Posts Tagged ‘Dick Butkus’

NFL All-Time Team

February 12th, 2010
Montana, Rice, Jim Brown, Dick Butkus, Reggie White, it doesn't get any better than this. These are the best that have ever played, and any team would be lucky to have any guy here. From Red Grange, to Randy Moss, Bronko Nagurski, to Brian Dawkins. The complete position by position breakdown of the greatest to ever play their position.

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The All-Time Chicago Bears Defense

February 9th, 2010
The Chicago Bears have a long and proud history on defense and have had some of the best defenders in NFL history on the team. Players like Dan Hampton, Dick Butkus, Mike Singletary and Doug Plank are revered by many long time Bears fans and are considered to be some of the best defensive players in Chicago football history. In this slideshow, we will take a look at the best Chicago Bears player at each position on defense in Bears history. We will also have some honorable mention players at each position to go along with the top player at each position.

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Man Up, America: It’s Time for Defense in Fantasy Football

November 4th, 2009

Australia is one of those unique places on earth with strange variations of plant and animal life. Because it was disconnected from the rest of the planet, evolution took its own path there.  

Back in 1994, when the idea of fantasy football was in relative infancy, a group of guys in Alabama decided to give it a try. The idea was new, and everybody had their own ideas as to how it should be run.

They sat down and worked out a set of rules, and a fantasy football league was born.

My cousin Brian was one of those guys. He started hounding me about getting into the league, but I was married and had kids—time was not on my side. Nonetheless, after about two or three years of him pestering me, I went ahead and joined up.

That year, because I was an expansion team I got a special pick before the first round because each team was allowed to keep one player from the year before. I chose Barry Sanders, the best running back in football at the time. That move might have made sense to you, and it did to me, but this was not your average league.

This league wasn't just offense; it was defense too. Each team had to carry linebackers, defensive linemen, and defensive backs. Tackles got you one point, sacks three, and interceptions six. If they returned a pick or fumble for a touchdown, they got the six points as well. 

In this league rookies got a 50 percent bonus, so a rookie linebacker averaging 10 tackles a game was way more important than a running back who occasionally scored a touchdown.

Needless to say, I got schooled that first year. They showed no mercy!

That was over a decade ago, and the rules have changed slightly, but for the most part it has remained as it began. We did go from keeping score on notebooks and calling on land lines to a full-featured website and cell phone access. One guy even drafted his team over a sat phone from Iraq.  

One thing that has not changed is the league is still private, it's invitation only, it's still about honor (money is not involved), and defensive players are still critical to winning.

For years we had hoped some fantasy football site like Fox Sports, ESPN, or the NFL itself would make a league with defensive players, but our wait has been in vain. So we keep trudging along on a privately run website.

Every time a new owner comes in, they load up with offensive talent, and for the first few weeks they do well. As the season wears on, guys get beat up, and the cold weather arrives with the snow and rain. Defense begins to dominate. The offensive-heavy teams fade back, and the defensive teams surge forward. 

Usually in the end a well-balanced team will come out on top.

That is our story, and I'm telling it for a reason. 

Are you folks tired of being amateurs?  What idiot decided defense wasn't important enough to be included?

When is America going to grow a backbone and play the game the way it was meant to be played? This is football! 

If there are pictures of Tom Brady somewhere on your wall, quit reading here—I'm sure momma is calling you home for supper. 

If the sight of Dick Butkus knocking the snot out of someone on a snowy field in Chicago makes your heart race, where is THAT league?

Where are players like Ray Lewis in your league?  Did the amazing rookie year of Patrick Willis register at all to you? Do you even know who he plays for? 

With so much competition out there for fantasy football web traffic, why is it everyone is serving the same product?  The competitive edge is right in front of you. If you can score a wideout, you can score a linebacker. 

To the powers that be in the fantasy football world, I'm calling you out. Show me your man card. I'm not seeing it.

Sorry Dick Butkus (Or, In This Case, John Madden)

October 21st, 2009

Don't you love that commercial, the one where the puny little business guy apologizes for interrupting the Dick Butkus speech being given to him and his co-worker?

Well, maybe I should apologize to John Madden in advance for what I know will be considered sacrilege and stupidity in the eyes of the greatest Brett Favre-lover in the world and everyone else who agrees with him.  

I'm sorry John Madden.

I need your forgiveness because I am going to argue here that Brett Favre is overrated.

That's right, the guy who is currently quarterbacking an undefeated team, the guy who has more than one league-MVP trophy, the guy who holds many of the NFL's passing records, the guy who likes to skip around the field like a deer on a cold winter day, and who slaps butts like no one who ever played the game before him gets too much hype, too much love and too much credit when the discussion has to do with the greatest quarterbacks ever to play the game.

As someone once told me, "Don't speak to be understood so much as to make sure you aren't misunderstood."  Let me practice that right here.

I'm not saying that Brett Favre is not a great quarterback.

I'm not saying that Brett Favre has not been entertaining to most NFL fans.

I'm not saying that Brett Favre's talent, longevity and durability are not impressive.

I'm not saying that the guy isn't one of the best stat-hounds ever to play the game.

I'm not saying that he isn't a slam dunk Hall-of-Famer.

What I am saying is that, while I would put Favre in my top 20 quarterbacks of all time, I'm not sure he is in my top 10, and I am certain that he isn't in my top five. 

Most people put him in the top three and some put him at No. 1.  It is on that basis, using that as my standard of rule, that I say he is overrated.

Favre has always been able to put up stats.  I would argue that one of the reasons he has been able to do that, along with his very real talent, is that he played for teams that wanted it to be that way.  I would also argue that Brett wanted it that way. 

The personality that has been put on display for all the world to see, in his never-ending tearful retirement act, is who this guy really is.  

Is he likable?  Yes.  Is he selfish?  Yes.  Does he have to be front-and-center in his world?  Without question.

And so, much like Dan Marino, Favre always preferred offenses where it was throw first, throw often, and, especially, throw inside the red zone.  In fact, throw inside the 5-yard line.  How many touchdown passes does this guy have for less than three yards?  

What gets mentioned about Favre, but always dismissed, is that he has killed his team in some of the biggest situations over and over again.  He has thrown away tight ball games.  He has thrown away playoff ball games.  Who can forget his six-interception performance in the playoffs?

Someone says, "But he won a Super Bowl."  True enough.  

But the kick returner was the MVP of that game.  And what happened the next Super Bowl?  Favre's team was favored but lost to the Denver Broncos.

I believe that one measure of a great quarterback is what he does with his team when it is favored.  Does he lose games he is supposed to win?

When you are playing the NFC Championship game at home and your team is favored and the weather has played into your hands, do you throw it away with a god-awful interception?  

Yeah, he did that, too.

That is Brett Favre.  

Media types, football watchers everywhere, even football players love him because he is the unbuckle your chin strap, slap a butt, give a wink, swashbuckler of a player.  He is hyped and hyped and hyped.  But when it comes to the most important issue, doing what is necessary, consistently, to make your team a winner, he isn't in the top 10 in my book.

Sorry Dick Butkus, I mean John Madden.



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