I really have to put in a word for Johnny Blood. In his earlier years, he played a lot of tailback, but he did indeed play mostly wingback from 1930. However, in 1929, the Packers' first championship season, he led the team in rushing.Bob Gill wrote:TanksAndSpartans wrote:The 40s are tricky. During the war, the talent level took a hit and there were multiple rule changes regarding substitutions, so I definitely went heavier on the 20s and 30s to make sure I got true two-way players. I like Bulldog Turner though - I originally had Trafton, but replaced him.
I agree the lineman are tough. I was close on Slater, Link Lyman, Al Nesser - some tough cuts.
Love Father Lumpkin and “Two-Bits” Homan on the Willis team. To keep it at 22, I pretty much skipped the BB position. In the Spartans game film I saw, Lumpkin actually moved to FB when he carried the ball and lined up at BB to lead block for TB Clark or FB Cavosie so it could be dynamic. And with Baugh as the TB, Battles was technically a FB. So I could have called Nagurski and Hinkle BBs if I wanted to use the single-wing as my basis. What I wound up doing was a T formation lineup with 5 tailbacks. I called the two best passing tailbacks QBs and the other 3 HBs. I think the T is better to use as a basis - with the s-w, you would not only have to name a BB, but a WB too. I'm pretty sure none of the players mentioned played WB. Latone was a good WB and Ernie Caddel off the top of my head.
I'd guess that Blood played a good bit of wingback. For the most part he didn't seem to run the ball much, but he was a great receiver. That sounds like a wingback to me.
He scored touchdowns in every possible except on a fumble recovery. He rushed for TDs, caught TD passes, and scored TDs on punt, kickoff, and interception returns. I believe he's the only player ever to do that in NFL history.
When he retired, he was the career leader in interceptions with 32. That was the (unofficial) NFL record until 1949. He was also known as being a sure tackler as well as a ballhawk.
As someone else noted in this thread, he was one of six backs chosen for the HOF's inaugural class in 1963. Is there any reason to think he's no longer one of the top six from the one-platoon era?