"I have loved football as an almost mythic game since I was in the fourth grade. To me, the game wasn't even grounded in reality. The uniform turned you into a warrior. Being on a team, the mythology of physical combat, the struggle against the elements, the narrative of the game..." ~ Steve Sabol (NFL Films)

NFL SuperPro Issue 12

NFL SuperPro Issue 11

NFL SuperPro Issue 10

NFL SuperPro Issue 9

NFL SuperPro Issue 8

NFL SuperPro Issue 7

NFL SuperPro Issue 6

NFL SuperPro Issue 5

NFL SuperPro Issue 4

NFL SuperPro Issue 3

NFL SuperPro Issue 2

NFL SuperPro Issue 1

All-Pro Football Stars '79

CFL Traditions- British Columbia

CFL Traditions- Edmonton

CFL Traditions- Calgary

CFL Traditions- Winnipeg

CFL Traditions- Saskatchewan

CFL Traditions- Ottawa

CFL Traditions- Montreal

CFL Traditions- Hamilton

 

CFL Traditions- Toronto

This Is Our League

 

Football Dreams- All Kinds of Time

 


Football Dreams- The Boys of Fall

Old School Football Memories

Miami Dolphins QB- Bob Griese
It was on January 9, 1977 that pro football entered my life and I witnessed (from what I can recall) was my first football game and NFL championship (Superbowl XI), and was immediately hooked. Months later I turned ten years old, started the fifth grade, and began rooting for what was then my favorite team, which was not m my beloved Cardinals, but rather the Miami Dolphins.

Why the Dolphins?  I honestly have no recollection some 40 years later.  It stemmed from a few things I think, I liked their uniforms, a lack of any good football in Chicago, and our family trip to Florida.

With that said though, exactly how it came to be that I became a Dolphins fan I don't really know for sure.  They were by then a team on the downward slide, and the only one I really identified with on the team was their quarterback, the by then bi-spectacle Bob Griese, who, as luck would have it, in 1977, was quarterbacking a resurgent offense in the post-Csonka era.  I wore the same style glasses that I immediately became a fan. I was such an over eager Dolphins fan that for the remainder of the 1970s I asked for literally every NFL licensed piece of merchandise a boy could find in the Sears and J.C. Penny's Christmas catalogs (more on that facet of football culture in a future article).

Read The Great NFL Fun Book II

Read the Great NFL Fun Book

Odyssey 2 Football

Intellivision Football

The NFL of 1970s Hollywood

 

Remembering the AFL

 

Madden Covers We Deserved

 

CFL and NFL Lunch Boxes

 

Pro Football Postage Stamps

Getting Stung in the WFL

NFL Art of the 60s and 70s

 

Handheld Football Gallery

Remembering Howard Cosell

 

NFL and AFL Pins


Football, the Military and Superheroes

 

The Last Super Bowl

Sports are universally beloved. Geographically, the athletic competitions take on various forms; the NFL, NBA, MLB are strong in America; NHL in Canada; Premier League in Europe; and Cricket in India.

But the now legendary George R. R. Martin wrote about the downfall of them all in “The Last Super Bowl,” a fantastically written short story in February 1975’s issue of Gallery Magazine, a men’s magazine.

The story is actually two tales, as he covers the last Super Bowl which takes place in January 2016 and interjects the depiction of that Super Bowl, between the Green Bay Packers and the Hoboken Jets, and the downfall of real sports. Real sports, in the 2016 of Martin’s fictional world, have been overtaken in popularity by simulated sports.

Gus the Field Goal Kicking Mule

McDonald's Super Bowl Magazines

The Great NFL Fun Book

Time Magazine Pro Football Covers

Football in Baseball Parks

I am not sure why, but I have always loved the aesthetic of pro football being played in baseball parks.  Something about the way the fields were aligned so that they fit just right into the tight confines.

Christmas CFL Wishbooks

Christmas NFL Wishbooks

 

When Howard Ruled Monday Night...

When I was a kid, Monday nights in the fall were truly an event of epic proportions for any preteen football nut like myself. For you see in the l970s Monday Night Football on ABC was the gold standard of football play by play, long before John Madden and Pat Summerall ever connected. Back in the day it was the game and the men who played it that mattered. Yet, what made MNF stand apart from all sports broadcasts was the magic of one man- Howard Cosell. Without Howard it would have been just a forgettable game, like it is now. John Gruden will never compare. With Howard it was an event, and even when the game was a blowout he still made it interesting. If only we could have Billy Crystal call the games now and take us all back in time, just for one one quarter even... Sigh :-(

Paper Lion

The History of Pro Football

Ken Stabler and the Luv Ya Blue Houston Oilers

Chicago's Farewell to the Cardinals

A nostalgic to take a look back to a time of the darkest day of the franchise (courtesy of the WBEZ archives), when Chicago’s pioneer pro football team played its very last home game in its hometown in a very familiar setting.  

Vince Lombardi's Impact on the Washington Redskins

CFL Video Games

NFL/AFL Programs and Media Guides

Life Magazine’s Look at the 1960s NFL


NFL and AFL Decals

Symbiosis- A Football Poem

The World Football League


The Magic of NFL Films

Without NFL Films would the game we now love and worship, here on this opening night of the 2016 season, be the game it is today.  I contend that NFL Films and Steve Sabol have had a bigger impact on football then we may ever realize, for NFL Films has humanized the game we love and has allowed us to view it through a cinematic lens. The article below appeared in Sports Illustrated and was written well before the death of Steve Sabol, the iconic leader and visionary of NFL Films in 2012. His genius is seen in the film below., "That One Vintage Year.."