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1-1-17 at Los Angeles.Indd
WEEK 17 GAME RELEASE #AZvsLA Mark Dalton - Vice President, Media Relations Chris Melvin - Director, Media Relations Mike Helm - Manag er, Media Relations Matt Storey - Media Relations Coordinator Morgan Tholen - Media Relations Assistant ARIZONA CARDINALS (6-8-1) VS. LOS ANGELES RAMS (4-11) L.A. Memorial Coliseum | Jan. 1, 2017 | 2:25 PM THIS WEEK’S GAME ARIZONA CARDINALS - 2016 SCHEDULE The Cardinals conclude the 2016 season this week with a trip to Los Ange- Regular Season les to face the Rams at the LA Memorial Coliseum. It will be the Cardinals Date Opponent Loca on AZ Time fi rst road game against the Los Angeles Rams since 1994, when they met in Sep. 11 NEW ENGLAND+ Univ. of Phoenix Stadium L, 21-23 Anaheim in the season opener. Sep. 18 TAMPA BAY Univ. of Phoenix Stadium W, 40-7 Last week, Arizona defeated the Seahawks 34-31 at CenturyLink Field to im- Sep. 25 @ Buff alo New Era Field L, 18-33 prove its record to 6-8-1. The victory marked the Cardinals second straight Oct. 2 LOS ANGELES Univ. of Phoenix Stadium L, 13-17 win at Sea le and third in the last four years. QB Carson Palmer improved to 3-0 as Arizona’s star ng QB in Sea le. Oct. 6 @ San Francisco# Levi’s Stadium W, 33-21 Oct. 17 NY JETS^ Univ. of Phoenix Stadium W, 28-3 The Cardinals jumped out to a 14-0 lead a er Palmer connected with J.J. Oct. 23 SEATTLE+ Univ. of Phoenix Stadium T, 6-6 Nelson on an 80-yard TD pass in the second quarter and they held a 14-3 lead at the half. -
Are You Ready for Some Super-Senior Football?
Oldest living players Are you ready for some super-senior football? Starting East team quarterback Ace Parker (Information was current as of May 2013 when article appeared in Sports Collectors Digest magazine) By George Vrechek Can you imagine a tackle football game featuring the oldest living NFL players with some of the guys in their 90s? Well to tell the truth, I can’t really imagine it either. However that doesn’t stop me from fantasizing about the possibility of a super-senior all-star game featuring players who appeared on football cards. After SCD featured my articles earlier this year about the (remote) possibility of a game involving the oldest living baseball players, you knew it wouldn’t be long before you read about the possibility of a super-senior football game. Old-timers have been coming back to baseball parks for years to make cameo appearances. Walter Johnson pitched against Babe Ruth long after both had retired. My earlier articles proposed the possibility of getting the oldest baseball players (ranging in age from 88 to 101) back for one more game. While not very likely, it is at least conceivable. Getting the oldest old-timers back for a game of tackle football, on the other hand, isn’t very likely. We can probably think about a touch game, but the players would properly insist that touch is not the same game. If the game were played as touch football, the plethora of linemen would have to entertain one another, while the players in the skill positions got to run around and get all the attention, sort of like it is now in the NFL, except the linemen are knocking themselves silly. -
Big 12 Conference Schools Raise Nine-Year NFL Draft Totals to 277 Alumni Through 2003
Big 12 Conference Schools Raise Nine-Year NFL Draft Totals to 277 Alumni Through 2003 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Apr. 26, 2003 DALLAS—Big 12 Conference teams had 10 of the first 62 selections in the 35th annual NFL “common” draft (67th overall) Saturday and added a total of 13 for the opening day. The first-day tallies in the 2003 NFL draft brought the number Big 12 standouts taken from 1995-03 to 277. Over 90 Big 12 alumni signed free agent contracts after the 2000-02 drafts, and three of the first 13 standouts (six total in the first round) in the 2003 draft were Kansas State CB Terence Newman (fifth draftee), Oklahoma State DE Kevin Williams (ninth) Texas A&M DT Ty Warren (13th). Last year three Big 12 standouts were selected in the top eight choices (four of the initial 21), and the 2000 draft included three alumni from this conference in the first 20. Colorado, Nebraska and Florida State paced all schools nationally in the 1995-97 era with 21 NFL draft choices apiece. Eleven Big 12 schools also had at least one youngster chosen in the eight-round draft during 1998. Over the last six (1998-03) NFL postings, there were 73 Big 12 Conference selections among the Top 100. There were 217 Big 12 schools’ grid representatives on 2002 NFL opening day rosters from all 12 members after 297 standouts from league members in ’02 entered NFL training camps—both all-time highs for the league. Nebraska (35 alumni) was third among all Division I-A schools in 2002 opening day roster men in the highest professional football configuration while Texas A&M (30) was among the Top Six in total NFL alumni last autumn. -
Illinois ... Football Guide
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign !~he Quad s the :enter of :ampus ife 3 . H«H» H 1 i % UI 6 U= tiii L L,._ L-'IA-OHAMPAIGK The 1990 Illinois Football Media Guide • The University of Illinois . • A 100-year Tradition, continued ~> The University at a Glance 118 Chronology 4 President Stanley Ikenberrv • The Athletes . 4 Chancellor Morton Weir 122 Consensus All-American/ 5 UI Board of Trustees All-Big Ten 6 Academics 124 Football Captains/ " Life on Campus Most Valuable Players • The Division of 125 All-Stars Intercollegiate Athletics 127 Academic All-Americans/ 10 A Brief History Academic All-Big Ten 11 Football Facilities 128 Hall of Fame Winners 12 John Mackovic 129 Silver Football Award 10 Assistant Coaches 130 Fighting Illini in the 20 D.I.A. Staff Heisman Voting • 1990 Outlook... 131 Bruce Capel Award 28 Alpha/Numerical Outlook 132 Illini in the NFL 30 1990 Outlook • Statistical Highlights 34 1990 Fighting Illini 134 V early Statistical Leaders • 1990 Opponents at a Glance 136 Individual Records-Offense 64 Opponent Previews 143 Individual Records-Defense All-Time Record vs. Opponents 41 NCAA Records 75 UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 78 UI Travel Plans/ 145 Freshman /Single-Play/ ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN Opponent Directory Regular Season UNIVERSITY OF responsible for its charging this material is • A Look back at the 1989 Season Team Records The person on or before theidue date. 146 Ail-Time Marks renewal or return to the library Sll 1989 Illinois Stats for is $125.00, $300.00 14, Top Performances minimum fee for a lost item 82 1989 Big Ten Stats The 149 Television Appearances journals. -
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER the Following Players Comprise the 1967 Season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER The following players comprise the 1967 season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set. The regular starters at each position are listed first and should be used most frequently. Realistic use of the players below will generate statistical results remarkably similar to those from real life. IMPORTANT: When a Red "K" appears in the R-column as the result on any kind of running play from scrimmage or on any return, roll the dice again, refer to the K-column, and use the number there for the result. When a player has a "K" in his R-column, he can never be used for kicking or punting. If the symbol "F-K" or "F-P" appears on a players card, it means that you use the K or P column when he recovers a fumble. Players in bold are starters. If there is a difference between the player's card and the roster sheet, always use the card information. The number in ()s after the player name is the number of cards that the player has in this set. See below for a more detailed explanation of new symbols on the cards. ATLANTA ATLANTA BALTIMORE BALTIMORE OFFENSE DEFENSE OFFENSE DEFENSE EB: Tommy McDonald End: Sam Williams EB: Willie Richardson End: Ordell Braase Jerry Simmons TC OC Jim Norton Raymond Berry Roy Hilton Gary Barnes Bo Wood OC Ray Perkins Lou Michaels KA KOA PB Ron Smith TA TB OA Bobby Richards Jimmy Orr Bubba Smith Tackle: Errol Linden OC Bob Hughes Alex Hawkins Andy Stynchula Don Talbert OC Tackle: Karl Rubke Don Alley Tackle: Fred Miller Guard: Jim Simon Chuck Sieminski Tackle: Sam Ball Billy Ray Smith Lou Kirouac -
The Ice Bowl: the Cold Truth About Football's Most Unforgettable Game
SPORTS | FOOTBALL $16.95 GRUVER An insightful, bone-chilling replay of pro football’s greatest game. “ ” The Ice Bowl —Gordon Forbes, pro football editor, USA Today It was so cold... THE DAY OF THE ICE BOWL GAME WAS SO COLD, the referees’ whistles wouldn’t work; so cold, the reporters’ coffee froze in the press booth; so cold, fans built small fires in the concrete and metal stands; so cold, TV cables froze and photographers didn’t dare touch the metal of their equipment; so cold, the game was as much about survival as it was Most Unforgettable Game About Football’s The Cold Truth about skill and strategy. ON NEW YEAR’S EVE, 1967, the Dallas Cowboys and the Green Bay Packers met for a classic NFL championship game, played on a frozen field in sub-zero weather. The “Ice Bowl” challenged every skill of these two great teams. Here’s the whole story, based on dozens of interviews with people who were there—on the field and off—told by author Ed Gruver with passion, suspense, wit, and accuracy. The Ice Bowl also details the history of two legendary coaches, Tom Landry and Vince Lombardi, and the philosophies that made them the fiercest of football rivals. Here, too, are the players’ stories of endurance, drive, and strategy. Gruver puts the reader on the field in a game that ended with a play that surprised even those who executed it. Includes diagrams, photos, game and season statistics, and complete Ice Bowl play-by-play Cheers for The Ice Bowl A hundred myths and misconceptions about the Ice Bowl have been answered. -
British Charge Five Suspects in Train Uobbery
THURSDAY, AUGUST 18; 1M8 The Weather f AdK TWENTY Average Daily Net Preae yaseeast ef C. & Weather BnrsM » Hanrbi^Btpr Smutting For the Week Ended < Angnst 10, 1968 Fair tooigbt. Low SO-56. Sat- oidiqr mostly eoany and a Mt ’Ihe recreatiMi department an'^ Ahen Ctodoury, Windham; Ohris- wainier with tocreaetog eioadi- CiTic Project Due riounoee toe closing on Friday Hospital Notes tlaa Ojala, 2 Harttand Rd.; Et- 13,590 ■ees la the aftemooii. w gh near About Town n i g h t t h e Teen CMiter for toe Bctt WbsWbum, 86 N. Lakewood Howard T. Smith, An Blenbcr of the Audit 80. AndovMT la apparently due fo r remainder of toe summer. New DOjvniiD rm sH Purean e< Olrenlatiott 0- programs will be planned and toe ▼Mting boors aia t ts 3 p.m. dover; Mha Angelina DeWuarclo, Manche»ter— A City of Village Charm llw iiiiiii o< lfaunt*ln I<aur«l an unaoheduled civic improve renovated during this pe- ; tor sn areas, eocoept mstemlty 53 Birch S t ; Keren Horan, 330 Ohaiitor, 8«r**t A<Jelln^Ihc., y m ment. tocm a Early,thia morning, at about rlod. Ilhe' rbopening- of the Center wbeirs they are S to 4 pm ,, sad Adams St; Rodney Plxlw, East «iar toMi^t at 6:30 for puienta at Hampton; Mira. Rita (Iregory, (Clsesllled OdviirHstof an Page 19) PRICE SEVEN CENTS 6 o’clock, the fire department will be about toe middle of Sep SiWi to 8 pjn. and private rooms, tFOURISBN PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1963 B3aat Hartford Ho^iltal. -
NCAA Bowl Eligibility Policies
TABLE OF CONTENTS 2019-20 Bowl Schedule ..................................................................................................................2-3 The Bowl Experience .......................................................................................................................4-5 The Football Bowl Association What is the FBA? ...............................................................................................................................6-7 Bowl Games: Where Everybody Wins .........................................................................8-9 The Regular Season Wins ...........................................................................................10-11 Communities Win .........................................................................................................12-13 The Fans Win ...................................................................................................................14-15 Institutions Win ..............................................................................................................16-17 Most Importantly: Student-Athletes Win .............................................................18-19 FBA Executive Director Wright Waters .......................................................................................20 FBA Executive Committee ..............................................................................................................21 NCAA Bowl Eligibility Policies .......................................................................................................22 -
Darrell Dess
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 28, No. 2 (2006) WHEN HAVING A BETTER RECORD DIDN'T MEAN HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE, Part Two By Andy Piascik With the NFL-AFL merger in 1966 and the advent of the Super Bowl, pro football's postseason began to grow larger. Neither the NFL or AFL addressed the long-standing problem of how better to determine the home team in their respective Championship Games, however. In fact, almost another decade would go by until necessary changes were made. Instead, both leagues continued with the rotation system that had ruled pro football's postseason since 1933. And as happened so many times previously, the teams that finished with the best regular season record in both leagues in 1966, the Packers and the Chiefs, had to go on the road in the title games. Bucking the odds clearly established over the previous 33 years, both won. Even when the NFL realigned in 1967 and enlarged the playoffs, the same system was left intact. Again, evidence that something was amiss was immediately apparent. That year, the Rams finished 11-1-2 and won the Coastal Division of the Western Conference on the basis of a head to head tie-breaker over the Colts, who also finished 11-1-2. In the West's Central Division, meanwhile, the Packers finished first at 9-4-1. Despite their superior record and even though they had beaten Green Bay in their regular season meeting, the Rams had to travel to Wisconsin to play the Western Conference Championship Game. After beating the Packers two weeks earlier in Los Angeles, the Rams lost and went home while the Packers went on to win the Super Bowl. -
Ike See on Clique
- !>•-•••.• •? k.u. V.V '■•• JV ■ \ » ' / i 'S ^ A Daily Net Preaa Ron For Vw Week Badod The Weather ^ Oetober 6, 196S roTMMt of V. k WeathOT 13,638 Moetly' elondy, milder toBicht, Member M the' Audit low >eiir (O. Tneedajr parti)! ' Boremi o f OircnlatiaB Noady, warmer. Hi|(k bi 70*. Mancket^r— A City o f Village Charm ' TOL. L X X X II, NO. 13 (FOURTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1962 ‘(OlaMMed AdvertMaf ea Pafe It) PRICE nVE CENTS 6 Questioned State News 2 Tell of Raid Roundup Ike See Traffic Tieup On Cuban Boat On Parkways Biggest E.v e r Sixf* Suarez’ account of the incident on Clique ^ MIAMI, Fhi. (AP) "men described by the Coast conflicted with a Cuban govern HARTFORD I a P) — Con ment announcement that a pirate Guard as raiders who sank a necticut’s throughways were vessel had attacked, a pleasure jammed with traffic from the Cuban patrol boat and rescued yacht, apparently killing two per: two wounded Cuban militia sons. Massachusetts to the New York border late Sunday. men east of Havana are being A Cuban exile, Antonio Bustlllo, Greets Seely-Brown, said the_ raid_ had been .planned Cars inched along, bumper-to questioned by immigration by 50 Cubans in Miami. BustUlo' bumper, in many sections, ihinaer- authorities. identified tnb raiders as Manolo ous minor accidents, mostly of me The unidentified men were Quiza, Manolo' /Casanova. Eddie rear-end variety, were reporte<!i> taken to Key West by a Coast Moore, Juan Esptnola, Jorge Ro Eight of 10 such mishaps took Alsop at GOP Rally Guard boat from the British Is driguez and Roberto Parson. -
SPS-Newsletter-Spring-2019.Pdf
NEWS SPRING CONVOCATION 2019 2019 NYU SCHOOL OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES CONVOCATION STUDENT SPEAKERS UNDERGRADUATE: Adam Simon Lassner GRADUATE: Carmella Glover BS in Sports Management MS in Public Relations and Corporate Preston Robert Tisch Institute for Global Sport Communication An avid love of soccer led native New Division of Programs in Business Yorker, Adam Lassner, to pursue the BS in A resident of Piscataway, NJ, Carmella Glover, sports management at the NYUSPS Preston this year’s Graduate Convocation student Robert Tisch Institute for Global Sport. The speaker, has earned the MS in public relations student speaker at this year’s Undergraduate and corporate communication (PRCC), Convocation ceremony at the Manhattan Center offered by the NYUSPS Division of Programs Hammerstein Ballroom, he asserts, “I have always heard that if you do in Business. She accomplished this while juggling a plethora of what you love, you will never work a day in your life, and this is the personal and professional obligations. A wife and the mother of a way I feel about sports. I’m a massive sports fan, and nothing could 10-month-old daughter, she works full time at L’Oréal USA Luxury be more enjoyable or fulfilling than having a career in this field.” Skincare and Cosmetics. Lassner’s passion for sports began while attending The Ramaz Thanks to growing up in a military family, Glover has been able School in Manhattan, where he played on the soccer and hockey to successfully manage multiple responsibilities while remaining teams, and founded the Business of Sports Club. When it came focused on her studies. -
It's Award Season for FWAA
It’s Award Season for FWAA; Time to meet at the Rose Bowl December 2005 Presenting awards is what the Foot- by the entire FWAA membership will be Vol. 43, No. 5 ball Writers Association of America does from Dec. 5-15. The winner will be an- best in December and January, including nounced during a BCS bowl game and during the annual meeting at the Rose honored at an event in the winning Inside this issue: Bowl on Jan. 3-5. coaches’ city next fall. The FWAA awards season kicked off The FWAA’s annual meeting will be President’ Alan on Dec. 5 when Louisville senior end Jan. 3-5 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in 2 Schmadtke’s column Elvis Dumervil became the first Cardinal Los Angeles, in conjunction with the Bowl to win the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, Championship Series 1-2 game at the which the FWAA awards to the best de- Rose Bowl. Six named finalists for fensive player in college football. The FWAA Board meeting will be the Eddie Robinson Coach 3 Dumervil received the trophy at a gala afternoon of Jan. 3. And the awards of the Year Award banquet at the Westin Hotel in Charlotte, breakfast and meeting the next morning N.C., where a sellout crowd of 900 at- at the media hotel. Commissioners Kevin tended and Notre Dame coach Charlie Weiberg of the Big 12 and Mike Slive of Weis gave the keynote address. the SEC will be in attendance and an- Next up was the presentation of the swer media questions about the BCS .