Showing posts with label pro football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pro football. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2025

NFL Draft 2025

1. Tennessee - Cameron Ward, QB, Miami
2. Jacksonville trades fifth pick to Cleveland and selects - Travis Hunter, WR/DB, Colorado
3. New York Giants - Abdul Carter, Edge, Penn State
4. New England - Will Campbell, OT, LSU
5. Cleveland - Mason Graham, DT, Michigan
6. Las Vegas - Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State
7. New York Jets - Armand Membou, OT, Missouri
8. Carolina - Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona
9. New Orleans - Kelvin Banks Jr., OT, Texas
10. Chicago - Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan
11. San Francisco - Mykel Williams, DE, Georgia
12. Dallas - Tyler Booker, G, Alabama
13. Miami - Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan
14. Indianapolis - Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State
15. Atlanta - Jalon Walker, LB, Georgia
16. Arizona - Walter Nolen, DT, Ole Miss
17. Cincinnati - Shemar Stewart, Edge, Texas A&M
18. Seattle - Grey Zabel, G, North Dakota State
19. Tampa Bay - Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State
20. Denver - Jahdae Barron, CB, Texas
21. Pittsburgh - Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon
22. Los Angeles Chargers - Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina
23. Green Bay - Matthew Golden, WR, Texas
24. Minnesota - Donovan Jackson, G, Ohio State
25. New York Giants (from Houston) - Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss
26. Atlanta (from Los Angeles) - James Pearce, Jr. Tennessee
27. Baltimore - Malaki Starks, S, Georgia
28. Detroit - Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State
29. Washington - Josh Conerly Jr, OT, Oregon
30. Buffalo - Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky
31. Philadelphia (from Kansas City) - Jihaad Campbell, LB, Alabama
32. Kansas City (from Philadelphia) - Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State



Mock drafts had him going 21 Pittsburgh (Iyer: Sporting News), 21 Pittsburgh (Schrager: ESPN), undrafted (McShay: The Ringer), 21 Pittsburgh (Brooks: NFL.com), undrafted (Simms: NBC Sports), 21 Pittsburgh (Brugler: The Athletic), 9 New Orleans (Kiper and Yates: ESPN), 21 Pittsburgh (Jeremiah: NFL Network), 21 Cleveland (via Washington) (Yates: ESPN)

Dillon Gabriel scouting report

Dillon Gabriel taken in the third round by Cleveland

Cleveland takes Shedeur Sanders in the fifth round despite having taken Gabriel in the third round

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

NFL 2025

6/6/25 - Aaron Rodgers finally decides on Steelers
1/22/25 - Jets hire Aaron Glenn as head coach
1/21/25 - Bears hire Ben Johnson as head coach
1/7/25 - Raiders fire Antonio Pierce
1/6/25 - Patriots fire Jerod Mayo after 1 season as head coach

Friday, December 27, 2024

R.I.P. 2024

12/27/24 - Greg Gumbel
12/20/24 - Ricky Henderson
12/11/24 - Rocky Colavito
12/6/24 - Bill Melton
12/1/24 - Lou Carnesecca
11/25/24 - Rico Carty
11/19/24 - Bob Love
11/12/24 - Gerry Faust
11/11/24 - John Robinson
11/3/24 - Dub Jones
10/8/24 - Luis Tiant
10/5/24 - Greg Landry
10/4/24 - Billy Shaw
9/30/24 - Pete Rose
9/30/24 - Dikembe Mutombo
9/21/24 - Mercury Morris
8/21/24 - Al Attles
8/10/24 - Kevin Sullivan
8/7/24 - Duane Thomas
6/28/24 - Orlando Cepeda
6/25/24 - Sika Anoa'i
6/18/24 - Willie Mays 
6/12/24 - Jerry West
6/9/24 - Frank Arnold
6/9/24 - Chet Walker
6/3/24 - Larry Allen
5/29/24 - Kent Kafentzis
5/27/24 - Bill Walton
5/20/24 - Jim Otto
4/20/24 - Roman Gabriel
4/16/24 - Whitey Herzog
4/11/24 - OJ Simpson (Reardon)
4/11/24 - Chad Rowan (Akebono)
3/26/24 - Jim Loomis
2/26/24 - Golden Richards

Friday, November 29, 2024

NFL 2024

11/29/24 - Chicago fires Matt Eberflus after sixth straight loss
11/22/24 - Giants release Daniel Jones
11/4/24 - Saints fire Dennis Allen after seventh straight loss
10/8/24 - Jets fire Robert Saleh / Jeff Ulbrich will be interim head coach
9/26/24 - Doctor says Tua has high susceptibility to additional concussions
8/22/24 - Cowherd predicts the NFL standings
7/27/24 - Jordan Love signs $220 million, 4-year extension
7/26/24 - Tua agrees to $212.4 million, 4-year extension
6/3/24 - Justin Jeffersion signs 4 year, $140 million extension

20. Pittsburgh - Troy Fautanu, G, Washington
19. Los Angeles Rams - Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State
18. Cincinnati - Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
17. Minnesota - Dallas Turner, LB, Alabama
Minnesota trades up for Jacksonville's pick
16. Seattle - Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas
15. Indianapolis - Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA
14. New Orleans - Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State
13. Raiders - Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia
12. Denver - Bo Nix, QB, Oregon
11. New York Jets - Olumuyiwa Fashanu, OT, Penn State
10. Minnesota - J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
Minnesota trades for the Jets first round pick
9. Chicago - Rome Odunze, WR, Washington
8.  Atlanta - Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington
7. Tennessee - JC Latham, OT, Alabama
6. New York Giants - Malik Nabers, WR, LSU
5. Chargers - Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame
4. Arizona - Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State
3. New England - Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina
2. Washington - Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU
1. Chicago - Caleb Williams, QB, USC 

4/3/24 - Buffalo trades Stefon Diggs to Houston for 2024 sixth round pick, 2025 second round pick, 2025 fifth round pick 
3/26/24 - NFL overhauls kickoff rules
3/16/24 - Pittsburgh acquire Justin Fields from Chicago for sixth round pick
3/16/24 - Rams sign Garoppolo to back up Stafford
3/15/24 - Aaron Donald announces retirement after ten seasons
3/14/24 - Chargers trade Keenan Allen to Chicago for fourth round pick
3/13/24 - Calvin Ridley signs with Tennessee for four years, $92 million
3/13/24 - Raiders release Garoppolo
3/12/24 - Mariota headed to Washington on one-year deal
3/12/24 - Derrick Henry to sign with Baltimore for two years, $16 million
3/11/24 - Saquon Barkley agrees to terms with Philadelphia for three years, up to $46.75 million
3/11/24 - Kirk Cousins leaving Minnesota for Atlanta for $180 million, four years
3/5/24 - Denver to part with Russell Wilson
2/1/24 - Commanders hire Dan Quinn as head coach
1/31/24 - Seattle hire Mike Macdonald as head coach 
1/26/24 - Falcons hire Raheem Morris as head coach
1/25/24 - Carolina hires Dave Canales as head coach 
1/24/24 - Chargers hire Jim Harbraugh as head coach
1/24/24 - Titans hire Brian Callahan as head coach
1/29/24 - Las Vegas to promote Antonio Pierce to head coach
1/12/24 - Patriots name Jerod Mayo to succeed Belichick
1/11/24 - Belichick out as Patriots head coach after winning six Super Bowls
1/10/24 - Pete Carroll out as Seahawks head coach after 14 seasons

Monday, January 08, 2024

NFL 2023

1/11/24 - Belichick leaving New England after 24 seasons
1/10/24 - Seattle moves on from Pete Carroll as head coach after 14 seasons
1/8/24 - Washington fires Ron Rivera after four seasons
1/7/24 - Atlanta fires Arthur Smith
12/15/23 - Chargers fire Brandon Staley
11/27/23 - Carolina fires Frank Reich in first season
11/1/23 - Raiders fire head coach Josh McDaniels and general manager David Ziegler
10/31/23 - Washington trades Chase Young to 49ers for third round pick / more trades
9/7/23 - Joe Burrow becomes NFL's highest paid player after signing $275 million, five year contract extension
9/6/23 - Nick Bosa signs five-year, $170 million extension to become highest paid NFL defensive player in history
8/25/23 - 49ers trade Trey Lance to Cowboys for fourth round pick
5/26/23 - Cardinals release DeAndre Hopkins
4/27/23 - Bryce Young, CJ Stroud, Will Anderson Jr., Anthony Richardson top NFL Draft
4/27/23 - Lamar Jackson signs 5-year $260 million contract with Ravens
4/24/23 - Packers trade Aaron Rodgers, first round pick (15th overall), fifth round pick to Jets for first round pick (13th overall), second round pick, sixth round pick and conditional 2024 second round or first round pick (if Rodgers plays 65% of snaps this year).
4/18/23 - Jalen Hurts signs 5-year, $255 million extension
3/17/23 - Mariota signs with Eagles for $8 million, 1 year
3/15/23 - Rams trade Jalen Ramsey to Dolphins for third round pick and Hunter Long
3/14/23 - Falcons signing Taylor Heinecke for 2 years, up to $20 million
3/14/23 - Raiders trade Darren Waller to Giants for third round pick
3/14/23 - Garoppolo to sign with Raiders for three years, up to $67.5 million
3/7/23 - Daniel Jones re-signs with Giants for four years, $160 million
3/6/23 - Derek Carr agrees to 4-year contract with New Orleans
2/28/23 - Falcons cut Marcus Mariota
2/17/23 - Eric Bieniemy leaves Kansas City to become OC / assistant head coach for Washington
2/14/23 - Arizona hires Philadelphia DC Jonathan Gannon as head coach
2/14/23 - Colts hire Philadelphia OC Shane Steichen as head coach
2/1/23 - Tom Brady says he is retiring for good
1/31/23 - Broncos and Saints agree to trade to make Sean Payton Denver's head coach 
1/31/23 - Houston hires 49ers defensive coordinator DeMeco Ryans as new head coach
1/26/23 - Carolina hires Frank Reich as head coach

Friday, May 19, 2023

Jim Brown

Jim Brown, one of the greatest professional and college football players of all time, has died. He was 87.

His wife, Monique, announced Brown's death in an Instagram post Friday afternoon. She said Brown "passed peacefully" Thursday night in their home in Los Angeles.

"To the world he was an activist, actor, and football star," the post read. "To our family he was a loving and wonderful husband, father, and grandfather. Our hearts are broken..."

In 2020, Brown was selected to the NFL 100 all-time team and also was ranked as the No. 1 all-time player on the College Football 150 list to celebrate those sports' anniversaries. He was named the greatest football player ever by the Sporting News in 2002.

Brown, who was selected in the first round of the 1957 draft, played nine seasons for the Cleveland Browns (1957-65) and led the league in rushing eight of those years. He rushed for 12,312 yards and held a 5.2 yards per carry average over his career. He also was named a Pro Bowler every year he played. He led the Browns to the league championship game three times, winning the title in 1964, and was named MVP three times.

He ran for at least 100 yards in 58 of his 118 regular-season games, never missing a game. He rushed for more than 1,000 yards in seven seasons, including 1,527 yards in one 12-game season and 1,863 in a 14-game season.

"It's impossible to describe the profound love and and gratitude we feel for having the opportunity to be a small piece of Jim's incredible life and legacy," the Browns said in a statement. "We mourn his passing, but celebrate the indelible light he brought to the world.

"Our hearts are with Jim's family, loved ones, and all those he impacted along the way."

Brown retired at 30, at the top of his career. He was filming the movie "The Dirty Dozen" during the offseason in 1966, and production went long because of bad weather. Browns owner Art Modell threatened to suspend Brown's pay if he didn't report to training camp on time. Brown opted to retire, saying he wanted to focus on his movie career and social issues.

Since his retirement, no Browns player has worn his No. 32 and a statue of him went up outside of FirstEnergy Stadium in 2016.

Thursday, January 19, 2023

2022 NFL

1/19/23 - Tampa Bay fires offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich
1/9/23 - Texans fire Lovie Smith after one season (3-13-1)
1/9/23 - Kliff Kingsbury fired by Arizona after going 4-13
12/27/22 - Denver fires Nathaniel Hackett after going 4-11
12/7/22 - Rams claim Mayfield
12/5/22 - Carolina waives Baker Mayfield
11/7/22 - Colts fire Frank Reich and name Jeff Saturday as interim head coach
11/1/22 - Trade deadline deals include Bradley Chubb to Dolphins, Chase Claypool to Bears, TJ Hockenson to Vikings, Roquan Smith to Baltimore, Calvin Ridley to Jaguars, 
10/20/22 - Carolina trades Christian McCaffrey to San Francisco for second-round, third-round, fourth-round, and fifth-round draft picks
10/10/22 - Matt Ruhle fired as Carolina head coach
9/27/22 - Pro Bowl to go flag football
8/18/22 - Deshaun Watson suspension extended to 11 games
8/1/22 - Deebo Samuel signs three-year $73.5 million extension
8/1/22 - Deshaun Watson suspended six games
6/21/22 - Gronkowski retiring again
3/30/22 - Bruce Arians unexpectedly retires as head coach of Tampa Bay and will move to front office
3/29/22 - NFL changes playoff overtime rules
3/23/22 - Tyreek Hill reportedly traded to Dolphins for first round pick and more, gets four-year extension worth $120 million
3/23/22 - Al Michaels joins Amazon for Thursday Night Football / Mike Tirico to team with Chris Collinsworth for Sunday Night Football / ESPN poaches Buck and Aikman from Fox
3/21/22 - Falcons trade Matt Ryan to Indianapolis for third round pick, sign Mariota for two years, $18.75 million
3/18/22 - Houston to trade Deshaun Watson to Cleveland for three first round picks and a third rounder
3/18/22 - Davante Adams traded by Packers to Raiders for first and second round picks, agrees to sign for five years, $141.25 million
3/15/22 - Aaron Rodgers to remain with Packers for $151 million
3/12/22 - Dallas trades Amari Cooper to Cleveland for fifth and sixth round picks
3/11/22 - Chicago to trade Khalil Mack to Chargers for second-round pick and 2023 sixth-round pick
3/9/22 - Indianapolis reportedly trades Carson Wentz to Washington for draft picks
3/8/22 - Seattle to trade Russell Wilson and fourth round pick to Denver for two first round picks, two second round picks, fifth round pick, Drew Lock, Noah Fant, and Shelby Harris
2/6/22 - Miami hires Mike McDaniel as head coach
2/2/22 - Washington Football Team is now the Washington Commanders
1/31/22 - Josh McDaniels named head coach of Raiders
1/29/22 - Tom Brady to retire (according to sources)
1/27/22 - Bears name Matt Eberflus (Colts defensive coordinator) as head coach
1/27/22 - Ben Roethlisberger retires after 18 season with the Steelers
1/24/22 - Sean Payton announces retirement

Thursday, May 20, 2021

2021 NFL

5/20/21 - Tebow signs with Jacksonville as a tight end
3/30/21 - NFL expanding regular season to 17 games
3/14/21 - Drew Brees retires after 20 seasons
3/8/21 - Dak Prescott signs $160 million, 4 year extension
3/1/21 - J.J. Watt to sign with Arizona
2/18/21 - Colts acquire Carson Wentz from Philadelphia for third round pick and conditional 2022 second round pick (that could turn into a first round pick)
2/12/21 - J.J. Watt released by Houston
1/30/21 - Matthew Stafford traded from Lions to Rams for Jared Goff, 2021 third round, 2022 first round, 2023 first round
1/28/21 - Eric Bieniemy shut out again
1/28/21 - Houston hires David Culley as head coach
1/21/21 - Eagles hire Nick Sirianni as head coach
1/20/21 - Detroit hires Dan Campbell as head coach
1/17/21 - Chargers hire Brandon Staley as head coach
1/15/21 - Falcons hire Arthur Smith as head coach
1/14/21 - Jets hire Robert Saleh as head coach
1/14/21 - Urban Meyer agrees to coach Jacksonville

Monday, January 11, 2021

NFL 2020

1/11/21 - Eagles fire Doug Pederson three seasons after winning Super Bowl
1/7/21 - Chan Gailey resigns as Miami offensive coordinator
1/4/21 - Jacksonville fires Doug Marrone after 1-15 season
1/4/21 - Chargers fire Anthony Lynn after four seasons
1/4/21 - Jets fire Adam Gase after two seasons
10/26/20 - NFL fines Titans for COVID-19 violations
10/11/20 - Atlanta fires Dan Quinn and GM Thomas Dimitroff
10/6/20 - Houston fires Bill O'Brien
9/13/20 - NFL displays their stance on social injustice
9/5/20 - Deshaun Watson agrees to 4 year $160 million contract exension
8/17/20 - Washington hires Jason Wright as NFL's first black team president
7/29/20 - Joey Bosa signs 5 year $135 million extension
7/23/20 - Washington to be called Washington Football Team
7/22/20 - NFL cancels preseason games
7/7/20 - Mahomes signs 10-year contract extension worth a record $503 million
6/28/20 - New England signs Cam Newton for the minimum
5/22/20 - Flacco signing with Jets
5/2/20 - Andy Dalton agrees to sign with Dallas
4/30/20 - Bengals releasing Andy Dalton
4/26/20 - Jameis Winston to sign with Saints
4/21/20 - New England to trade Gronkowski to Tampa Bay for fourth round pick
4/8/20 - Tom Brady interview with Howard Stern
3/24/20 - Carolina releases Cam Newton after getting no trade takers
3/20/20 - Todd Gurley signs with Atlanta
3/19/20 - Rams release Todd Gurley [exiting with at least 34.5 million for two years]
3/17/20 - Tom Brady reportedly will sign with Tampa Bay for $30 million per season
3/17/20 - Philip Rivers signs with Colts for one year, $25 million
3/17/20 - Carolina will sign Teddy Bridewater for three years, $63 million to replace Cam Newton
3/17/20 - Tom Brady won't return to Patriots
3/17/20 - Drew Brees to stay with Saints for $50 million, two years
3/16/20 - DeForest Buckner traded from San Francisco to Buffalo for first round pick (13th overall)
3/16/20 - Marcus Mariota headed to the Las Vegas Raiders
3/16/20 - Houston trades DeAndre Hopkins to Arizona for David Johnson and second-round pick in 2020 and fourth-round pick in 2021.
3/16/20 - Amari Cooper staying in Dallas for five years, $100 million
3/16/20 - Stefon Diggs (and a seventh round pick) traded from Minnesota to Buffalo for first-round, fifth-round, sixth-round pick, plus fourth-round pick in 2021.
1/22/20 - Eli Manning announces retirement
1/17/20 - Giants hire Jason Garrett as offensive coordinator
1/14/20 - Luke Kuechly retires at 28
1/12/20 - Cleveland hires Minnesota offensive coordinator Kevin Stefanski as head coach
1/7/20 - Giants to hire Patriots wide receiver coach Joe Judge as next head coach
1/7/20 - Carolina to hire Baylor's Matt Ruhl as new head coach
1/6/20 - Cowboys to hire Mike McCarthy to replace Jason Garrett
1/2/20 - Redskins hire Ron Rivera as new head coach, Jack Del Rio as defensive coordinator
12/29/19 - Cleveland fires Freddie Kitchens after one season

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Johnny Manziel will be back

Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel will reportedly soon be "Johnny Football" once again in a new startup league.

Manziel, 28, told ESPN he's agreed to join Fan Controlled Football, which is scheduled to begin play in February. The new league will reportedly have 7-on-7 games in which fans set rosters, call plays and interact in varying other ways.

"The more I heard about what this was going to be, the more I felt it was going to be something that was just very fun," Manziel said. "It's going to be very fan-oriented and something I could get behind without being extremely, extremely, extremely serious, the way that my football career has been in the past."

The former first-round draft pick said he connected with FCF co-founder and CEO Sohrob Farudi through a mutual friend, comedian Bob Menery, to discuss joining the league. Manziel hasn't played football since 2019, when he appeared in the now-defunct Alliance of American Football league for the Memphis Express.

The former Texas A&M standout had previously appeared in the Canadian Football League as a member of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Montreal Aloutettes, as well as The Spring League, following a disappointing NFL tenure that only lasted two seasons.

Manziel was selected No. 22 overall by the Cleveland Browns in the 2014 NFL Draft after a decorated collegiate career. However, multiple off-field incidents coincided with lackluster play and the Browns released the quarterback in 2016.

Manziel had previously told TMZ in September that he was retired from playing football, but wouldn't completely rule out his options when asked if he planned on joining the XFL after it was purchased by Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson and a team of business partners.

"I think football is a little bit behind me…Football for me is not at the forefront of my mind," Manziel said. "Listen, anything ‘The Rock’ touches is gonna be gold as always."

FCF will begin with four teams, each of which currently have celebrity owners including current NFL stars Richard Sherman, Austin Ekeler and retired legend Marshawn Lynch, as well as Migos rapper Quavo and boxing legend Mike Tyson.

Monday, August 17, 2020

Canadian Football League cancels season

The Canadian Football League announced the cancellation of its 2020 season amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The nine-team league said on Monday that it will focus on resuming in 2021 after its hopes to play a shortened season in the hub city of Winnipeg this fall were dashed.

"Our league governors decided today it is in the best long-term interests of the CFL to concentrate on the future," commissioner Randy Ambrosie said in a statement.

"We are absolutely committed to 2021, to the future of our league and the pursuit of our vision of a bigger, stronger, more global CFL."

The decision marks the first time the Grey Cup won't be presented since 1919.

Monday, August 03, 2020

the new XFL

[8/3/20] The Rock is part of group to buy XFL

***

When the XFL debuts in February, it will take a "Star Trek" approach of going where no football league has gone before.

The eight-team league will have options for extra points worth one, two or three points. It will allow double forward passes behind the line of scrimmage.

Kickoffs will look way different, in the name of both safety and excitement. Overtime will look like the NHL's version of settling matters with a "shootout.'' No coin tosses here, with each team getting up to five shots to score from the 5-yard line — similar to World Cup soccer shootouts.

Is it a catch at the sideline? Well, the officiating calls might be easier because the XFL will use the college rule of receivers needing only one foot in bounds rather than the NFL's two-feet rule.

Speaking of officiating, there will be a dedicated ball spotter to ensure a faster tempo that comes with a 25-second play clock. A running clock, too, except in the final two minutes of each half. All replay reviews will be initiated by an officiating booth, with no coaches challenges.

To XFL Commissioner Oliver Luck, a former NFL quarterback and longtime football executive, a speedier game means a more entertaining one.

"From research we had done, fans think there's too much downtime and dead time. I suppose games have gotten longer," Luck says. "We wanted to take a step forward by going back to games under three hours based on all our fan research. More action and more plays speed it up.

"Our data analysts looked at hundreds of games. This makes sense from a flow perspective, TV perspective and fan perspective. And I am looking forward to as we launch, will our players be required to be in better shape? They'll be moving fast and playing with tempo. That is going to be neat; conditioning may play more of a role in our game."

The XFL kicks off on Feb. 8, the weekend after the Super Bowl, seeking more success than its predecessor in 2001 (one season) and last year's Alliance of American Football (less than a season). Its innovations could be a turn-on for fans who never tire of football. Or they could come off as gimmicks, though the XFL mantra is "no gimmicks — ever."

Luck and Fox analyst Dean Blandino, the former head of NFL officiating now overseeing XFL officiating, believe these and other changes are worth a try.

Such as the double forward pass.

"My thought as I watch the game develop, there are more quarterbacks out of the shotgun and already 6 yards back from the line," Luck explains. "You aren't wanting to throw a lateral to a receiver who would have to be 7 yards or more behind the line of scrimmage. I thought to myself that the traditional trick plays would be enhanced. ... We are excited to have that in the repertoire."

The one-foot-in-bounds completions should ease the strain on pass catchers — and officials.

"When you look at the college rule versus the NFL," Blandino says, "it definitely is still a skilled play, but an easier play. But I will say there will be less replay reviews; it's easier to officiate looking for that one body part. I see less controversy in terms of catch/no catch."

Adds Luck: "As we went through this process, we had to keep in mind that players in our league will have played in college, and a vast majority spent time in the NFL, some in the CFL. We had to be somewhat selective in terms of innovations to adopt. They need to be teachable to our players to play fast. We have had our coaches working with the players on all these innovations to make sure they don't black out and think they are in a different league or back in college."

Luck and Blandino also note that the one-foot catch is safer because the receiver is not dragging his second foot, so he can roll to the ground in a true football fall.

Where fans (and bettors and fantasy players — yes, the XFL is likely to have those, too) might be most intrigued is after touchdowns are scored. There will be no PAT kicks in the XFL. Rather, a scoring team can go for one point from the 2-yard line, two points from the 5 or three points from 10.

Yep, a nine-point lead can be a one-possession game.

"I think it brings strategy into a play that historically has been a simple decision," Luck says. "Even with the NFL moving the extra point kick further away, it's still a 93.6% success rate. A fait accompli.

"We think the tiered extra point brings an element of strategy that will be fascinating to watch. Potential points on the board are exciting plays and will add an exciting element to our game.

"One coach said he is thinking if his team scores on defense it is such a shift in momentum, and he would use those opportunities to go for three, even if in the first quarter."

Are all of the XFL’s changes going to be an enticement for fans? Luck, Blandino and company will begin finding out in a month.

*** [2/5/20] ***

It was a professional football league that lasted for one season 19 years ago, but memories of the XFL are surprisingly vivid for fans over 30: He Hate Me, Jesse Ventura, no fair catches, the Memphis Maniax.

So when the XFL returns this weekend with a new eight-team league, again owned by Vince McMahon of World Wrestling Entertainment, can fans expect more of the same?

The answer, said Commissioner Oliver Luck, is no. “Aside from the name, there is nothing in common that we will have with the league in 2001,” he said.

Rather than razzle-dazzle or ratings-grabbing stunts, “we are focusing 100 percent on the quality of play,” he said.

The old XFL celebrated its edginess, even promising glimpses into the cheerleaders’ locker rooms.
“We are gimmick-free,” the new league president, Jeffrey Pollack, said. “And we don’t even have cheerleaders.”

The league has landed every one of its games on television, on ABC, ESPN, Fox and FS1 and 2, as well as on Spanish-language stations. And the newfound mellowness extends to its announcers. While broadcasts in 2001 featured the colorful likes of Ventura, Brian Bosworth and Jerry (the King) Lawler, the lead play-by-play man for XFL 2020 will be a reliable pro, Steve Levy.

Even the most memorable aspect of the old league has been scrapped. Players’ jerseys will have plain old last names, rather than nicknames like He Hate Me (Rod Smart) and Death Blow (Jamal Duff).

The team nicknames have similarly been tempered, with extreme names like, well, the Los Angeles Xtreme and the Maniax (which drew the ire of some mental health advocates) giving way to the more conventional Dallas Renegades and Los Angeles Wildcats.

Pollack acknowledged that despite the XFL abandoning many of its former distinctive features, the old league does buy some good will for the new. “We’re launching a 100-year brand that also has 20 years of equity built in.”

To the extent that the new league is pushing the football envelope, it comes in several unusual rules innovations.

For one, kickoffs will be dramatically different in the new XFL. The kicker will boot the ball from his own 25-yard line, but he will be a lonely figure. His 10 teammates will be lined up 40 yards away at the opposing team’s 35. The returning team will be at its 30. Only once the ball is caught by the returner will players on either side be allowed to move. “It’s effectively a play from scrimmage,” Luck said.

The league has been testing the new kickoff and expects to see more kickoff run backs, exciting plays that have been dying out in football, but without the injuries that are often caused by large men colliding after a 35- to 40-yard sprint.

(This concern for safety is another departure from the original XFL, which billed itself as manly football: It did not allow fair catches, for example. The new league emphasizes that it sought good football players who were also of good character.)

The league has also added a strategic decision that may prove intriguing. After a touchdown, teams cannot kick an extra point. They can go for a single point with a play from scrimmage at the 2-yard line, or go for 2 points from the 5-yard line. They can even go for 3 with a play from the 10. Effectively, the rule makes a 9-point game a one-score game.

Should a game go to overtime, it will end with a contest that operates much like a soccer or hockey shootout. Each team will get five tries to score from the 5-yard line. Whichever team scores more times wins the game. “Let’s have the position players decide overtime,” Luck said.

The league said it wanted to avoid one team getting the ball, scoring and immediately ending the game. But at the same time, it wanted an overtime that would wrap up in seven or eight minutes.

The league, which will play a 10-week season followed by a four-team playoff ending in late April, has opted for big stadiums for its games, including CenturyLink Field, home of the Seattle Seahawks; Raymond James Stadium, home of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers; and MetLife Stadium, where the Giants and Jets play.

Despite the danger of having some empty seats, Pollack said: “We’re playing in eight cities that have a love of football. We want to be in big markets with world-class venues.”

Because of the N.F.L., of course, world-class names are in much shorter supply. Hard-core fans might recognize quarterbacks like Landry Jones (Dallas Renegades), Matt McGloin (New York Guardians) and Cardale Jones (D.C. Defenders). But other unemployed players who might have joined the league, fancifully or not, like Johnny Manziel, Colin Kaepernick, Chad Johnson and Tim Tebow, are absent.

Star power was not a major consideration, the league said. “Our goal was to get the best players who want to play in our league,” Luck said. “We think we’ve got the best 400 or so players that aren’t under contract elsewhere.”

Unlike the N.F.L., the new league will allow its broadcaster to talk about point spreads. “A lot of fans enjoy gaming, playing fantasy, placing legal bets,” Pollack said. “We want to support all of that activity. We see it as a way of increasing fan engagement.”

Though none of the teams have played a game, bookmakers already have opinions. In three of the four opening games, the home team is favored, as might be expected. The exception is the New York team, which is a 2½-point underdog at home to the Tampa Bay Vipers. Perhaps some mojo from the recent-vintage Jets and Giants is rubbing off.

Numerous other professional leagues have been started and have failed in recent years (all were men’s leagues; women do play football, but a high-profile investment in a women’s league is still awaited). Why does the new XFL think it will be different?

Pollack spoke of a “100-year brand,” but will the league even surpass the United Football League (four seasons), the Fall Experimental Football League (two seasons) or the Alliance of American Football (less than a season, just last year)?

Luck said it would, because “the caliber of play is better than any previous league.” Pollack cited two years of research and development, every game being on TV and “ownership that is dedicated to long-term brand building.”

But he admitted the league was taking nothing for granted: “It’s going to take time to build the XFL. Fandom is earned, not given.”

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Washington Redskins retiring name and logo

[7/13/20] The Washington Redskins are retiring their name and logo after years of criticism that it is offensive to Native Americans. Last week, the team announced they were conducting a "thorough review" of the name after FedEx, which owns the naming rights to their stadium, asked them to change it.

"That review has begun in earnest," the team said in a statement on Monday (July 13). "As part of this process, we want to keep our sponsors, fans and community apprised of our thinking as we go forward. Today, we are announcing we will be retiring the Redskins name and logo upon completion of this review."

The team had been facing mounting pressure to change their name. In addition to the request from FedEx, 87 investors and shareholders wrote a letter to FedEx, PepsiCo, and Nike, asking them to cut ties with the organization. Nike responded by pulling the team's merchandise from their online store. Amazon, Target, Walmart, and other retailers followed suit.

The team did not announce what their new name or logo will be.

"[Owner] Dan Snyder and Coach [Ron] Rivera are working closely to develop a new name and design approach that will enhance the standing of our proud, tradition rich franchise and inspire our sponsors, fans and community for the next 100 years."

According to ESPN, the team will keep the red and gold color scheme but will not use any Native American iconography when designing their new logo. Instead, they are looking at ways to incorporate the military into their new name.

***

[7/23/20] The franchise announced Thursday that it has decided to call itself the "Washington Football Team" throughout the upcoming season as it continues to finalize a replacement name and logo for "Redskins," which will be formally retired once the games begin.

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

NFL's greatest running backs

This ad/article rates the NFL's greatest running backs of all time.

30. Marion Motley
29. Tiki Barber
28. Chris Johnson
27. Jamal Lewis
26. Ricky Watters
25. Joe Perry
24. Ottis Anderson
23. Marshawn Lynch
22. Thurman Thomas
21. John Riggins
20. Fred Taylor
19. Edgerrin James
18. Frank Gore
17. Corey Dillon
16. Jerome Bettis
15. Earl Campbell
14. Tony Dorsett
13. Marshall Faulk
12. O.J. Simpson
11. Curtis Martin
10. Franco Harris
9. Terrell Davis
8. Adrian Peterson
7. Marcus Allen
6. LaDainian Tomlinson
5. Eric Dickerson
4. Walter Payton
3. Jim Brown
2. Barry Sanders
1. Emmitt Smith

I would rank Campbell, Dorsett, and Simpson higher.  (Maybe because they were from my era.)  And Jim Brown should definitely be no. 1.

***

Here's Athlon's 25 greatest

25. Marshawn Lynch
24. Tiki Barber
23. Shaun Alexander
22. Frank Gore
21. Jim Taylor (yeah, they missed him)
20. Terrell Davis
19. Edgerrin James
18. Jerome Bettis
17. Franco Harris
16. Thurman Thomas
15. John Riggins
14. Tony Dorsett
13. Gale Sayers (another one)
12. O.J. Simpson (how is he not top ten?)
11. Curtis Martin
10. Marcus Allen
9. Earl Campbell
8. Eric Dickerson
7. Adrian Peterson
6. Marshall Faulk
5. LaDainian Tomlinson
4. Emmitt Smith (I think he's ranked too high)
3. Walter Payton
2. Barry Sanders
1. Jim Brown (as he should be)

***

And here's Bleacher Report's Top 10

First the honorable mentions.  Marcus Allen, Earl Campbell, Gale Sayers, O.J. Simpson, Thurman Thomas.

10. LaDainian Tomlinson
9. Franco Harris
8. Tony Dorsett
7. Marshall  Faulk
6. Eric Dickerson
5. Adrian Peterson
4. Barry Sanders
3. Jim Brown (what?)
2. Emmitt Smith
1. Walter Payton

***

First of all, Jim Brown led the league in rushing in 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965.  Missing only 1962 when Jim Taylor led the league.

Other multiple season rushing leaders:

Whizzer White 1938, 1940
Bill Paschal 1943, 1944
Steve Van Buren 1945, 1947, 1948, 1948.
Marion Motley 1948, 1950
Joe Perry 1949, 1953, 1954
Jim Nance 1966, 1967 (AFL)
Gale Sayers 1966, 1969
Leroy Kelly 1967, 1968
O.J. Simpson 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976
Earl Campbell 1978, 1979, 1980
Eric Dickerson 1983, 1984, 1986, 1988
Barry Sanders 1990, 1994, 1996, 1997
Emmitt Smith 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995
Edgerrin James 1999, 2000
LaDainian Tomlinson 2006, 2007
Adrian Peterson 2008, 2012, 2015
Ezekiel Elliott 2016, 2018

Interestingly, Walter Payton led the league in rushing only once (1977).

Monday, May 04, 2020

Don Shula

MIAMI — Don Shula, the steel-jawed son of Hungarian immigrants who rose from tiny Painesville, Ohio, to carve his name in professional football’s record books and become both a national figure and a South Florida icon, passed away Monday morning.

Shula, an NFL head coach for 33 years and coach of the Miami Dolphins for 26 of those seasons, was 90 years old. He is the winningest coach in NFL history with a regular-season record of 328-156-6 and a postseason record of 19-17.

Shula was a father.

A grandfather.

A husband.

And while his family remembers him as a success at all three, Shula was recently asked what legacy he wanted to leave once he was gone. The man who always fiercely protected stood up for his children and players and records didn’t mention any of those.

His answer was all about integrity.

“I want them to say that he won within the rules,” Shula said. “That he had players that took a lot of pride in playing within the rules. And that his teams played an exciting brand of football, wide open football, that made it exciting for the fans.

“I want them to say that his players loved it, the coaches loved it, the fans loved it and I loved it — when we won. I want them to say that we did it all the right way. Always the right way.”

RELATED ARTICLE:  NFL world mourns loss of Don Shula

Shula began his coaching career in 1963 as the NFL’s youngest coach. By the time he retired after the 1995 season, he was the league’s winningest coach.

He is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

He was a pitchman for Ford cars, NutriSystem diet foods and the name behind an expanding Shula’s Steakhouse empire. State Road 874, a seven-mile road in South Miami-Dade, is named after him. He even once appeared in a government campaign asking Americans to sign up for Medicare Part D.

But despite his national prominence, Shula adopted South Florida in 1970 when he was “traded” from the Colts to the Dolphins as the head coach and never left. He lived in Miami Lakes in the 1970s and ‘80s with his first wife Dorothy and his family. After Dorothy died, Shula moved to Indian Creek on Miami Beach with his second wife Mary Anne.

“This is a great place to live and raise a family,” said Shula, who later in life nonetheless spent part of the summers in North Carolina and California.

“The people down here adopted me when I became the Dolphins coach. This place, the Dolphins, the fans … it’s all just part of me. Always will be.”

Shula grew up in Painesville, a small and unremarkable Lake Erie fishing village where work ethic and family values were simply more important than sports. Shula’s father, Dan, was born in Hungary and immigrated to the United States at age six. He changed his surname from Sule to Shula while in school to better fit the American pronunciation.

Dan and Mary Shula had twins Joe and Josephine in 1922, Irene in 1926, Don in 1930, and triplets in 1936.

Shula’s first job was baby sitting — a practice he joked became useful later in life as a coach when he had to deal with a petulant player or reporter.

“I had to make sure they got to school on time and got home on time and did the things they should be doing for school,” Shula said. “It’s kind of like dealing with some wide receivers.”

Shula’s first job outside the home came at age 12 at the same rose bush nursery where his father worked. He made about $1 per day performing odd jobs. He later worked at his grandparent’s grocery store, stocking shelves and carrying supplies. And he also worked at Kishman’s and Grow Brothers fisheries while he was in high school.

Yes, Don Shula learned about work ethic early.

“You learn pretty quickly that nothing is handed to you,” Shula said. “You learn that if you want honest results you have to put in an honest day’s work. That time taught me there were no shortcuts. You believe in God, you work hard and that gets results. What they said back then was true, there were no free lunches.”

Football was always important for Shula but at age 11 when he suffered a gash on his face — “because I led with my head,” Shula joked — his parents responded by forbidding him from playing the sport.

The hiatus didn’t last very long at all.

Shula was fascinated by football and learned how to play it from Joe Jenkins, who was the head coach of the team at St. Mary’s middle school when Shula was in fifth and sixth grade. The lessons Shula learned from Jenkins apparently stuck because 56 years later, in August 1997 when he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Shula spoke fondly of Jenkins.

Shula had invited his teacher to attend the induction and asked Jenkins to stand and be recognized during his speech.

“An honor of a lifetime,” Jenkins said then.

Shula’s budding athletic career earned him 11 varsity letters at Harvey High School in Painesville. His high school classmates dubbed him “best body” in the 1947 yearbook.

“A distinction I carried throughout my life even to this day,” Shula joked in 1995. “Can’t you tell?”

Shula played collegiate football at John Carroll University in Ohio. At 5-10 and 185 pounds, the future coach was sometimes a halfback, sometimes a defensive back, sometimes a starter, and sometimes a reserve.

But he was seemingly always a coach-in-the-making.

“Don was a fun-loving guy,” teammate and friend Lenny Soder once told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. “He was always honest, always had a lot of integrity, he was a gentleman.

“Don was always the leader of the group. Even on the field he always had suggestions for the coaches, especially the defensive coaches. We always called him ‘The Coach’ in a kidding way.”

His time at the Jesuit university made a profound impact on Shula in other ways.

Shula says he seriously considered joining the priesthood during a retreat at John Carroll. Ultimately, however, thoughts of a professional football career kept him out of the clergy. But he was bound to his Catholic faith the rest of his life.

Shula says he usually started his day, “everyday,” he said, by attending church even when the duties of coaching were competing for this time.

When Dorothy Shula, the coach’s first wife, became ill with breast cancer in the 1980s, the couple and 10 fellow parishioners of Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church in Miami Lakes trekked to Croatia hoping to find a cure for the disease by way of a miracle from God.

Like many great coaches, Shula was not a great player. But he was good enough to be the lone rookie in Hall of Fame coach Paul Brown’s lineup for the defending NFL champion Cleveland Browns in 1951.

Two years later, Shula was part of the largest trade in NFL history when he was one of 15 players the Browns and Baltimore Colts exchanged. He later played with the Washington Redskins and retired with 21 career interceptions in seven seasons.

Then lightning struck.

In 1958, Shula married Painesville native Dorothy Bartish. And he got his first coaching job at the University of Virginia. Shula would coach at Virginia, Kentucky, and with the Detroit Lions. Then he became the head coach of the Baltimore Colts in 1963.

He was only 33 years old and a handful of his players were older than the new, young coach. That didn’t stop Shula from winning 71 of 94 games (a .745 winning percentage) and advancing to two Super Bowls in seven years.

Throughout those years while Shula’s reputation as a coach grew, the Shula family grew as well.

Dave Shula was born in 1959, Donna Shula in 1961, Sharon Shula in 1962, Anne in 1964 and Mike in 1965.

It was a big family and although Shula credited Dorothy with raising the kids while he attended to coaching football teams, the family was a great joy for the coach.

“During those years I had two priorities and that was my family and winning football games and it wasn’t always in that order,” Shula said after his retirement. “Looking back, there are some things I might change. You have to make adjustments as a coach. But Dorothy did a great job with the kids and I benefited from that.”

Shula was a staunch defender of his children, particularly his sons. When Mike was fired as the Alabama coach in 2006, Shula went public to criticize the school for the decision. He also later had harsh words for the manner Nick Saban left the Dolphins that same season.

Saban left Miami to replace Mike Shula as the Alabama coach.

Shula also had tunnel vision of sorts for football. Even as the Dolphins’ fortunes ebbed and flowed in the 1980s and early 1990s, his attention to his work never waned.

Once, after a 1980s victory in the Orange Bowl, actor Don Johnson came by the Miami locker room to meet the coach and some players. It was the height of the Miami Vice television craze and the actor introduced himself as “Don Johnson, from Miami Vice.”

Shula shook Johnson’s hand and remarked about the “great job” Miami Vice was doing, thinking Johnson was actually a local vice cop.

But against that stereotype as a driven, yelling, player-and-referee-intimidating-robot, Shula often let his humanity show. In the early 1980s he was doing an interview with reporter Andy Cohen, who had covered the team a long time and continues to cover them now.

And Shula noticed Cohen seemed distracted so he asked if anything was wrong. Cohen told the coach his father was soon going in for open heart surgery and he was concerned about it.

“He asked me if my father was a Dolphins fan, which he was,” Cohen said. “So he asked what hospital he was in and immediately asked his secretary Anne to make the call. He talked to my father and told him he just wanted him to know Don Shula was thinking about him.

“My father used to tell the story of being the only person ever to go into an operating room with a smile on his face. It showed me a different side of Don Shula.”

Shula made football something of a family affair. Both David and then Mike were immersed in the family business by working with the Dolphins — as ballboys, keeping track of play-calls, helping with equipment, absorbing information and later following their father’s coaching footsteps.

David would become the Dolphins offensive coordinator and eventually the head coach of the Cincinnati Bengals. Mike spent time as the Dolphins quarterback coach, became the head coach at the University of Alabama, and today is the offensive coordinator for the Carolina Panthers.

Mike Shula even interviewed for the Dolphins head coach opening in 2007.

In retirement, Don Shula invested the precious time on his children and grandchildren he didn’t have during his coaching career.

He flew from California to Alabama to watch Mike’s first two games coaching the Crimson Tide. He attended St. Thomas High School games to watch grandson Chris Shula play. He bragged about grandson Danny’s exploits as a young quarterback at Dartmouth and another grandson Alex’s exploits as a pole vaulter at St. Thomas.

“When I left coaching I said I was going to get to know my kids and my grandkids and that’s what I tried to do,” Shula said. “I’ve been watching high school football, college football and the spectacle that it is, and the NFL. I enjoy it.”

After Dorothy Shula passed away in February 1991, Don Shula lost his biggest fan.

Shula has never shied from discussing his Super Bowl losses — he had two including the memorable (forgettable for Shula) upset loss to the New York Jets in 1969 that Joe Namath guaranteed for the Jets.

But discussing the loss of Dorothy this day in 2014 was not something he wanted to do.

“Painful,” Shula said succinctly. “Let’s not bring that up.”

Shula denied that anything was different in his approach with football and his personal life after Dorothy’s death but those close to him noticed a change.

“He was never the kind of father who could tell you he loved you who would hold or kiss you,” Donna told Sports Illustrated in 1993. “It was real awkward for him. But these days he’s very connected. He tells us he loves us a lot more.”

Said then assistant coach and confidant Monte Clark at the time: “He’s still working the same hours. He’s still demanding. He still wants it. But he is more understanding, it seems to me. He has what he calls courage of conviction. But he’s more willing to think of options before he arrives at that conviction.

“Something’s definitely changed.”

There was no doubt about that. Shula hired a clothier to update and match his wardrobe. He met the former Mary Anne Stephens at a private 1992 New Year’s Day party. The two were introduced by golfer and friend Raymond Floyd.

The couple’s connection was unmistakable the remainder of Shula’s life.

It took Shula two months after they met to ask Mary Anne out. But it wasn’t long before Shula realized he had found “another love of my life,” as he put it and they were married.

“When I married Mary Anne, I married way out of my league,” Shula said. “When Bob Griese first met Mary Anne he said to me, ‘Coach, you outkicked your coverage.’”

Shula and Mary Anne spent a lot of his days after retirement traveling, enjoying life and each other.

“Somebody’s got to do it,” Shula would joke of his leisurely retirement.

Throughout his professional life filled with constant change both privately and publicly, one thing remained constant: Don Shula won football games.

A lot of them.

More than anyone ever had and perhaps more than anyone ever will, given today’s highly pressurized, win-now-or-else fire that owners light under coaches.

His 347 career victories is 136 victories ahead of Bill Belichick, who is the closest active coach to Shula’s victory mark with 211 wins.

So Belichick, 63, would need seven consecutive undefeated seasons to get close to but still not surpass Shula’s victory milestone.

Shula coached 33 years with the final 26 of those on the Dolphins sideline. His teams made the playoffs 20 times in 33 years in a league that didn’t expand the playoff field to the present day format until after Shula retired.

Don Shula’s team suffered a losing season only twice in 33 years. The Dolphins either won or shared their division title 15 times in 26 years.

“He was the best of all time, simple as that,” Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino said.

No, the Dolphins didn’t return to the Super Bowl in the 1990s under Shula’s hand. But they did play in the AFC Championship game in 1992-93 and Shula believed his 1994-95 team capable of going to the Super Bowl if only a 48-yard field goal in San Diego had been true instead of sailing wide.

Shula’s 1995 team included 19 former first round picks but had little chemistry and many of those former high picks were past their prime or not worthy of their draft status. The team made it to the playoffs anyway before exiting in the first round.

Shula would not coach again after that final playoff game loss to the Bills on December 30, 1995. He “stepped away” as he put it in January of 1996 and although multiple teams, including the Cleveland Browns, called him about returning to the sideline in the next couple of years, Shula resisted the temptation to go back.

“I missed the competition,” he said. “There’s nothing that replaces the feelings once the ball is kicked off in that three-hour period of time. You can play a lot of golf, go on a lot of great vacations, you can do all those things, but you can never replace the thrills, the excitement the emotional highs and lows that happen in those three hours.

“But I don’t miss the long days and endless nights and media critics. If you get back into it, it totally consumes you. It takes morning, noon, and night. It takes over your life. I wouldn’t want to get back to that. I had 33 years of coaching and accomplishments and things I’m very proud of. I’m happy about that and I’m happy about where I am in life right now.”

Shula was also happy to remain protective of his and his team’s legacy.

Shula often found himself in the position of defending the accomplishments of a team he argued needed no defense. The undefeated, untied Dolphins of 1972 to this day are the only team ever to enjoy a “perfect season.”

But to this day that team is often ignored in conversations ranking the greatest NFL teams of all time.

And that bugged Shula.

“We’ve been accused of saying we haven’t gotten enough recognition but we’ll stand by our record,” Shula said. “Nobody did it before 1972 and nobody’s done it since. We think it’s a pretty strong accomplishment.”

Shula often wore a honkin’ gold and diamond Super Bowl ring from that perfect season. He kept the Super Bowl VIII ring from the 15-2 season that followed somewhere else. That’s because the ‘72 ring had professional and personal significance.

“That was probably the most special moment in my coaching career because I was 0-2 in my previous Super Bowls and I didn’t want to be 0-3,” Shula said. “People start to say bad things about you like you can’t win the big game. And that’s not a nice thing to have people say about you. So it was great. It took me off the hook.”

And once he was off that proverbial hook, Shula was more than comfortable being judged by the score.

And his record.

And his actions.

“That’s why they have scoreboards,” he said. “That’s why they have standings. I was judged by the team on the field and the results that team got. I wanted to be the guy responsible.

“Same in life. I’m responsible for my actions, who I am, what I do. I’m happy with that.”

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