Posted on
November 23, 2009 by
Dean Hybl
Football has been a Thanksgiving tradition for more than a century.
Ever since the first professional football league was formed in the early 1900s, football has been as much a part of Thanksgiving Day as pumpkin pie, turkey and dinner at Grandma’s.
Upon creation of the NFL in 1920, the league initially played multiple games on Thanksgiving Day.
In 1920 there were a total of six games played on Thanksgiving. Included during that first season were matchups between the Canton Bulldogs and Akron Pros, Daytona Triangles against the Detroit Heralds, and the Elyria Athletics against the Columbus Panhandles.
The first matchup between two current NFL franchises was in 1922 when the Chicago Cardinals defeated the Chicago Bears 6-0. The first regular Thanksgiving rivalry, the Cardinals and Bears met every year between 1922 and 1933.
The following year, the Cardinals played the Green Bay Packers on Thanksgiving Day while the Bears faced the Detroit Lions.
From 1934-1938 the Bears and Lions played annually on Turkey Day.In 1939 and 1940 the only Thanksgiving Day game was played between the Philadelphia Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers.
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Tags: Dallas CowboysDetroit LionsFootballNFLThanksgiving Day
Category
Football, Sports History
Posted on
September 21, 2009 by
John Wingspread Howell
Is the new Dallas Cowboys Stadium a model for how to build a sports venue or a temple to greed and gluttony?
Are the Dallas Cowboys still America’s team, or are they America’s bad dream?
I recently watched Jerry Jones show off the monument he has built to American excess on the Today Show. It struck me as hauntingly ironic that Dallas, one of the demographic icons of the excesses and extravagance of the recent bubble, is opening a billion dollar stadium, in the middle of the debris of the bubble burst, and that Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, is chatting it up with Matt and Al on what is supposed to be a morning news program.
It is news of course, but not in the way it is being covered. NBC is just whoring their Sunday Night Football coverage in an infomercial disguised as news. And to think the Today Show used to be serious about journalism. But that’s another topic.
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Tags: Buffalo BillsDallas CowboysJerry JonesNFL Salary Cap
Category
Football
Posted on
September 18, 2009 by
Dean Hybl
This is the time of the year when the sports world offers a venerable smorgasbord of opportunities for sports fans to feed their hunger for action.
Whether it is the NASCAR Chase, the playoff push in baseball or the heating up of action in college and professional football there is something for everyone. And, to add some dessert, the WNBA Playoffs are starting, the hockey exhibition season has just begun and in just a couple weeks NBA teams will be starting training camp.
The Chase for the Cup
Having grown up in Southside Virginia less than an hour from the track where Jeff and Ward Burton cut their teeth in South Boston, I have always enjoyed NASCAR.
In the days before every race was wire to wire on live TV, I remember listening to NASCAR on the radio and visioning in my mind the battles between Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough, Buddy Baker and the other great drivers of that era.
Even today, I still believe that NASCAR is more compelling to listen to than to watch as you lose the monotony of watching the drivers make continual left hand turns and instead are paying close attention so you are ready when the announcer suddenly blasts out “And we’ve got trouble in turn three.”
So, NASCAR is now starting its version of the playoffs, the 10-race “Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.”
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Tags: Dallas CowboysLisa LeslieNASCARWNBA
Category
Basketball, General, NASCAR, Waiting For Weekend
Posted on
September 11, 2009 by
Dean Hybl
Just so you know, I love baseball and I love the major championships for tennis and golf and I love NASCAR (except when Jeff Burton is struggling like he is this year) and I’m somewhat infatuated with the NBA Playoffs, but I really LOVE football season.
So, you can imagine just how happy I am that the football season has finally started. For a while I wasn’t sure if it would ever start.
Before We Get Started
Since today marks the eighth anniversary of a tragic day in the history of our country and world, I would be remiss if I didn’t start my column with an acknowledgement that sports are wonderful, but in the larger scheme they are only games and entertainment. It is days like today when we must remember what is more important, family, friends, country, values, relationships and all the other things that we hold dear.
You will see on this site a couple articles that were submitted by regular contributors to this site. These are heartfelt stories and I hope you will read them with as much interest as any game story or player feature.
I especially encourage you to take a minute to read the amazing story written by Julia Civin, the 18-year old daughter of talented writer Todd Civin. You can see that his writing talent has not skipped a generation as she penned an amazing story called “When The World Decided To Share My Birthday” that is a must-read. It truly illustrates how the events of September 11 forever changed the world, even for a then-10-year-old girl.
Okay, now back to the sports.
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Tags: 2009 Football SeasonAnaheim AngelsDallas CowboysNew York YankeesTampa Bay Buccaneers
Category
Baseball, Football, General, Waiting For Weekend
Posted on
September 06, 2009 by
Dean Hybl
Calvin Hill
With the NFL season starting this week we recognize as the Sports Then and Now Vintage Athlete of the Week a player who was the NFL Rookie of the Year 40 years ago and went on to a successful 12-year career.
Many were surprised when the Dallas Cowboys used the 24th pick in the 1969 draft to select a running back from Yale University. However, Calvin Hill proved to be a perfect pick.
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Tags: 1969 Rookie of the YearCalvin HillCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysWashington RedskinsWorld Football League
Category
Football, Vintage Athletes
Posted on
July 29, 2009 by
Dean Hybl
Chuck Howley is the only player to be named Super Bowl MVP while playing on the losing team.
Our position-by-position look at the best eligible players not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame continues with a position that includes both players who served as the quarterback of the defense and others that disrupted offenses with their prowess rushing the passer.
Beginning in the 1950s and 1960s, many top middle linebackers became familiar figures as the defensive quarterback on the field. Players like Ray Nitschke, Dick Butkus, Tommy Nobis, Willie Lanier, Bill Bergey, Lee Roy Jordan, Jack Lambert, Harry Carson, Nick Buoniconti and Mike Singletary were recognized as the defensive leader for their team and every team looked to find their own stuffer in the middle.
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Tags: Chuck HowleyDallas CowboysLinebackersPro Football Hall of Fame
Category
Football