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Post by Hulkshi Tanahashi on Sept 27, 2019 16:16:27 GMT -5
So, NFL Network has been doing 100 Greatest countdowns for the NFL’s 100th Anniversary. Here’s their list of the 100 Greatest Plays:
1. The Immaculate Reception, 12-23-1972 2. The Catch, 1-10-1982 3. The Helmet Catch In Super Bowl XLII, 2-3-2008 4. The Music City Miracle, 1-8-2000 5. Malcolm Butler’s Interception In Super Bowl XLIX, 2-1-2015 6. Santonio Holmes’s Catch In Super Bowl XLIII, 2-1-2009 7. The Immaculate Interception In Super Bowl XLIII, 2-1-2009 8. Bart Starr’s QB Sneak In The Ice Bowl, 12-31-1967 9. The Minneapolis Miracle, 1-14-2018 10. The Philly Special, 2-4-2018 11. The Titans Come Up One Yard Short In Super Bowl XXXIV, 1-30-2000 12. Lynn Swann’s 53 Yard Catch In Super Bowl X, 1-18-1976 13. The Beast Quake, 1-8-2011 14. Marcus Allen’s 74 Yard TD Run In Super Bowl XVIII, 1-22-1984 15. The 1st Hail Mary-Roger Staubach To Drew Pearson, 12-28-1975 16. Odell Beckham Jr.’s One-Handed Catch, 11-23-2014 17. The Sea Of Hands, 12-21-1974 18. Adam Vinatieri’s Game-Tying Kick In The Tuck Rule Game, 1-19-2002 19. The Game-Winning TD In The Greatest Game Ever Played, 12-28-1958 20. John Riggins’s 43 Yard TD Run On 4th Down In Super Bowl XVII, 1-30-1983 21. Joe Montana’s TD Pass To John Taylor In Super Bowl XXIII, 1-22-1989 22. Julian Edelman Keeps The Ball Off The Turf In Super Bowl LI, 2-5-2017 23. The Miracle In The Meadowlands, 11-19-1978 24. The Catch 2-Steve Young To Terrell Owens, 1-3-1999 25. Bo Jackson’s 91 TD Run Into The Tunnel, 11-30-1987 26. The Holy Roller, 9-10-1978 27. Steve Young’s Game-Winning 49 Yard TD Run, 10-30-1988 28. Steve Gleason Blocks A Punt, 9-25-2006 29. Ghost To The Post, 12-24-1977 30. John Elway Completes The Drive, 1-11-1987 31. Mario Manningham’s Super Bowl XLVI Catch, 2-5-2012 32. Tracy Porter’s Super Bowl XLIV Interception, 2-7-2010 33. John Elway’s Helicopter Spin, 1-25-1998 34. Gale Sayers’s 85 Yard Punt Return TD, 12-12-1965 35. Tony Dorsett’s 99 Yard TD Run, 1-3-1983 36. The Miracle In The Meadowlands 2, 12-19-2010 37. Walter Payton Runs Through The Chiefs, 11-13-1977 38. Dan Marino’s Fake Spike, 11-27-1994 39. Earl Campbell Headbutts Defender, 9-24-1978 40. John Mackey Runs Over The Lions For 64 Yard TD, 11-20-1964 41. Antonio Freeman’s Unreal Catch, 11-6-2000 42. The Miami Miracle 2018, 12-9-2018 43. Tony Nathan’s Hook And Lateral, 1-2-1982 44. Chuck Bednarik Kills Frank Gifford, 11-20-1960 45. Terry Bradshaw’s TD Pass To John Stallworth In Super Bowl XIV, 1-20-1980 46. Don Beebe Runs Down Leon Lett In Super Bowl XXVII, 1-31-1993 47. Jim Brown Breaks Off A 77 Yard TD Catch, 12-10-1961 48. Aaron Rodgers’s Hail Mary VS The Cardinals, 1-16-2016 49. The Fumble, 1-17-1988 50. Max McGee’s One-Handed TD Catch In Super Bowl I, 1-15-1967 51. Barry Sanders’s 47 Yard TD Run, 1-5-1992 52. The Motown Miracle, 12-3-2015 53. Fran Tarkleton Eludes Defenders Before Long TD Pass, 10-30-1966 54. Jim Marshall Runs The Wrong Way, 10-25-1964 55. The River City Relay, 12-21-2003 56. Ed Brown’s TD Pass To Harlon Hill, 12-30-1956 57. Ben Rothlisberger’s Game Saving Shoelace Tackle, 1-15-2006 58. Richard Sherman Tips Pass For Interception, 1-19-2014 59. Barry Sanders Spins Defenders On 39 Yard TD Run, 9-25-1994 60. Deion Sanders’s Punt Return TD In His 1st Game, 9-10-1989 61. “Old Man Willie”’s Super Bowl XI Interception, 1-9-1977 62. Dante Hall’s Punt Return, 10-5-2003 63. Ed Reed’s 103 Yard Interception, 11-23-2008 64. Brett Farve’s 40 Yard TD Pass To Sterling Sharpe, 1-8-1994 65. Adrian Peterson Stiff Arms Browns For 64 Yard TD, 9-13-2009 66. Garrison Hearst’s Overtime 96 Yard TD Run, 9-6-1998 67. Brett Farve’s Game-Winning Deep Pass To Greg Lewis, 9-27-2009 68. Randy Moss’s Behind The Back Lateral For TD, 10-19-2003 69. Mike Ditka’s Catch And Run, 11-24-1963 70. Michael Vick’s 46 Yard Game-Winning TD Run, 12-1-2002 71. The Alley Oop To R.C. Owens, 12-22-1957 72. Randall Cunningham’s 95 Yard TD Pass, 12-2-1990 73. Mark Ingram’s 3rd & 13 Catch In Super Bowl XXV, 1-27-1991 74. 65 Toss Power Trap In Super Bowl IV, 1-11-1970 75. Garo’s Gaffe In Super Bowl VII, 1-14-1973 76. Tim Tebow’s Game-Winning TD Against The Steelers, 1-8-2012 77. Von Miller’s Strip Sack In Super Bowl L, 2-7-2016 78. The Miracle At The Met, 12-14-1980 79. William Perry’s Rushing TD In Super Bowl XX, 1-26-1986 80. Randel El To Hines Ward In Super Bowl XL, 2-5-2006 81. Mark Bavaro Drags The 49ers Defense, 12-1-1986 82. Randall Cunningham Absorbs Hit, Throws TD, 10-10-1988 83. Steve Atwater Stops Christian Okoye, 9-17-1990 84. Randy Moss’s One-Handed TD Catch, 9-19-2010 85. Ben Watson Stops A Defensive TD, 1-14-2006 86. “We Want The Ball, And We’re Gonna Score!”, 1-4-2004 87. Steve Bartowski’s Hail Mary, 11-20-1983 88. Antonio Cromartie Returns Missed FG 109 Yards, 11-4-2007 89. Derrick Henry’s 99 Yard TD Run, 12-6-2018 90. Emmit Smith’s 29 Yard TD Run, 12-21-1992 91. Steve Van Buren’s Championship-Winning TD, 12-19-1948 92. Vinny Testaverde’s TD Pass To Jumbo Elliot, 10-23-2000 93. Hugh McElhenny’s Helmet-less Catch And Run, 11-9-1952 94. Larry Fitzgerald’s Overtime Catch And Run, 1-16-2016 95. Larry Wilson’s One-Handed Interception Returned For TD, 10-2-1966 96. Wilber Marshall Returns A Fumble For TD, 1-12-1986 97. Jim Brown Runs Through The Cowboys, 10-17-1965 98. Billy Sims Karate Kicks Steve Brown, 11-13-1983 99. The Butt Fumble, 11-22-2012 100. Roger Craig’s High Knee TD Through The Rams, 10-16-1988
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Push R Truth
Patti Mayonnaise
Unique and Special Snowflake, and a pants-less heathen.
Perpetually Constipated
Posts: 39,277
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Post by Push R Truth on Sept 27, 2019 17:28:06 GMT -5
My life is now complete, The Butt Fumble is officially in the 100 Greatest Plays of All Time
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Post by Vice honcho room temperature on Sept 29, 2019 10:25:00 GMT -5
NFL films YT page has the list in I'm guessing truncated form in a YT playlist.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Sept 29, 2019 11:13:42 GMT -5
Unless I missed it, THAT Marshawn Lynch run didn't make it? Bullshit.
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Post by Vice honcho room temperature on Sept 29, 2019 11:49:25 GMT -5
Unless I missed it, THAT Marshawn Lynch run didn't make it? Bullshit. Its number 13
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Post by arrogantmodel on Sept 29, 2019 16:03:24 GMT -5
The Immaculate Reception is just mind blowing. That really has to be some divine intervention. To have a ball ricochet off of somebody right near your running back, who fingertips it from an inch off the turf, AND make it to the endzone.
Malcolm Butler didn't make an amazing play, the Seahawks made the #1 Boneheaded play.
And is there still an argument if the Music City Miracle was a forward pass? I'm guess in Buffalo there is.
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Post by Hulkshi Tanahashi on Sept 29, 2019 16:13:31 GMT -5
Unless I missed it, THAT Marshawn Lynch run didn't make it? Bullshit. The Beast Quake is on there at 13.
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Sam Punk
Hank Scorpio
Own Nothing, Be Happy
Posts: 6,304
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Post by Sam Punk on Sept 29, 2019 19:33:58 GMT -5
You should watch the play again. If Butler was one step slower, that's a touchdown.
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Post by sfvega on Sept 29, 2019 20:10:17 GMT -5
Jumping a short slant on a short field is not more impressive than a number of those plays. Same with the Mike Jones tackle. I get the stage counts for a lot, but those aren't jaw-dropping plays. If you wanted to put Edelman's catch up there at 5, cool. Because it is a play that will be remembered not just for when it took place, but how it took place.
Also, the helmet catch is way, way ahead of "the catch". Super Bowl vs. NFCCG. One beat a dynasty the other beat a former dynasty on a downtrend for a while. Undefeated team vs. 12-4 team. Impossibly tougher catch vs. being pretty much wide open in the end zone. Ridiculous QB escape vs. scramble under pressure. A type of catch we'd never seen before vs. jumping 6 inches off the ground and making a routine catch. Clark himself has even said the camera angle makes it look way cooler than it was. Also, if Eli gets sacked there, they are facing 4th and 11 from their own 37, versus an incompletion from Montana means 4th and 3 on the Cowboys 6. The Helmet Catch and Immaculate Reception are in a league of their own in terms of ridiculous plays with everything on the line. The Catch is kinda the Willis Reed moment of the NFL. People talk about it like this mythical thing that happened, and you see it and you're like "Really? That's it?"
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Post by Jedi-El of Tomorrow on Sept 30, 2019 5:06:57 GMT -5
Jumping a short slant on a short field is not more impressive than a number of those plays. Same with the Mike Jones tackle. I get the stage counts for a lot, but those aren't jaw-dropping plays. If you wanted to put Edelman's catch up there at 5, cool. Because it is a play that will be remembered not just for when it took place, but how it took place. Also, the helmet catch is way, way ahead of "the catch". Super Bowl vs. NFCCG. One beat a dynasty the other beat a former dynasty on a downtrend for a while. Undefeated team vs. 12-4 team. Impossibly tougher catch vs. being pretty much wide open in the end zone. Ridiculous QB escape vs. scramble under pressure. A type of catch we'd never seen before vs. jumping 6 inches off the ground and making a routine catch. Clark himself has even said the camera angle makes it look way cooler than it was. Also, if Eli gets sacked there, they are facing 4th and 11 from their own 37, versus an incompletion from Montana means 4th and 3 on the Cowboys 6. The Helmet Catch and Immaculate Reception are in a league of their own in terms of ridiculous plays with everything on the line. The Catch is kinda the Willis Reed moment of the NFL. People talk about it like this mythical thing that happened, and you see it and you're like "Really? That's it?" The Catch launched a dynasty. The Helmet Catch did not have the historical impact that The Catch did.
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Post by sfvega on Sept 30, 2019 5:43:54 GMT -5
Jumping a short slant on a short field is not more impressive than a number of those plays. Same with the Mike Jones tackle. I get the stage counts for a lot, but those aren't jaw-dropping plays. If you wanted to put Edelman's catch up there at 5, cool. Because it is a play that will be remembered not just for when it took place, but how it took place. Also, the helmet catch is way, way ahead of "the catch". Super Bowl vs. NFCCG. One beat a dynasty the other beat a former dynasty on a downtrend for a while. Undefeated team vs. 12-4 team. Impossibly tougher catch vs. being pretty much wide open in the end zone. Ridiculous QB escape vs. scramble under pressure. A type of catch we'd never seen before vs. jumping 6 inches off the ground and making a routine catch. Clark himself has even said the camera angle makes it look way cooler than it was. Also, if Eli gets sacked there, they are facing 4th and 11 from their own 37, versus an incompletion from Montana means 4th and 3 on the Cowboys 6. The Helmet Catch and Immaculate Reception are in a league of their own in terms of ridiculous plays with everything on the line. The Catch is kinda the Willis Reed moment of the NFL. People talk about it like this mythical thing that happened, and you see it and you're like "Really? That's it?" The Catch launched a dynasty. The Helmet Catch did not have the historical impact that The Catch did. I completely disagree. The Niners had an incredibly well-run organization, had an all time great QB followed by another HOF QB, a HC whose offense shaped the next 20+ years of the offensive side of the NFL, ended up getting the consensus or near-consensus best WR ever, and of course just as importantly to most dynasties, existed mostly before the implement of the salary cap and modern free agency. To boil that all down to one play whether that happens or not, I think that's the exact type of overstatement that is associated with that play.
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BRV
Bill S. Preston, Esq.
Wants him some Taco Flavored Kisses.
Posts: 16,882
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Post by BRV on Sept 30, 2019 14:08:09 GMT -5
You should watch the play again. If Butler was one step slower, that's a touchdown. I'm glad someone got to that before I did, because reading that sentence made my eyes bulge out of my skull like I was in "Total Recall." Malcolm Butler's interception, regardless of the play call that was drawn up by Seattle, was the greatest defensive play in NFL history. It was arguably the most all-or-nothing play of all-time. If Butler intercepts it, the Patriots win the Super Bowl. If he doesn't, either Ricardo Lockette catches it for a touchdown or the Seahawks get two more cracks at the end zone from the one-yard-line. It also was just a straight-up brilliant call by New England and execution by Butler and Brandon Browner. Watch the NFL Network documentary "Do Your Job" and see how prepared the Patriots were for that play. Butler let up a touchdown in practice when the play was called, so he knew exactly what he needed to do in order to prevent the go-ahead touchdown. As has been said, if he's slow by even half a step, Lockette walks into the end zone and the Seahawks are back-to-back champions.
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bob
Salacious Crumb
The "other" Bob. FOC COURSE!
started the Madness Wars, Proudly the #1 Nana Hater on FAN
Posts: 78,273
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Post by bob on Sept 30, 2019 16:06:04 GMT -5
this play is missing
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Post by Toilet Paper Roll on Sept 30, 2019 18:22:14 GMT -5
You should watch the play again. If Butler was one step slower, that's a touchdown. I'm glad someone got to that before I did, because reading that sentence made my eyes bulge out of my skull like I was in "Total Recall." Malcolm Butler's interception, regardless of the play call that was drawn up by Seattle, was the greatest defensive play in NFL history. It was arguably the most all-or-nothing play of all-time. If Butler intercepts it, the Patriots win the Super Bowl. If he doesn't, either Ricardo Lockette catches it for a touchdown or the Seahawks get two more cracks at the end zone from the one-yard-line. It also was just a straight-up brilliant call by New England and execution by Butler and Brandon Browner. Watch the NFL Network documentary "Do Your Job" and see how prepared the Patriots were for that play. Butler let up a touchdown in practice when the play was called, so he knew exactly what he needed to do in order to prevent the go-ahead touchdown. As has been said, if he's slow by even half a step, Lockette walks into the end zone and the Seahawks are back-to-back champions. The Butler play was a split second that kind of relaunched he Patriots dynasty and might have stopped a potential Seahawks dynasty from ever happening. It won a SuperBowl and it’s earned its spot.
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Post by Cyno on Oct 1, 2019 1:17:39 GMT -5
Out of all the plays on that list, I think the Odell one-handed catch is going to get bumped down a lot on any future versions of that list. As impressive a feat of athleticism as it was, it was fairly insignificant in the grand scheme of things. It was during a regular season game which the Giants lost anyway.
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Post by Citizen Snips Has Left on Oct 1, 2019 18:06:13 GMT -5
Concrete Charlie knocking the soul right out of Frank Gifford should have been a few places higher than 44 because it was punctuated by the immortal quote "This f***ing game is OVER!" as he stands over Gifford's dead body.
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Post by Hulkshi Tanahashi on Oct 5, 2019 12:32:07 GMT -5
Now, here's their list of the 100 Greatest Games:
1. The Greatest Game Ever Played, 1958 NFL Championship Game, Colts 23-Giants 17, 12-28-1958 2. The Catch, 1981-82 NFC Championship Game, 49ers 28-Cowboys 27, 1-10-1982 3. The Ice Bowl, 1967-68 NFL Championship Game, Packers 21-Cowboys 17, 12-31-1967 4. The Epic In Miami, 1981-82 AFC Divisional Playoff, Chargers 41-Dolphins 38, 1-2-1982 5. Super Bowl XLII, Giants 17-Patriots 14, 2-3-2008 6. Super Bowl III, Jets 16-Colts 7, 1-12-1969 7. The Comeback (or The Choke), 1992-93 AFC Wild Card, Bills 41-Oilers 38, 1-3-1993 8. Super Bowl XLIX, Patriots 28-Seahawks 24, 2-1-2015 9. Super Bowl LI, Patriots 34-Falcons 28, 2-5-2017 10. Super Bowl XXV, Giants 20-Bills 19, 1-21-1991 11. The Drive, 1986-87 AFC Championship Game, Broncos 23-Browns 20, 1-11-1987 12. Super Bowl XLIII, Steelers 27-Cardinals 23, 2-1-2009 13. The Immaculate Reception, 1972-73 AFC Divisional Playoff Game, Steelers 13-Raiders 7, 12-23-1972 14. Super Bowl LII, Eagles 41-Patriots 33, 2-4-2018 15. The Tuck Rule, 2001-02 AFC Divisional Playoff, Patriots 16-Raiders 13 16. Super Bowl XXXIV, Rams 23-Titans 16, 1-30-2000 17. Super Bowl XIII, Steelers 35-Cowboys 31, 1-21-1979 18. The NFL’s Longest Game, 1971-72 AFC Divisional Playoff, Dolphins 27-Chiefs 24, 12-25-1971 19. Super Bowl XXIII, 49ers 20-Bengals 16, 1-22-1989 20. Super Bowl XXXVI, Patriots 20-Rams 17, 2-3-2002 21. 2006-07 AFC Championship Game, Colts 38-Patriots 34, 1-21-2007 22. The Fumble, 1987-88 AFC Championship Game, Broncos 38-Browns 33, 1-17-1988 23. The Sea Of Hands, 1974-75 AFC Divisional Playoff, Raiders 28-Dolphins 26, 12-21-1974 24. The Minneapolis Miracle, 2017-18 NFC Divisional Playoff, Vikings 29-Saints 24, 1-14-2018 25. 1990-91 NFC Championship Game, Giants 15-49ers 13, 1-20-1991 26. The Music City Miracle, 1999-2000 AFC Wild Card, Titans 22-Bills 16, 1-8-2000 27. Super Bowl XXXII, Broncos 31-Packers 24, 1-25-1998 28. Ghost To The Post, 1977-78 AFC Divisional Playoff, Raiders 37-Colts 31, 12-24-1977 29. Week 13 1985-1986, Dolphins 38-Bears 24, 12-2-1985 30. Super Bowl XLVII, Ravens 34-49ers 31, 2-3-2013 31. 2015-16 NFC Divisional Playoff, Cardinals 26-Packers 20, 1-16-2016 32. 1950 NFL Championship Game, Browns 30-Rams 28, 12-24-1950 33. Week 11 2018-19, Rams 54-Chiefs 51, 11-19-2018 34. 1998-99 NFC Championship Game, Falcons 30-Vikings 27, 1-17-1999 35. 1972-73 NFC Divisional Playoff, Cowboys 30-49ers 28, 12-23-1972 36. 2018-19 AFC Championship Game, Patriots 37-Chiefs 31, 1-20-2019 37. Super Bowl XXXVIII, Patriots 32-Panthers 29, 2-1-2004 38. 1966-67 NFL Championship Game, Packers 34-Cowboys 27, 1-1-1967 39. 2002-03 NFC Wild Card, 49ers 39-Giants 38, 1-5-2003 40. The Mile High Miracle, 2012-13 AFC Divisional Playoff, Ravens 38-Broncos 35, 1-12-2013 41. The Heidi Bowl, AFL Week 11 1968-69, Raiders 43-Jets 32, 11-17-1968 42. 2009-10 NFC Championship Game, Saints 31-Vikings 28, 1-24-2010 43. The Monday Night Miracle, Week 8 2000-01, Jets 40-Dolphins 37, 10-23-2000 44. 2014-15 NFC Championship Game, Seahawks 28-Packers 22, 1-18-2015 45. Super Bowl X, Steelers 21-Cowboys 17, 1-18-76 46. The Catch 2, 1998-99 NFC Wild Card, 49ers 30-Packers 27, 1-3-1999 47. 2009-10 NFC Wild Card, Cardinals 51-Packers 45, 1-10-10 48. The Miracle At The Meadowlands, Week 12 1978-79, Eagles 19-Giants 17, 11-19-1978 49. Week 2 1972-73, Jets 44-Colts 34, 9-24-1972 50. The Fog Bowl, 1988-89 NFC Divisional Playoff, Bears 20-Eagles 12, 12-31-1988 51. 1933 NFL Championship Game, Bears 23-Giants 21, 12-17-1933 52. Week 16 2003-04, Packers 41-Raiders 7, 12-22-2003 53. Super Bowl I, Packers 35-Chiefs 10, 1-15-1967 54. 2007-08 NFC Championship Game, Giants 23-Packers 20, 1-20-2008 55. Week 7 1994-95, Chiefs 31-Broncos 28, 10-17-1994 56. The Holy Roller, Week 2 1978-79, Raiders 21-Chargers 20, 9-10-1978 57. NOLA No Call, 2018-19 NFC Championship Game, Rams 26-Saints 23, 1-20-2019 58. Week 3 1989-90, 49ers 38-Eagles 28, 9-24-1989 59. Week 3 2006-07, Saints 23-Falcons 3, 9-25-2006 60. 1992-93 NFC Championship Game, Cowboys 30-49ers 20, 1-17-1993 61. 2013-14 AFC Wild Card, Colts 45-Chiefs 44, 1-4-2014 62. The Sneakers Game, 1934 NFL Championship Game, Giants 30-Bears 13, 12-9-1934 63. 1983-84 NFC Championship Game, Reds’ 24-49ers 21, 1-8-1984 64. The Catch 3, 2011-12 NFC Divisional Playoff, 49ers 36-Saints 32, 1-14-2012 65. Week 5 2003-04, Colts 38-Buccaneers 35, 10-6-2003 66. 1991-92 AFC Divisional Playoff, Broncos 26-Oilers 24, 1-4-1992 67. The Freezer Bowl, 1981-82 AFC Championship Game, Bengals 27-Chargers 7, 1-10-1982 68. 2013-14 NFC Championship Game, Seahawks 23-49ers 17, 1-19-2014 69. 4th And 26, 2003-04 NFC Divisional Playoff, Eagles 20-Packers 17, 1-11-2004 70. Week 18 1993-94, Cowboys 16-Giants 13, 1-2-1994 71. Red Right 88, 1980-81 AFC Divisional Playoff, Raiders 14-Browns 12, 1-4-1981 72. 2003-04 NFC Wild Card, Packers 33-Seahawks 27, 1-4-2004 73. Super Bowl XVII, Reds’ 27-Dolphins 17, 1-30-1983 74. 1980-81 NFC Divisional Playoff, Cowboys 20-Falcons 27, 1-4-1981 75. Week 7 1983-84, Packers 48-Reds’ 47, 10-17-1983 76. 1957 Western Conference Playoff, Lions 31-49ers 27, 12-22-1957 77. 1945 NFL Championship Game, Rams 15-Reds’ 14, 12-16-1945 78. 1996-97 AFC Divisional Playoff, Jaguars 30-Broncos 27, 1-4-1997 79. 1985-86 AFC Divisional Playoff, Dolphins 24-Browns 21, 1-4-1986 80. 1986-87 AFC Divisional Playoff, Brown 23-Jets 20, 1-3-1987 81. Red Grange’s NFL Debut, Week 11 1925, Bears 14-Cardinals 7, 11-26-1925 82. 1932 NFL Championship Game, Bears 9-Spartans 0, 12-18-1932 83. Dan Marino’s Fake Spike, Week 13 1994-95, Dolphins 28-Jets 24, 11-27-1994 84. 2006-07 NFC Wild Card, Seahawks 21-Cowboys 20, 1-6-2007 85. Super Bowl XXII, Reds’ 42-Broncos 10, 1-31-1988 86. 2003-04 NFC Divisional Playoff, Panthers 29-Rams 23, 1-10-2004 87. 1995-96 AFC Championship Game, Steelers 20-Colts 16, 1-14-1996 88. Miracle At The Meadowlands 2, Week 15 2010-11, Eagles 38-Giants 31, 12-19-2010 89. 2005-06 AFC Divisional Playoff, Steelers 21-Colts 18, 1-15-2006 90. 1994-95 NFC Championship Game, 49ers 38-Cowboys 28, 1-15-1995 91. Week 3 1986-87, Jets 51-Dolphins 45, 9-21-1986 92. Super Bowl XIV, Steelers 31-Rams 19, 1-20-1980 93. 1948 NFL Championship Game, Eagles 7-Cardinals 0, 12-19-1948 94. The Snowplow Game, Week 14 1982-83, Patriots 3-Dolphins 0, 12-12-1982 95. Week 6 2006-07, Bears 24-Cardinals 23, 10-16-2006 96. The Miracle At The Met, Week 15 1980-81, Vikings 28-Browns 23, 12-14-1980 97. Super Bowl XLIV, Saints 31-Colts 17, 2-7-2010 98. 2008-09 AFC Championship Game, Steelers 23-Ravens 14, 1-18-2009 99. 1999-2000 NFC Championship Game, Rams 11-Buccaneers 6, 1-23-2000 100. The Mud Bowl, 1982-83 AFC Championship Game, Dolphins 14-Jets 0, 1-23-1983
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Lupin the Third
Patti Mayonnaise
I'm sorry.....I love you. *boot to the head*--3rd most culpable in the jixing of NXT, D'oh!
Join the Dark Order....
Posts: 36,316
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Post by Lupin the Third on Oct 5, 2019 17:06:20 GMT -5
Seriously, NFL? You leave off the game that basically LEGITIMIZED YOU?
1925 - December 12th - Pottsville Maroons v. Notre Dame All Stars
At that time, College Football was considered much more prestigious than professional football. Pro Football was considered trash by many.
And the Pottsville Maroons faced off against the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. A quartet that in 3 years at Notre Dame, had only lost 2 games, both to Nebraska.
And Pottsville took them down, 9-7, and helped legitimize the NFL.
Of course, the NFL doesn't want to talk about it, since they were the ones that screwed the Maroons.
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Post by Hulkshi Tanahashi on Oct 18, 2019 21:45:59 GMT -5
Now, here's there list of the 100 Greatest Characters:
1. Joe Namath 2. Al Davis 3. John Madden 4. Brett Favre 5. Deion Sanders 6. Bum Phillips 7. Deacon Jones 8. Art Donovan 9. Jim McMahon 10. Mike Ditka 11. Buddy Ryan 12. Bill Parcells 13. Dick Butkis 14. Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson 15. Rob Gronkowski 16. Terrell Owens 17. Don Meredith 18. John Riggins 19. Jerry Glanville 20. Lawrence Taylor 21. Ken Stabler 22. Vince Lombardi 23. William “The Refrigerator” Perry 24. Marshawn Lynch 25. Hank Stram 26. Lyle Alzado 27. Jon Gruden 28. Conrad Dobler 29. Bill Belichick 30. Bobby Lane 31. John Randle 32. Terry Bradshaw 33. “Mean” Joe Greene 34. Thomas “Hollywood” Henderson 35. Chuck Bednarik 36. Mark Gastineau 37. John McKay 38. Ray Lewis 39. Bo Jackson 40. Jack Lambert 41. Michael Irvin 42. Bubba Smith 43. Rex Ryan 44. Billy “White Shoes” Johnson 45. Randy Moss 46. John Matuszak 47. Peyton Manning 48. Ted Hendricks 49. Brian Bosworth 50. Ben Davidson 51. Shannon Sharpe 52. Charles Halley 53. Sam Wyche 54. George Allen 55. Bronko Nagurski 56. Walter Payton 57. Ickey Woods 58. Paul Hornung 59. Gene “Big Daddy” Lipscomb 60. Fred “The Hammer” Williamson 61. Sammy Baugh 62. Jimmy Johnson 63. Max McGee 64. Abe Gibron 65. Alex Karras 66. Steve Smith, Sr. 67. Richard Sherman 68. Tim Rossovich 69. Michael Strahan 70. Clinton Portis 71. Tony Siragusa 72. Ricky Williams 73. Jack “Hacksaw” Reynolds 74. Mike Singletary 75. Tim Tebow 76. Warren Sapp 77. Johnny “Blood” McNally 78. Jim Mora 79. John “Frenchy” Fuqua 80. Bob “The Geek” St. Clair 81. Duane Thomas 82. Sonny Jurgensen 83. Bill Cowher 84. James Harrison 85. Philip Rivers 86. Norm Van Brocklin 87. Marv Levy 88. Odell Beckham, Jr. 89. Herm Edwards 90. Cam Newton 91. Kevin Greene 92. Dick Vermeil 93. Brian Dawkins 94. Jarred Allen 95. Marty Schottenheimer 96. Nate Newton 97. Terrell Suggs 98. Jerome Bettis 99. Jay Cutler 100. Walt Garrison
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Post by Hulkshi Tanahashi on Nov 1, 2019 22:06:51 GMT -5
Now, here's their list of the 100 Greatest Game Changers:
1. Paul Brown 2. Pete Rozelle 3. Al Davis 4. Bill Walsh 5. George Halas 6. The 1946 Re-Integration 7. Joe Namath 8. Lamar Hunt 9. Monday Night Football/Roone Arledge 10. Vince Lombardi 11. Bill Belichick 12. Instant Replay 13. NFL Films 14. Curly Lambeau 15. The Madden Football Video Games 16. Fantasy Football 17. Lawrence Taylor 18. Johnny Unitas 19. Tom Landry 20. Jim Brown 21. Bert Bell 22. Doug Williams 23. Red Grange 24. Jim Thorpe 25. Tom Brady 26. Sid Gillman 27. Jerry Jones 28. Don Coryell 29. Dan Rooney 30. Don Shula 31. Astroturf 32. Dr. James Andrews 33. Reggie White Becoming A Free Agent 34. Deacon Jones 35. Fritz Pollard, First African-American Player 36. Don Hutson 37. The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders 38. Gil Brandt 39. The Herschel Walker Trade 40. Paul Tagliabue 41. Dan Marino 42. Clark Shaughnessy 43. Tex Schramm 44. ESPN NFL Primetime 45. Deion Sanders 46. Mel Blount 47. Bill Nunn 48. Peyton Manning 49. Jerry Rice 50. The NFL On FOX 51. Bo Jackson 52. Tony Dungy 53. Warren Moon 54. Buddy Ryan 55. Brett Favre 56. Pete Gogolak, First Soccer-Style Kicker 57. Dan Reeves 58. Moving The Goal Post 59. Ozzie Newsome 60. Dick Lebeau’s Zone Blitz 61. Joe Gibbs 62. Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder 63. Roger Staubach 64. Mel Kiper, Jr. 65. Sammy Baugh 66. The First Night Game 67. Joe F. Carr 68. Mike Ditka 69. Leigh Steinberg 70. John Elway 71. Roger Goodell 72. Fran Tarkenton 73. The In Living Color Halftime Show 74. Barry Sanders 75. Amy Trask 76. The J5-V Football 77. Sticky Gloves/Stickum 78. Emmitt Smith 79. Randy Moss 80. Tim Mara 81. Homer Jones 82. The Mo Lewis Hit That Knocked Out Drew Bledsoe 83. Dick “Night Train” Lane 84. Arch Ward, Creator Of The Pro Bowl 85. Sam Huff 86. Ronnie Lott 87. Brian Piccolo & Gale Sayers 88. Randall Cunningham 89. Weeb Ewbank 90. Willie Lanier 91. Phyllis George 92. Aaron Rodgers 93. Pete Gent--North Dallas Forty 94. Larry Wilson 95. Eric Dickerson 96. Sarah Thomas, First Female Referee 97. Odell Beckam, Jr. 98. Ladainian Thomlinson 99. Apple’s 1984 Super Bowl Commercial 100. Thurman Thomas
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