I'm not really an advocate of NFL player memories. They are usually wrong. My favorite player memory is an NFL Films clip of Bob Lilly describing the 1972 divisional playoff comeback win over the Niners, with Lilly attributing the game-winning TD reception to Lee Folkins instead of Ron Sellers. Folkins was Lilly's teammate for 3 years...in the early 1960's. As Larry Cole once said, "Anybody can have an off-decade" or something like that.jeckle_and_heckle wrote:Fill up the page with as much minutia you want. It won’t distract from what Youngblood himself said about 1981-1982.
Glad to be ahead of crowd
Re: Glad to be ahead of crowd
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Re: Glad to be ahead of crowd
Relatedly, I'm not sold on fan's memories as valid for things like HoF cases. You know, the layman's argument sometimes seen of "I saw every game he played, and he looked like a HoFer to me," or "He didn't pass the smell test for me."Bryan wrote: I'm not really an advocate of NFL player memories. They are usually wrong. My favorite player memory is an NFL Films clip of Bob Lilly describing the 1972 divisional playoff comeback win over the Niners, with Lilly attributing the game-winning TD reception to Lee Folkins instead of Ron Sellers. Folkins was Lilly's teammate for 3 years...in the early 1960's. As Larry Cole once said, "Anybody can have an off-decade" or something like that.
Watching a game is not the same as film study. My understanding is that the latter requires real discernment skills and good knowledge of the game. When just watching a game, there's the following to consider:
-chances are good what's seen are what the skill position player with the ball and the tackler did -- and not much else.
-distractions are all over the place, both at the game and at home: hot cheerleaders, mugging mascots, folks you're watching the game with, munchies and going to get them, that fourth beer buzz (not to mention that jaunt to the bathroom later). Who's going to be seriously breaking down what the nose tackle or left guard are doing under those circumstances?
-most casual game watchers likely wouldn't know a blown assignment or splendid coverage if it bit them on the behind.
-if you're watching on TV, a decent amount of what's going on gets cut off. And if you've got anything less than a prime seat at the game, you're not going to see everything.
Re: Glad to be ahead of crowd
Everyone should be fact checked as memories do fade. My favorite is when people are adamant about a point of fact that can be disproven, Ray Didinger claiming that Willey had a dozen or so facts and that the newspaper printed it the next day, well I've read the paper he mentions and it most certainly doesn't.bachslunch wrote:Relatedly, I'm not sold on fan's memories as valid for things like HoF cases. You know, the layman's argument sometimes seen of "I saw every game he played, and he looked like a HoFer to me," or "He didn't pass the smell test for me."Bryan wrote: I'm not really an advocate of NFL player memories. They are usually wrong. My favorite player memory is an NFL Films clip of Bob Lilly describing the 1972 divisional playoff comeback win over the Niners, with Lilly attributing the game-winning TD reception to Lee Folkins instead of Ron Sellers. Folkins was Lilly's teammate for 3 years...in the early 1960's. As Larry Cole once said, "Anybody can have an off-decade" or something like that.
Watching a game is not the same as film study. My understanding is that the latter requires real discernment skills and good knowledge of the game. When just watching a game, there's the following to consider:
-chances are good what's seen are what the skill position player with the ball and the tackler did -- and not much else.
-distractions are all over the place, both at the game and at home: hot cheerleaders, mugging mascots, folks you're watching the game with, munchies and going to get them, that fourth beer buzz (not to mention that jaunt to the bathroom later). Who's going to be seriously breaking down what the nose tackle or left guard are doing under those circumstances?
-most casual game watchers likely wouldn't know a blown assignment or splendid coverage if it bit them on the behind.
-if you're watching on TV, a decent amount of what's going on gets cut off. And if you've got anything less than a prime seat at the game, you're not going to see everything.
But back to the beginning, memories fade, I struggle more with affirmative claims that something happened that didn't, that requires that at some point the person making the claim is either making a leap or expressly lying. Forgetting something that did happen strikes me as a more natural human condition, I lose my keys all three time!
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Re: Glad to be ahead of crowd
I recall Galen Fiss reflecting on the Browns 1964 title upset of the Colts by saying that they entered the game "as 24-point underdogs." More like seven.NWebster wrote:But back to the beginning, memories fade, I struggle more with affirmative claims that something happened that didn't, that requires that at some point the person making the claim is either making a leap or expressly lying. Forgetting something that did happen strikes me as a more natural human condition, I lose my keys all three time!