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Home / Archive: 23. March 2009
By Louis “King of Roncesvalles” Pisano…
The Toronto Marlies played three games in row over the weekend, two in Grand Rapids and the third at home Sunday against the San Antonio Rampage dropping all three, yet gaining two much needed points, one in an SO loss Friday and one in an OT loss at home Sunday.
The seeding for the AHL playoffs works differently than it does in the NHL. The teams in each division one through four make the playoffs, unlike the NHL where it decided by conference. In the North Division of the Western Conference the Syracuse Crunch feature budding young star Nikita Filatov have been climbing towards the fourth position held by the Toronto Marlies. Luckily the Crunch lost to the Rochester Americans 2-1 Sunday night, leaving the Marlies with a three point lead on them in the division, though the Crunch still have a game at hand. With only 9 games left in the 80 game schedule for the Marlies every game has a playoff like atmosphere. The Marlies have a tough road ahead having 79 pts in the tight North division and are facing some tough teams to end off the season.
Down this last stretch the Marlies face:
@ Hershey Bears (Wed 25) 2nd in the East div 95 pts
@Philadelphia Phantoms (Fri 27) 5th in the East div 76 pts
@Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (Sat 28) 4th in the East 90 pts
Syracuse Crunch (Sun 29) 5th in the North div 76 pts 3 points behind the Marlies
@ Manitoba Moose (Fri 3rd) League Leading and 1st in the North div 98 pts
@ Manitoba Moose (Sat 4th)
Rochester Americans (Wed 8th) 7th in the North div 55 pts
Manitoba Moose (Fri 10th)
Hamilton Bulldogs (Sat 11th) 3rd in the North div 89 pts to end the season
Toronto’s Home Record 21-12-1-2
Toronto’s Road Record 14-15-2-4
The Marlies have a tough go of it as you can plainly see by the records of the teams they have to face and the divisional games they have to play. Their road record, not a good one by any means, with five of the last nine on the road, the test of this team will be determined by how they play away from the Ricoh Coliseum. Justin Pogge and the team will have to be at their best to make the playoffs. Get down to the game Sunday the 29th and catch the last game Nikita Filatov, top ranked AHL player, will play in the minors, when the Marlies face the Syracuse Crunch.
by Tommy G…There are many Leafs fans that would thoroughly and genuinely relish the moment if the Toronto Maple Leafs finished the season in last place.
Of course, I’m talking about the benefit Toronto would have out of such a dismal season—the first pick in the 2009 NHL Draft.
Most fans would even settle for a top-five selection.
These are the fans that are having pleasant dreams of John Tavares wearing No. 61 for the blue and white. Victor Hedman, Matt Duchene, and Brayden Schenn look just as good, too.
Oh no, there goes that pesky alarm clock radio with news that the tenacious Maple Leafs keep winning games even if a playoff berth in non-existent.
Well, what did you expect them to do? Roll over and play dead?
The Maple Leafs keep hovering between the No. 7 and No. 10 spots. God forbid if they ever have to draft in the eleventh to fifteenth positions.
The ACC Platinum Country Club might protest by not going back to their seats until the three-star selections.
Hold on, I think they do that already.
The truth is, it’s not only some fans that support this crazed way of thinking, but the Toronto media also reports and analyzes every twitch that is made by the Maple Leafs.
Most hockey analysts are trying to convince viewers, listeners, and readers with their opinion that the Maple Leafs are doomed because they are situated in “draft limbo”.
Remember Doug Wickenheiser, Darren Veitch, Doug Smith, Joe Cirella, Gord Kluzak, Brian Lawton, Neil Brady, Shawn Anderson, Wayne McBean, Daniel Dore, and Dave Chyzowski?
I’m willing to bet you don’t, but if so, then you know that they were all players chosen in the top five in drafts from 1980 to 1989.
This list doesn’t even include the 1990s ,which included more familiar names like Pat Falloon, Scott Lachance, Todd Warriner, Alexandre Daigle, Aki Berg, Andrei Zyuzin, Alexandre Volchkov, Richard Jackman, Patrick Stefan, and Pavel Brendl.
I hope you get the point.
Just in case, however, let me reaffirm it.
I’ll bet that you remember Ray Bourque, Mark Messier, Glenn Anderson, Brian Propp, Michel Goulet, Jarri Kurri, Steve Larmer, Grant Fuhr, Al MacInnis, Chris Chelios, Dave Andreychuck, Pat Verbeek, Doug Gilmour, Cam Neely, Rick Tocchet, Patrick Roy, Brett Hull, Luc Robitaille, Joe Niewendyk, Brian Leetch, Joe Sakic, John Leclair, Theoren Fleury, Jeremy Roenick, Rod Brind’Amour, Teemu Selanne, Mark Recchi, Tony Amonte, Rob Blake, Keith Tkachuk, Martin Brodeur, and Jerome Iginla.
I know it’s a long list, but I’m trying to make a point, so stick with me for a while.
You guessed correctly if you say that these are players chosen after the fifth pick from 1980 to 1995. Most of them were drafted in the second round and beyond. The earliest draftees on this list were chosen eighth overall.
Not only are they great hockey players, but current and future Hockey Hall of Fame members that have propelled the game to new heights.
Plus, I didn’t even include Russian players like Sergei Federov, Alexandre Mogilny, and Pavel Bure because Communism prevented teams from risking a high draft pick on these players.
So, the Maple Leafs shouldn’t have to worry about “the lottery” because sports drafts are a lottery anyhow.
If the Leafs develop a very strong scouting staff then they will always have a chance to draft quality talent, no matter what place they finish in the standings.
However, the draft remains virtually unpredictable, so success is not always guaranteed.
It would be a disaster to purposely lose hockey games just to have a chance to draft Tavares or Hedman. This is a very young Maple Leafs squad that is trying to learn how to win and lose in the highest quality hockey league.
Do you honestly want them to think they can’t win without Tavares on their team?
What about young people that emulate their favourite players and teams? Whether they become future professional hockey players or choose another career do you want your children to think they can “pack it in” whenever the “importance level” drops?
If you answer yes, that’s bogus and you know it.
Maybe it’s important for a few fans to know that their favourite team is winning hockey games. I’m talking about the blue-collar parents who just shelled out hundreds of dollars so that their kids can watch their beloved Maple Leafs.
Yeah, it’s not the biggest tragedy in the world, but hockey’s not the most important aspect of life either. It’s a form of entertainment and people deserve to watch a great hockey game—even if the teams playing are already eliminated from the playoffs.
The Detroit Red Wings won the Stanley Cup last season and not Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin. If this can’t prove that sports franchises don’t have to finish last for five years in a row, to eventually win, then I don’t know what will convince the masses.
Leafs Nation is better off concerning themselves with Brian Burke’s draft record. Most of his first-round picks have developed into decent NHL players and of course.
However, it’s Burke’s draft record after the first round that should worry Leafs fans.
His picks in the second round and thereafter are not impressive. I’m not taking his recent drafts into consideration because these players still have a chance to develop. But anything before 2003 can easily be criticized.
Great drafting requires a fantastic scouting staff and Burke’s draft record has me wondering if he is devoted to building this essential part of a sports organization.
Then again, many general managers have wised up in the last couple of seasons, and Brian Burke does seem slightly improved compared to a decade ago. I’m sure he learned a thing or two in that time because he made a smart pick by drafting Corey Perry very late in the first round.
I’m digressing, however, because the point of this article was not to question Brian Burke. I wanted to demonstrate that the Toronto Maple Leafs should not “roll over and play dead” just to draft Tavares.
The Leafs, as I have proved, can still draft quality players at any spot in the draft. Perhaps they may draft a future Hockey Hall of Fame member in the second round like Edmonton did with Mark Messier.
As for the Leafs play down the final stretch of the season, I am glad that they are choosing to win because they are setting precedence for next season and beyond.
They are trying to build a championship attitude and instill the idea that winning is infectious.
Just ask the Detroit Red Wings and they will tell you what winning has done for them in the past 15 years.
by Andrew McNair… I wrote an article asking the world if scoring a goal was better than sex? The idea was widely received and many sided with my opinion of scoring goals being better than sex.
However, I am not a professional “shagger” and with my professional career limited to the South African lower leagues, I was unable to declare scoring goals as better than sex due to a lack of an expert’s opinion.
So you can imagine my surprise as I’m flicking through April’s issue of Four Four Two and find an interview with a porn star, who just happened to once be an England school boy international, and is the current captain of Hollywood FC.
Danny Mountain is not only a professional porn star of hits such as
To the Manor Porn, but is married to one as well—the very cute Eva Angelina. So I think we can take his word on matters involving sex. After all, not only does he have a sexy wife, but his work involves countless beauties on an almost daily basis.
Not bad work if you can get it.
Mountain’s football career came to an abrupt end as a teenager when a knee injury ended his professional dreams, but he still plays for Hollywood’s all star side most Sunday’s. So I think he is the most qualified yet to answer my year old question.
Is scoring a goal better than sex?
“Absolutely,” Mountain said in the interview. “I work with beautiful women from Monday to Saturday, but the best time of the week is the 90 minutes of football I get on a Sunday.”
Well, I can’t say I didn’t tell you so.
“Scoring a goal, to me, is simply the most satisfying rush on earth. I could even argue it’s better than sex,” he said. “If you have to work as hard for sex as you do to score a goal, then my friend, you are with the wrong woman.”
“It doesn’t matter which level you play at or even who you’re playing against, but there’s something about scoring a goal that just feels fantastic. Scoring a goal is arguably the best feeling, even better if you are a striker. We live on goals, with a goal on Saturday boosting us all the way till next weekend. It doesn’t even really matter how it goes in—top corner or deflection—that feeling of relief, mixed with absolute pleasure is simply unequalled in my opinion.”
by Stoker Dafire… Most recently, I have written articles regarding the fear factor of modern day boxers who are highly avoided due to their reputation for explosive punching power and thrilling knockouts.
This latest interest of mine had me embarking on a quest to find a fighter who I could consider the most feared—and most avoided—boxer of all time.
Well, let me tell you that I came across some heavy-handed fighters with more than one reason listed why they were avoided by other pugilists.
Names like Sonny Liston, who learned to fight while serving time at one of Americas’ toughest prisons, and had huge knockout wins over heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson.
Joe Louis Barrow once fought a fighter named King Levinsky, who got a bad case of pre-fight jitters before fighting Louis, and was incapacitated by thoughts of his impending doom.
Mike Tyson intimidated his opponents so badly that Michael Spinks when being interviewed by a reporter from Sports Illustrated spoke of thoughts of his own demise due to his upcoming bout with Tyson.
Big George Foreman, who traveled with two huge German Shepherd dogs and uttered very few words to anyone, was also a terrifying heavyweight with a murderous punch.
Foreman took advantage of the fear factor by filming himself in the gym taking bootlace type swings at a heavy bag.
The big mans’ power was clearly evident, as the film showed the punching bag filled with dents the size of a toaster.
The man who gets my vote, however, as the most feared boxer of all time, is a guy who was born right here in my home province.
Sam Langford was a 5′7″, 180-pound fighter from Weymouth Falls, Nova Scotia, Canada, who took on all comers from lightweight to heavyweight, and beat many of the greatest fighters of his era.
Langford was a fearless combatant with a style not unlike that of Tyson’s; also, he was often outweighed in his fights by 20 to 50 pounds.
Regardless of these shortcomings, however, Langford had more knockout victories than George Foreman and Mike Tyson combined.
Langford was also an outstanding defensive fighter; a master at blocking an opponent’s leads with an open glove.
He also had an iron jaw and was able to absorb the powerful blows of much larger men.
As a great offensive fighter and a master of defense Langford could do it all, and it wasn’t until the end of his career—when he was nearly blind—that opponents were willing to step up to him.
Langford was never able to win a title, however, because he was ducked by a most unlikely and notoriously fearless opponent.
Jack Johnson was the heavyweight champion of the world at the time, and he had won a previous war with Langford and had no desire to wage another.
Langford’s only meaningful loss was to the future heavyweight champion in 1906. Langford was only a light-middleweight at the time, and Johnson was an established heavyweight.
Johnson floored the much smaller Langford twice in winning a 15-round decision.
Later, as Sam grew in size, reputation, and experience, and became a real threat to his heavyweight championship, Johnson refused to give Sam a shot at the title.
Langford never received his rightful chance at the heavyweight title because of Johnson’s refusal to risk his crown.
However, despite the fact that Langford was never given a title shot—the great Ring Magazine founder and boxing historian Nat Fleischer—still ranked him as the No. 7 greatest heavyweight of all time.
- I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.
- Joan Didion
US author & journalist (1934 - )
by Jack Porter… Years down the road Mikhail Stefanovich may be viewed as one of the big draft day steals that helped rebuild the Toronto Maple Leafs.
The Leafs took Mikhail with their fourth round pick (98th overall) in the 2008 NHL entry draft. Stefanovich was a highly touted prospect at the beginning of the 2007-2008 QMJHL season. So highly thought of that he was projected to go as high as the top 10.
Scouts then found a flaw in this young man’s game though. Mikhail was not playing to the best of his abilities every night. This worried scouts and his ranking began to fall. Come draft day teams passed over him because of his work ethic.
The Leafs, however, saw the potential in him. Instead of using their fourth-round pick to get a player who had a chance of making the NHL, they took a player who will make the NHL if he just changes his attitude.
This season, Stefanovich did just that, he decided he wanted to play hockey from day one of the 2008-2009 season.
Stefanovich finished the regular season with 49 goals and 27 assists for 76 points, also he was an amazing plus 30. Oh ya, he got the 76 points in just 56 games for the Quebec Remparts of the QMJHL good for 17th in league scoring behind guys who played 10-12 more games than him.
What Mikhail will bring the Leafs
Mikhail is a big forward with a scoring touch and could work wonders with fellow Belorussian Mikhail Grabovski a few years down the road. Many scouts are amazed by his hockey sense, he has the ability to out think almost anyone when on the ice.
NHL Central Scouting’s Chris Bordeleau says, “He’s a big kid, 6′2″ and 200 pounds. He has good overall skills, but needs to improve on his work ethic and his involvement if he’s going to make it to the next level. When he is on his game, he is a good skater and has a great shot. He can really stickhandle but needs to show it more.”
Stefanovich Plays Like
Olli Jokinen
Stefanovich Next Year
Mikhail will be playing for the Marlies next season and will see a few games with the Leafs.
by Bryn Swartz… Steve Sabol, President of NFL Films, once stated, “There are so many definitions of toughness. There’s the toughness of getting the snot knocked out of you, and the can’t-be-intimidated, never-quit kind of tough. And then there’s the injured tough, which is no-regard-for-your-body-and-play-with-broken-bones tough. Then there’s mental toughness, when you’re tough under pressure and not losing your poise. Then there’s the toughness a person has, an aura, that he can intimidate other people by his play or his toughness.”
And then there’s the players below who contain all of these qualities. It’s incredibly debatable, but here is my attempt to rank them in order for toughness.
40. Sam Huff, Linebacker, New York Giants & Washington Redskins (1956-1969)
“A pro football linebacker is just naturally tough. You don’t mess with him. If we were fighting a war, the linebackers would be the first guys to get killed. Why? We invariably would attack a bunker from where the enemy is shooting machine guns. We’d attack the bunker, and the quarterbacks would be sitting in a tank with the general saying, ‘Well, what kind of attack are you planning?’ “
39. Hines Ward, Wide Receiver, Pittsburgh Steelers (1998-present)
Hines Ward played wide receiver, tailback, quarterback, and punt returner in college. He is famous for his crack-back blocks, and broke the jaw of Cincinnati rookie Keith Rivers in a 2008 contest. The Baltimore Ravens placed a bounty on Ward, to which the former Super Bowl MVP responded, “Bring it on.” He was voted the smartest offensive player in the NFL (non-quarterbacks) and is considered the best blocking receiver in the NFL.
38. Don Meredith, Quarterback, Dallas Cowboys (1960-1968)
“Meredith was really tough. He got beat up so bad in his early years. His last game, up in Cleveland, he came out of the hospital to play with a broken rib, a punctured lung, and pneumonia. I saw Meredith’s nose broken so bad that it spread all over his face. Looked like a raccoon.” —Bob Lilly
37. Ernie Stautner, Defensive Tackle, Pittsburgh Steelers (1950-1963)
“Ernie Stautner comes in the huddle, and his thumb is broken back against his wrist. There’s a tear near the break, and his bone is sticking out. He has a compound fracture of the thumb. He takes his thumb in his hand and wrenches it down into his fist. Doesn’t show it to anybody. Doesn’t say anything.
So he stayed there for the rest of the series, and then we came off, and I’m watching him because I’m the only guy who saw that he had a compound fracture. I saw the bone. So I’m figuring now he’s going to ask for the doctor, and he may have to go to the hospital because this thing could get infected, and he says, “Give me some tape.” So they throw him some tape and he just starts taping this huge ball. He makes this big fist. Then we go back in. He plays the entire game. Never misses a down. I’m just astounded, and he’s using this hand that is broken as a club. He’s beating people with it. After the game, we go into the locker room and he says, “Hey Doc, I think I got a problem.” —Andy Russell, linebacker
36. Jon Runyan, Tackle, Houston/Tennessee Oilers & Titans, Philadelphia Eagles (1996-present)
Runyan has started 180 consecutive games at right tackle, and has played in the postseason on seven occasions. He is regarded as the second dirtiest player in the NFL and a 2008 poll revealed that one of the scariest things in the NFL is being blocked by Runyan on a screen pass. He has played through numerous injuries, including a broken bone in his back.
35. Jack Youngblood, Defensive End, Los Angeles Rams (1971-1984)
Youngblood played the final three games of the 1979 NFL playoffs, including the Super Bowl against the Pittsburgh Steelers, with a heavily-taped broken leg. He was called the “John Wayne of Football” by John Madden.
34. Mark Bavaro, Tight End, New York Giants & Cleveland Browns & Philadelphia Eagles (1985-1990, 1992-1994)
Nicknamed “Rambo” for his tough play and physical resemblance to Sylvester Stallone, Bavaro broke seven tackles on one catch across the middle against the 49ers in a 1986 game. He dragged Ronnie Lott twenty yards. Bavaro’s play inspired the Giants, who went on to win the game, and the Super Bowl.
33. Bill Romanowski, Linebacker, San Francisco 49ers & Philadelphia Eagles & Denver Broncos & Oakland Raiders (1988-2003)
NFL tough guy was fined for: kicking fullback Larry Centers in the head (1995); breaking Kerry Collins’ jaw on a preseason helmet-to-helmet hit (1997); throwing a football at linebacker Bryan Cox and hitting him in the groin (1999); punching tight end Tony Gonzalez (1999); and breaking the eye socket of teammate Marcus Williams in a scrimmage, forcing him to retire (2003). He also received fines for three illegal hits in the 1999 season. In 1997, he spit in the face of wide receiver JJ Stokes. Romanowski played in 243 consecutive games, a record for a linebacker, and played for four Super Bowl champions.
32. Larry Wilson, Safety, St. Louis Cardinals (1960-1972)
Larry Wilson is best known for inventing the safety blitz. Wilson intercepted 52 passes in his career, but the one that stands out is the 91-yard interception touchdown from 1965—a pass he intercepted despite casts on both of his broken hands. Hall of Fame quarterback Bobby Layne has called Wilson “pound for pound the toughest player in the NFL.”
31. Conrad Dobler, Guard, St. Louis Cardinals & New Orleans Saints & Buffalo Bills (1972-1981)
Dobler, in an ESPN poll, was named the dirtiest professional athlete of all time. He spent the week prior to a game building up his hatred over the opponent. Among Dobler’s principal offenses were biting, gouging, punching, kicking, and grabbing the face mask. In 1974, he used a cast on his broken left hand as a weapon. Dobler punched Pittsburgh’s Mean Joe Greene in the solar plexus and kicked the Rams’ Merlin Olsen in the head. He spit in the face of Eagles’ safety Bill Bradley as he lay injured on the ground. When Giants defensive tackle Jim Pietrzak wished him good luck in the playoffs, he punched him. He bit one tackle so many times that the player requested a rabies shot. Dobler swore that he would never intentionally blind someone, only blur their vision.
30. Deacon Jones, Defensive End, Los Angeles Rams & San Diego Chargers & Washington Redskins (1961-1974)
The NFL’s unofficial record-holder with 26 sacks in the 1967 season, Deacon coined the term “sack.” Jones said that toughness is defined not by playing through pain, but by avoiding pain in the first place. Deacon perfected the “head slap,” a move that would be eventually banned by the NFL because it was “too effective.”
29. Walt Garrison, Running Back, Dallas Cowboys (1966-1974)
In a playoff game in 1970, Garrison broke three ribs in the first quarter and continued playing after he was carried off the field. He rushed for over 100 yards, caught several passes, and helped the Cowboys continue their path to the Super Bowl. Garrison has also played through a separated shoulder, a severely broken nose and a broken collarbone. Teammate Charlie Waters recalls the time that Garrison accidentally cut his thumb with a knife so that it was dangling from his hand. Garrison wrapped his thumb in tape and played the next day, rushing for over 100 yards.
28. Walter Payton, Running Back, Chicago Bears (1975-1987)
Gary Fencik: “I had the displeasure of tackling, by accident, Walter only once in my 12-year career. And boy, the rest of the day was hell for me.” The ironic part? Fencik, a Bears safety, speaks about a hit that occurred in practice.
27. Jerry Kramer, Guard & Kicker, Green Bay Packers (1958-1968)
Kramer endured 23 operations and required over 500 stitches in his NFL career, including a colostomy, which he described as “a horror movie that hasn’t been made yet.”
26. Jim Marshall, Defensive End, Minnesota Vikings (1960-1979)
Could someone please explain to me why Jim Marshall is not in the Hall of Fame? As a 248-pound defensive end, he played in 282 consecutive games. Every game. For 19 straight seasons. He maintained his streak despite pneumonia, an ulcer, and a shotgun wound to the side. Marshall earned his fame as a member of the Purple People Eaters of the early 1970s.
25. Mike Curtis, Linebacker, Baltimore Colts & Seattle Seahawks & Washington Redskins (1965-1978)
Curtis was nicknamed “The Animal” and was one of the angriest men to ever play in the NFL. He was named the AFC Defensive Player of the Year in 1970 and once knocked unconscious a fan who entered onto the playing field during a game. He chewed through the bars of his face mask and reportedly ate the window panes of the team bus. He proudly stated that he played football because it was the only way he could hit someone and get away with it.
24. George Trafton, Center, Chicago Bears (1920-1921, 1923-1932)
Red Grange called George Trafton the “toughest, meanest, most ornery critter alive.” The 235-pound center had his college days cut short after he was expelled from Notre Dame and was considered the dirtiest player of his time. Trafton played before the NFL enforced late-hit, roughing, or unsportsmanlike conduct penalties. As a rookie in 1920, he angered the Rock Island Independents so bad that they sent four players into the game on a mission to destroy Trafton. Within 12 plays, Trafton had knocked each player out of the game, sending one of them to the hospital with a broken hand and an 11-inch cut across the forehead. Nicknamed “The Brute,” Trafton broke the leg and ended the career of halfback Fred Chicken by throwing him into a fence. The Rock Island fans were so angered that a rock-throwing mob chased him from the field.
23. Ronnie Lott, Cornerback & Safety, San Francisco 49ers & Los Angeles Raiders & New York Jets & Kansas City Chiefs (1981-1995)
Ronnie Lott was a cornerback who hit like a linebacker. His claim to fame occurred in 1985 when his left pinkie was caught between the shoulder pads and helmet of Cowboys running back Timmy Newsome, shattering the bone. When Lott’s finger didn’t heal properly, he told the doctors to cut it off, and they amputated his pinkie at the third knuckle. Over his 14-year career, which included Pro Bowl selections at safety, cornerback, and linebacker, Lott endured many injuries, including a broken leg and torn knee cartilage.
22. Bucko Kilroy, Guard, Philadelphia Eagles (1943-1955)
Giants lineman Al DeRogatis once accused Kilroy of biting him on the nose. Kilroy denied the charge. “I didn’t bite his nose,” he said. “I bit his ear.” Kilroy, who played back in the days when offensive linemen weren’t allowed to extend their arms to block, was considered the dirtiest player in the NFL, and he helped Philadelphia win back-to-back NFL championships.
21. Jim Brown, Running Back, Cleveland Browns (1957-1965)
Arguably the greatest combination of power and speed the game has ever seen, Brown missed one game in his nine-year career. He won eight rushing titles before abruptly retiring at the age of 30. He gave the following advice to future Hall of Fame tight end John Mackey: “Make sure when anyone tackles you he remembers how much it hurts.”
20. Emmitt Smith, Running Back, Dallas Cowboys & Arizona Cardinals (1990-2004)
Emmitt Smith transformed the epitome of toughness on national television in the last game of the season in 1993. With the Cowboys and Giants fighting for the NFC East and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs, Emmitt played the entire game with a sprained and separated right shoulder. He ran 32 times for 168 yards and caught 10 balls for 61 yards. The Cowboys won the game, earned home-field advantage throughout the playoffs, and captured the Super Bowl title. When asked why he played through the pain, instead of watching from the sidelines, Smith calmly responded, “This is why they pay me.”
19. Steve McNair, Quarterback, Houston/Tennessee Oilers & Titans & Baltimore Ravens (1995-2007)
Steve McNair is the definition of playing through pain. The former Titans star quarterback has injured nearly every part of his body at one time or another. He has played through numerous injuries such as a separated right clavicle, an infected right shoulder, a dislocated ring finger on his right hand, torn cartilage in his right knee, a strained calf, a hip pointer, a ruptured disk, back spasms, strained rib cartilage, severely bruised ribs, a left knee sprain, an MCL sprain, a left ankle sprain, severe turf toe, a cracked bone spur in his left ankle, a bone spur in his toe, and a severely bruised sternum. The 2003 NFL MVP, McNair has never missed a playoff start and led the Titans to the Super Bowl in 1999.
18. Dick Plasman, Wide Receiver, Chicago Bears & Chicago Cardinals (1937-1947)
Plasman refused to wear a helmet. Flat-out refused—that is, until the league made him. Teammate Hugh Gallarneau claims that, “He had a piece of cement for a head.” He once dove into a brick wall attempting to catch a pass, busted open his head, and was carried off semiconscious. His first words: “Did we score?” Believe it or not, Plasman suffered from blindness and post-concussion syndrome until his death at age 67 in 1981.
17. Larry Csonka, Fullback, Miami Dolphins & New York Giants (1968-1974, 1976-1979)
Csonka was a bull in a china shop. He was one of the best 4th-and-1 runners in NFL history. Csonka also broke his nose 10 times in his career, causing it to be permanently deformed, and would remain in the game despite blood pouring out of it. In 1972, he thought he broke his back on a hit by a Minnesota Vikings linebacker, so he crawled off the field. Minutes later, he set up the winning touchdown with a fake handoff. Csonka is also the only player in the history of the NFL to be penalized while carrying the ball—a forearm shot/right cross that knocked a safety unconscious.
16. Rocky Bleier, Running Back, Pittsburgh Steelers (1968, 1971-1980)
Bleier’s story is one of the greatest in the history of sports. He was drafted into the U.S. Army after his rookie season and endured shrapnel wounds to his right leg. Told by doctors that he would never play football again, Bleier, recipient of the Purple Heart and Bronze Star, spent two full years attempting to return to the NFL. He finally returned after a three-year absence. Bleier eventually played on four Super Bowl championships and earned a reputation as both a fearsome blocker and a powerful runner. Today, he tours the country giving motivational speeches.
15. Jack Tatum, Safety, Oakland Raiders & Houston Oilers (1971-1980)
He was nicknamed “The Assassin.” He knocked out future Hall of Fame tight end John Mackey in the first game of his career. He knocked the helmet off Minnesota receiver Sammy White in the Super Bowl—probably the hardest hit I have ever seen. He paralyzed wide receiver Darryl Stingley in a preseason game in 1978 on a clean hit. He liked to think that his best hits border on “felonious assault.”
14. Mel Hein, Center, New York Giants (1931-1945)
Hein played fifteen seasons with the Giants and never missed a play. He only called timeout one time and that was to reset his broken nose. Hein remains the only offensive linemen to ever win the MVP award (1938).
13. Bob Lilly, Defensive Tackle, Dallas Cowboys (1961-1974)
In his 14 seasons, Lilly never missed a game. Not one. He endured torn-up knees, broken hands, broken ribs, and an acutely-painful hamstring tear but never missed a game. He played in 11 Pro Bowls and is considered one of the greatest defensive players in NFL history.
12. Tommy McDonald, Wide Receiver, Philadelphia Eagles & Dallas Cowboys & Los Angeles Rams & Atlanta Falcons & Cleveland Browns (1957-1968)
McDonald was the last NFL player to not wear a facemask. In one game, he was knocked unconscious by a 49er defender. With a broken jaw wired shut, McDonald could only drink milkshakes and watched his weight plummet from 175 to 143. In the Eagles’ next game, against the Giants, McDonald caught three touchdowns and returned a punt 81 yards for a touchdown. McDonald suffered exactly zero broken noses and knocked out teeth in his career.
11. Earl Campbell, Running Back, Houston Oilers & New Orleans Saints (1978-1985)
“I can’t think of anyone who even comes in a close second, when you say, “Running backs—who really hurts? It’s Earl Campbell.” –Gary Fencik, safety
10. Chuck Bednarik, Center & Linebacker, Philadelphia Eagles (1949-1962)
“The greatest collision of all time was Bednarik hitting Gifford. It was a good, clean hit. Nothing dirty about it. I thought he killed Frank. I walked by Frank, and he was laid out. He missed the whole next year of football. You couldn’t be upset about the hit; it was clean and legal.” –Sam Huff
Bednarik was the last NFL player to play offense and defense. He led the Eagles to championships in 1949 and 1960. He had a game-winning tackle of future Hall of Fame running back Jim Taylor in the closing seconds of the Eagles 17-13 win in 1960. Bednarik was nicknamed “Concrete Charlie” and to me, will always be known for the phrase I heard him say at training camp one year: “Today’s football players are underplayed and overpaid.”
9. Hardy Brown, Linebacker, Brooklyn Dodgers & Chicago Hornets & Baltimore Colts & Washington Redskins & San Francisco 49ers & Chicago Cardinals & Denver Broncos (1948-1956, 1960)
190-pound linebacker Hardy Brown was the hardest-hitting player who ever lived. Hall of Fame linebacker Sam Huff said, “Hardy Brown was a designated hitter. He was not a great linebacker. Is he in the Hall of Fame? No. But I’ll tell you what—he had more knockouts than any of us.” Brown fractured the face of an Eagles running back, broke another player’s vertebrae, and knocked a Steelers’ running back’s eye out of its socket. In 1951 alone, he knocked out 21 players. In one game, he knocked out the entire Washington Redskins backfield one by one. His famed right shoulder was responsible for dozens of broken noses and jaws. The origin of the since-outlawed helmet-to-helmet hit is sometimes traced to Brown.
8. Ray Lewis, Linebacker, Baltimore Ravens (1996-present)
The desire of Ray Lewis to be the greatest linebacker in NFL history is fueled by an inner toughness that manifests itself on the football field. Lewis is one of the greatest playmakers and natural team leaders the game has ever seen. Lewis’s toughness peaked when he dislocated his elbow so seriously that a teammate was forced to help him put on his jewelry. Lewis missed two games, returned wearing a heavy brace, and registered 11 tackles against Pittsburgh. Ray Lewis has won a Super Bowl MVP, two Defensive Player of the Year awards, and has earned nine Pro Bowl invitations.
7. Bronko Nagurski, Running Back, Chicago Bears (1930-1937, 1943)
As Giants linebacker Johnny Dell Isola said during their playing days years ago, “I had heard a lot about him, but I thought most of it was exaggerated. We were at the Polo Grounds when I first ran up against him. It was 1st and 10, and they gave the ball to Nagurski up the middle. Well, a huge hole opened, and I saw him coming. I put my head down and charged into the hole. We met at the line of scrimmage, and you could hear the thud all over the Polo Grounds. I had my arms around his legs, and my shoulder dug into him. It was the hardest tackle I ever made, but I made it, and I said to myself, “Well, I guess that will show you, Nagurski!” Then as I was getting up, I heard the referee shout, “Second down and 2!”
George Halas: “Nagurski blasted through two would-be tacklers as though they were a pair of old saloon doors and kept on going right into the endzone. His head still down, Nagurski ran full speed into the brick outfield wall there at Wrigley Field. He went down, then got up and trotted off the field. As he approached me on the sideline, he shook his head and said, “That last guy really gave me a good lick, coach.’ “
Nagurski once knocked unconscious four would-be tacklers on a kickoff return touchdown in his rookie season. Nagurski became a professional wrestler after his NFL career and was a two-time world heavyweight champion. In 1995, Nagurski was honored when the Football Writers Association of America voted to have his name attached to college football’s Defensive Player of the Year trophy.
6. Lawrence Taylor, Linebacker, New York Giants (1981-1993)
LT was easily the most disruptive defensive force in NFL history. He was double-teamed, every play, for his entire career. He played a game against the Saints with a dislocated shoulder. He recorded three sacks and forced two fumbles with a severely torn pectoral muscle. He played three games with a fractured tibia. He ended the career of MVP quarterback Joe Theismann with a compound leg fracture in a Monday Night game in 1985. Hall of Fame running back Tony Dorsett calls LT “an old-school player. He played with pain and didn’t come out. He played the game like it was supposed to be played, with pain and passion.”
5. Johnny Unitas, Quarterback, Pittsburgh Steelers & Baltimore Colts & San Diego Chargers (1956-1974)
Unitas could intimidate without being one of the physical players. He played in an era when quarterbacks did not receive much protection, specifically on late hits. Throughout his Hall of Fame career, this three-time NFL MVP played with a number of injuries, including a badly broken nose, broken fingers, ripped arm tendons, and torn knee cartilage. In 1958, with three broken ribs and a punctured lung, he led the Colts to the NFL title while wearing a protective harness. Two years later Unitas played the entire season with a broken vertebrae. Unitas missed most of the 1968 season due to injury but returned in the Super Bowl to lead Baltimore on its only touchdown drive in a 16-7 loss to the Jets.
4. Joe Greene, Defensive Tackle, Pittsburgh Steelers (1969-1981)
Nicknamed “Mean,” Joe Greene was one of only a handful of defensive players in NFL history who could singlehandedly change the outcome of a game. He helped the Steelers win four Super Bowl titles in a six-year span in the 1970’s and is probably the most important player in team history. As a rookie, he was notorious for threatening veterans and starting fights in training camp. In a playoff game in 1972, Greene recorded five sacks, forced a fumble, recovered a fumble, and blocked a field goal in a 9-3 win vs. Houston. Greene was notorious for kicking a player when he was down and had to be ejected from a game in 1975 for repeatedly kicking a Cleveland Browns player in the groin. He defined toughness as, more of a mental aspect than a physical power, saying, “Toughness doesn’t necessarily mean physical prowess; it’s more mental.”
3. Jim Otto, Center, Oakland Raiders (1960-1974)
Otto played fifteen seasons and never missed a game, despite 10 broken noses and over 40 back, knee, and shoulder operations, including 28 to his knees alone. Otto now suffers from arthritis, and severe neck problems. He has fought off three life-threatening bouts of infections to his arthritic joints, and almost died on the handicapped table once. He had his right leg amputated in 2007. He said, “Football is tough. You want to spell football: T-U-F-F. It’s not for weak-hearted guys. It’s a tough sport. If you want to get into something else, play with the girls.”
2. Brett Favre, Quarterback, Atlanta Falcons & Green Bay Packers & New York Jets (1991-2008)
Favre has started 287 consecutive games, including the postseason, an all-time record for a quarterback. Favre has played through unbelievable injuries, including a broken and sprained thumb on his right hand, a badly sprained left ankle, a sprained left foot, a sprained left knee, a torn ligament in his left knee, a severely bruised left hip, and a separated left shoulder. He suffered a cracked vertebra, a concussion, and crushed intestines during a car crash before his senior year of college. He underwent surgery to have 30 inches of his intestines removed, and returned for the second game of the season. Favre has earned three MVP awards and led the Packers to a championship in 1996.
1. Dick Butkus, Linebacker, Chicago Bears (1965-1973)
Dick Butkus was the angriest, most ferocious, menacing, and yes, toughest player to ever play the game of football. Butkus’s opponents claimed that Butkus was like an odor that you could feel or sense on the field. Anything loose—a knee pad, a shoe, a chin strap—would be ripped off by a Butkus tackle. Butkus has bitten officials, bitten opponents in the groin, scratched, punched, everything. Going across the middle against Dick Butkus was considered attempted suicide. Butkus was a turnover machine and earned eight Pro Bowl selections in his nine seasons. Steve Sabol had the following to say about Butkus: “His career stands as the most sustained work of devastation ever committed on any field of sport, anywhere, any time.”
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