레이블이 DePaul University인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 DePaul University인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 27일 수요일

About 'national louis university chicago'|...roughly tripled after going with Porter's picks. Thank you." - Louis Charles, Chula Vista, CA "I entrusted my rather small retirement money with a financial...







About 'national louis university chicago'|...roughly tripled after going with Porter's picks. Thank you." - Louis Charles, Chula Vista, CA "I entrusted my rather small retirement money with a financial...








Hardy               Brown               Hardy               came               up               the               hard               way.

He               grew               up               in               an               orphanage               after               witnessing               his               father               murdered               when               he               was               four.
               After               attending               college               at               both               Southern               Methodist               University               and               Tulsa               University,               the               New               York               Giants               drafted               him               in               the               12th               round               of               the               1947               NFL               Draft.

He               was               the               104th               player               chosen               overall.
               Brown               opted               to               join               the               U.S.

Army               instead,               and               stayed               in               the               service               until               1948.
               He               then               decided               to               join               the               Brooklyn               Dodgers               of               the               All               American               Football               Conference               that               year,               then               joined               the               Chicago               Hornets               of               the               AAFC               the               next               season.

He               played               placekicker,               offensive               end,               and               linebacker.
               Brown               then               went               to               the               NFL               in               1950,               when               he               signed               with               the               Washington               Redskins.

He               lasted               eight               games               with               the               team,               before               joining               the               Baltimore               Colts               for               four               games.
               The               Colts               went               defunct               at               the               end               of               the               year,               so               Brown               joined               the               49ers               and               was               put               in               as               their               starting               middle               linebacker               for               the               1951               season.

He               knocked               out               21               players               from               games               in               1951               alone.

In               one               game,               he               knocked               the               opponents               entire               backfield               out               of               action.
               He               stayed               with               the               team               until               1955,               and               gained               a               reputation               for               being               one               of               the               hardest               hitters               in               the               league.

He               was               nicknamed               "Thumper"               and               "The               Hatchet"               by               all.
               49ers               head               coach               Buck               Shaw               banned               him               from               team               practices,               fearing               the               team               would               lose               players.

Hardy               Brown               is               the               only               man               in               NFL               history               to               be               banned               from               his               own               team               practices               without               committing               a               transgression.
               Brown               had               a               technique               where               he               would               wind               up               his               shoulder,               and               had               sent               players               flying               backwards               as               much               as               ten               yards               from               his               impact.
               He               also               almost               took               the               eye               out               of               Joe               Geri,               a               Pittsburgh               Steeler               running               back,               in               1951.

He               fractured               the               face               of               one               player,               and               crushed               the               vertebrae               of               another.
               He               was               named               to               his               lone               Pro               Bowl               Team               in               1952               as               the               MLB               position.

He               then               would               play               both               of               the               other               linebacker               positions               his               last               two               years               with               the               team.
               During               the               1954               season,               the               Detroit               Lions               Gil               "Wild               Horse"               Mains,               a               future               professional               wrestler,               jumped               into               Brown's               leg               feet               first.

Brown               needed               20               stitches,               but               refused               to               leave               the               game.

He               soon               returned               and               broke               the               nose               of               Lions               running               back               Bill               Bowman.
               Brown               moved               on               to               the               Chicago               Cardinals               for               the               1956               season,               and               played               eight               games               before               retiring.
               He               was               lulled               out               of               retirement               in               1960               to               join               the               Denver               Broncos               in               the               newly               formed               American               Football               League,               thus               becoming               one               of               just               two               men               to               have               played               football               in               the               AAFC,               NFL,               and               AFL.
               Hardy               Brown               retired               after               that               year,               and               is               remembered               as               one               of               the               most               vicious               defenders               of               his               day.

The               number               of               careers               he               ended               or               destroyed               is               innumerous.

It               is               often               said               that               he               left               a               trail               of               broken               bones               in               his               wake.
               His               childhood               story               is               set               to               be               told               in               the               upcoming               movie               "Twelve               Mighty               Orphans".
               Ed               "The               Claw"               Sprinkle
               Sprinkle               was               signed               as               an               undrafted               free               agent               by               Chicago               in               1944               because               Hall               of               Fame               Bears               center               Clyde               "Bulldog"               Turner               recommended               him               to               owner/               coach               George               Halas.

Turner               had               attended               the               same               college,               Hardin-Simmons,               as               Sprinkle               and               was               familiar               with               him.
               He               was               brought               along               slowly               initially               to               gain               weight               and               muscle,               but               it               became               quite               apparent               that               Sprinkle               excelled               on               defense.

His               was               called               "The               Claw"               because               of               his               ability               to               shed               blockers               with               his               strong               left               arm               from               his               right               defensive               end               position.
               Bears               would               end               up               winning               the               1946               NFL               championship               by               defeating               the               New               York               Giants               24-14.

In               1950,               he               attained               a               Pro               Bowl               nod.

He               would               return               to               the               Pro               Bowl               in               each               of               the               next               three               years.
               By               the               time               he               retired               after               the               1955               season,               he               had               a               career               where               he               played               with               some               of               the               greatest               players               in               NFL               history.

Men               like               Turner,               Bill               George,               Sid               Luckman,               George               Connor,               Doug               Atkins,               and               George               Blanda               played               defense               with               him               and               are               all               members               of               the               Pro               Football               Hall               of               Fame.
               Sprinkle               was               dubbed               "The               Meanest               Man               in               Pro               Football"               in               his               playing               days.

He               used               his               left               arm               in               ways               that               opponents               accused               him               of               dirty               play,               especially               after               the               whistle               had               sounded               to               halt               the               action.

There               are               also               those               who               say               he               used               his               cleats               to               stomp               on               the               opposition.
               He               disputed               these               claims               in               an               interview,               saying               that               he               was               about               as               aggressive               as               any               other               player               in               the               league               and               that               he               would               have               faced               retribution               if               he               was               a               dirty               player.

He               was               never               fined               nor               suspended               for               any               of               his               actions               on               the               field.
               "A               guy               wouldn't               have               lasted               long               in               those               days               playing               dirty.",               he               said.

"The               others               would               take               care               of               him.

They               would               call               a               play               and               try               to               bury               him               with               six               or               eight               guys,               or               blindside               him.

There               were               so               many               ways               to               do               it."
               Halas               often               said               that               not               only               was               Sprinkle               the               greatest               pass               rusher               he               ever               saw               play,               but               that               he               was               the               roughest               player               the               Bears               ever               had.

He               probably               would               have               went               to               more               Pro               Bowls               if               defensive               ability               was               more               recognized               then,               but               the               honor               often               went               to               pass               catching               ends               until               later               in               his               career.
               His               owner,               teammates,               coaches,               and               Bears               fans               loved               and               admired               him.

Though               "The               Claw"               might               be               most               renowned               for               his               rough               and               tumble               style               of               play,               there               are               many               Bears               historians               that               agree               with               Halas               that               Ed               Sprinkle               was               the               greatest               pass               rushing               defensive               end               to               ever               wear               their               jersey.
               Dick               Butkus
               The               Chicago               Bears               had               the               great               fortune               of               drafting               two               Hall               of               Famers               in               the               first               round               of               the               1965               draft.

They               snagged               Butkus               with               the               third               pick               overall,               then               running               back               Gale               Sayers               with               the               next               selection.
               Butkus               started               right               away               at               middle               linebacker               and               instantly               became               a               star.

After               getting               a               career               best               five               interceptions,               he               was               named               to               the               first               of               his               eight               straight               Pro               Bowls.

He               was               known               for               having               the               brute               strength               to               cause               opponents               to               fumble,               and               he               pounced               on               a               then-NFL               record               27               balls               over               his               career.
               The               NFL               also               feared               his               hitting               abilities               and               intelligence.

Sports               Illustrated               dubbed               him               "The               Most               Feared               Man               in               the               Game"               in               1970               after               he               won               his               second               straight               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               Award.

His               desire               and               athleticism               was               legendary.
               Butkus'               knees               began               to               fail               him               as               his               career               went               on,               so               he               retired               after               1973.

He               filed               a               lawsuit               against               the               team               for               pushing               pain               killing               pills               on               him               so               he               would               suit               up               and               fill               seats               for               more               money.

Since               then,               he               has               actively               campaigned               for               sports               to               be               played               clean               without               the               use               of               drugs               like               steroids.
               He               is               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1960's               and               1970's               All-Decade               Teams,               the               75th               Anniversary               Team,               and               both               the               Pro               Football               and               College               Football               Halls               of               Fame.

His               jersey               has               been               retired               by               both               the               Bears               and               his               Alma               mater               Illinois               University.
               Few               men               struck               fear               in               the               hearts               of               opponents               like               Butkus.

The               NFL               Network               named               him               the               most               feared               player               to               ever               play               the               game,               and               it               is               a               justified               honor.

No               linebacker               has               ever               roamed               the               gridiron               like               him.
               Jack               Tatum
               Tatum               was               a               first               round               draft               pick               of               the               Oakland               Raiders               in               1971.

He               was               the               19th               player               picked               overall.

He               went               to               college               at               Ohio               State               University.

Two               legends               there               would               help               change               his               path.

Woody               Hayes               was               planning               to               use               Tatum               as               a               running               back               when               his               assistant               coach,               Lou               Holtz,               persuaded               Hayes               to               move               Tatum               into               the               defensive               safety               position.
               In               his               first               game               as               a               Buckeye,               Tatum               knocked               the               opposing               teams               starting               tight               end               and               running               back               out               of               the               game.

He               was               All-Big               Ten               from               his               sophomore               year               until               his               senior               year,               and               was               a               two-time               All-American.

He               helped               Ohio               State               get               to               two               National               Championship               games               in               his               collegiate               career,               winning               once.

Ohio               State               lost               just               two               games               in               his               three               seasons               playing.
               His               legend               at               Ohio               State               is               so               everlasting               that               current               Ohio               State               head               coach               Jim               Tressel               instituted               a               "Jack               Tatum               Hit               of               the               Week               Award,"               given               to               the               player               who               had               the               most               impressive               defensive               hit               of               the               game.
               Tatum               made               an               immediate               impact               upon               his               arrival               in               the               NFL.

One               game,               he               knocked               out               two               Baltimore               Colts               from               the               game.

Hall               of               Fame               Tight               End               John               Mackey               was               one               of               the               players.

He               also               once               sent               Hall               of               Fame               wide               receiver               Lynn               Swann               to               the               hospital               after               a               hit.
               Tatum               was               one               of               the               most               feared               and               respected               free               safeties               in               the               NFL.

He               was               named               to               his               first               Pro               Bowl               squad               in               1973,               and               would               go               on               to               be               named               to               the               Pro               Bowl               team               each               season               until               1977.

He               was               a               key               ingredient               to               the               Raiders               team               that               would               go               on               to               win               Super               Bowl               XI.
               Tatum               would               then               be               traded               to               the               Houston               Oilers               prior               to               the               1980               season,               and               responded               by               intercepting               a               career               high               seven               interception               for               100               yards               despite               not               starting               one               game.

He               helped               the               Oilers               win               the               AFC               Central               Division               Championship.
               Houston,               coincidentally,               would               then               lose               to               the               Wild               Card               Oakland               Raiders               in               the               first               round               of               the               playoffs.

Tatum               retired               after               that               game.

No               matter               how               one               looks               at               him,               Tatum               is               part               of               some               of               some               of               the               most               memorable               moments               in               the               NFL's               history.
               The               famous               "Immaculate               Reception",               at               the               end               of               a               playoff               game               in               1972,               started               when               Tatum               laid               out               Pittsburgh's               John               Fuqua.

Most               fans               recall               Hall               of               Fame               running               back               Franco               Harris               gathering               the               caromed               ball               and               running               it               in               for               a               game               winning               touchdown.

In               Super               Bowl               XI,               Vikings               wide               receiver               Sammy               White               was               leveled               by               Tatum               on               a               crossing               pattern,               but               the               Viking               held               onto               the               ball.
               During               a               1978               preseason               game,               he               hit               New               England               Wide               Receiver               Darryl               Stingley               in               a               play               that               would               paralyze               Stingley               for               life.

Tatum               happened               to               play               on               a               team               that               was               called               the               "Bad               Boys"               of               the               1970's               NFL.

It               was               a               unique               roster               full               of               characters.
               Tatum               was               nicknamed               the               "Assassin"               due               to               his               hard               hitting               ability.

The               hit               on               Stingley,               coupled               with               the               Raiders               already               established               reputation,               gave               Jack               an               unfair               label               of               being               a               dirty               player.

He               was               vilified               by               casual               observers,               and               anti-Raider               media               types               after               this               play.
               Tatum               once               said,               "I               always               wanted               to               hit               someone               hard,               and               if               they               got               hurt,               that               was               just               part               of               the               game.

But               you               always               wanted               them               to               be               okay."               He               admitted               his               hitting               prowess               "borderlines               on               felonious               assault."
               "They               said               on               ESPN               that               I               hit               Stingley               in               the               back               and               that's               just               a               lie,"               Tatum               said.

"It's               amazing               to               me               that               they               lie               like               that               when               they               can               just               look               at               the               hit.

They               have               it               on               tape."               As               you               can               see               in               the               picture,               the               hit               was               clean".

Even               then-Patriots               head               coach               Chuck               Fairbanks               said               the               hit               was               far               from               dirty.
               The               "Assassin"               may               have               hit               guys               hard,               but               that               is               the               way               the               game               was               played               then.

Jack               Tatum               played               within               the               rules.

He               was               not               flagged               nor               fined               for               his               hit               on               Stingley,               though               the               play               was               the               catalyst               for               changing               the               ten               yard               chuck               rule               to               the               current               five               yard               rule.
               Jim               Brown
               When               the               Cleveland               Browns               drafted               Jim               Brown               in               the               first               round               of               the               1957               draft,               with               the               sixth               overall               selection,               they               were               getting               possibly               the               greatest               football               and               lacrosse               player               in               the               history               of               Syracuse               University               and               collegiate               sports.
               He               was               put               in               as               a               starter               immediately               and               led               the               NFL               in               rushing               yards               and               touchdowns,               yards               rushing               per               game,               and               rushing               and               receiving               touchdowns               as               a               rookie.

He               was               named               to               the               Pro               Bowl,               an               honor               he               would               accrue               every               year               that               he               played.
               In               his               nine               years               with               the               NFL,               he               led               the               league               in               rushing               yards               eight               times.

He               led               the               NFL               in               yards               rushing               per               game               eight               times,               rushing               touchdowns               five               times,               carries               six               times,               yards               from               scrimmage               six               times,               and               rushing               and               receiving               touchdowns               six               times.

There               has               never               been               a               player               in               the               history               of               any               sport               who               has               so               thoroughly               dominated               a               professional               sport               for               as               long               a               time.
               To               intensify               the               target               that               was               on               his               back               already               for               being               the               best               player               in               the               NFL,               he               had               to               deal               with               the               prevalent               bigotry               that               ran               rampant               in               society               at               the               time.

He               dealt               with               anger               over               the               color               of               his               skin,               which               was               intensified               due               to               the               fact               he               was               a               handsome,               educated               man               who               refused               to               succumb               to               being               bullied.
               Always               as               quick               and               strong               with               his               mind               as               he               was               with               his               body,               one               game               an               opposing               player               yelled               an               expletive               at               him               and               claimed               "You               stink               Brown!"               He               walked               back               to               the               huddle,               asked               for               the               ball,               then               proceeded               to               score.

Brown               then               asked               "How               do               I               smell               from               here?"
               He               retired               after               nine               years               as               the               NFL               rushing               king               in               yards               for               a               season               and               career,               rushing               and               total               touchdowns               in               a               career,               and               still               holds               the               records               for               having               run               for               four               touchdowns               in               a               game               six               times               and               leading               the               league               in               all-purpose               yards               five               times.
               Not               only               is               Brown               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1960's               All-Decade               Team               and               75th               Anniversary               Team,               but               he               also               a               three               time               NFL               MVP,               a               three               time               Pro               Bowl               MVP,               and               a               member               of               the               Pro               Football               Hall               of               Fame.
               The               1964               season               saw               Cleveland               win               the               NFL               Championship,               the               last               the               franchise               has               seen.

Brown               helped               the               team               secure               the               title               by               running               for               114               yards               and               helping               Cleveland               control               the               clock               will               ball               possession.
               When               he               shocked               the               sports               world               by               retiring               at               age               29,               an               age               many               consider               to               be               the               prime               years               of               an               athlete,               he               went               into               acting               and               starred               in               several               films.

Much               as               he               broke               barriers               on               the               gridiron,               he               did               the               same               in               Hollywood.

Yet,               through               all               the               fame,               he               always               worked               to               help               those               less               fortunate               in               society.
               Jim               Brown               was               truly               scary               each               time               he               was               handed               the               ball.

He               would               outrun               opponents               while               carrying               a               few               on               his               back.

A               man               amongst               boys               and               most               likely               the               greatest               human               being               to               ever               step               foot               on               an               NFL               field.

He               is               also               an               American               hero.
               Joe               Greene
               The               Pittsburgh               Steelers               used               their               first               round               pick               in               the               1969               draft,               the               fourth               overall               selection,               to               select               the               man               they               would               call               "Mean"               Joe               Greene.

The               reason               for               his               nickname               came               from               the               fact               he               went               to               college               at               North               Texas               State,               and               their               sports               teams               are               called               the               "Mean               Green".
               Yet               he               lived               up               to               the               moniker               instantly.

He               went               to               the               Pro               Bowl               after               being               named               Defensive               Rookie               of               the               Year               on               a               Steelers               team               that               won               just               once.

He               went               to               the               Pro               Bowl               in               nine               of               the               next               10               years.

The               lone               exception               was               in               1977,               where               he               was               named               First               Team               All-Pro.
               Greene               did               not               like               to               lose,               and               his               fiery               disposition               exuded               this               fact.

He               once               spat               in               the               face               of               Dick               Butkus,               challenging               him               to               a               brawl.

He               kicked               a               lineman               lying               on               the               ground,               and               swatted               the               ball               away               from               the               center               as               the               opposition               was               lining               up               to               run               a               play.

He               was               frequently               triple-teamed               as               the               team               struggled,               but               his               desire               was               rubbing               off               on               the               entire               Pittsburgh               roster.
               The               Steelers               went               from               perennial               losers               to               the               most               dominate               team               in               the               1970's,               and               Greene               led               the               way.

On               a               team               stockpiled               with               stars               now,               he               remained               the               main               face               of               the               franchise.

The               Steelers               would               have               12               Hall               of               Famers               in               the               organization               at               this               time,               yet               he               was               generally               the               first               player               mentioned               above               all
               Pittsburgh               won               four               Super               Bowls               under               his               leadership,               as               he               led               a               legendary               defensive               unit               simply               called               the               "Steel               Curtain".

Four               Hall               of               Famers               patrolled               this               defense,               though               several               fans               believe               there               are               others               who               should               join               them               in               Canton.

It               was               a               defense               filled               with               10               Pro               Bowl               players,               yet               perhaps               none               was               more               important               than               Greene.

Pittsburgh's               defense               fed               off               of               his               abilities               and               leadership.
               When               he               retired               after               the               1981               season,               opposing               teams               were               glad               to               see               him               go.

He               dominated               them               for               13               years,               piling               up               an               unofficial               total               of               78.5               sacks.

He               also               was               stellar               versus               the               run,               often               swallowing               up               running               backs               no               matter               how               many               blockers               were               attempting               to               pester               him.
               "Mean"               Joe               was               a               total               team               player               bent               on               winning.

He               would               line               up               between               the               center               and               guard               to               take               them               out               of               the               play               so               his               teammates               could               have               an               easier               time               stopping               the               opponents.

Something               they               did               time               and               time               again.
               He               is               a               member               of               the               1980's               All-Decade               Team               and               75th               Anniversary               Team,               as               well               as               being               twice               named               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year.

He               is               also               a               member               of               both               the               Pro               Football               and               College               Football               Halls               of               Fame.
               Randy               White
               When               the               Dallas               Cowboys               drafted               White               in               the               first               round               of               the               1975               draft,               the               second               pick               overall,               they               didn't               know               what               to               do               with               him.

He               played               on               the               defensive               line               at               Maryland               University,               winning               virtually               every               award               possible,               but               his               blend               of               speed,               intelligence,               strength,               and               athleticism               had               the               Cowboys               think               he               would               make               an               excellent               middle               linebacker               who               would               one               day               supplant               aging               great               Lee               Roy               Jordan.
               He               spent               his               first               two               years               as               a               reserve               and               special               teams               performer,               as               Bob               Bruenig               passed               him               on               the               depth               chart               and               became               the               starter               when               Jordan               retired.

Dallas               then               moved               White               to               defensive               tackle,               a               move               that               paid               off               in               legendary               proportions.
               He               made               the               Pro               Bowl               in               his               first               year               at               the               position               as               the               Cowboys               would               go               on               to               win               in               Super               Bowl               XII.

He               was               dominate               in               the               game,               and               was               named               the               co-MVP               along               with               his               defensive               linemate               Harvey               Martin.
               The               next               eight               years               saw               him               return               to               the               Pro               Bowl.

He               was               unblockable               and               even               played               through               injury.

He               missed               two               games               in               his               14               year               career.

There               were               Cowboy               fans               debating               if               he               or               Hall               of               Famer               Bob               Lilly               was               the               best               defensive               tackle               in               team               history.

Lilly               had               long               been               recognized               as               one               of               the               best               the               NFL               ever               saw,               so               White's               abilities               were               truly               recognized               and               admired.
               Though               he               was               officially               recognized               with               52               career               sacks,               the               Cowboys               kept               this               stat               through               his               career               and               credit               him               with               111               total.

But               he               was               much               more               than               an               amazing               pass               rusher               from               inside               the               pocket,               he               also               was               equally               adept               at               stopping               the               run.

He               finished               his               career               with               an               astronomical               1,104               tackles,               including               an               amazing               701               solo               tackles.
               Not               only               is               White               a               member               of               the               NFL               1980's               All-Decade               Team,               but               he               is               a               member               of               both               the               Pro               Football               and               College               Football               Halls               of               Fame.

He               was               known               as               the               "Manster"               because               opponents               swore               he               was               half               man               and               half               monster.

He               terrorized               and               struck               fear               into               other               teams               hearts               each               time               he               took               the               field.
               Reggie               White
               White               was               not               drafted               in               1983               by               the               NFL               despite               having               been               named               the               SEC               Player               of               the               Year               and               All-American               in               his               senior               season               at               the               University               of               Tennessee.

He               instead               joined               the               Memphis               Showboats               of               the               fledgling               United               States               Football               League.
               He               played               36               games               over               two               years               for               them,               and               racked               up               23.5               sacks.

The               USFL               folded               after               1984,               and               the               Philadelphia               Eagles               made               White               their               first               draft               choice               in               the               1984               Supplemental               Draft.

He               had               13               sacks               in               13               games               for               the               Eagles               in               1985.
               He               became               a               huge               star               the               next               year,               making               the               first               of               13               consecutive               Pro               Bowls.

He               had               a               whopping               57               sacks               between               1986               -               1988,               including               21               in               just               12               games               in               1987.

Though               Philadelphia               had               one               of               the               better               defenses               in               the               league               when               White               was               there,               they               were               unable               to               reach               any               Super               Bowls.
               He               became               a               free               agent               in               1993,               so               he               joined               the               Green               Bay               Packers.

His               leadership               and               skills               were               crucial               in               helping               the               Packers               reach               consecutive               Super               Bowls,               where               they               won               once.

He               stayed               with               the               Packers               until               retiring               after               1998.
               The               Carolina               Panthers               coaxed               him               out               of               retirement               in               2000,               and               he               had               a               career               low               5.5               sacks.

It               was               the               only               season               of               his               career               he               failed               to               reach               the               Pro               Bowl.

He               then               retired               with               a               then-NFL               record               198               sacks               in               232               games               played.
               Not               only               was               he               a               great               pass               rusher,               but               he               was               equally               excellent               against               the               rush.

Hew               had               an               amazing               1,048               tackles,               including               four               years               of               100               tackles               or               more.

He               had               a               "hump"               and               "swim"               move               that               blockers               could               not               stop               him               from               using,               and               he               was               rarely               blocked               out               of               a               play.
               He               is               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1980's               and               1990's               All-Decade               Teams,               as               well               as               the               75th               Anniversary               Team               and               USFL               All-Time               Team.

He               won               the               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               Award               twice               and               the               NFC               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               Award               three               times.

His               jersey               has               been               retired               by               both               the               Eagles               and               Packers,               and               he               is               a               member               of               both               teams               Halls               of               Fame               as               well               as               the               Pro               Football               and               College               Football               Halls               of               Fame.
               White               was               called               the               "Minister               of               Defense"               because               he               was               an               ordained               minister.

Though               a               gentle               soul               off               the               field,               he               was               a               scary               sight               on               it.

Teams               weekly               concocted               game               plans               to               stop               him,               but               failed.
               Dick               "Night               Train"               Lane
               The               story               of               the               Night               Train               is               proof               why               the               NFL               should               never               shorten               training               camp               and               preseason.

Found               as               an               abandoned               infant,               he               graduated               from               high               school               then               went               to               junior               college               for               one               year               before               joining               the               Army.

After               his               discharge,               he               got               a               job               as               a               factory               worker               and               disliked               it.

He               then               showed               up               at               the               training               camp               of               the               Los               Angeles               Rams               asking               for               a               tryout               in               1952.
               He               initially               tried               out               as               a               wide               receiver,               but               was               moved               to               cornerback               because               the               Rams               had               two               Hall               of               Famers               already               there               in               Tom               Fears               and               Elroy               "Crazy               Legs"               Hirsch.

Lane               made               the               team               and               quickly               earned               a               starting               job.

He               picked               off               an               NFL               record               14               passes               in               just               12               games               during               his               rookie               year,               returned               them               for               a               league               leading               298               yards,               still               the               sixth               most               in               NFL               history,               and               scored               twice.

He               even               recorded               a               safety               on               a               tackle,               yet               somehow               was               not               named               a               Pro               Bowler.
               The               Rams               traded               him               to               the               Chicago               Cardinals               in               1954               and               he               responded               with               his               first               of               three               consecutive               Pro               Bowl               season               by               leading               the               league               with               10               interceptions               for               181               yards.

After               two               more               Pro               Bowl               years,               including               one               season               in               1958               where               he               caught               a               98               yard               touchdown               pass,               he               was               traded               to               the               Detroit               Lions               in               1960               and               made               the               Pro               Bowl               three               straight               years.
               He               was               part               of               an               elite               defense               that               had               three               Hall               of               Famers               in               the               secondary               with               Lane,               Yale               Lary,               and               Dick               LeBeau.

The               defensive               line               was               called               the               "Fearsome               Foursome",               led               by               Roger               Brown               and               Alex               Karras               and               Hall               of               Fame               middle               linebacker               Joe               Schmidt.

Though               the               Lions               never               won               a               championship,               there               were               few               defenses               ever               as               good.
               When               he               retired               after               1965,               he               had               61               interceptions               for               1,207               yards               and               seven               total               touchdowns               with               his               safety.

His               1,207               interception               return               yards               still               ranks               as               the               sixth               most               ever               in               NFL               history.

The               NFL               named               him               the               top               cornerback               in               their               first               50               years               of               existence,               and               he               is               on               their               75th               Anniversary               Team               and               1950's               All-Decade               Team.
               What               made               Lane               stand               out               even               more               than               his               propensity               to               acquire               the               ball,               and               go               long               distances               with               it,               was               his               hitting               ability.

He               often               knocked               players               out               of               games,               and               his               favorite               move               was               dubbed               the               "Night               Train               Necktie".

It               was               a               move               where               he               would               lasso               a               receiver               around               the               head               and               shoulders,               crashing               him               hard               into               the               turf.
               Few               cornerbacks               have               ever               hit               as               hard               or               covered               a               receiver               as               well               as               "Night               Train"               Lane.

He               may               not               only               be               the               scariest               cornerback               in               the               history               of               football,               but               also               the               most               complete               and               best               overall.
               Deacon               Jones
               Jones               was               drafted               in               the               14th               round               of               the               1961               NFL               Draft               by               the               Los               Angeles               Rams,               the               186th               player               picked               overall.

Amazingly,               the               American               Football               League               chose               not               to               take               a               flier               on               him.
               He               earned               a               starting               job               right               away,               was               named               the               teams               Rookie               of               the               Year,               and               made               the               first               of               seven               consecutive               Pro               Bowls               by               1964.

The               Rams               had               stockpiled               defenders               like               Hall               of               Famer               Merlin               Olsen               along               with               Pro               Bowlers               like               Rosey               Grier,               Jack               Pardee,               Eddie               Meador,               Lamar               Lundy,               Maxie               Baughan,               Irv               Cross,               Myron               Pottios,               Coy               Bacon,               Roger               Brown,               and               Hall               of               Famer               Bill               George               over               this               time.
               The               "Fearsome               Foursome"               was               born               in               Los               Angeles,               and               the               group               was               very               popular               with               the               fans               and               media.

Jones               was               called               the               "Secretary               of               Defense",               and               was               named               the               "Most               Valuable               Ram               of               All               Time"by               the               Los               Angeles               Times               newspaper.

Hall               of               Fame               coach               George               Allen               said               Jones               was               the               "Greatest               Defensive               End               of               Modern               Football".
               He               left               the               Rams               after               1971               and               joined               the               San               Diego               Chargers.

He               was               named               to               his               final               Pro               Bowl               in               1972,               then               reunited               with               Allen               as               a               member               of               the               Washington               Redskins               in               1974               before               retiring.

Sacks               were               not               recorded               in               his               era,               but               several               teams               recorded               the               stat               anyways               for               fun.

Jones               is               said               to               have               recorded               50               over               two               years,               including               26               in               1967.

Both               would               be               records               if               recognized.

One               source               claims               he               had               173.5               over               his               career,               while               others               claim               that               number               to               far               exceed               200.
               It               was               Jones               himself               who               coined               the               phrase               "sack"               ,               when               it               came               to               tackling               the               quarterback               attempting               a               pass.

His               toughness               is               legendary,               having               missed               just               six               games               in               his               14               seasons.

He               was               named               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               twice.

He               also               is               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1960's               All-Decade               Team               and               75th               Anniversary               Team,               along               with               being               a               member               of               the               Pro               Football               Hall               of               Fame.
               No               other               defensive               end               is               said               to               be               more               important               to               the               position               than               Deacon               Jones.

Blessed               with               long               arms,               his               favorite               pass               rush               move               was               the               "head               slap"               technique.

Opponents               said               it               felt               like               Jones               was               slapping               their               brains               out               of               their               earholes               with               the               move               because               he               was               so               strong               and               had               pinpoint               accuracy.
               The               Rams               have               retired               his               jersey,               but               not               his               memories.

There               may               be               no               tougher               or               scarier               defensive               end               in               the               history               than               David               "Deacon"               Jones.
               Lawrence               Taylor
               The               New               York               Giants               drafted               Taylor               in               the               first               round               of               the               1981               draft,               where               he               was               the               second               player               chosen               overall.

The               Giants               immediately               started               him               at               right               outside               linebacker,               a               position               he               would               spend               most               of               his               career               at,               and               he               rewarded               them               by               being               named               the               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               and               NFL               Defensive               Rookie               of               the               Year.

He               is               the               only               player               to               have               accomplished               this               feat.

He               also               was               named               to               the               first               of               his               ten               consecutive               Pro               Bowl               nods.
               The               NFL               began               to               officially               record               quarterback               sacks               as               a               statistic               in               1982,               and               Taylor               stood               out               even               more               as               he               won               his               second               straight               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               Award               .

He               would               pile               up               142               over               his               13               seasons.

He               led               the               NFL               with               20.5               in               1986,               winning               the               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               Award               for               a               record               third               time               as               the               Giants               would               go               on               to               win               Super               Bowl               XXI.
               The               1990               season               was               his               last               as               a               Pro               Bowler,               yet               he               helped               the               Giants               win               Super               Bowl               XXV.

He               retired               after               the               1993               season               and               is               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1980's               All-Decade               Team               and               their               75th               Anniversary               Team.

The               Giants               also               retired               his               jersey.
               While               some               fans               recall               how               Taylor               broke               the               leg               of               Washington               Redskins               quarterback               Joe               Thiesmann               during               a               nationally               televised               game               in               1985,               it               is               not               the               play               that               capsules               his               career.

Teams               best               remember               him               for               knowing               he               was               coming               hard               off               the               edge,               but               were               hardly               ever               able               to               stop               him.

His               speed,               strength,               and               athleticism               were               unusual               and               unmatched.
               His               abilities               opened               things               up               for               the               rest               of               an               excellent               Giants               defense               that               won               two               championships               and               were               in               serious               contention               for               several               others.

Many               pundits               think               he               is               the               greatest               defensive               player               to               have               ever               played,               and               he               certainly               was               one               of               the               most               feared.
               Ronnie               Lott
               When               the               San               Francisco               49ers               drafted               Lott               in               the               first               round               of               the               1981               draft,               the               eoghth               pick               overall,               they               put               him               at               cornerback.

He               stood               out               immediately,               going               to               the               first               of               ten               straight               Pro               Bowls               after               getting               seven               interceptions               and               a               league               leading               three               touchdowns               that               helped               the               49ers               win               Super               Bowl               XVI.
               After               17               interceptions               and               four               scores               and               another               Super               Bowl               win               over               four               years,               he               shifted               to               free               safety               midway               in               the               1985               season.

The               move               initially               didn't               go               well,               because               he               had               to               have               the               tip               of               his               left               pinkie               finger               amputated               after               a               tackle.

He               stayed               at               free               safety               however.
               He               led               the               NFL               with               ten               interceptions               in               1986               despite               missing               two               games.

San               Francisco               would               go               on               to               win               both               Super               Bowl               XXIII               and               XXIV               with               Lott               creating               turnovers               and               crushing               opponents               with               bone               jarring               hits.
               He               departed               the               49ers               to               join               the               Los               Angeles               Raiders               in               1991,               and               led               the               NFL               with               eight               interceptions               playing               the               strong               safety               for               the               first               time.

He               stayed               with               them               until               1993,               then               played               two               seasons               at               free               safety               for               the               New               York               Jets               before               retiring               after               the               conclusion               of               the               1994               season.
               He               is               a               member               of               the               NFL's               1980's               and               1990's               All-Decade               Teams,               the               75th               Anniversary               Team,               as               well               as               both               the               Pro               Football               and               College               Football               Halls               of               Fame.
               When               you               see               how               Lott               got               1,113               tackles,               61               interceptions,               17               fumble               recoveries,               and               five               touchdowns               over               his               14               seasons,               you               see               a               productive               player.

Yet               it               does               not               tell               his               true               worth.

His               hitting               prowess               changed               games               and               game               plans               because               he               was               so               feared.
               Jack               Lambert
               Lambert               was               drafted               in               the               second               round               of               the               1974               draft               by               the               Pittsburgh               Steelers,               the               46th               player               chosen               overall.

He               earned               the               starting               job               at               middle               linebacker               right               away               and               won               the               NFL               Defensive               Rookie               of               the               Year               Award               as               the               Steelers               won               Super               Bowl               IX..
               His               second               season               saw               him               get               the               first               of               nine               straight               Pro               Bowl               nods.

He               recovered               a               career               high               eight               fumbles               in               his               third               year,               tied               as               the               second               most               ever               by               a               defensive               player.

He               was               not               only               an               established               star               in               the               league,               but               he               was               also               a               well               reknowned               leader.
               His               leadership               really               shone               in               1976,               when               the               Steelers               started               the               year               at               1-4               after               several               injuries               to               key               players.

Lambert               held               a               players               only               meeting               and               put               the               onus               on               the               defense               to               lead               the               team.

Pittsburgh's               defense               responded               by               sending               eight               players               to               the               Pro               Bowl               after               pitching               five               shutouts               over               the               next               nine               games,               and               only               28               points               over               the               course               of               the               other               four               games.
               He               was               named               NFL               Defensive               Player               of               the               Year               and               was               a               member               of               four               Super               Bowl               winning               Steelers               teams               in               his               career.

He               is               a               member               of               both               the               NFL's               1970's               and               1980's               All-Decade               Teams               as               well               as               the               75th               Anniversary               Team.

He               is               also               a               member               of               the               Pro               Football               Hall               of               Fame.
               Few               fans               who               saw               Lambert               play               will               ever               forget               his               determination,               leadership,               intelligence,               and               relentless               motor.

What               they               also               will               not               forget               is               his               toothless               snaerl               that               struck               fear               in               the               opposition               each               play,               a               look               that               made               "Count               Dracula               in               Cleats"               become               an               indelible               image               of               the               league               for               eternity.
               Johnny               Sample
               Sample               was               drafted               by               the               Baltimore               Colts               in               the               seventh               round               of               the               1958               draft,               where               he               was               the               79th               player               chosen               overall.

Though               he               played               sparingly               as               a               rookie,               he               was               on               the               field               as               the               Colts               defeated               the               New               York               Giants               in               the               1958               NFL               Championship,               which               is               called               "The               Greatest               Game               Ever               Played".
               He               then               began               to               start               at               free               safety               and               return               kicks               by               his               second               year.

Baltimore               traded               him               to               the               Pittsburgh               Steelers               in               1961,               and               he               led               the               NFL               in               punt               returns,               punt               return               yards               gained,               and               had               a               career               best               eight               interceptions               his               first               year               with               the               Steelers,               who               had               moved               him               to               cornerback.
               After               an               injury               plagued               1962,               he               joined               the               Washington               Redskins               the               next               year               for               two               games.

He               stayed               with               the               team               until               1965,               before               jumping               to               the               American               Football               League               to               play               with               the               New               York               Jets.

The               Jets               would               go               on               to               win               the               1968               AFL               Championship,               then               Super               Bowl               III,               where               Sample               picked               off               a               pass.

He               retired               after               the               game
               Though               he               is               the               only               person               to               ever               win               a               Super               Bowl               as               well               as               an               NFL               and               AFL               Championship,               people               tend               to               forget               he               snagged               41               interceptions               and               scored               six               times               in               his               11               seasons               because               of               the               style               of               play               he               had               on               the               field.
               He               was               known               as               a               hard               hitter               who               was               dirty               to               some.

He               even               wrote               a               book               called               "Confessions               of               a               Dirty               Ballplayer"               in               1970               before               becoming               a               famous               professional               tennis               umpire.

Homer               Jones,               a               Pro               Bowl               receiver               for               the               New               York               Giants               who               invented               the               spike               and               has               the               NFL               record               for               career               average               of               yards               per               catch,               said               Sample               laid               out               the               biggest               hit               he               ever               saw               at               the               expense               of               his               teammate               Del               Shofner.
               Shofner               was               a               well               respected               receiver               with               five               Pro               Bowls               under               his               belt               when               he               caught               a               pass               and               was               headed               towards               the               sidelines.

Sample               came               from               out               of               nowhere               and               laid               a               hit               so               ferocious               that               it               knocked               Shofner               out               and               caused               both               teams               benches               to               empty               into               a               brawl.
               The               NFL's               director               of               football               operations               is               Gene               Washington,               a               former               Pro               Bowl               receiver.

He               said,               "I               played               against               Sample,               and               nobody               today               plays               the               way               he               did.

Playing               on               the               line               or               over               the               line,               as               it               relates               to               dirty               tactics,               there               is               not               an               equal."
               Whether               he               got               into               an               opponents               psyche               or               body,               there               where               few               defensive               backs               as               feared               as               Johnny               Sample.
               Larry               Csonka
               Csonka               was               drafted               by               the               Miami               Dolphins               in               the               first               round               of               the               1968               draft,               where               he               was               the               eighth               player               chosen               overall.

He               had               attended               Syracuse               University,               where               he               had               broken               many               school               rushing               records               that               were               set               by               such               legends               like               Jim               Brown,               Ernie               Davis,               and               Floyd               Little.
               He               had               almost               never               became               a               running               back.

He               was               playing               defensive               end               in               high               school               when               he               filled               in               on               the               kickoff               team               in               his               sophomore               year               on               the               last               game               of               the               season.

He               got               his               hands               on               the               ball               and               loved               it.

After               pleading               to               his               coaches               to               play               fullback               for               a               long               period               of               time,               he               was               given               an               opportunity               and               immediately               stood               out               from               then               on.
               Miami               brought               him               along               slowly               his               first               two               seasons,               handing               the               ball               off               to               him               just               under               ten               times               a               game               because               he               suffered               two               concussions               so               severe               that               his               career               was               in               jeopardy.

They               increased               his               workload               his               third               season               and               the               team               improved               as               Csonka               made               the               first               of               his               five               consecutive               Pro               Bowls.
               He               never               missed               a               game               over               a               four               year               span               that               saw               him               regularly               run               over               defenders               on               each               play.

He               was               a               nightmare               trying               to               tackle,               and               he               would               often               deliver               a               more               forceful               impact               than               the               opposition               could               deliver.

To               make               matters               worse,               he               rarely               fumbled               and               was               an               outstanding               blocker.
               He               was               called               a               "movable               weight"               by               one               defender,               who               lamented               the               strength               in               Csonka's               legs.

He               also               was               extremely               tough,               having               played               through               at               least               ten               broken               noses               in               his               gridiron               career.

Monte               Clark,               a               assistant               coach               on               Miami,               once               said               "When               Csonka               goes               on               safari,               the               lions               roll               up               their               windows."
               "Zonk"               became               famous               as               the               offensive               leader               on               Dolphin               teams               that               appeared               in               three               Super               Bowls               in               the               first               half               of               the               1970's,               winning               two.

He               was               named               MVP               of               Super               Bowl               VIII.

His               story               was               on               books               and               magazines               constantly,               and               was               named               1973               Super               Athlete               of               the               Year               by               the               Professional               Football               Writers               Association.
               With               all               of               his               successes,               he               was               significantly               underpaid.

The               World               Football               League               was               starting               up               in               1974,               so               Csonka               left               the               Miami               Dolphins               for               the               Memphis               Southmen               for               a               more               lucrative               contract.

He               stayed               there               until               the               WFL               folded               midway               into               their               second               year.
               He               joined               the               New               York               Giants               in               1976,               and               was               part               of               a               memorable               play               two               years               later               most               call               "The               Miracle               at               the               Meadowlands".

With               the               Giants               leading               the               Philadelphia               Eagles               by               five               with               31               seconds               left               on               the               game               clock,               the               New               York               offensive               coordinator               instructed               the               quarterback               to               hand               off               the               ball               to               Csonka               instead               of               kneel               down.

The               rest               of               the               team               was               expecting               the               quarterback               to               kneel,               but               he               attempted               to               hand               it               to               Csonka               while               juggling               the               ball.

The               ball               bounced               around               until               Philadelphia               scooped               up               the               ball               and               ran               it               in               for               a               winning               score.
               He               returned               to               Miami               in               1978               and               scored               a               career               high               13               times               and               was               named               the               NFL               Comeback               Player               of               the               Year.

He               asked               for               an               increase               in               pay,               but               was               denied               so               he               retired.

He               is               a               member               of               the               Pro               Football,               College               Football,               and               Miami               Dolphins               Halls               of               Fame.
               The               images               of               a               bloodied               "Zonk"               glaring               into               a               hole               just               before               he               ran               over               three               defenders               is               permanently               etched               in               the               memories               of               every               football               fan               that               got               to               see               him               play.

There               were               few               as               tough,               sturdy,               or               strong               to               ever               carry               the               football.
               Conrad               Dobler
               Dobler               was               drafted               in               the               fifth               round               of               the               1972               draft               by               the               Saint               Louis               Cardinals,               the               110th               player               chosen               overall.

He               joined               a               team               filled               with               great               blockers               who               all               would               go               to               the               Pro               Bowl               in               their               careers.

Men               like               Hall               of               Famer               Dan               Dierdorf,               Bob               Young,               Ernie               McMillan,               Tom               Banks               and               Hall               of               Fame               tight               end               Jackie               Smith               played               along               the               line               with               him.
               He               started               right               away               at               left               guard,               but               was               moved               to               the               right               side               in               his               second               year.

A               position               he               would               stay               at               the               rest               of               his               career,               and               he               stood               out               immediately.

Known               for               his               surly               demeanor               on               the               field,               Dobler               would               do               whatever               it               took               to               keep               the               opposition               away               from               his               teams               high               powered               offense.
               Though               he               was               called               "Pro               Football's               Dirtiest               Player",               he               was               also               excellent               and               respected.

He               was               named               to               the               Pro               Bowl               for               three               straight               years               from               1975-1977.

Whether               he               was               seen               punching               Hall               of               Famer               "Mean"               Joe               Greene,               kicking               Hall               of               Famer               Merlin               Olsen               in               the               head,               or               spitting               on               an               injured               player,               Dobler               was               a               character               you               loved               to               have               on               your               team               or               hate               the               fact               that               he               wasn't.
               What               made               him               so               scary               was               his               unpredictable               nature.

He               was               as               apt               to               punch               you               or               dive               into               your               knees               on               any               play.

This               style               of               play               was               also               one               with               payback,               but               he               was               so               tough               that               he               played               through               multiple               injuries.

The               Cardinals               traded               him               to               New               Orleans               in               1978,               who               then               traded               him               to               the               Buffalo               Bills               in               1980               before               he               retired               after               1981.
               He               now               is               90%               disabled               after               several               surgeries               to               try               to               fix               a               body               that               both               gave               out               and               was               dealt               severe               punishment.

He               has               had               nine               knee               replacement               surgeries               alone               so               far,               causing               financial               hardship               seen               with               many               players               of               his               era               because               of               how               they               are               disregarded               by               the               NFL               and               NFLPA.
               Bronko               Nagurski
               Bronko               joined               the               Chicago               Bears               after               a               legendary               collegiate               career               with               the               University               of               Minnesota.

He               once               scored               a               touchdown               and               intercepted               a               pass               while               playing               with               cracked               vertebrae.
               At               6'2"               226,               he               was               one               of               the               largest               running               backs               of               his               era.

His               strength               carrying               the               ball               was               legendary.

He               ran               over               four               players               while               playing               in               Wrigley               Field,               then               smashed               against               the               brick               wall               after               scoring.

"That               last               guy               hit               me               awfully               hard."               was               his               response.
               He               got               hurt               carrying               the               ball,               so               the               Bears               used               his               blocking               prowess               by               inserting               him               at               offensive               tackle.

He               was               a               All-Pro               player               at               fullback,               defensive               tackle,               and               offensive               tackle,               making               him               the               only               player               ever               to               be               named               to               the               All-Pro               at               three               different               positions.
               Nagurski               was               also               a               professional               wrestler               when               he               wasn't               playing               football.

He               did               it               to               supplement               his               income,               because               NFL               players               were               paid               little               in               his               era.

He               won               three               world               championships               as               a               wrestler.
               Nagurski               is               considered               one               of               the               greatest               defensive               tackles               in               college               football               history.

Not               only               is               there               an               annual               award               named               after               him               that               goes               to               the               top               defender               in               college               football,               but               he               is               a               member               of               the               College               Football               Hall               of               Fame               and               the               starting               defensive               tackle               on               Sports               Illustrated's               NCAA               Football               All-Century               Team.

He               is               also               an               charter               member               of               the               Pro               Football               Hall               of               Fame,               a               member               of               the               1930's               All-Decade               Team               and               NFL               75th               Anniversary               Team.
               As               a               professional               player,               he               was               truly               feared               on               both               sides               of               the               ball.

Whether               he               was               carrying               it,               blocking,               or               tackling,               Nagurski               made               a               huge               impact.

He               retired               after               1937,               but               returned               in               1943               to               help               Chicago               win               a               championship               by               scoring               a               touchdown               in               the               title               game.

The               Bears               retired               two               of               the               numbers               he               wore.
               When               Hall               of               Famers               like               Jim               Brown,               Marion               Motley,               John               Riggins,               Earl               Campbell,               and               Larry               Csonka               were               seen               dragging               around               defenders               into               the               end               zone,               history               must               pay               tribute               to               the               man               who               did               it               first.

Bronko               Nagurski               was               a               winner               who               scared               opponents               each               time               he               stepped               on               the               gridiron.






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