BD Sullivan wrote:conace21 wrote:Rupert Patrick wrote:
Episodes I would like to see:
-George Halas, which is kind of an oversight that they haven't already covered him.
-Art Rooney, as he was from all accounts one of the finest gamblers in the country, but parlayed that success into buying a football team that were perpetual losers for 40 years. It wasn't until his son took over the reins of the franchise that their fortunes began to change.
I would like to see both of those, but the problem is finding people who actually knew them in their prime.
You could have actual football historians offer their insights, but then NFL Network seems to think radio talk show idiots qualify in that category.
A few nights ago, the NFL Network had a Top 10 marathon. One was the "Top 10 Heisman Winners in the NFL." This first ran in 2012. Since then, Tim Tebow has been dropped (he was Number 7), Cam Newton was moved from 10 to 7 and Tim Brown was installed at Number 10.
O.J. Simpson was Number 3. A "talk radio show idiot" opined: "O.J. never won anything. He never won a national championship in college did he? He never won anything in the NFL. He never won anything."
Well, anyone who knew football history (even slightly) knows O.J. Simpson's 1967 USC team was the college football national champion that year; a "Game of the Century" win over UCLA with O.J. making a 64 yard game winning TD run, and a Rose Bowl victory. Yet this clown blubbered "O.J. never won a national championship in college." And anyone versed in football history knows O.J. didn't play on a team that was a real Super Bowl contender: Three winning seasons (1973-75) one playoff year (1974). A game or two away from the playoffs the other two years.
A football historian would know O.J. Simpson never played on a team with a real chance for the Super Bowl. The 1975 Bills might have made it with a good defense, but they didn't have it.