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HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:39 AM
I fondly remember this one. Halloween game at Chicago in 1994. Ran coming down sideways. Favre starts 0 for 5, but has the 40 yard TD run (just after 3 minute mark).


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uetiZX-nIRQ

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:42 AM
Great block by Edgar Bennett there.

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:43 AM
I fondly remember all of these. :) Here's a game vs. Detroit in 1992 where Sterling Sharpe lost track of the end zone in the snow.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyBvp1y_EBo&feature=related

Joemailman
01-07-2011, 11:46 AM
I fondly remember this one. Halloween game at Chicago in 1994. Ran coming down sideways. Favre starts 0 for 5, but has the 40 yard TD run (just after 3 minute mark).


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uetiZX-nIRQ

The only thing uglier than the weather was the uniforms worn by both teams.

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:48 AM
Sharpe knew where the endzone was. I think he was just showboating a bit. He was about to put the ball over the line.

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:50 AM
Wonder where the second half highlights are. I loved Paul Coffman. He was awesome.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vDAw8WoEfA&feature=related

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:51 AM
I don't remember this game. I'm sure it was on national TV, so I didn't see it.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQsYA07HL68&feature=related

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 11:54 AM
Here is one for the old timers. :)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jcq1egM83RI&feature=related

Joemailman
01-07-2011, 11:59 AM
Sharpe knew where the endzone was. I think he was just showboating a bit. He was about to put the ball over the line.

I was at that game, and from where I was in the centerfield bleachers, I thought he had accidentally thrown the ball down short of the goal line. Looking at it now though, I think you're right. He didn't know that defender was right behind him.

channtheman
01-07-2011, 12:37 PM
So Sharpe's play doesn't go down as a TD throw for Favre does it? It seems to me it would go down as a fumble recovery for a TD.

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 12:43 PM
I think it's a TD throw. If the fumble is recovered by the same player, the stats stick with that player. That's the way it is now. It may have went into affect after that play though. I'll look it up.

HarveyWallbangers
01-07-2011, 12:44 PM
http://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/199212060gnb.htm

Packers Sterling Sharpe 65 yard pass from Brett Favre (Chris Jacke kick) 0 14

vince
01-07-2011, 01:16 PM
Regarding that play, Sharpe says he knew where the endzone was. He was just pulling a cocky move by reaching the ball over the goal line for the score, but the ref didn't acknowledge that the ball had crossed the goal line, so he had to recover the fumble and take himself over the line with the ball.

gbgary
01-07-2011, 03:59 PM
Wonder where the second half highlights are. I loved Paul Coffman. He was awesome.



yeah that offense was something. number one. dickie, coffman, jefferson, and lofton all were probowl starters.

Little Whiskey
01-07-2011, 06:02 PM
I fondly remember all of these. :) Here's a game vs. Detroit in 1992 where Sterling Sharpe lost track of the end zone in the snow.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyBvp1y_EBo&feature=related

wasn't this game in milwaukee?

pbmax
01-08-2011, 11:13 PM
I don't remember this game. I'm sure it was on national TV, so I didn't see it.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQsYA07HL68&feature=related

I am pretty sure I saw this game. John Dorsey, eventual personnel guy is playing for the Packers I thought I heard.

The Browns O coordinator will be instantly recognizable to middle aged Rats as Lindy Infante. Pass to daylight worked for these Browns. Marty Schottenheimer was the HC. It was his second full season. Webster Slaughter was a rookie and a initially disappointing first round pick, because we could find him listed nowhere but as the 8th best WR prospect in the Sporting News I think. Mack and Byner were coming off twin 1,000 yard seasons. Mack was the more talented back, but he as always getting nicked up. Byner could do everything, including fumble at horrible moments. The Browns were playing a static AFC 3-4 with a no name line and 3 first round linebackers - Clay Matthews, Chip Banks and Tom Cousineau. Matthews was not happy playing strong side and losing his pass rush role when Banks was drafted.

I think both Hanford Dixon and Frank Minnifield were on the defense (CBs) by then, two of the original "Last Dogs of Defense", which was a poster to raise money for the Humane Society or something along those lines, and then became a section of the bleachers (the Dog Pound). The Browns had traded (year before I think) a reg draft pick to someone and picked up ALL the other teams supplemental picks. These picks were used to take several USFL players. Mack, Mike Johnson (the non first round LB), Minnifield and a few others came to the team that way. It was a very smart move and probably was engineered by eventual Giants GM Ernie Accorsi.

They went 12-4 I think and played in the AFC Championship game, losing to Horse Face on The Drive. I am going to go kick the dog now. This team was also the first I think, to defeat the NY Jets and Mark Gastineau in the playoffs for 3 of 4 seasons. They eventually got even one year, but beating Gastineau and the sack dance was a treat.

pbmax
01-08-2011, 11:37 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PL7ajfUamow&feature=related

Hoo boy. Old school. Clay Matthews Jr. as a 2nd year player, recently a 1st round pick out of USC. I cannot be sure, but when I saw Clay Jr. up close at a Brown's training camp in Berea OH in 1987 or 88, I thought he was on something. He was far larger than he had been as a young player. PEDs were not as well known then, mainly a subject for Olympic coverage, but something tells me it was in the news for me to have suspected. Even in his practice uni he looked like a comic book superhero. Lyle Alzado was on the team after they got him from Denver. The connection seems ominous now, it meant nothing then.

The 1980 Browns were the Kardiac Kids and won the Division from the Steelers for the first time in a decade. Bam Bam Ambrose was the middle linebacker. Mike Pruitt was the best RB, but Greg Pruitt was the one you wanted to watch. Like the Metcalfs only bigger, he could catch, run and return punts. He wore the tearaway jerseys when the were legal and he lost at least one per game. Reggie Rucker was the veteran WR, smooth and fast but getting older. Dave Logan was a precursor to basketball style TEs. He played WR, but ran routes like a TE. His best route was the fade into the endzone for a jump ball which he always seemed to win.

These Browns lost in the playoffs to eventual champion Oakland when Red Right 88, a pass to future Ravens GM Ozzie Newsome in the corner of the endzone was intercepted by the Raiders to seal a 2 point win.

The best season on the team was had by Brian Sipe, who should have been MVP over Fouts (I think) as he had a nearly duplicate statistical season with far less resources at his disposal.

pbmax
01-08-2011, 11:53 PM
Can't forget about Calvin Hill. Browns first 3 rd down back. One of a wave of pass catching backs in the 80s. Ultimate checkdown guy. Worked a lot of short routes for first downs. Could block blitzes too. And Paul Warfield is calling this game with Stockton.

esoxx
01-09-2011, 10:29 AM
I don't remember this game. I'm sure it was on national TV, so I didn't see it.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQsYA07HL68&feature=related

Funny seeing Randy Scott #55 LB for Packers. A former girlfriend of mine moved to Milwaukee and ended up dating Randy Scott. That bastard.

pbmax
01-09-2011, 10:42 AM
#77, Mike Butler apparently, was a pretty good player if the two videos mean anything. He was torching Cody Risien the RT in the 1980 video, and Risien would eventually replace old Left Tackle Doug Dieken and make a Pro Bowl or two if memory serves. Dieken used to joke that he played so well for so long because he had mastered the art of holding without getting caught. When he retired, he claimed that fans shouldn't worry, he taught Cody everything he knew about holding.

Freak Out
01-11-2011, 07:02 PM
What an awesome thread...I still have newspaper clippings from the Lynn Dickey era. Coffman was a badass. So many great games yet so many heartbreakers....I will never forget the MNF game in Denver when the fucking Broncos scored two touchdowns off fumbles to start the game. Dickey and the boys went to work and just tore up the Bronco D until I think???... a sack of Dickey sealed the deal at the end. Fuck I was bummed after that game.

Freak Out
01-11-2011, 07:17 PM
Was Moseley the last of his kind in the NFL?

Iron Mike
01-11-2011, 07:26 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYVj-7Wfdeo

Iron Mike
01-11-2011, 07:38 PM
Here's an old game for you.....


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXhEOYhFL1g

Fritz
01-11-2011, 09:22 PM
Wow. Thanks for posting...I watched the introduction of the lineups for the 1961 Giants/Packers game. The offensive linemen were all between 230 and 255 pounds. The wide receivers were called ends...Boyd Dowler was introduced as the "flanker back" and of course the running backs were halfbacks,

And Bart Starr weighed 200 lbs.