was better than Chamberlain when it really counted.
/Don
|
183.9 | | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Wed Sep 14 1994 17:13 | 49 |
| From your list
Ali Me
Curt Flood (especially given today's expected announcement) Or McNally
Billie Jean King 5
Joe Namath 10
Bird/Magic 3
Jordan 15
Mickey Mantle 20
Willie Mays after Aaron who sb in 6
Wayne Gretzky 9
John Wooden ? Sort of an insiders choice. For all the
WRONG reasons Smitty probably had
the greater impact(stalling,flopping
intricate recruiting rules - admin >
tech skills)
Johnny Unitas would be in top 10 and #1 for football because 1958 game
put pro football on the map; Brown was merely top athlete of his time
(with Russell and Mays).
Roger Bannister should have been seriously considered for top 15 as he
put Sports Illustrated on the map. Also, I agree with SI's selection
of Secretariat. Another that I would mention is Doc Councilman of
Indiana swimming who changed this sport.
Palmer,Russell Lombardi in top 7; Wilma Rudolph perhaps in top 10
second 10 includes
Jack Nicklaus
Palmer
Russell
Wilt
Lombardi
Chris Evert
Arthur Ashe He would be my other tennis pick
Jimmy Connors
Montana yep
1980 US Olympic Hockey team
Bobby Fischer belongs in top 25 but I'll drop chess if everyone agrees
to disinclude figure skaters (Tonya?)
Sports Illustrated seems to be taking influence (Mark McCormack) and
notoriety into great account. One figure who was the center of much
national interest was Boston's John Thomas who dominated the high jump
(pre-flop) and then lost to two Russians in Rome in 1960. Perhaps that
wasn't two inch headlines in Denver but it was around here.
|
183.10 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 14 1994 17:35 | 32 |
| RE <<< Note 183.9 by 25022::BREEN "It IS necessarily so" >>>
> Bobby Fischer belongs in top 25 but I'll drop chess if everyone agrees
> to disinclude figure skaters (Tonya?)
Not a chance. Peggy Flemming is definitely in my top 25.
After the plane crash in 1960 that wiped out the entire U.S. figure skating
team people were saying it would take more than a decade for the U.S. to
rebuild but she finished in the top 10 in 1964 and blew away the competition in
the 1968 Winter Olympics.
She had a lead coming out of school figures, built it up with her short
program and won the long program going away with perfect 6.0s for artistic
impression. Flemming had a lot to do with the Winter Olympics becoming a major
TV sport and ranked right up there as one of the baby boomer icons.
RE 40 years.
Hmmm, 40 years. I guess that rules out Chicago pitcher Al Spalding who really
tore up the National League back in the mid 1870's. He and his brother also had
some luck selling sports equipment. Someone once said that he was pitching
during Custer's last stand but I don't think he was. I believe he pitched the
day before and a couple days after.
Ali is near the top of my list. He brought boxing back from near death and
for a while it was actually a popular sport. I'd put Jack Nicklaus ahead of
Arnie. For years Jack dominated a game that's almost impossible to dominate
even for a short time winning something like twenty major championships. Next
guy on that list is somewhere down around eight.
George
|
183.11 | Charles Goren? | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Wed Sep 14 1994 18:12 | 8 |
| The Arnold Palmer - Jack Nicklaus rating would typify what SI is doing
with this list.
Palmer had the greater impact or influence, perhaps the most of anyone
but Nicklaus was the greater golfer.
And, George if you promise not to tell anyone, Peggy Fleming was on my
short list too.
|
183.12 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Wed Sep 14 1994 18:33 | 1 |
| I think Marilyn Monroe should be in the top 5.
|
183.13 | ; | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Wed Sep 14 1994 20:12 | 4 |
| What, no K.C. Jones? You gotta be kidding me. Surely he should
replace Magic in the Bird/Magic pairing!
Ken
|
183.14 | Orr>Gretzky | 30254::BURROWS | V�lkl: smoke'm if you got'm | Thu Sep 15 1994 09:54 | 6 |
| While I agree that Gretzky has the best instincts I have seen demonstrated
in any of the "flow-type" games (hockey, basketball, soccer) and
unbelievable peripheral vision, I think Bobby Orr was a more complete
and influential player by virtue of his position as a defenseman.
Clark
|
183.15 | Peggy Fleming? | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Thu Sep 15 1994 10:10 | 12 |
| You won't get much argument from these parts, especially from those who
saw Orr and again especially the pre-bad knees Orr.
When SI puts Mark McCormack in its top 40 (top 15?) I guess they want
you to buy the magazine to figure out what their criteria is. Gretzky
is probably the most famous hockey player of the 40 years if "famous"
is defined by stopping a rap-mouthing, cleft-headed young individual
and asking them to "name a hockey player!"
I read McCormack's Palmer book (some not all; had to stop) and it was
about the worst of the genre ever printed - haven't thrown it out yet,
available to the first fool who wants it
|
183.16 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Thu Sep 15 1994 10:26 | 7 |
| One wonders if OJ would have been chosen had he not been
implicated in his ex-wife's death.
I told my daughter last night, Lemond has to be on this list.
Number 38.
Scott
|
183.17 | | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Thu Sep 15 1994 10:39 | 9 |
| Re.
> One wonders if OJ would have been chosen had he not been
> implicated in his ex-wife's death.
I think rushing for 2,000 yards in a season might have had something
to do with it.
Ken
|
183.18 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 11:03 | 9 |
| O.J. was the greatest running back of all time. Jimmy Brown was great but he
always had a good offensive line and Dr Frank Ryan at QB to keep the line
backers honest. O.J. did it with some really terrible teams.
He also ranks high with his promotion of the sport (the Arnie/Babe factor).
He created a lot of excitement, even when he was up in Buffalo, which had
a major impact on the game.
George
|
183.19 | Saw a lot of OJ, as a Pats fan... | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Thu Sep 15 1994 11:31 | 10 |
| I agree that OJ would have been higher, were it not for
the recent developments. He was a great natural
running back on a par with Jim Brown. Brown was more of
a trail blazer for the league and his race.
Of course the most gifted of them all was Gayle Sayers,
who was number {mumble-mumble}, down the list because of
his short career.
=Bob=
|
183.20 | | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Thu Sep 15 1994 12:10 | 8 |
| Jimmy Brown was the more dominant runner and had less need of a great
offensive line (his was excellent, so was buffalo's).
He transcended the skill level seen up to that time with his
combination of power and speed.
There are combinations of power and speed today (a certain ex-raider
now cal. angel comes to mind) but in 1957 he was Ruthian.
|
183.21 | Mr. Brown | HBAHBA::HAAS | Sorry, wrong species. | Thu Sep 15 1994 12:18 | 11 |
| Brown's the Main Main.
To appreciate his performances, you really need to look at his per game
stats. Brown played in a_era with 12 games per season. Now we have 16
games.
Also, in regard to the "no good defenses" during Brown's career, one
might refer to the discussion a little while back over in the Giants
topic. Now tell me there weren't good defenses.
TTom
|
183.22 | | SPIKED::SWEENEY | Tom Sweeney in OGO | Thu Sep 15 1994 12:23 | 52 |
| I'm a sicky today, and just got the mail. My SI with the top 40 just
arrived. From their list:
1 Ali (Whom else?)
2 Michael Jordan
3 Roone Arledge
4 Jim Brown
5 Billie Jean King
6 Pete Rose
7 Marvin Miller
8 Bird & Magic
9 Arnold Palmer
10 Mark McCormack
11 Carl Lewis
12 Wayne Gretzky
13 Pete Rozelle
14 Martina Navratilova
15 Hank Aaron
16 John Wooden
17 Secretariat
18 Joe Namath
19 Dr. Harold Gores (Inventor of Astroturf)
20 Jack Nicklaus
21 Bill Russell
22 Howard Cosell
23 Joe Montana
24 Paul Bear Bryant
25 Roberto Clemente
26 Olga Korbut
27 Arthur Ashe
28 Richard Petty
29 Bill Rasmussen (Founder of ESPN)
30 Pele'
31 Bobby Orr (He got robbed! shoulda been much higher)
32 Sugar Ray Leonard
33 Jim Fixx
34 Nolan Ryan
35 Peggy Fleming
36 Don King
37 Dr. Robert Jackson (Brought arthoscopic surgury from Japan to North
America)
38 Greg Lemond
39 Gary Davidson (Founder of ABA, WHL, and WFL)
40 Julius Erving
I find it interesting to note how many people made the list that
made money from the game but didn't play. Especially the number of
them. I'm also very surprised that Wilt Chamberlain didn't
make the list.
t
|
183.23 | | MKFSA::LONG | Strive for five! | Thu Sep 15 1994 12:27 | 6 |
| >> 36 Don King
Just goes to show you that not all infulence is positive!
billl
|
183.25 | Meadow Muffins!!!!!!!! | TOOK::HALPIN | Jim Halpin | Thu Sep 15 1994 13:13 | 10 |
|
I can't beleive they put a HORSE on the list!!!
Nexted thing you know Mr. Ed will be listed as one
of the most influencial figures in Hollywood history!!!
JimH
|
183.26 | American Based/biased list..? | USCTR1::BARRY | | Thu Sep 15 1994 13:16 | 10 |
|
With painfully few exceptions (Pele, #30!!) this is purely a North
American listing.
Where are the Russian hockey players (Tretiak)? Why not George Best
in soccer instead of Joe Namath? Same type of individuals with similar
effects on their respective sports.
|
183.27 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:13 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 183.21 by HBAHBA::HAAS "Sorry, wrong species." >>>
>Also, in regard to the "no good defenses" during Brown's career, one
>might refer to the discussion a little while back over in the Giants
>topic. Now tell me there weren't good defenses.
I think it's more a case of the Browns having a good offense. Jimmy Brown
had a great quarterback in Frank Ryan, who in turn had great receivers. They
also had a really good offensive line. I remember the last few years there
was a half back named Green or Greene, I forget which, who also got a lot
of yardage. That was one tough offensive unit with or without Brown.
By contrast, what kind of team did O.J. have around him? They were somewhere
between terrible and bad yet he still ran pretty much were he wanted when
he wanted.
O.J. was definitely better than Brown,
George
|
183.28 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:16 | 7 |
| Why does Billie Jean King rate so much higher than Martina Navratilova with
Chris Everett and Graf not even on the list. They each dominated their own time
period and of the 4 it would seem that Navratilova kept it going the longest.
Was that match with Bobby Riggs really that big?
George
|
183.29 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:23 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 183.25 by TOOK::HALPIN "Jim Halpin" >>>
> I can't beleive they put a HORSE on the list!!!
Each year SI names a sportsman of the year. Is this a list of those winners
or is it suppose to be the 40 most influential over the 40 year time period?
There's a big difference. For example, if during a 40 year period you have a
number of top contenders competing at the same time one of them might get left
out and someone not as good might make it during an off year when no one really
great was competing.
In any case, if this is a list of the 40 end of the year winners than that
would explain the horse. The year that Secretariat won the triple crown he
was named SI sportsman [sic] of the year.
George
|
183.30 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:12 | 4 |
| I haven't read the article yet, but how can Secretariat be on that
list and not Flipper.
Jimbo
|
183.31 | | MKFSA::LONG | Strive for five! | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:13 | 5 |
| And don't forget Lassie and Rin Tin Tin!
billl for REK
|
183.32 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:39 | 11 |
|
OJ was *definitely* better than Jim Brown? No way. OJ
was fortunate enough to play against some pretty awful
AFC and specifically AFC East teams and to play for six-
teen games a season. We in New England were fortunate(?)
enough to see him log 200 yard game after 200 yard game
against the Pats including a 253 yard effort that is still
the record. Those Pats teams stunk. OJ was fast and could
cut. Jim Brown was fast and could cut and could bowl people
right over. OJ was the best of my generation, Jim Brown was
the best ever.
|
183.33 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:46 | 9 |
| The Pats were not the only team in the division. Miami and Baltimore had
some pretty tough clubs back then. And he also played against other teams
in the conference like Pittsburgh.
I remember one pro bowl game where he and Franco Harris were the two starting
running backs. They ran where ever they wanted when ever they wanted and the
NFC pro bowl defense could hardly lay a finger on them.
George
|
183.34 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:03 | 6 |
|
You're talking about a Pro Bowl game behind a Pro Bowl offense.
During the regular season he got to run roughshod over the stanky,
Pats, the just as stanky Jets and a declining Baltimore team. Not
to say OJ wasn't great because he was but it's Jim Brown then OJ
and Walter Payton and then another larger group.
|
183.35 | BOBBY ORR IS A LEGEND IN HIS SPORT!!! | AIMHI::CONNOR | | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:10 | 4 |
| I can't believe there was no mention of #4 Bobby Orr,he changed the
way the game was played!!!!
JC
|
183.36 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:17 | 14 |
| And there were no bad teams in Brown's day? As I recall the Eagles and
Stealers were generally a joke and the Cardinals and Redskins rarely put up much
of a fight. About the only tough team he played was the Giants.
Also, the longer season worked against O.J. more than in his favor since he
got beat up more than Brown did. O.J. always played a 14 or 16 game season but
Brown only played a 12 game season and one playoff game. They usually didn't
make it to the final. That's 2-3 less poundings a year for Brown.
And of course there's always the point that training methods and talent
pools generally improve with time which means that the guys O.J. played against
were probably bigger, stronger, and faster than the guys Brown played against.
George
|
183.37 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:27 | 9 |
| Bobby Orr was on the list -- mid 20s I believe....
I personally think Jim Brown was a better runner, period. I also think
that Walter Payton and Gale Sayers were better than OJ.....
JMHO,
'Saw
|
183.38 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:41 | 4 |
| The year OJ ran for 2,000 yards, 500 of them came against the
woeful Pats. That's 25% of his season total!
/Don
|
183.39 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:52 | 13 |
| And when Brown got his yards, how many came against the woeful Eagles or
Steelers?
Many of the high individual scores recorded by athletes over the years have
come against other weak teams or players. What makes a difference is that O.J.
got his yards with almost no support while Brown did his running behind a 1st
rate offensive line against a defense that always had to worry about Frank Ryan
connecting with a number of 1st rate receivers.
I'm trying to think of the names. Wasn't Paul Warfield a receiver for the
Browns back then?
George
|
183.40 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:54 | 6 |
| I'd swap Fischer with Richard Petty. He should have been in there.
Pele too. I wasn't old enough to experience Flemming's impact.
I put Namath in because if the Jets lose that Super Bowl, the chance of
a merger with the AFL goes way down. The Jets' win made the AFL legit.
|
183.41 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:05 | 12 |
| For Race Car drivers A.J. Foyt might be up there ahead of Richard Petty.
Petty was pretty much limited to NASCAR but Foyt drove just about everything
and I believe he has the record for most Indy wins.
Then of course there was Formula I driver Jimmy Clark who was probably the
greatest driver that ever lived.
I'm curious about the question I asked before, is the SI list just a list
of the 40 yearly winners or is it suppose to be the 40 best regardless if
they were ever named SI sportsman of the year?
George
|
183.42 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:16 | 15 |
|
George, Brown didn't get to play the Eagles and Steelers
twice a year. I remember the two games where OJ chalked
up over 500 yards rushing total. As a Pats fan it was em-
barassing and not because OJ was a great runner but because
we stunk. OJ didn't come along far enough after Brown for there
to be a huge difference in the size and speed of the defenders.
If Brown hadn't retired, their two eras could have overlapped.
OJ just got to play against a more diluted talent pool. And
when teams prepped for the Browns the one goal was to stop
Brown not Frank Ryan. I'm sure Huber or Groaner or even Hal
could elaborate more on Brown's greatness but I got to see
OJ twice a year and he was a great one but he didn't do it
alone and he did some of it against pretty mediocre comp over
a 16 game schedule.
|
183.43 | Going to the Colts then Injuries kept him out of the record book | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:25 | 23 |
| Well maybe im biased because I didnt get to see any live action games
of brown or oj but you also have to remeber this little unknow unliked
Running back by the name of Eric Dickerson. Many people talk about Jim
brown getting his yrds in a 12 game season etc but even the great Jim
Brown took 98 games to reach 10,000 yrds, Dickerson did it in 91.
Dickerson would have surpased/broke all the rushing records had he not
went after the big bucks in Indy. I think peopel are right Indy cursed
themselves when they moved. They didnt accomplish anything with Eric,
and then Drafted Jeff George, again did squat. Judging by this track
record Faulk is in for some trouble times.
I dont know how many years Payton ran but Dickerson retired with 13,259
yrds in 11 years, not too shabby... He rushed for 7 consecutive 1000
yrd seasons, and I beleive still holds the single season rushing record
with 2100 ? Not sure if his record for 12 100yrad games in a season
was tied or broken recently....
Many people didnt like him, but when you talk about the greatest RB of
all time I think Dickerson (Being #2 alltime) has to be considered in
there with the best of them...
mab
|
183.44 | Knute Rockne ???? | BUMP::MMARLAND | | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:37 | 6 |
| What about Knute Rockne. Please has to be in the top 10. Reinvented football as we
know it today....
Mike
|
183.45 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:37 | 34 |
| <<< Note 183.42 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
>And
> when teams prepped for the Browns the one goal was to stop
> Brown not Frank Ryan.
No this is not right. Frank Ryan was 1st rate quarterback and the Browns
passing attack was not something that a team could just ignore.
The Browns were able to run over just about every team in the NFL because
they attacked from all directions. About the only team in the Eastern
Conference that could beat them was the Giants and that was because the Giants
had the best defense in the league and an offense that was almost as good.
How did it go, something like:
Eastern Conference Western Conference
------------------ ------------------
Giants Packers
Browns Colts
Steelers Rams
Eagles '49ers
Redskins Cowboys
Cardinals Vikings
Lions Bears
They were divided into 2 divisions each but I forget how that worked.
They played 12 games. So what was it, each team in your division twice?
I forget. But in any case the bottom line was that Jimmy Brown played against
the Giants and a lot of weak teams because the Packers, Colts, and Bears were
in the other conference.
George
|
183.46 | The voice from the past | 25022::BREEN | It IS necessarily so | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:45 | 18 |
| During the 50s the two major networks, cbs and nbc carried the giants
and the browns on sunday. New England consisted of mostly Giant fans
but some stubborn Brown fans too (usually ex Boston Braves
contrarians). Of course the Browns were the perennial champs of the
first half decade.
I rarely watched the Browns whose quarterback by the way was Milt Plum,
the prototypical browns quaterback (stats but can't do it in the big
games).
Jimmy Brown dominated the way an overgrown, stayed back a few years
kid, often dominates playground games in grammar school. The Giants
stopped him by making Plum beat them and Brown the coach not being able
to adapt to their tactics.
But nothing in all of sports in the 40 years SI talks about tops those
big Browns - Giants games from 56-63 including one or two playoff
games.
|
183.47 | I Love Reading Stuff Like This!!! | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:47 | 11 |
| Swap Lions and Cowboys and you're all set!
Kudos to Dickerson. The guy was amazing.
Its hard not to say Brown was CLEARLY the best. 5.1 yards/carry
over a CAREER.
By the way, Bo Jackson's yard/carry his last year was something
ridiculous like 5.8. (Unreal.)
Tony
|
183.48 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:48 | 4 |
|
Thank you, Bill. George's assertion that teams prepped for
the Browns QB and not the great Jim Brown is ridiculous beyond
compare.
|
183.49 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 15 1994 17:56 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 183.48 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
> Thank you, Bill. George's assertion that teams prepped for
> the Browns QB and not the great Jim Brown is ridiculous beyond
> compare.
Tommy your a riot. I take your plea for someone to argue your point as an
admission on your part that you have no clue as to what you are talking about.
I watched those games as well, I saw Frank Ryan play, and you'll notice that
no one will touch my point that the Giants were the Browns only competition.
The way you guys are talking it's as if the Browns played the Giants 12 times a
year. They didn't, they played those other teams who were for the most part
pathetic.
Brown played against cream puff defenses just about every week,
George
|
183.50 | | PEAKS::WOESTEHOFF | | Thu Sep 15 1994 18:15 | 4 |
| I sure am glad to see "The Great One", Roberto Clemente, included in
SI's list. Still have his poster hanging on my wall.
Keith
|
183.51 | Even Ruth had his 33,34 seasons | 25022::BREEN | | Thu Sep 15 1994 18:16 | 15 |
| George,
Ryan came along after Plum and for the most part those years in
which the Giants fell back in the pack and the Cowboys and Browns
contested.
I would not push Jimmy Browns greatness on his mid 60s career. His
dominance was '57-63 and he was at his peak the day he stepped on an
nfl field. In fact his most memorable game was the '57 sugar bowl
where he simply ran amok.
I think the Browns actually won the nfl championship over the colts
in the only pre merger final lacking giants or pack from 58-66. You
probably did see a more balanced attack and a less dominant Brown, sort
of the OJ of the late 70s. He was about ready to retire, still a great
athlete but not what Tommy and I are talking about.
|
183.52 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 09:57 | 13 |
|
>> Tommy your a riot. I take your plea for someone to argue your
>> point as an admission on your part
Nope, George. No admission of anything just kudos to Bill for
injecting some truths into the discussion. In reality, OJ wasn't
all that much better than Tony Dorsett or even Emmitt Smith and
Barry Sanders. Brown, on the other hand, was a player on the order
of a Lawrence Taylor in the way he could force the opposition to
revolve its game plan around him and still not stop him. But I
take your position as being on a par with your complaints about
parking during BC games.
|
183.53 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 10:44 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 183.52 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
> Nope, George. No admission of anything just kudos to Bill for
> injecting some truths into the discussion.
Tommy, do you or do you not know what you are talking about? If you do,
why do you have to rely on someone else to make your point? Why not just
admit that you don't know all that much about this topic and are basically
rooting against me in this debate.
George
|
183.54 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Everybody knows this is Nowhere | Fri Sep 16 1994 10:47 | 11 |
|
Count me in with Billthe and Tommy. Brown was simply the most magnificent
back to ever play the game. Forget your creampuff teams etc cause both
camps have them. Forget the 12 games vs 16 games argument. Alls I know
is that no one man ever tackled Brown. It took half the team to get him
down. You could contain him for 45 mintues and the last 3 minutes he's
break off 2 80 yards sweeps to break your heart. He also punished
defenders for tackling him. Moves, speed, power, brains and a joe cool
attitude, he had it all........
mike
|
183.55 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 10:49 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 183.51 by 25022::BREEN >>>
> I would not push Jimmy Browns greatness on his mid 60s career. His
> dominance was '57-63 and he was at his peak the day he stepped on an
> nfl field. In fact his most memorable game was the '57 sugar bowl
> where he simply ran amok.
Ok, but the question still remains, who was his competition? I know from
watching the games of the early '60s that the Giants and Browns were the only
strong teams in the conference. I said "Eastern/Western" yesterday and it may
have been "American/National" but the point still remains, during the early 60s
that conference was the Giants, Browns, and a bunch of weak teams.
And from what I remember from looking at the record books the late 50s was
all Giants and Browns as well.
Besides the Giants, who did Brown play against that was all that great? Ok,
the Sugar Bowl, lots of guys have one great game, but besides the Giants what
NFL defense did Brown face that was all that tough? The Packers, Colts, Bears,
and Vikings were in the other Conference.
George
|
183.56 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 10:55 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 183.54 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Everybody knows this is Nowhere" >>>
>Alls I know
> is that no one man ever tackled Brown. It took half the team to get him
> down.
Tell that to Giants center line backer Sam Huff. The word was that if he felt
Brown was going to reverse his direction he'd deliberately send the rest of his
team the other way so he could take him one on one. That probably an
exaduration but he definitely held his own against Brown.
And then there was one time that Brown broke free in the back field with the
announcers yelling "no one can stop him now" and suddenly down he went with no
one in sight. When he got up there underneath him was the number 20 and the
flattened out form of Jimmy Patton, the giants weak side safety.
Those Giants/Browns games were among the greatest matchups of all time.
George
|
183.57 | My Top 40 | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Will edit for food | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:03 | 48 |
| Didn't anybody else do their own list? I'm sure most of ours are
better than whatever SI could come up with!
Remember the criteria: most infulential over the past 40 years.
1) Muhammad Ali - an obvious pick
2) ESPN - they've changed the life of every sports fan for the better
3) Magic Johnson - won everywhere, an ambassador for the game
4) Marvin Miller - changed baseball forever
5) Michael Jordan - maybe the best who ever played
6) Carl Lewis - greatest, most versatile track man ever
7) Larry Bird - helped raise pro basketball to unheard of level
8) Jim Brown - best running back ever; left at height of his skills
9) Bill Russell - consummate winner; made defense fashionable
10) Hank Aaron - battled racism as well as Babe Ruth
11) Red Auerbach - won more titles than any pro basketball coach
12) John Wooden - won more titles than any college basketball coach
13) Joe Namath - his guaranteed victory legitimized the AFL
14) 1980 US Olympic Hockey Team - "Do you believe in miracles? YES!"
15) Roberto Clemente - humanitarian and superstar
16) Billie Jean King - made women's tennis acceptable to the masses
17) Bob Cousy - was Magic before Magic ever played a game
18) Arthur Ashe - class personified, opened up his sport to minorities
19) David Stern - made basketball marketbale around the world
20) Pete Rozelle - brought pro football incredible strength
21) Bobby Orr - only bad knees prevented him from immortality
22) Al Davis - "Just win, baby" became an All-American phrase
23) Ozzie SMith - reinvented the shortstop position
24) Rollie Fingers - the father of modern relief pitching
25) Dick Butkus - made middle linebacker the position we all loved
26) Lawrence Taylor - the best ever at what he did
27) Julius Erving - excitement, style, and above all, class
28) Jackie Joyner-Kersee - best at what she does, and for a long time
29) Martina Navratilova - perserverence allowed public acceptance
30) Joe Montana - best quarterback ever
31) Johnny Unitas - previous best quarterback ever
32) Dick Fosbury - invented the modern high-jump technique
33) Willie Mays - made center field the glamour position in baseball
34) Wayne Gretsky - not called "the Great One" for nothing
35) Pele - showed the US what soccer was about
36) Arnold Palmer - turned the US into a golf-crazy nation
37) Nolan Ryan - fastballs forever
38) Sergei Bubka - Mr. pole vault
39) The 1967 "Impossible Dream" Boston Red Sox - nuff said
40) Don King - made boxing what it is today - a boring cesspool
NAZZ
|
183.58 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Everybody knows this is Nowhere | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:03 | 8 |
|
Geez isn't anybody allowed to stretch the trooth a little. Sure occasionally
one man did tackle Brown. Huff's winning the battle against Brown one on one
is a figment of the NY Media and Huff's imagination. I was and still am a
Giants' fan and I know that Huff had success against Brown but Brown also
chew up and spit Sam out on many occasions.........
mike
|
183.59 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:06 | 21 |
|
>> Tell that to Giants center line backer Sam Huff.
"Center line backer"? You're the one who hasn't got a clue, George.
There ain't no such thing as a "center line backer". Hahaha. It's
middle linebacker, George. Stop embarassing yourself and stick
manly sports like figure skating because you obviously don't even
know the basics about football. I bet you think quarterback is change
for a dollar. I'm beginning to think this is just you looking for an
argument. Did you even know who OJ was before he was took that lei-
surely cruise on national tv?
>> The word was that if he felt Brown was going to reverse his direction
>> he'd deliberately send the rest of his team the other way so he could
>> take him one on one. That probably an exaduration but he definitely
>> held his own against Brown.
Yes, George, that's a very big "exaduration" (whatever the heck that
is). Holding your own against Brown was like holding your own against
Wilt and keeping him down from amazing to phenomenal.
|
183.60 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:19 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 183.59 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
> "Center line backer"? You're the one who hasn't got a clue, George.
> There ain't no such thing as a "center line backer". Hahaha. It's
> middle linebacker,
Duck and weave, duck and weave. Since you don't know anything about this
issue pick on my language. Hey, won't be long before I make a spelling error
maybe you can get some mileage out of that.
Lighten up Tommy, no one knows everything. Why not just admit that you don't
know anything about football from this period and let those of us who actually
watched the games argue this out. Either that or go do some research and join
the fight on the issues rather than meaningless nit picking details.
No, Jimmy Brown was not a better running back than O.J. because I said center
instead of middle. That has nothing to do with this debate.
Meanwhile back to the topic, I'm still waiting for someone to name a few good
team besides the Giants that Jimmy Brown had to face on a regular basis.
George
|
183.61 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:26 | 29 |
| re .57
Well, that's much better than SI's list IMO. But I'd drop the
'80 Olympic team and the '67 Sox both exciting teams but what
exactly did they contribute? I'd also lump Bird, Magic and Stern
together because they all helpoed make basketball more marketable.
I'd also drop Ozzie Smith, Dick Butkus and Lawrence Taylor because
if you're going to start picking the best at particular positions
then you'd need a list of about 100 which probably still wouldn't
be long enough. In place of those I'd put:
Vince Lomabardi - the biggest influence on football coaches
at all levels.
Roone Arledge - thank you for spanning the globe and all the
technological advances.
Roberto Duran - arguably the greatest fighter of the last forty years.
Willie Mays - arguably the best baseball player ever.
Olga Korbut - captured our hearts and brought gymnastics into the
spotlight.
Tommie Smith, John Carlos, and mumble mumble mumble - for better
or worse solidified the postion of athlete as spokesmen
and social activist. As a young black kid in the '60s
the sight of their raised fists on the Olympic podium
sent chills down my spine.
|
183.62 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:35 | 10 |
|
>> No, Jimmy Brown was not a better running back than O.J. because I
>> said center instead of middle. That has nothing to do with this debate.
It has alot to do with the debate. You don't have the numbers to
back up your position and now it's revealed that you don't even
know very very basic football positions and yet you'll try and argue
that OJ was better than a man generally acknowledged as the best
football player ever. Pardon me if I think your credibility stinks.
|
183.65 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 12:12 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 183.62 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
> It has alot to do with the debate. You don't have the numbers to
> back up your position and now it's revealed that you don't even
> know very very basic football positions and yet you'll try and argue
> that OJ was better than a man generally acknowledged as the best
> football player ever. Pardon me if I think your credibility stinks.
Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Blah, Blah, Blah, Nit, Nit, Nit, Pick, Pick, Pick.
Tommy, name a team tough team Brown had to play against on a regular basis
besides the Giants.
George
|
183.66 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 12:13 | 5 |
| On another note, who ever built the Astrodome had an impact on sports. Same
with the guys who gave us the DH in baseball. It may have been infamous rather
than famous but it was still an impact.
George
|
183.67 | | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Fri Sep 16 1994 12:34 | 3 |
| When O.J. played, there were 14 games in the season, not 16.
Ken
|
183.68 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Fri Sep 16 1994 12:44 | 4 |
| Great defenses when Brown played? The Colts, Lions and Eagles
come to mind right off the top of my head.
/Don
|
183.69 | Some facts on OJ? | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:02 | 19 |
|
A friend dropped off the current issue of SI and here
are some *FACTS* on Jim Brown:
o His career average per carry was 5.22 yards.
o He led the league in rushing 8 of his 9 years.
o In 9 years he never missed a game.
o In his final season, he had 1,544 yards. 5.3 yards per carry and
17 touchdowns.
As for Sam Huff, he has a scar on the bridge of his nose from a
collision with Brown. His nose was crushed by the force of his
helmet crashing down on it. Two of his teeth were shattered.
Huff doesn't remember a thing about the collision. "I woke up on
the trainer's table," he later said.
|
183.70 | how about OJ | BSS::MENDEZ | | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:35 | 2 |
| what tough team did OJ run against george????
|
183.71 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:37 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 183.68 by 30008::ROBICHAUD "CasinoMania" >>>
> Great defenses when Brown played? The Colts, Lions and Eagles
> come to mind right off the top of my head.
The Colts were in the other Conference. From what I remember of the early
60's, the Eagles were terrible and the Lions were not much better.
George
|
183.72 | If he doesn't slow down, Emitt will be in Bown's patheon | CNTROL::CHILDS | Everybody knows this is Nowhere | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:40 | 8 |
|
The Steelers and Raiders come to mind and maybe Miami during OJ's time.
Of course he didn't play against either the Steelers or the Raiders twice
a year..........
I'm a USC man and love OJ but Brown was in his own class..........
mike
|
183.73 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:43 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 183.68 by 30008::ROBICHAUD "CasinoMania" >>>
> Great defenses when Brown played? The Colts, Lions and Eagles
> come to mind right off the top of my head.
The Colts were in the other Conference. One of the most famous NFL
Championship games was the one in the late '50s when the Colts went for it and
made it on 4th down and long against the Giants and set up the winning
touchdown. I think it was a draw play to Lenny Moore. At any rate, the Browns
wouldn't have played the Colts all that much.
And from what I remember of the early 60's, the Eagles were terrible and the
Lions were not much better.
Hey, I'm not saying that Brown wasn't great, he was. And he did play against
some good teams. But there were some really awful teams in that conference as
well so just because O.J. got to play against the Pats that doesn't diminish
his accomplishment. Jimmy Brown got to play against some pathetic teams as
well.
George
|
183.74 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:52 | 9 |
|
Let's see some OJ numbers to back up these assertions, George.
There always were and always will be weak teams in the league
and if anything OJ played against weaker defenses with the advent
of the league expanding via the AFL merger and other peripheral
leagues syphoning off talent. No let's see something beyond fairy
tales of the immense bravado of Sam Huff and the word of Mr. Center
Linebacker. You're alone in your belief of Simpson over Brown - defend
yourself properly. You haven't to this point.
|
183.75 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:52 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 183.70 by BSS::MENDEZ >>>
> what tough team did OJ run against george????
Dalphins, Steelers ...
Wasn't O.J. playing for the Bills during Miami's perfect season? If so then
he played against the no name defense. I'm pretty sure he was playing for the
Bills then because I remember seeing him and Franco Harris in the probowl after
one of the Steelers Superbowl wins and the Steelers had their good years after
the Dalphins.
George
|
183.76 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:55 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 183.74 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
>No let's see something beyond fairy
> tales of the immense bravado of Sam Huff and the word of Mr. Center
> Linebacker. You're alone in your belief of Simpson over Brown - defend
> yourself properly. You haven't to this point.
Ok Tommy, but since I asked 1st you answer 1st.
Tell me about the tough teams Jimmy Brown played against other than the
Giants.
George
|
183.77 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri Sep 16 1994 14:21 | 7 |
|
What were the average weights of the Def lines and Linebackers
when Jim Brown Played compared to when OJ played?
Chap
|
183.78 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 14:49 | 16 |
| re .76
I thought as much, George.
And yes, OJ did play for Buffalo the year that Miami had their
perfect season. I'd think that you'd know that much about the guy
that proposing as the greatest running back ever but apparently
not. And no, the Steelers were in a separate division so OJ didn't
play them very often. The other great AFC team at that time was
Oakland who was also in another division. In OJ's division were
the Dolphins who were incredible for about a three or four year
stretch but that's about it as players departed for other teams and
leagues, the Pats who were worse than anything Brown could have
faced, the Jets who were pretty awful as well and the Colts whose
glory days went with Don Shula to Miami.
|
183.79 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:02 | 13 |
| The bottom line is that both O.J. and Brown were great running backs, both
had one or two really tough opponents in their division and a few more tough
teams around the league. And both played some games against some really weak
teams as well.
Other factors seem to even out, Brown played a shorter season and didn't get
beat up as much but by O.J.'s time the talent was spread out a bit more.
I give the edge to O.J. because the teams he played for were ok to poor while
some of the Browns teams that Jimmy Brown played on were pretty good. Hey, it's
a subjective call. Like I said, both were great running backs.
George
|
183.80 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:05 | 12 |
| | What were the average weights of the Def lines and Linebackers
| when Jim Brown Played compared to when OJ played?
Good point, except the bigger is not necessarliy better. The differrence is
that the linemen, and particularly the linebackers, are better athletes today.
Thsi whole thing is a tough call. I tend to agree that Brown was better than
OJ, but not as by the huge margin some seem to think. Also there is no way you
could rate Sayers higher than OJ. Sayers was the most talented of all, but his
career was so short that you couldn't compare.
=Bob=
|
183.81 | JB & CB | VAOP28::Rice | tata | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:06 | 15 |
| > And from what I remember of the early 60's, the Eagles were terrible and the
> Lions were not much better.
Couldn't let this go by.....
Can you say Chuck Bednarik???? Probably the greatest 2-way player ever. And
the Lions had a guy named Joe Schmidt.....
I saw both Brown and OJ play, and Brown was better by far. Brown was like
Larry Bird - he seemed to move in slow motion, but nobody could catch him.
He would disappear into a pile, you'd be getting up to head for the fridge,
and the pile would move and JB would sorta stroll out the back and take off,
he was amazing. Brown and Bednarik were the greatest players I ever saw.
josh
|
183.82 | | METSNY::francus | There is no joy in Mudville | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:14 | 4 |
| Didn't Bednarik play mostly in the 1950's??
The Crazy Met
|
183.83 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:18 | 6 |
| Of course comparing Brown to O.J. is probably not the best comparison to make
since Brown was more of a fullback and O.J. was more of a half back. Yes, Brown
would plow into a pile and keep going but that's what fullbacks do. Halfbacks
try to run around the pile rather than through it.
George
|
183.84 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:27 | 7 |
| | Of course comparing Brown to O.J. is probably not the best comparison to make
|since Brown was more of a fullback and O.J. was more of a half back. Yes, Brown
|would plow into a pile and keep going but that's what fullbacks do. Halfbacks
|try to run around the pile rather than through it.
However, each of them was the primary ball carrier for their team, os it is a
valid comparison.
|
183.85 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:45 | 12 |
| Well, it is until you say that Brown was better than O.J. because of his
ability to squirm through a pile and come out the other side. That's just not a
half back's job.
Also if your primary ball carrier is a fullback rather than a halfback you
run a different set of plays.
It's an ok comparison but not a great comparison.
Now Jimmy Brown to Franco Harris, that would be a good comparison.
George
|
183.86 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Sep 16 1994 15:47 | 20 |
|
George sounds like he's starting to wane a little bit.
Brown didn't just plow people over, he could outrun and
out quick them too but he loved contact. The reason he
threatened to come back when Franco Harris was approaching
his record was that he had little respect for Harris. Brown
said that he watched Harris run out of bounds too often when
defenders were closing in. Brown said that just because he
had the ball didn't mean that he couldn't be the one dishing
out the punishment instead of receiving it. I've read a bio-
graphy and an autobiography of his and he was unique, one for
the ages. OJ was great but Brown is universally acknowledged
as not just the best back ever but the best football player ever
period.
re Chuck Bednarik
Ask Frank Gifford if he knows Bednarik. Old Chuck came pretty
close to decapitating Frank and saving MNF viewers twenty years of
Gifford's inanities.
|
183.87 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 16:04 | 17 |
| No, I'm not waning at all. I saw them both, they were both great, I think
O.J. was better for the reasons I've given. If you feel otherwise fine.
But now that you mention it, Frank Gifford should definitely be on that list.
He was an outstanding flanker back for the Giants and while other's have come
and gone he's the one guy who's lasted on Monday Night Football pretty much
from the start.
The Giants got some big yards with Y.A. Tittle to Frank Gifford on a crossing
pattern. He'd go in some pretty thick traffic and come up with a shoe string
catch.
Del Shoffner always seemed to work the sidelines and run the deep stuff. If
only he had held on to that ball in the Bear's endzone during that ice bowl
NFL Championship game ...
George
|
183.89 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 16 1994 16:25 | 10 |
| So what? Why do you insist on making my noting style a big issue?
Will you get off my case? I'm sorry that you got embarrassed by making a
strong claim about something when you knew nothing about it but that's not my
fault, now leave me alone and stick to discussing the issues.
The topic here is SI's top 40 sports figures and how we feel about those
people (and the horse), it's not a topic about my noting style.
George
|
183.90 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Fri Sep 16 1994 16:38 | 14 |
| Nazz,
I like your picks, but they're obviously NE biased. Some of them
are fine,but that many Celtics don't belong in the top 40 of all
sports. From the looks SI just did individuals, not teams. The
67 Dream Team? They didn't even win a pennant and what influence
did they have over, for example, the 69 Mets? Lewis was versatile,
but for me, Moses was the most dominant I can think of for the longest
period of time.
Tommy, the 80 hockey team influenced patriotism beyond belief when it
was needed. Plus, ever team after it is still compared to it, so it's
still fresh in people's minds, almost 15 years later. That's why I
put in on mine.
|
183.91 | rollward | VAOP28::Rice | tata | Fri Sep 16 1994 16:39 | 10 |
| > Ask Frank Gifford if he knows Bednarik. Old Chuck came pretty
> close to decapitating Frank and saving MNF viewers twenty years of
> Gifford's inanities.
As usual, Tommy gets right to the point ;). If Bednarik ever failed on
the football field that was it. He put Giff out of the game, so I guess
he figgered that was enough, but if he had known the future he woulda
kilt him fer sure.
josh
|
183.92 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Fri Sep 16 1994 16:43 | 5 |
| I know that Bednarik played on the Eagles team that won the
1960 NFL title. The Chicago Bears had some pretty good defenses
in the late 50's early 60's also.
/Don
|
183.93 | "Definitely"? | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Sep 19 1994 10:34 | 14 |
|
>> But now that you mention it, Frank Gifford should definitely be
>> on that list.
I think that you'd be hard-pressed to find a spot on the 40 most
important/influential sportscasters of the last forty years for
Frank let alone a spot on something as all encompassing as the 40
most important/influential sports figures. Frank hasn't been anything
but third banana on MNF for twenty years and the next revelatory
thing that he says will be his first. OJ better than Jim Brown?
There *is* small room for argument. But Frank Gifford over Curt Gowdy or
Jim McKay or Vin Scully or Johnny Most or a host of others? No way.
|
183.94 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:01 | 24 |
| Gifford is a hall of fame football player and he's gone beyond being a color
commentator. He did play by play back in the Meridith/Cossell days and he's
made an impact announcing other sports as well, notably the down hill at the
Olympics.
And where other guys have come and gone, he's the one guy that's always been
associated with Monday Night Football which is one of the all time institutions
in American Sport.
True Curt Gowdy did go national but I doubt many people outside of Boston
remember him all that well. He is mostly remembered as the Red Sox announcer
that made the big time. And while Johnny Most was probably the greatest Celtics
fan of all time, he's pretty much local.
I agree that Jim McKay deserves consideration. Vin Scully? I don't know, some
times I like him, some times he drives me nuts. I thought that he and Joe
Garigiola did a terrible job with the '86 world series, they pretty much phoned
it in.
I'll never forget Scully's irritating voice after the game 6 wild pitch:
"Mitchel scores, the game is tied!!!". Yuch!!!, the worst moment in sports. Ok,
that wasn't his fault but they did do a pretty poor job overall.
George
|
183.95 | Just Say NO to Gymnastics! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Will edit for food | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:37 | 19 |
| Before 1967, the Red Sox drew flies. I loved to sneak down to the box
seats from my $1.50 grandstand seat, and I'd have my pick of locations,
as long as the ushers weren't jerks and kicked us out. Usually they'd
just move you back to your old seat, but once my two friends and I got
escorted out of the park in the second or third inning of the second
game of a doubleheader, for throwing popcorn at the head of this old
guy in the first row!
Anyway, the 1967 Red Sox were the most influential team in New England
sports history, because they changed the perception of baseball in this
region, and began a one-sided love affair (fans love Sox, Sox love to
break fans' hearts) that continues to this day.
As for Olga Korbut, she never won my heart. That ugly little pipsqueak
was a freak of nature, much like Manute Bol. I refuse to watch any
event where alleged adults compete at under 100 pounds. even flywight
boxers weigh more than that!
NAZZ
|
183.96 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:45 | 22 |
| >> Gifford is a hall of fame football player
Are you positive? I was aware that he was a good football player but
I didn't think he was a Hall Of Famer.
>> and he's gone beyond being a color commentator. He did play by play back
>> in the Meridith/Cossell days
Frank's main qualities have always been that he was a likable, inobtrusive
guy. Meredith and Cosell were the show back then, Dierdorf and Michaels are
the show now.
>> and he's made an impact announcing other sports as well, notably the down
>> hill at the Olympics.
He made an "impact"? Might that not be a little strong. Given that he isn't
fully qualified to examine the technical aspects of the sport, the most he
could do is announce who's up next, point out the obvious and prod whoever
is analyst. Which is pretty much what he does on MNF maybe even more than
what he does on MNF. I don't think that you could find four sports fans that
remember Frank Gifford for his downhill announcing.
|
183.97 | Gifford is in the Hall O' Fame | HBAHBA::HAAS | Sorry, wrong species. | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:49 | 0 |
183.98 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:53 | 4 |
| re: Gifford as a player.
My research says he was a product of NY hype. He was
very good, but not great.
|
183.99 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:57 | 8 |
| Regardless, he is in the Hall of Fame.
I'm not a big Gifford fan. While he is in the HoF, I can't see him as
being one of the most influential sports figures of the last 40 years.
JMHO,
'Saw
|
183.100 | NO to Heiser | PTOS01::JACOBR | Follically Challenged!! | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:00 | 4 |
|
JaKe
|
183.101 | "Brown is better" | HBAHBA::HAAS | Sorry, wrong species. | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:00 | 24 |
| The entire issue of OJ vs Jim Brown has been settled. Jim Brown was
better. He said so.
In fact, said that OJ did drugs and that gave him another side.
Brown was interviewed over the weekend by ESPN. Some other thoughts:
o He likes Jerry Rice and has no problem with him having the TD record.
He says he likes the 49ers, mentioning their tradition with
Joe Montana and current players such as Rice, Steve Young and
John Taylor.
o He thinks Eric Dickerson coulda broke all running records if he had
concentrated on playing instead of his contract disputes over
more money.
o He thinks some players transcend their era. Among those mentioned
were Montana, Ray Neitschki (sp?), Sammy Baugh, Sterline Sharpe
and Andre Rison.
o When asked if he could play in today's game, Big Jim said that it
would be a piece of cake.
TTom
|
183.102 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:02 | 11 |
| >
> o He thinks some players transcend their era. Among those mentioned
> were Montana, Ray Neitschki (sp?), Sammy Baugh, Sterline Sharpe
> and Andre Rison.
>
Nitschke.
hth,
'Saw
|
183.103 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:07 | 5 |
| For the job McKay's done on Wide World of Sports, he deservers it over
Gifford. The 72 Olympics was TV Sports ugliest memory, but McKay
handled it with class and dignity. That's part of why Arledge made
the list.
|
183.104 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:26 | 18 |
| > For the job McKay's done on Wide World of Sports, he deservers it over
> Gifford. The 72 Olympics was TV Sports ugliest memory, but McKay
> handled it with class and dignity. That's part of why Arledge made
> the list.
For me, McKay's reporting of Munich, and Al Michaels reporting of the
World Series Earthquake, were two very important moments in sport, and
I felt their broadcasts transcended sport.
Arledge took a concept on a network that was struggling, and parlayed it
into a wonderfully long and prosperous thing. Wide World of Sports was
one of the most innovative things in all of television.
'Saw
|
183.105 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Sep 19 1994 12:44 | 9 |
| Regardless of his stats Gifford was an impact player for the Giants. Del
Shoffner would rack up yardage running down Y.A. Tittle's long bombs, but it
was Gifford that went into the traffic up the middle and came up with passes
for critical yardage on 3rd down.
My brother and I were big Gifford fans long before he stepped up to a mic. I
always felt he deserved to be in the hall of fame.
George
|
183.106 | | METSNY::francus | There is no joy in Mudville | Mon Sep 19 1994 13:40 | 8 |
|
> Anyway, the 1967 Red Sox were the most influential team in New England
> sports history
exactly, regional, not national or global.
The Crazy Met
|
183.107 | Where's Red???? | BUSY::RSTPIERRE | | Mon Sep 19 1994 13:49 | 11 |
|
Where's Red Auerbach on the list????
As for the other arguements, Jim Brown was the greatest, with
Walter Payton 2nd...OJ was all for OJ and his stats, he could have
cared less if the Bills won or lost.
Gifford's an NFL butt-kisser like Will McDonough, which is the only
reason the two of them have prominent roles on NFL telecasts...Gifford
adds zippo to MNF and Will "the Pats are going to St.Louis" McDonough
gives info that's a week old on his NFL live gig.
|
183.108 | | 24661::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Mon Sep 19 1994 13:52 | 10 |
| <<< Note 183.107 by BUSY::RSTPIERRE >>>
-< Where's Red???? >-
> Where's Red Auerbach on the list????
Absent, where he belongs.
Mark.
|
183.109 | Need hands and toes to fit the rings on | BUSY::RSTPIERRE | | Mon Sep 19 1994 14:57 | 2 |
|
107. Yeah, right....
|
183.110 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Mon Sep 19 1994 16:04 | 4 |
| The question isn't best ever. It's most influential. What kind of
influence did he have? More than Russell? He put the team together,
but I don't know if you can call it "influential".
|
183.111 | not many coaches | HBAHBA::HAAS | Sorry, wrong species. | Mon Sep 19 1994 16:08 | 9 |
| I agree that Red shoulda been on this list. He has been very influential
in the development of the NBA.
I also notice that there's only a couple of coaches on this list. Wooden
and The Bear.
I guess the Wooden > Dean debate has been settled.
TTom
|
183.112 | earl | NWD002::JOLMAMA | smoke on the chess board | Mon Sep 19 1994 17:42 | 9 |
| IMHO, the argument thus far "who is the best running back ever" must
consider Earl Cambell. In his prime, he is the only peer to Jim Brown.
Forget OJ. But the great Jim Brown, over nine years, is peerless while
Earl had a 3-4 year run during which he flirted with greatness,
(remember the Monday night games?).
Jim is the man, the best, and belongs in the Top 10, let alone the Top
40. Earl is #2.
|
183.113 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | Bad Things, man... | Tue Sep 20 1994 08:52 | 9 |
| If your talking about impact on the sport one played, Wilt has to be on
the list. Numerous rule changes (3 seconds in the lane, changes in
offensive goaltending and free throw shooting rules, widening the lane)
were made to try to shut down Wilt, with VERY limited success. Russell
was a very good player who had a fabulous supporting cast, but Wilt
changed the game.
Dennis Faust
|
183.114 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 10:40 | 5 |
|
During last night's MNF broadcast that was billed as Emmit Smith
vs. Barry Sanders, they showed a graphic of the running backs who
reached 7,000 yards in the fewest games. Jim Brown was second fastest.
Earl Campbell was first. I did not see OJ Simpson in the top seven.
|
183.115 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Sep 20 1994 11:18 | 8 |
| O.J. didn't have the offensive line that others had nor did the Bills have
the passing game to keep the defense honest.
I was browsing in a book store and I looked it up. The Browns were near the
top and often on top of their Conference for all of the late 50's and early
60's. Jimmy Brown was always surrounded by a good team.
George
|
183.116 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 11:30 | 11 |
|
>> O.J. didn't have the offensive line that others had nor did the
>> Bills have the passing game to keep the defense honest.
I have a book at home with a picture of a smiling OJ surrounded
by his linemen the year that he broke 2,000 yards. The caption
reads, "OJ thanks his hardworking linemen." (Hokey, I know).
Even someone with an ego as big as OJ's knows that you don't rack
up 2,000 yards all by yourself. He had a very good line.
|
183.117 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Sep 20 1994 11:55 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 183.116 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
>The caption
> reads, "OJ thanks his hardworking linemen." (Hokey, I know).
> Even someone with an ego as big as OJ's knows that you don't rack
> up 2,000 yards all by yourself. He had a very good line.
Just because a back is smart enough to spread the credit around that doesn't
mean they deserve the credit. Obviously it was in O.J.'s interest to give them
as much motivation and praise as possible. He was hardly an objective critic.
I've seen coaches call their own championship team a bunch of no talent
clowns (and worse) after a loss, does that mean they really didn't have
talent? I'm not calling players and coaches liars, but let's face it, coaches
and players say what they have to say to get the most out of their players
and team mates.
George
|
183.118 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Tue Sep 20 1994 11:56 | 2 |
| I thought Dickerson was first...
|
183.119 | me too. | FXTROT::ALLEMANG | | Tue Sep 20 1994 12:16 | 2 |
|
I recall Dickerson being first as well...
|
183.120 | 2 cents worth | 25151::HOVEY | | Tue Sep 20 1994 12:20 | 14 |
|
OJ was the best college back I ever saw, dominated games. I think
if you look into it his O line at Buffalo has some pro-bowlers, Reggie
Mckenzie (sp), etc.....his first few years in Buffalo weren't that
great.
The best pro-back I ever saw was Sayers even though his time was
limited. I never got to see Brown play so I cannot judge him. There's
some great backs who never played for great teams so like anything else
it's just someones opinion.
Wasn't there a back who was traded for 7 players or so to the
Rams (way back? Someone out there must know....
Put Barry Sanders on a great line......
|
183.121 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 12:43 | 11 |
| >> Wasn't there a back who was traded for 7 players or so to the
>> Rams (way back? Someone out there must know....
Ollie Matson.
And yes, Reggi Mackenzie was a Pro Bowl tackle for the Bills back in
OJ's day. They also had several other very good lineman and a good
QB in Ferguson as well as a good blocking fullback in Roosevelt
Mumblesomething. OJ was not a one man team by any stretch of the
imagination.
|
183.122 | Another guy with big thighs | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | How unkind ,Arrested for flying while blind | Tue Sep 20 1994 12:46 | 6 |
|
Roosevelt Leaks from U of Texas a year or two prior to Earl Campbell
Cadzilla2
|
183.123 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 13:28 | 6 |
|
>> Roosevelt Leaks from U of Texas a year or two prior to Earl Campbell
That was him, a great blocking back. The Bills also had a very good
QB in Joe Ferguson.
|
183.124 | Use your strengths... | BUSY::RSTPIERRE | | Tue Sep 20 1994 13:29 | 6 |
|
.121 The blocking back for OJ was Jim Braxton, who rused for 100+
in the same game that OJ went for 250, against the Pats in 1973.
We all must remember that the big change in OJ's career was
when Lou Saban took over, and let the Juice run 30-40 times a game.
Much like John Robinson, who did the same for Dickerson....
|
183.125 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:07 | 2 |
| I remember Roosevelt Leeks playing for the
Colts, and Braxton blocking for OJ.
|
183.126 | Eagles Not That Bad | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:16 | 3 |
| I've only read up to .73, but I don't think the Eagles were
always bad defensively. For example, they won the NFL
championship in 1960 by beating the Packers.
|
183.127 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:18 | 12 |
| Yeah, they had the DB, I forget his name.
He used to be paired up with Pat Summerall before Madden, but CBS got
pissed at him. I don't think he made a racial remark (at least if he
did I don't remember it being as bad as Cosell's monkey comment or
Jimmy Greek's thigh comment), but I could be wrong.
Anyway, he was a DB for the Eagles and I think (not sure, but think) he
was on the championship team......
'Saw
|
183.128 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:21 | 1 |
| Tom Brookshire
|
183.129 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:25 | 12 |
| ><<< Note 183.128 by SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH "Hakuna Matata - means no worries..." >>>
>
>Tom Brookshire
Thanks =Bob=!
That was starting to bug me and I was starting to get antsy because I
couldn't remember....
'Saw
|
183.130 | Remember the Electric Company | BSS::MENDEZ | | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:27 | 7 |
| OJ had some great offensive lines. McKenzie has been mentioned
but they also had Joe DeLameliure (sp). If you recall the offensive
line was called the Electric Company and OJ supplied the Juice. The
debate is interesting but I think it is pretty clear that Jim Brown
was the best back ever. On an aside Rice may go down as the best
football player ever.
|
183.131 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:28 | 3 |
|
The Bills had a very good tight end back then, too. Does
anyone remember who it was? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
|
183.132 | Misc. | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:31 | 36 |
| I'm now onto .97!
Gifford was not always a flanker. He became a flanker thanks
to Chuck Bednarik.
When Lombardi was the offensive coordinator for the New York
Giants, he made Gifford a 'triple-threat' halfback (running,
catching, and throwing). Lombardi went on to do the same
thing for Hornung.
Neat story I heard on Bednarik. I guess one time Chuck Noll
knocked him out in a game. Bednarik told Noll he would get
back at him. Apparently, after a game, he cold cocked the
back of Noll's head with an elbow which knocked Noll clean
out!!
Incidentally, I think the whole weight of players thing can
be a little exagerrated. Only because they were different times
and part of the difference is due to conditioning/weightlifting/
steroids. Jim Brown also lacked the regimented programs these
others have had.
One other thing...we keep talking about who played against who.
That's a pretty meaningless stat unless we can see how they did
against what specific team. How many yards would O.J. gain against
Miami? How about Brown against the Giants?
My inkling is to take Brown in a heartbeat over Simpson. But, my
favorite will probably always be Sayers.
By the way, I started watching football at the age of 9 in 1967.
Saw a couple games in '66. But, I've read some and seen film and
stuff. I had most of the Punt Pass and Kick library! Great reading
for a kid!!
Tony
|
183.133 | The Line Stunk At First | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:38 | 15 |
| up to .117...
The Bills line stunk up the joint in Simpson's early years. The
electric company didn't come into being until some years later.
Man, I like a good argument, but the bias rings loud and clear.
C'mon Tommy, I agree with ya! But, maintaining the Bills always
had a good line weakens the credibility of your overall argument!
THE LINE STUNK AND THE BILLS WERE THE PITS!!!
The Browns were always a fine team when Jim Brown played for them.
Besides Ryan, Collins was also a fine player on offense.
Tony
|
183.134 | But I can't think of the Bill TE | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:41 | 6 |
| | The Browns were always a fine team when Jim Brown played for them.
| Besides Ryan, Collins was also a fine player on offense.
Was Paul Warfield the other WR, or did he come in later?
Gene Hickerson played right guard I beleive.
|
183.135 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:42 | 13 |
| >> Neat story I heard on Bednarik. I guess one time Chuck Noll
>> knocked him out in a game. Bednarik told Noll he would get
>> back at him. Apparently, after a game, he cold cocked the
>> back of Noll's head with an elbow which knocked Noll clean
>> out!!
Football was a much tougher, grittier sport back then. In Brown's
autobiography, he said that after a play he'd be at the bottom of
the pile and guys would be biting him, gouging at his eyes or
twisting his ankle. After Sam huff tried to wrench Brown's ankle
after a play Brown went up to him and said, "I expect that from
everyone else but Sam, you're better than that." Brown said that
Huff never did anything dirty again..
|
183.136 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:48 | 6 |
| There were also some runners that could make it as a unit. Franco Harris and
Rocky Briar (sp?) worked well together. Also Larry Zonka, Jim Kick, and Mercury
Morris from the Dalphins. Smashing their way to an undefeated season was a
major influence on the sport.
George
|
183.137 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Tue Sep 20 1994 14:58 | 15 |
| Rocky Bleier. Vietnam vet who had a severely wounded foot, and they
figured he wouldn't ever walk again, never mind play football. One very
gutsy guy.
Meantime, while we're talking about all the greats, one person who amazes
me is Jackie Slater of the LA Rams. Here's a guy who plays in The Pit,
at offensive tackle, and he's quietly put in 19 seasons.
Can you imagine that -- 19 years of line play. That's an accomplishment
in my book....
'Saw
|
183.138 | Regrettably, with Brown it shouldn't have had to be man vs boys | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Sep 20 1994 15:06 | 28 |
|
> Football was a much tougher, grittier sport back then.
But one thing that works against Brown in a comparison of eras was the
relative dearth of black players of his day, even compared to when
OJ hit his prime and certainly to today. Almost all of the players
came from the colleges, and that's where the bottleneck existed, as the
few who made it such as Brown had to go above and beyond the call and
even then catch some major breaks along the way. In Brown's case the
big break was being taken in by the family of a prominent physician and
Syracuse alum. Generally I don't like to take a player out of his time
when making comparisons, because it's unfair to the older players who
could have just as easily taken advantage of the modern advances in
training techniques as today's, but when so many potentially great
athletes were excluded on a basis that had nothing to do with talent or
training it should be accounted for. Considering the overwhelming
representation of black players in today's NFL, I'd say that this
factor is even more significant than in the very same valid arguments
in baseball around the records of players like Ruth/Cobb/etc.
I'd still rate Brown ahead of OJ, I think, but I'm not so sure I'd
automatically place him above a Walter Payton or a Barry Sanders from
today. And yes, I think that Jerry Rice has as good an argument as
anyone as the greatest football player ever, to the extent that such
arguments are practical.
glenn
|
183.139 | what a show | VAOP28::Rice | tata | Tue Sep 20 1994 15:11 | 17 |
| > Football was a much tougher, grittier sport back then. In Brown's
> autobiography, he said that after a play he'd be at the bottom of
> the pile and guys would be biting him, gouging at his eyes or
> twisting his ankle. After Sam huff tried to wrench Brown's ankle
> after a play Brown went up to him and said, "I expect that from
> everyone else but Sam, you're better than that." Brown said that
> Huff never did anything dirty again..
What a rivalry that was. Remember how JB got up reaaalll slooowwww after
every play? The rest of the pile would be back in the huddle already, JB
would lie on the turf for a minute, sorta get to his knees, look around,
get up, shake his head, look dazed, walk back to the huddle just in time
to line-up. This was smart football - you never knew if he was hurt cuz
he always acted as if he could hardly walk, then he would *explode*
through the line and you'd think, "well, i guess he's ok..."
josh
|
183.140 | U of M's Paul Seymour (te for OJ) | 25022::BREEN | | Tue Sep 20 1994 15:41 | 7 |
| Paul was a younger brother of Jack Seymour one of the greatest college
football players of all time at Notre Dame and a prominent member of
the most heralded college game of my lifetime, Michigan State vs Irish
in 1966.
Seymour (Paul) seemed to save his best games for the Pats and at 6'5,
250 with talent would've made Jimmy Brown a 200yd /game average.
|
183.141 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Tue Sep 20 1994 16:10 | 3 |
| Re: DB turned CBS announcer
what was Irv Cross?
|
183.142 | Misc. | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | God cares. | Tue Sep 20 1994 17:26 | 15 |
| re: -1
I thought the same thing Mike. Its just an odd coincedence.
Both Tom Brookshier and Irv Cross were Eagle DB's who made
it to CBS Sports.
One other thing I like to do is to not forget the real oldies.
I'll bet Jim Thorpe was a good football player. Same with
Bronco Nagurski, Don Hutson, Ernie Nevers, Red Grange (at
least so they say).
Roosevelt Leaks. Hadn't heard that guys name in a long time.
Same with Gene Hickerson.
Tony
|
183.143 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | Bad Things, man... | Wed Sep 21 1994 07:46 | 10 |
| The broadcaster in question is definitely Brookie. He was in the TNT
special on the NFL (he's no. 40 on the Eagles, trying to tackle Jim
Brown) and was a member of the 1960 champion Eagles. He has since had
his number retired by the Birds. His career ended when he broke his leg
in a game in 1962 (I think). A Joe Theisman type injury - the bone was
sticking in the mud. Additional irony, Brookie's spot in the lineup was
taken by Irv Cross.
Dennis Faust
|
183.144 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Wed Sep 21 1994 09:48 | 5 |
| I had completely forgotten about Irv Cross. I liked Irv too. I wonder
what happened to him. Maybe HBO's NFL show should do a segment on him.....
'Saw
|
183.145 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | Bad Things, man... | Wed Sep 21 1994 16:19 | 4 |
| Last I heard, Irv was still a stock broker in Philadelphia.
Dennis Faust
|
183.146 | (8^)* | PTOS01::JACOBR | Follically Challenged!! | Thu Sep 22 1994 15:27 | 92 |
| SI NEGLECTED TO PICK THESE 15
By Bruce Keidan
from The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 9-22-1994
Fourteen people and one animal unjustly omitted by Sports Illustrated
from its list of 40 individuals said by the magazine to have exerted the
most influence on sport since 1954(listed in no particular order and
numbering 15 iun total becuase this is how old I am in dog years):
1. Vince Lombardi--Not for building a football dynasty in Green Bay, and not
for his pithy philosophy of life("Winning isn't everything, it's the only
thing.") Selected because of his game plans. under Lombardi, the Packers
had only four plays: sweep left, sweep right, fullback up the middle,
and a pass to Max McGee. Most of the time, you knew which one was coming.
Lombardi liked it that way. He reasoned there was nothing more
demoralizing than knowing what your opponent was about to do and being
unable to stop it. This strategy was later emulated by President Clinton
in making public every detail of his Haitian invasion plan before sending
his troops in.
2. Terry Bradshaw--The first bald former football player to appear in a
Burt Reynolds movie without a toupee. Thus far, Burt Reynolds has resisted
the temptation to be the second.
3. George Foreman--Muhammad Ali was No. 1 on SI's list, but George is more
of a household name. At least in the Foreman household. George has 11 sons,
all named George. No one knows his daughter's name, Georgette prehaps?
Gerogia? Girl George??
4. Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding--I know what you're thinking: "Why
them? Why now?" If SI can make Larry Bird and Earvin "Magic" Johnson a
single entry, surely I can do no less for Nancy and Tonya, the co-stars of
the greatest soap opera in the annals of figure skating. Turns out it's a
tossup which one we like less, the conspirator or her victim.
5. Brian Bosworth--Not just because he turned out to be an $11 million bust,
thus helping hasten the advent of a cap on salaries for NFL rookies. But
also because there was a time when every third boy between the age of 12
and 17 wore his hair styled in a "Boz," the look he popularized. Bosworth
now support himself by impersonating an actor in bad motion pictures.
6. Bo Jackson--SI must have been out of town when this guy was an all-star
in football and baseball. Bo knows speech impediments. Bo knows hip replace-
ment surgery. But Bo knows NO limits.
7. Ralphie the Buffalo--Either you have beasts on the list or you don't.
If SI can choose Secretariat, I nominate the University of Colorado football
team's mascot. Ralphie III is a credit to her species. She is also politically
correct. And she is exceptionally smart and well behaved. Especilly in
comparison to some of the PLAYERS on the Colorado football team.
8. Barry Bonds--Is YOUR autograph worth $7500 a month?? Is anyone else's
you know? Barry's was. He got a $7500 reduction in his spousal- and child-
support payments. It lasted until the newspapers found out that the judge
sought and received Barry's autograph after the order was signed.
9. Joe Paterno--When he seconded George Bush's nomination, Bush was
elected president. Then when he didn't, Bush was voted out. What more can
I say?
10. Mario Lemieux--Just the sight of him holding a sand wedge is enough
to reduce otherwise rational grownups into jabbering idiots who insist who
insist golf ranks somewhere between full-contact karate and bungee jumping
in the toll it exacts on the body and the danger it represents to the
participant.
11. Willie Cauley--Led the Big East Basketball Conference in time off for
good behavior this past summer, with 32 days. Pitt declared him ineligible
at the point his arrests exceeded his scoring average.
12. Andy Van Slyke--The Nostradamus of the Major League Players Association.
The day after he predicted there would be peace in the Middle East before
baseball players accepted a salary cap, King Hussein of Jordan phoned the
Tel Aviv Hilton and made reservations for Passover weekend.
13. Wilt Chamberlain--Still holds the single season scoring records for both
the NBA and bachelors taller than 7 feet.
14. John Fedko(JaKenote: Fedko is a local rather weird sportscaster)-- What
do you get when you cross a sportscast with MTV? Tune in to WPXI(station he's
employed by) and see.
Bruce Keidan
JaKe
|
183.147 | Next chapter of "Steve is out of touch" | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Fri Sep 23 1994 08:54 | 20 |
| re .146
>>4. Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding--I know what you're thinking: "Why
>>them? Why now?" If SI can make Larry Bird and Earvin "Magic" Johnson a
>>single entry, surely I can do no less for Nancy and Tonya, the co-stars of
>>the greatest soap opera in the annals of figure skating. Turns out it's a
>>tossup which one we like less, the conspirator or her victim.
When did Kerrigan stop being America's Darling? I remember watching a
Rangers game at Bruins just before the Winter Games, and they had some
sort of sendoff for New England competitors. When Kerrigan came onto
the ice, the Garden erupted.
The Ranger announcer (the excellent Sam Rosen) noted that, after she was
attacked, both Mark Messier and Adam Oates wrote sympathy notes.
Has she not been forgiven for coming in second, or did I miss something?
Steve
|
183.148 | | CAMONE::WAY | No rest for the weary | Fri Sep 23 1994 09:50 | 4 |
| She showed her true colors by being a bitch after she won silver, and
then, as Disneyworld, she dissed Mickey Mouse.
After that, it was history....
|
183.149 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 23 1994 10:52 | 16 |
| Kerrigan will probably end up being well liked in the Boston area but nation
wide feelings about her will be mixed. Some see her as the sympathetic victim,
others see her as the "Why me" whinner who picked on Oksana about her weeping,
criticized the Mouse, and left the Olympics early.
In reality it appears that she is a whinner but then when she whinns she
generally calls it like it is. Baiul is a weeper, it was corny to wear the
medal riding a fake fire truck down a fake street, and it would have been
stupid for her to ignore the death threats and march with Tonya in the closing
ceremony when 2/3rds of the U.S. team had already left.
On the up side, she'll no doubt continue raking in the bucks for some time to
come. Her deals with Disney, Rebok, and Revelon are holding up and she packs
them in at the ice shows.
George
|
183.150 | Satchel | VAOP28::Rice | tata | Fri Sep 23 1994 14:36 | 13 |
|
After lasted nites BASEBALL I realized that Satchel Paige was left
off this list. Inexusable. Unacceptable. His influence was HUGE!!!!
- In the black community he was a symbol of success that inspired
millions.
- Even the white culture was affected - "Don't look back..." and
other quotes of his have become standard pieces of American Culture.
- He was the greatest pitcher ever. No question.
josh
|
183.151 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Fri Sep 23 1994 15:09 | 3 |
| Impact was huge, but most of it was after 1954, when SI started. Not
a bad pick though...
|
183.152 | Satch's own book is back in print | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Mon Sep 26 1994 09:28 | 15 |
| Josh, if you're interested in looking into Negro League baseball in more
detail, I warmly recommend John Holway's _Josh and Satch_ as a starter.
Holway is author of a number of books on the subject, but this is the
most accessible. The other title character is Josh Gibson, who played
with and against Paige, and died tragically young.
Did they mention in the program that in 1965, at the age of 59, Paige
pitched three scoreless innings for the KC Athletics (1 hit, 0 W, 1 K)?
It is not hard to make a case for Paige as the greatest pitcher of all
time, nor is it hard to make a case for putting an asterisk before any
MLB record set before 1947 as having been achieved against inferior
competition.
Steve
|
183.153 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Sep 26 1994 10:28 | 10 |
| RE: Vince Lombardi...
He did not say, "Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing."
He said something like "Winning isn't everything; the desire to
win, that's the only thing."
Big difference.
Scott
|
183.154 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Sep 26 1994 10:41 | 14 |
| Actually I think that Lombardi gave variations on the speech on different
occasions. Once I heard a tape of him giving that speech at rookie camp. If he
did that for one bunch of rookies then he probably did it at the beginning of
other seasons as well.
The version I heard went something like "Even at this level you have to block
and tackle. Blocking and tackling are the fundamentals of the game. If you
block and tackle you will win and in this league winning is everything."
Think the rah rah type of speech you would expect a coach to give a bunch
of rookies before sending them out to spend the day slamming into those sleds
and I think you should get the drift of the tone behind those words.
George
|
183.155 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Mon Sep 26 1994 11:35 | 24 |
| Probably the definitive work for Lombardi Philosophy (which is really
pretty applicable to life too) is his book "Run to Daylight".
If you have never read it, pick up a copy, and learn from it.
One thing about Lombardi was that he taught his players more than football.
Almost every single one of his former players has been really successful
in life, and they attribute a lot of that to the philosophies that Lombardi
taught them.
One thing that I thought was so cool about Lombardi was his offensive
approach. Everyone in the world knew that they'd run the Power Sweep
or throw the McGee or stuff like that. They knew it was going to happen,b
but the Packers executed so well that they were, for the most part,
unstoppable. That's a cool thing.
"Here's what we're going to do against you. Try and stop us"
Inexorable. That's the word I'd use to describe it.....
'Saw
|
183.156 | | 25022::BREEN | | Mon Sep 26 1994 11:40 | 7 |
| I'm surprised that SI left off Roger Bannister who helped launch SI
with his 4 minute mile business in 1954.
Celtics were another team with limited plays but excellent excecution.
The Megesey book and Lombardi books came out about the same time with
two totally different views of pro football.
|
183.157 | A nutshell of Lombardi's philosophy | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Mon Sep 26 1994 11:53 | 16 |
| I remember posting a reply in an internal conference for our group some
years ago. In it, I briefly discussed what it seemed the kernel of
Lombardi's philosophy was to me. I found it, and pulled out that
part:
Vince Lombardi, in his book "Run to Daylight" speaks often of a "single-minded
purpose". Lombardi's concept of single minded purpose was envisioning the way
a play or game-plan looked when it was perfectly executed, then stopping at
nothing until what was actually executed matched his vision. He abhorred
distractions along the way.
'Saw
|
183.158 | Could Lombardi coach today? | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Mon Sep 26 1994 12:13 | 12 |
| In "Run to Daylight" Lombardi claims to have never said "Winning isn't
evertything, it's the only thing". He claims the appropriate quote was
something like "Winning isn't everything, it's how you react to
losing". Interestign to note that in all his time as a head coach he
only lost one championship game, his first. He obviously learned from
the experience.
Lombardi demanded more from his players than anyone else, but rewarded
them by building their self-image through winning. As Saw said, this
prepared miost of his players for future success.
=Bob=
|
183.159 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Mon Sep 26 1994 12:40 | 7 |
| In regard to that Championship loss (to the Eagles I think) he said something
like "we didn't lose, we just ran out of time...."
He hated to lose....
'Saw
|
183.160 | What I learned in J school... | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Mon Sep 26 1994 13:16 | 10 |
| Lord Acton did NOT say "Power corrupts.".
Humphrey Bogart did NOT say "Play it again, Sam."
Vince Lombardi did NOT say "Winning... is the only thing."
But that's how it was reported. Nice to be able to have confidence
in your daily paper, isn't it.
Steve
|
183.161 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Sep 26 1994 13:17 | 2 |
|
And Charles Darwin never said "Survival of the fittest."
|
183.162 | | 24661::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Mon Sep 26 1994 13:20 | 4 |
| Next thing you know is that you guys will be saying George Washington
never chopped down that cherry tree.
Mark.
|
183.163 | Satchel and Vince | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Mon Sep 26 1994 14:21 | 15 |
| My single favorite baseball player is Satchel Paige. It was
pure bliss watching Ken Burn's baseball thing where they showed
the old black leagues. Satchel sure seemed like the best to me.
I'll have to get that book on Satchel and Josh Gibson.
I read all the Lombardi books. The Packers really were such a
combination of fine coaching and talent. Man, they were loaded.
One of my favorite stories was when Lombardi first talked to the
Green Bay Packers. He held up a football and said, "Men, this
is a football."
Max McGee replied, "Slow down coach...you're going too fast!"
Tony
|
183.164 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Mon Sep 26 1994 14:57 | 38 |
| >
>Lord Acton did NOT say "Power corrupts.".
>
>Humphrey Bogart did NOT say "Play it again, Sam."
>
>Vince Lombardi did NOT say "Winning... is the only thing."
That goes along with:
Discretion is the better part of valor
Which is from Shakespeare, but written differently.
Bogart's line was something like
Play it, Sam.
It followed that wonderful line
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world,
she walks into mine.
Then he tells Sam
If she can take it, so can I (pause to pour more Scotch).
Play it, Sam....
Forrest Gump did say
I gawta pee
'Saw
|
183.165 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Sep 27 1994 09:49 | 14 |
|
> My single favorite baseball player is Satchel Paige. It was
> pure bliss watching Ken Burn's baseball thing where they showed
> the old black leagues. Satchel sure seemed like the best to me.
It's interesting; I was talking to my mom about Satchel Paige on
Sunday, and she was telling me what a disappointment it was to
see him pitch as a rookie. He came to the Indians with as much hype
as Doby did; given that build up, his performance, however impressive
given his age, just wasn't what my mom had hoped for at the time.
She's really enjoyed seeing, in retrospect, the skill that led to
the hype.
Joe
|
183.166 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Tue Sep 27 1994 10:02 | 8 |
| Perhaps I'm going against the grain here, but I think that no way could
Paige carry Bob Gibson's jock.
Paige had some cute philosophies and stuff, and I never saw him pitch, but
as I kid I FEARED Bob Gibson....
'Saw
|
183.167 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 27 1994 10:28 | 24 |
| re: Cassablanca
Bogart also did say:
"You'll thank me someday. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but
someday, and for the rest of your life."
But my favorite Bogie line remains from "The Petrified Forest", when
Duke Mantee said:
"I've spent most of my life life on the run, and it looks like
I'll spend the rest of it dead".
re: Paige and Gibson
We never saw Paige at his best. There was no television in his
heyday. He was such a admirable sort, that I choose to beleive
that he was as good a pitcher as he was said to be.
Gibson, on the other hand, had a very visable career. To me he was
something of a dying breed. A ballplayer who was so totally focused
on winning that it consumed him on the field. Beign a Red Sox fan, of
course, I hated Gibson for leading the Cards over the Sox in 1967, but
in retrospect, I really wish there were a few more Bob Gibsons playing
today.
=Bob=
|
183.168 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:06 | 34 |
| >Bogart also did say:
>"You'll thank me someday. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but
> someday, and for the rest of your life."
Yeah, that's a GREAT movie.
>But my favorite Bogie line remains from "The Petrified Forest", when
>Duke Mantee said:
>"I've spent most of my life life on the run, and it looks like
>I'll spend the rest of it dead".
I've never seen that one.
I've also got to see the entire Key Largo. I've seen bits and pieces.
And of course The African Queen is stellar. The scene where he is
in the water, pulling the boat through the marsh is so powerful....
>Gibson, on the other hand, had a very visable career. To me he was
>something of a dying breed. A ballplayer who was so totally focused
>on winning that it consumed him on the field. Beign a Red Sox fan, of
>course, I hated Gibson for leading the Cards over the Sox in 1967, but
>in retrospect, I really wish there were a few more Bob Gibsons playing
>today.
Oh, I hated that in 67, no doubt. Bob Gibson broke my heart. But,
like you, in retrospect, I had the opportunity to see one of the greats
play the game....
'Saw
|
183.169 | Paige just went on and on and on... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:15 | 25 |
|
> It's interesting; I was talking to my mom about Satchel Paige on
> Sunday, and she was telling me what a disappointment it was to
> see him pitch as a rookie. He came to the Indians with as much hype
> as Doby did; given that build up, his performance, however impressive
> given his age, just wasn't what my mom had hoped for at the time.
Didn't Paige rip off a fairly impressive winning streak with a couple
of shutouts in the 1948 pennant drive? As I recall, it was Bob Feller
(who continues to sound ungracious about the talents of black players
of the era, as he did at the time) who had his lunch handed to him
in the World Series, with the supporting cast including Paige taking up
the slack to bring home the championship. Granted, Paige didn't pitch
at a stellar level for much longer after that, being over 40 years old.
I wouldn't downplay Paige's talents in a comparison with Bob Gibson's.
Paige pitched at a top-notch level for damn near 25 years, and white
America only saw the tail end, which wasn't too shabby even at that.
Gibson didn't break through to greatness until he was almost 30 and
had "only" about a 10-year period at the top. So it's really just an
impossible comparison, in more ways than just the opportunity to be
seen and appreciated.
glenn
|
183.170 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:34 | 23 |
|
> Didn't Paige rip off a fairly impressive winning streak with a couple
> of shutouts in the 1948 pennant drive?
I _thought_ he was used mostly in relief in '48; that's certainly how
my mom remembers him being used. She probably only saw him once or
twice, though...
> As I recall, it was Bob Feller
> (who continues to sound ungracious about the talents of black players
> of the era, as he did at the time) who had his lunch handed to him
> in the World Series, with the supporting cast including Paige taking up
> the slack to bring home the championship.
Yup. Feller's World Series numbers are not impressive.
> Granted, Paige didn't pitch
> at a stellar level for much longer after that, being over 40 years old.
Can you imagine Nolan Ryan first getting the chance to pitch in the
majors at 42, or however old Paige really was at the time?
Joe
|
183.171 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:43 | 8 |
| re: Feller
I noticed his attitude also. Then again, all I've heard out
of him in recent years is groussing about a variety of topics.
He acting like a bitter old man. Doesn't he do Indians games
on television?
=Bob=
|
183.172 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:45 | 8 |
|
re: Feller
> Doesn't he do Indians games on television?
No; never has that I can remember.
Joe
|
183.173 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Tue Sep 27 1994 11:48 | 5 |
| |> Doesn't he do Indians games on television?
| No; never has that I can remember.
Am I thinking of Herb Score?
|
183.174 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Sep 27 1994 12:09 | 4 |
|
Likely, yes. Score's done the radio games for years...
Joe
|
183.175 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Tue Sep 27 1994 12:47 | 1 |
| Satch is better on guitar than he is playing baseball!
|
183.176 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Tue Sep 27 1994 13:36 | 6 |
| >
> Satch is better on guitar than he is playing baseball!
>
But he was GREAT on trumpet too!
|
183.177 | 2000 WINS!!! | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Tue Sep 27 1994 14:31 | 7 |
| Satchel Paige estimated that he pitched ~2500 games and won
2000. And this was a league whose all stars typically beat
the major league all stars.
Sure they played a lot more games, but man, to win 2000 games!!!
Tony
|
183.178 | 1m $ arm .10 head | AIMTEC::MORABITO_P | Hotlanta Rocks | Wed Sep 28 1994 07:30 | 9 |
|
I met Feller at a convention last year. He was signing autographs while
dressed in his Indians uniform. He looked pretty ridiculous. I went up
to him and shook his hand and told him I had read about him and saw him
on ESPN. He just grumbled and asked if I want an autograph. I said no,
I just wanted to say hello, he just kind of blew me off. I mean, he wasn't
getting paid per autograph. What a d**k.
Paul
|
183.179 | Feller, Baseball | 25151::HOVEY | | Wed Sep 28 1994 11:21 | 5 |
|
I think that Feller was also one of the people who made racist comments
concerning Robinson when he came up. I'm sure it was in the 7th inning
segment of Baseball by Ken Burns when he mentioned some of the views
of white major league players.
|
183.180 | Plenty of impressive fact behind the legend... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 28 1994 15:03 | 30 |
|
>> Didn't Paige rip off a fairly impressive winning streak with a couple
>> of shutouts in the 1948 pennant drive?
>
> I _thought_ he was used mostly in relief in '48; that's certainly how
> my mom remembers him being used. She probably only saw him once or
> twice, though...
Okay, for the record, after turning 42 "officially" on July 7 (I'd
take that as a minimum; he would then have started pro ball in 1924
at 17, as it's doubtful that even Paige could have done so at 13,
based on the phony 1910 birthdate), Paige debuted in the majors on
July 9. He pitched in 21 games, started 7, hurled two shutouts and
finished the year with a 6-1 record and a 2.48 ERA. Considering
that the Indians won the pennant in the famous one-game playoff with
Boston, I'd say that it's likely Cleveland would not have won in
1948 without him. Pretty damned impressive for at least that first
year of 1948, I'd say.
As it was, Paige retired with a 3.29 career ERA pitching through the
age of 47 (not counting those 3 shutout innings he tossed against the
Red Sox in 1965 at the age of 59-- as I recall hearing it, Yaz got the
only hit, a single).
Paige once struck out 22 batters in an exhibition against major-leaguers
in 1932 (not a strikeout era). In his younger years, he was not the
crafty junkballer of his later days...
glenn
|
183.181 | For the record | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Fri Sep 30 1994 08:30 | 21 |
| Re last dozen or so:
Satchel Paige PAIGE, LEROY ROBERT
B. July 7, 1906, Mobile, Ala.
D. June 8, 1982, Kansas City, Mo.
Hall of Fame 1971.
W L ERA G GS CG IP H BB SO ShO
1948 CLE A 6 1 2.48 21 7 3 72.2 61 25 45 2
1949 4 7 3.04 31 5 1 83 70 33 54 0
1951 StL A 3 4 4.79 23 3 0 62 67 29 48 0
1952 12 10 3.07 46 6 3 138 116 57 91 2
1953 3 9 3.53 57 4 0 117.1 114 39 51 0
1965 KC A 0 0 0.00 1 1 0 3 1 0 1 0
-------------------------------------------------------------
6 yrs. 28 31 3.29 179 26 7 476 429 183 290 4
Doesn't EVERYBODY keep a copy of the Baseball Encyclopedia in
their office???
Steve
|
183.182 | The final 40 | SPIKED::SWEENEY | Tom Sweeney in OGO | Fri Sep 30 1994 09:26 | 50 |
| To offset SI's 40 most influential, inspirational and
innovative sports figures of the past 40 years,
one of their writers, Rick Reilly picked 40 for
the Dark Ages. This is for the 40 least
important figures over that period.
40 Renee Richards
39 Leroy Neiman
38 Gerry Faust
37 ESPN2
36 Rosie Ruiz
35 Quintin Dailey
34 Arazi
33 Victor Kiam
32 LaRue Martin (#1 NBA pick in '72 over Bob
McAdoo, Paul Westphal and Dr. J)
31 Ickey Woods
30 Rudy Martzke
29 Laura Baugh
28 Richard M. Nixon
27 Eddie the Eagle
26 The 3 "slobs" who got up and stretched at
a U of Washington game starting the 1st wave.
25 Jeff & Tonya Gillooly
24 Ken Burns
23 Alan Dershowitz
22 Frank Kush
21 The Stanford Band
20 Ted Stepien
19 Leon Lett
18 Mark Gastineau
17 Schottzie
16 Tony Mandarich
15 Morganna
14 John Ziegler
13 Rudy
12 Fan Man
11 Andre Ware
10 Mario Mendoza
9 Mitch (Blood) Green
8 Vince McMahon
7 Steve Howe
6 Phyllis George
5 Chuck Wepner
4 Bobby Riggs
3 Larry Brown
2 Marv Throneberry
1 Brian Bosworth
zamboni
|
183.183 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Fri Sep 30 1994 10:03 | 33 |
|
You know, this list is kinda fun...
> 38 Gerry Faust
Still coaching Akron, where the team has gone from OK to dreadful. Worst
team in the NCAA.
> 31 Ickey Woods
I wonder what Ickey's doing these days. It's weird, I was just thinking
about the Ickey Shuffle recently...
> 24 Ken Burns
At least he wasn't trying to be an important figure...
> 21 The Stanford Band
I always liked that moment. Someone in the band should have tackled him,
though. B^)
> 20 Ted Stepien
Ah, yes. The real mistake on the lake...
> 10 Mario Mendoza
Not really fair, since he did make a significant contribution to the
game, unlike others on the list.
Joe
|
183.184 | sacrilege | METSNY::francus | There is no joy in Mudville | Fri Sep 30 1994 10:48 | 4 |
| Hey, leave Marvelous Marv alone! :-)
The Crazy Met
|
183.185 | | 24661::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Fri Sep 30 1994 13:22 | 17 |
| I'd add the following to that list:
Chris Chelios
George Steinbrenner
The bozo who stabbed Seles
Donald Fuerh (sp?)
Fay Vincent
Bob Probert
St. John (3:16) :^)
Buster Douglas
Ralph Sampson
Jerry Tarkanian
Mark.
|
183.186 | add: | METSNY::francus | There is no joy in Mudville | Fri Sep 30 1994 13:26 | 4 |
| Gary Betteman
Bud Selig
The Crazy Met
|
183.187 | | TOOK::HALPIN | Jim Halpin | Fri Sep 30 1994 14:14 | 8 |
|
What did Laura Baugh do to get on this list? I haven't heard of her
in years????
JimH
|
183.188 | Perhaps the author should replace Laura with himself | 25022::BREEN | | Fri Sep 30 1994 14:43 | 10 |
|
> What did Laura Baugh do to get on this list? I haven't heard
> of her in years????
This is a tasteless pick in that she has fought a courageous battle
with cancer over the last several years.
I can't think of why she'd be picked other than in her younger days was
very attractive and a good golfer at the same time.
|
183.189 | thanks for the dinner | CNTROL::CHILDS | She was a TWO-Bagger | Fri Sep 30 1994 14:55 | 5 |
|
Maybe she treated the writer like Janey Pauley treated all they young
buck Studs at IU that T was tellin' us about..........
mike
|
183.190 | Laura | SPIKED::SWEENEY | Tom Sweeney in OGO | Fri Sep 30 1994 15:28 | 9 |
| re: Laura Baugh
According to the article: "Hundreds of endorsements. Zero LPGA wins."
Laura isn't the same one who passed away from cancer recently, at least
I don't think so....
zamboni
|
183.191 | Same one I'm afraid | 25022::BREEN | | Mon Oct 03 1994 10:30 | 4 |
| Yes, she is the same one. Yes, she probably did get a lot of
endorsements and dollars for her looks and personality. If the writer
wanted to compare a golfer with Shaquille O'Neil he should have tried
Jan Stevenson.
|
183.192 | Ickey's the man at Marge Used Cars.... | WLW::TURCOTTE | Well...I got my man | Mon Oct 03 1994 12:22 | 7 |
|
Ickey Woods is selling Cars in Cincinnati, he was on the news in the
preseason, for some tragedy or another.
HTH
Turk
|
183.193 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | QUIET--case study in progress | Mon Oct 03 1994 15:54 | 6 |
|
Heather Farr is the woman golfer who recently passed away. Laura Baugh
was known for her nice set of personalities that she always carried
with her on the golf course.
brews
|
183.194 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Mon Oct 03 1994 17:30 | 3 |
| Heather Farr's family is also having quite a time getting any medical
bills paid by her former employer - PING. They're in court over this
now.
|
183.195 | Don't tell me I mixed my heathers and baughs | 25022::BREEN | | Tue Oct 04 1994 15:23 | 1 |
|
|
183.196 | | CAMONE::WAY | Models caskets for D'Esopo's | Tue Oct 04 1994 15:39 | 13 |
| > -< Don't tell me I mixed my heathers and baughs >-
Just don't let it happen again. It's against all the horticultural
guidelines to do that.
If you mess up again, we'll have to confine you to the study of moss and
ferns for a while....
'Saw
|
183.197 | Yeh, I get a little mossy at times | 25022::BREEN | | Tue Oct 04 1994 16:40 | 10 |
| 'Saw,
While I have your attention and since these days, where you are is
as good a place as any...
Wasn't there a character in Travis McGee stories by ???(there it goes
again, a mind is a hell of a thing not to have anymore) named
Max Meyer
I noticed this is same, same name of one of our VPs
|
183.198 | SI TOP 40 list... | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Dawgs RULE, Pats SIP! | Wed Nov 16 1994 14:51 | 2 |
183.199 | ...left off... | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Dawgs RULE, Pats SIP! | Wed Nov 16 1994 14:52 | 1 |
183.200 | HAL | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Dawgs RULE, Pats SIP! | Wed Nov 16 1994 14:52 | 2 |
183.201 | Michael Jordan SI memorabilia autographed cover for sale. | XANADU::KMAC::moraros | | Wed Dec 07 1994 13:56 | 13 |
| Since this is the topic on SI. I thought I would put this in. If it needs
to be moved to another topic let me know.
I have the first SI cover that Micahel Jordan appeared on. It is framed and
autographed by him. It is an authenticated memorabilia and has a serial
number (there are only a few of these, I think 8 total.) I think this one is
#4. It comes in a nice memorabilia box.
It is worth $400, asking $350.
Contact: Xanadu::Moraros
It can be seen at ZKO.
|
183.202 | Sorry MAir but we can't afford it for you for Christmas | CNTROL::CHILDS | Theresa's Sound World | Wed Dec 07 1994 14:03 | 1 |
|
|
183.203 | something good but NOT this good | HBAHBA::HAAS | dingle lingo | Wed Dec 07 1994 14:27 | 4 |
| This is NOT, I repeat NOT, the prize for winning the soon to come Nexted
Annual Bowl Contest.
TTom
|
183.204 | did you spend it already??? | BSS::MENDEZ | | Wed Dec 07 1994 15:01 | 2 |
| Aw c'mon ttom...spend some of that gamlin' money
|
183.205 | less is less | HBAHBA::HAAS | dingle lingo | Wed Dec 07 1994 15:15 | 9 |
| Hey it all came in the mail just like its supposed to. I cashed 'em in,
quick.
I used some of it, though. Mike Heiser was so lavish in his praise of
Arizona State that I decided to make a small contribution.
Unfortunately, it wasn't tax deductible.
TTom
|
183.206 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Wed Dec 07 1994 16:47 | 1 |
| TTom, SPROTS Best Sports Investor!
|