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Sivert Has Distinction of Oldest Vol Letterman
UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE FOOTBALL Sivert has distinction of oldest Vol letterman Jim Sivert is more than a Vol for Life. He’s a Vol for a Long Life. The 94-year-old native of Gate City, Virginia, was recently informed he’s the oldest living Tennessee football letterman. Now living in the Memphis suburb of Bartlett, he’s 10 months older than former teammate Jim Miner. A versatile player at 5-foot-10 and 185 pounds, Sivert played blocking back, center and linebacker for the General Robert Neyland-coached Vols. He was even listed as quarterback on the team’s archives. The 1949 Tennessee Football Brochure had the following description of him: This veteran of all positions was shifted to blocking back in the spring and he fits in it as he would a “custom-made suit”…..He is a great defensive man, but his play of late indicates that he was made for a blocker…when he hits something gives. VIRGINIA PREP STAR Sivert played football as a running back at Shoemaker High School from 1940-42 before World War II changed his course. A 1942 Shoemaker program for their Oct. 16 game against Tazewell pointed out that he led the team in scoring to date with 34 points. The next highest player was Tommy Campbell with 20 points. “They cut out football at Shoemaker in 1943 because of World War II with the gas rations and tires,” Sivert said. “I got a scholarship to Fork Union Military Academy and was up there for the football season before I got drafted and had to go into service.” His senior year, Sivert scored four touchdowns to lead Fork Union to a 31-7 win over Staunton Military Academy in the state championship game. -
1963 San Diego Chargers
The Professional Football Researchers Association The AFL’s First Super Team Pro Football Insiders Debate Whether the AFL Champion San Diego Chargers Could Have Beaten the Bears in a 1963 Super Bowl By Ed Gruver It's an impossible question, but one that continues to intrigue until January 12, 1969, when Joe Namath quarterbacked the members of the 1963 AFL champion San Diego Chargers. upstart New York Jets to a stunning 16-7 victory over the heavily- favored Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III, that the AFL earned its If the Super Bowl had started with the 1963 season instead of first championship game win over the NFL. Even so, it wasn't until 1966, could the Chargers have beaten the NFL champion Chicago Len Dawson led the Kansas City Chiefs to a similar win one year Bears? later over the Minnesota Vikings in the fourth and final Super Bowl between the AFL and NFL that the AFL finally got its share of "I've argued that for years and years," says Sid Gillman, who respect from both the NFL and football fans. coached the 1963 Chargers. "We had one of the great teams in pro football history, and I think we would have matched up pretty well Those who know the AFL however, believe that the 163 Chargers, with the NFL. We had great speed and talent, and I think at that rather than the '68 Jets, might have gone down in history as the time, the NFL really underestimated the talent we had." first AFL team to win a Super Bowl. -
Dave Boyd Rambles for West, 33-19
Dave Boyd Rambles for West, 33-19 Warriors Win 3rd OCTOMR t, 1M7 Straight The hard running Dave Boyd, Dean Owens and Dan Whelan of West High gallop, Lumar Lundy ed to five touchdowns and a 33-19 non-league football vic tory over San Marino Friday night There could have been Of the Rams more scoring, but the offi cials said "no" to three touch Lamar Lundy, who has been with the Rams longer downs in the fourth by dis than any other player in the dub's history, looked back covering penalty infractions. this week over his 11 seasons and decided that playing Boyd tallied three TDs and as a member of the famed "Fearsome Foursome" has had two others nullified. He given him tore into the San Marino de his greatest satisfaction as a pro performer fense for 265 yards rushing. "But my biggest thrill? Last week's win over the As a team, West had 473 Dallas Cowboys was it," declared the towering (6-7) de yards rushing and 51 passing fensive end and co-captain as he took a breather dur for a 524 total. Eight 15-yard ing practice for penalties were called against today's battle at the Coliseum agains West. the San Francisco 49ers. While the Warriors struck "It has given us such a big lift. We know we bea on the ground, San Marino a real fine team. We have proved we have the ability quarterback Steve Sommers to go all the way. serenaded the Titan fans with one touchdown pass and two "The way we beat them was so satisfying touchdown runs. -
Chuck Noll and Rita Rapp
University of Dayton eCommons News Releases Marketing and Communications 10-1-1980 UD Alumni Award Winners: Chuck Noll and Rita Rapp Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.udayton.edu/news_rls Recommended Citation "UD Alumni Award Winners: Chuck Noll and Rita Rapp" (1980). News Releases. 6883. https://ecommons.udayton.edu/news_rls/6883 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Marketing and Communications at eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in News Releases by an authorized administrator of eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. UD ALUMNI AWARD WINNERS: CHUCK NOLL AND RITA RAPP October 1, 1980 Although space expl oration plans have been temporarily tabled, work on formulating menus for the Space Shuttle continues at Houston's Lyndon B. Johnson Space Genter, under the direction of University of Dayton Distinguished Alumnus Award winner, Rita Rapp (Bachelor of Science, 1950). ,,41- "It's been kind of quiet because we\'J:J~ven't had a flight lately, but we're v'"," ~l J~} working on the shuttle menu right now," S,~d the Piqua native. An aerospace technologist in physiology and flight foo~~ystems coordinator at the space I::::'" G ~nter, Rapp joined the spnee program in(196l~working with the Mercury and It '\ Apollo food systems. If /k,_~, \ \ The space ('uisine has evolved Jon, ~ii;ft~iab,,- C'!, i):, l'~' \ the liquid and paste diets l~/./ I, ~-ic:~ ,~" of the early '60s. NOW, commercial ~ : 2 - \ l fg:o,~S i ~ i e prepared according to ,~, t ,'\ I, f-' ,"j I ~i I ,4'" I!!!]' ') Iii J ,i' -, J '" I ~ package instructiono and then read\ ~e~ ~q ~pac~ l t~a~et. -
Oakland Raiders Transcript
Oakland Raiders Transcript Jacksonville Jaguars Head Coach Doug Marrone Q: What have you seen from the Raiders on film? Coach Marrone: “Well, I think you got a team that’s playing hard. I think they have some really good players offensively. Defensively, there is a couple guys that can take over a game and really cause some problems, so overall special teams they’re good. They’re a good football team and we’re concerned about ourselves, because obviously we’re not playing well.” Q: Do you have any cool Black Hole stories? Coach Marrone: “Oh yeah. When I was with the Jets and we would go out there, we’d always warm up and I had the offensive line with me and I had a bunch of veteran guys who we’d warm up in the one corner of the end zone and for some reason there was one guy, he was all over me. Like he was killing me, not the players, me. And the players would come up to me and go, ‘Coach, you going to take that (expletive) from that guy? Like, if he did that (expletive) to me, I would go up in the stands. You need to go up in the stands, you need to confront that.’ And I’d be like, ‘Shut the hell up, would you? We’re just going to go ahead and play.’ But I just remember those times and the playoff game up there when I was in New York and just how crazy it can be and it’s a special place. -
Pro Football Hall of Fame
PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME The Professional Football Hall Between four and seven new MARCUS ALLEN CLIFF BATTLES of Fame is located in Canton, members are elected each Running back. 6-2, 210. Born Halfback. 6-1, 195. Born in Ohio, site of the organizational year. An affirmative vote of in San Diego, California, Akron, Ohio, May 1, 1910. meeting on September 17, approximately 80 percent is March 26, 1960. Southern Died April 28, 1981. West Vir- 1920, from which the National needed for election. California. Inducted in 2003. ginia Wesleyan. Inducted in Football League evolved. The Any fan may nominate any 1982-1992 Los Angeles 1968. 1932 Boston Braves, NFL recognized Canton as the eligible player or contributor Raiders, 1993-1997 Kansas 1933-36 Boston Redskins, Hall of Fame site on April 27, simply by writing to the Pro City Chiefs. Highlights: First 1937 Washington Redskins. 1961. Canton area individuals, Football Hall of Fame. Players player in NFL history to tally High lights: NFL rushing foundations, and companies and coaches must have last 10,000 rushing yards and champion 1932, 1937. First to donated almost $400,000 in played or coached at least five 5,000 receiving yards. MVP, gain more than 200 yards in a cash and services to provide years before he is eligible. Super Bowl XVIII. game, 1933. funds for the construction of Contributors (administrators, the original two-building com- owners, et al.) may be elected LANCE ALWORTH SAMMY BAUGH plex, which was dedicated on while they are still active. Wide receiver. 6-0, 184. Born Quarterback. -
Rams' Team Travel
PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME TEACHER ACTIVITY GUIDE 2019-2020 EDITIOn LOS AnGELES RAMS Team History One of the National Football League’s oldest franchises, the Rams began their football life in Cleveland in 1937. They did no better than a .500 mark once during their first six seasons. They then disbanded for a year in 1943 because of the manpower shortages of the World War II era. When they finally did record a winning season, they hit the jackpot with a 15-14 victory over the Washington Redskins in the NFL championship game. A sensational rookie quarterback from UCLA, Bob Waterfield, was the league’s Player of the Year. That championship game proved to be the last the Rams would ever play in Cleveland. Dan Reeves, a shrewd businessman and a master innovator who had bought the team in 1941, decided to move the Rams to Los Angeles for the 1946 season. He then signed Kenny Washington and Woody Strode to make them the first two African-American athletes with an NFL contract since 1932. Reeves also instituted the famed “Free Football for Kids” program, providing the groundwork for today’s successful TV policies, and became the first to employ a full-time scouting staff. In their first four seasons on the West Coast, the Rams had to wage a costly head-to-head battle with the intra-city Dons of the All-America Football Conference. Reeves and the Rams suffered mammoth financial losses. But the AAFC folded after the 1949 season just as the Rams were embarking on a string of outstanding seasons on the field. -
NORM VAN BROCKLIN: the Dutchman
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 23, No. 2 (2000) 1 NORM VAN BROCKLIN: The Dutchman By Don Smith connected with his election was that it took so long for the Hall’s Board of Selectors to recognize him. One of the most colorful and competitive individuals, both as a player and later as a coach, that pro football has seen, Van Brocklin blazed a sometimes stormy, but always eventful path in his 12 active seasons as a player. His difficulties, if you want to call them that, started almost the day he was selected No. 4 by the Rams in the 1949 draft. He had a year’s eligibility left at the University of Oregon, where he had married his biology instructress, but the Rams, aware of his plans to forego a final college season, surprised the league by picking the 1948 all-America. The problem, from Van Brocklin’s standpoint, was that the Rams already had a brilliant quarterback, Bob Waterfield, who also was destined for the Hall of Fame. As a result, The Before the 1958 season, the Philadelphia Dutchman saw only brief action as a rookie Eagles acquired quarterback Norm Van until the final game against Washington, Brocklin from the Los Angeles Rams for a which the Rams needed to win for a divisional tackle, a defensive back and No. 1 draft title. Norm responded with a four-touchdown choice. It was one of the sharpest deals any performance for coach Clark Shaughnessy’s team ever made because, in just three years, charges. The Dutchman led the Eagles to the NFL championship. -
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 13, No. 1 (1991) The AFL: A League Too Often Misremembered by Greg Thomas 1960 was a time of expansion in every phase of American life. People were expanding their houses to include bomb shelters that often became forts for pre-adolescent boys. We were expanding our known universe with flights circling our seemingly smaller planet. We were expanding our nation with a northern star, Alaska and a southern haven, Hawaii. We were expanding the danger of being a fighting man with a little booboo called Vietnam, and we were expanding our country's still youthful vision with the election of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Beyond our growth in these noted areas was the growth of pro football. For it was during this decade, the seventh decade of the twentieth century (1960-1970), that pro football would supplant major league baseball as the favorite of the fan. New names like Unitas and Starr and the great Jim Brown would begin to overshadow even legends like Mantle and Mays. America was a contact country and football was a contact sport. The good ole USA was a place where people could not just stand around and wait; passivity had no place in American life in these times. For one to succeed, he must go full-throttle for sixteen hours and then huddle in sleep for eight hours, repeating the pattern for as many days as possible until hard work reaped its expected reward. Out of the unending work ethic and expanding dreams of this era was born the American Football League. -
Titans Turn Focus to 2021 After Winning First Division Title in 12 Seasons
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FEBRUARY 23, 2021 TITANS TURN FOCUS TO 2021 AFTER WINNING FIRST DIVISION TITLE IN 12 SEASONS Titans carry streak of five consecutive winning seasons, hold 22nd pick in NFL Draft NASHVILLE — The 2020 season was marked by adversity and adaptation, and by tests and achievements. The COVID-19 pandemic affected how NFL teams prepared, met, traveled and conducted business; precautions that had never been imagined in March were routine by the fall. Yet during one of the most unique seasons in NFL history, the Tennessee Titans earned 11 wins 2020 TITANS SCHEDULE and claimed their first division championship in 12 seasons. Armed with one of the best offenses in franchise history, the Titans won REGULAR SEASON (11-5) their first five games of 2020 and spent every week of the season either in first Day Date Opponent Result Score place in the AFC South or tied for the best record in the division. However, the Mon. Sept. 14 at Denver W 16-14 division crown was not fitted to the Titans until the final play of their final game Sun. Sept. 20 JACKSONVILLE W 33-30 of the regular season at Houston. On Jan. 3, kicker Sam Sloman, appearing Sun. Sept. 27 at Minnesota W 31-30 in his first game with the team as a COVID-19 replacement player for regular kicker Stephen Gostkowski, bounced a 37-yard field goal off the right upright Sun. Oct. 4 Bye and over the crossbar as time expired to defeat the Texans 41-38. Tue. Oct. 13 BUFFALO W 42-16 Tennessee finished with an 11-5 record, identical to the division rival Sun. -
Raider Boss Ranchu Named
k if1 1 bII eC I0 eC ttII IIII N fIf ftI t Ir tI Is te j jI I 1 J 1 c ia a a I R I1 WILT meet Emil Rached HesHe's 79 Wilt Chamberlain standout center for the World Champion Philadelphia shakes handsbands with Emil Rached of the Botafogo De E Rached who towers over Chamberlain 72 led his team to the semisemifinal round of the World Cup Tournament against the Akron Ohio Goodyears The Goodyears won 84 I I Raider Boss RanchRauch Named Coach of Year by UPI NEW YORK tollingtoiling 14 years in assistant Rauch who piloted the mannered John RauchUPIMildof the 1 slots Thursday was named thethe- Raiders to the title with Oakland Raiders who finally U nitn i t e d Press International the best record in the history of got his first chance at a head I Coach of the Year in the I the league was a close winner coaching job last season after American Football League over Wally Lemm of the Houston in the balloting of 27 writers across the nationnation- three from each league city Although the were clobbered by the Raiders 40 inin- the title game Lemm also7diddid- an excellent coaching job this season in leading the rookierookie- laden squad from last place in 1966 to the Eastern Division championship in 19571967 Rauch received 13 votes while Lemm picked up 10 and one other coach Sid Gillman of the San Diego Chargers landed thethe- other four Rauch joined the Raiders in 1963 as the No 1 assistant to coach Al Davis and remained in that position for three seasons But after the 1965 season the decided to escalate the war with the National FootFoot- ball League -
15 Modern-Era Finalists for Hall of Fame Election Announced
For Immediate Release For More Information, Contact: January 11, 2013 Joe Horrigan at (330) 588-3627 15 MODERN-ERA FINALISTS FOR HALL OF FAME ELECTION ANNOUNCED Four first-year eligible nominees – Larry Allen, Jonathan Ogden, Warren Sapp, and Michael Strahan – are among the 15 modern-era finalists who will be considered for election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame when the Hall’s Selection Committee meets in New Orleans, La. on Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Joining the first-year eligible, are eight other modern-era players, a coach and two contributors. The 15 modern-era finalists, along with the two senior nominees announced in August 2012 (former Kansas City Chiefs and Houston Oilers defensive tackle Curley Culp and former Green Bay Packers and Washington Redskins linebacker Dave Robinson) will be the only candidates considered for Hall of Fame election when the 46-member Selection Committee meets. The 15 modern-era finalists were determined by a vote of the Hall’s Selection Committee from a list of 127 nominees that earlier was reduced to a list of 27 semifinalists, during the multi-step, year-long selection process. Culp and Robinson were selected as senior candidates by the Hall of Fame’s Seniors Committee. The Seniors Committee reviews the qualifications of those players whose careers took place more than 25 years ago. To be elected, a finalist must receive a minimum positive vote of 80 percent. The Pro Football Hall of Fame Selection Committee’s 17 finalists (15 modern-era and two senior nominees*) with their positions, teams, and years active follow: • Larry Allen – Guard/Tackle – 1994-2005 Dallas Cowboys; 2006-07 San Francisco 49ers • Jerome Bettis – Running Back – 1993-95 Los Angeles/St.