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In this enlightening discourse, we unveil a remarkable revelation concerning the father of modern American football, Walter Camp, whose historical narrative is unexpectedly marred by an allegation of attempted murder. We delve into the intricate details of this episode, as explored by Timothy B. Brown of Football Archaeology, who meticulously unravels the circumstances surrounding Camp's arrest in the late 19th century. The discussion encompasses the convoluted tale of a love triangle that culminated in violence, casting a shadow over Camp's otherwise illustrious legacy. Through this examination, we endeavor to illuminate lesser-known aspects of football history that significantly shape our understanding of its prominent figures. Join us as we explore the intersection of personal turmoil and professional achievement within the annals of American football.Join us at the Pigskin Dispatch website and the Sports Jersey Dispatch to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ Email-subscriberDon't forget to check out and subscribe to the Pigskin Dispatch YouTube channel for additional content and the regular Football History Minute Shorts.Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't, because they can still be found at the Pigskin Dispatch website.
On today's DNVR Buffs Podcast, the guys are live from New York for the Heisman Trophy ceremony! Ryan Koenigsberg, Jake Schwanitz and Scott Procter discuss Travis Hunter's legacy after winning the Biletnikoff, Bednarik and Walter Camp award last night. What Travis Hunter had to say at his press conference today in New York. The latest transfer portal updates, Buffs media legend William Whelan joins the show and much more.An ALLCITY Network ProductionPARTY WITH US: https://thednvr.com/eventsALL THINGS DNVR: https://linktr.ee/dnvrsportsMERCH: https://store.allcitynetwork.com/coll...SUBSCRIBE: / dnvr_sports Sleeper: Download the Sleeper app and use the code BUFFS to get up to a $100 match on your first deposit! Terms and conditions apply. See Sleeper's Terms of Use for details. Currently operational in over 25 states. Check out Sleeper today!Elevations Credit Union: Sko Buffs With the Go Buffs® Visa® Signature Rewards Card, the only official credit card of CU athletics, only at Elevations Credit Union. Visit http://buffscreditcard.com to apply and see full card benefits and details.Empire Today: Schedule a free in-home estimate today! All listeners can receive a $350 OFF discount when they use the promo code DNVR. Restrictions apply. See https://empiretoday.com/dnvr for detailsZbiotics: Go to https://zbiotics.com/dnvrbuffs to get 15% off your first order when you use DNVRBUFFS at checkout. Pre-Alcohol is backed with 100% money back guarantee so if you're unsatisfied for any reason, they'll refund your money, no questions asked. Coach Prime wants to help you and other Coloradans be your healthiest selves as the Chief Motivation Officer of UCHealth's Ready. Set. CO challenge. If you want to join the challenge, go to https://www.uchealth.org/readysetcoMint Mobile: To get your new 3-month unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to https://mintmobile.com/buffs. $45 upfront payment required (equivalent to $15/mo.). New customers on first 3 month plan only. Speeds slower above 40GB on Unlimited plan. Additional taxes, fees, & restrictions apply. See MINT MOBILE for details.Get Coors Light delivered straight to your door with Instacart by going to https://coorslight.com/DNVR. Celebrate Responsibly. Coors Brewing Company, Golden, Colorado. Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code BUFFS for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply.bet365: Go to https://www.bet365.com/hub/en-us/app-... or use code DNVR365 when you sign up. Must be 21+ and physically located in CO. Please gamble responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help call or TEXT 1-800-GAMBLER This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try athttps://betterhelp.com/dnvr today to get 10% off your first month and get on your way to being your best self.Check out FOCO merch and collectibles here https://foco.vegb.net/DNVR and use promo code “DNVR10” for 10% off your order.Download the Circle K app and join the Inner Circle or visit https://www.circlek.com/inner-circle! Get 10 FREE meals at https://hellofresh.com/freebuffs. Applied across 7 boxes, new subscribers only, varies by plan.Rugged Road: Gear up for your next adventure with Rugged Road Coolers - Your ultimate outdoor companion! Head to http://ruggedroadoutdoors.pxf.io/ALLCITY and use code DNVR for 10% off!When you shop through links in the description, we may earn affiliate commissions.Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Today on the Logan Blackman Show we recap every award that was given out during this year's college football awards, with Ashton Jeanty taking home the Maxwell and Doak Walker Award(s) and Travis Hunter taking home the Walter Camp, Biletnikoff, and Bednarik Award(s). With that we go through each Heisman Trophy finalist and discuss why. each of them could win the award while also revealing our officially official predictions. We then take some time to go back and recap all the recent Heisman winners and discuss how we felt about them as players and whether or not we felt they deserved the award. Moving over to quarterbacks, we take a look at Garrett Nussmeier returning to LSU while also discussing what Quinn Ewers' future holds and revealing our officially official week 15 quarterback prospect rankings. Finally, we preview the game of the week between the Bills and Lions while going over the strengths and weaknesses for each team as well as look at every other game from this upcoming weekend. Enjoy!
On today's DNVR Buffs Podcast, Jake Schwanitz and Scott Procter discuss every position in the transfer portal and share who "their guys" are. Today is a massive day for Travis Hunter, who has won the AP National Player of the Year award and signed with Adidas. The winners of the Bednarik, Biletnikoff and Walter Camp will also be announced tonight. Plus, news from two of the best wide receivers in the transfer portal. Also, Phillip Dukes aka Dukes the Scoop joins the show to talk transfer portal, Julian Lewis, Caleb Odom, Bill Belichick and much more.An ALLCITY Network ProductionPARTY WITH US: https://thednvr.com/eventsALL THINGS DNVR: https://linktr.ee/dnvrsportsMERCH: https://store.allcitynetwork.com/coll...SUBSCRIBE: / dnvr_sports Sleeper: Download the Sleeper app and use the code BUFFS to get up to a $100 match on your first deposit! Terms and conditions apply. See Sleeper's Terms of Use for details. Currently operational in over 25 states. Check out Sleeper today!Elevations Credit Union: Sko Buffs With the Go Buffs® Visa® Signature Rewards Card, the only official credit card of CU athletics, only at Elevations Credit Union. Visit http://buffscreditcard.com to apply and see full card benefits and details.Empire Today: Schedule a free in-home estimate today! All listeners can receive a $350 OFF discount when they use the promo code DNVR. Restrictions apply. See https://empiretoday.com/dnvr for detailsZbiotics: Go to https://zbiotics.com/dnvrbuffs to get 15% off your first order when you use DNVRBUFFS at checkout. Pre-Alcohol is backed with 100% money back guarantee so if you're unsatisfied for any reason, they'll refund your money, no questions asked. Coach Prime wants to help you and other Coloradans be your healthiest selves as the Chief Motivation Officer of UCHealth's Ready. Set. CO challenge. If you want to join the challenge, go to https://www.uchealth.org/readysetcoMint Mobile: To get your new 3-month unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to https://mintmobile.com/buffs. $45 upfront payment required (equivalent to $15/mo.). New customers on first 3 month plan only. Speeds slower above 40GB on Unlimited plan. Additional taxes, fees, & restrictions apply. See MINT MOBILE for details.Get Coors Light delivered straight to your door with Instacart by going to https://coorslight.com/DNVR. Celebrate Responsibly. Coors Brewing Company, Golden, Colorado. Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code BUFFS for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply.bet365: Go to https://www.bet365.com/hub/en-us/app-... or use code DNVR365 when you sign up. Must be 21+ and physically located in CO. Please gamble responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help call or TEXT 1-800-GAMBLER This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try athttps://betterhelp.com/dnvr today to get 10% off your first month and get on your way to being your best self.Check out FOCO merch and collectibles here https://foco.vegb.net/DNVR and use promo code “DNVR10” for 10% off your order.Download the Circle K app and join the Inner Circle or visit https://www.circlek.com/inner-circle! Get 10 FREE meals at https://hellofresh.com/freebuffs. Applied across 7 boxes, new subscribers only, varies by plan.Rugged Road: Gear up for your next adventure with Rugged Road Coolers - Your ultimate outdoor companion! Head to http://ruggedroadoutdoors.pxf.io/ALLCITY and use code DNVR for 10% off!When you shop through links in the description, we may earn affiliate commissions.Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Learn that the idea of gratitude and giving thanks is an ancient concept for mankind and expressly elevated in the Bible. Review how days of thanksgiving were originally commemorated in the English colonies in Virginia and Massachusetts, with the English dissenters, the Pilgrims, having the most influential celebrations. In the colonial era, Thanksgiving celebrations were centered on particular events and circumstances, and, accordingly, happened at different times. As Americans united against British tyranny, they made continental wide proclamations through the Continental Congress, but again tied to specific events and times. President George Washington issued the first two Thanksgiving Proclamations under the Constitution, and John Adams and James Madison did the same. Thomas Jefferson refused, and after James Madison, Thanksgiving was proclaimed by the States, but not by the President, until Abraham Lincoln. Sarah Josepha Hale's drive to create a uniform, nation wide celebration was embraced by Lincoln and his successors, and it became firmly fixed to the Fourth Thursday of November under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Feasts, running, football, parades, Black Friday, Cyber Monday and Giving Tuesday all flow from this powerful day of gratitude. Highlights include the Bible, Thessalonians 5:16-18, Colossians 2:7, Psalm 100:4, Colossians 4:2, Psalm 92, Philippians 4:6, King Henry VIII, Queen Elizabeth Anne Boleyn, Church of England, John Calvin, Puritans, Common Book of Prayers, King James I, Pilgrims, Mayflower, Plymouth England, Plymouth Harbor Massachusetts, Mayflower Compact, John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Samoset, Squanto, Wampanoag, William Bedford, Thanksgiving commemoration, Melanie Kirkpatrick, Thanksgiving The Holiday at the Heart of the American Experience, William Bradford, Berkeley Plantation a/k/a Berkeley Hundred, The Margaret, John Woodlief, Jamestown, the Starving Time, Chief Opechancanough, Massacre of 1622, Massachusetts Bay Colony, New Amsterdam, First Continental Congress, Second Continental Congress, Day of Humiliation Fasting and Prayer (1776), Henry Laurens, Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1777), Battle of Saratoga, Thomas McKean, Day of Thanksgiving and Prayer, George Washington, James Madison, Elias Boudinot, Aedanus Burke, Thomas Tudor Tucker, Federalist Party, Anti-Federalists, Peter Silvester, Roger Sherman, Articles of Confederation, Continental Association, Constitution, William Samuel Johnson, Ralph Izard, Washington Thanksgiving Day Proclamation , Whiskey Rebellion, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Letter, James Madison, First Amendment, War of 1812, Abraham Lincoln, Sarah Josepha Hale, Mary Had a Little Lamb, Northwood: A Tale of New England, Vassar College, domestic science, Ladies' Magazine, Godey's Lady's Book, Civil War, William Seward, Andrew Johnson, Lincoln Thanksgiving Proclamation, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt a/k/a FDR, National Retail Dry Goods Association, Franksgiving, Allen Treadway, Earl Michener, FDR Thanksgiving Speech, President Lyndon Baines Johnson, Johnson Thanksgiving Speech (1963), President John F. Kennedy, President Ronald Reagan, Reagan Thanksgiving Speech, President Barak Obama Thanksgiving Speech, President George W. Bush, President Bush Thanksgiving Day visit to the troops in Iraq, President Donald Trump, Trump Thanksgiving Day visit to troops in Afghanistan, Trump Speech to troops on Thanksgiving, President Bill Clinton Pardoning of Turkey, Presidential Pardons of Turkey, Thanksgiving Dinner & Feast, Thanksgiving parades, Grumbles, Macy's, Hudson's, Turkey Trot, National Football League (NFL) Thanksgiving Games, Detroit Lions, Dallas Cowboys, Walter Camp, Collegiate Football Thanksgiving Games, George A. Richards, The Chicago Bears, Black Friday, Giving Tuesday, Henry Timms, Cyber Monday, and many others. To learn more about America & Patriot Week, visit www.PatriotWeek.org. Our resources include videos, a TV series, blogs, lesson plans, and more. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/michael-warren9/support
pWotD Episode 2691: Tua Tagovailoa Welcome to Popular Wiki of the Day, spotlighting Wikipedia's most visited pages, giving you a peek into what the world is curious about today.With 235,236 views on Friday, 13 September 2024 our article of the day is Tua Tagovailoa.Tuanigamanuolepola Donny Tagovailoa ( TUNG-oh-vy-LOW-uh; born March 2, 1998) is an American professional football quarterback for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Alabama Crimson Tide and was named the Offensive MVP of the 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship during his freshman season. As a sophomore, Tagovailoa won the Maxwell and Walter Camp awards en route to an appearance in the 2019 National Championship.After his junior season was cut short by a hip injury, Tagovailoa was selected fifth overall by the Dolphins in the 2020 NFL draft. He spent his rookie season alternating as a backup and starter before becoming the team's primary starter in 2021. Tagovailoa led the league in passer rating in 2022 and passing yards in 2023, earning Pro Bowl honors in the latter, and helping the Dolphins qualify for the playoffs both seasons.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 02:24 UTC on Saturday, 14 September 2024.For the full current version of the article, see Tua Tagovailoa on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm neural Brian.
Tennessee Football is one of six schools with multiple Walter Camp All-Americans. What does that say about the Volunteers? The Dave Hooker Show airs weekdays at 10am EST weekdays. Please turn notifications on! WATCH/SUB: https://linktr.ee/offthehooksports SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS The Dave Hooker Show. Represented by Banks and Jones. Tennessee's Trial Attorneys. Play to win. banksjones.com. Why Banks and Jones? Other lawyers say they'll go to trial. They won't. They'll settle. And settle for less. Banks and Jones is ready to go to trial for you. Truly Tennessee's trial attorneys. Why settle? Banks and Jones, led by T. Scott Jones. https://www.banksjones.com/ Apex Apparel Group Design Call to action - 15% off your first order Apex Apparel, but they do so much more. A one-stop shop for all brand supply products. Not just clothes. Design. Brand. Market. Your Way! Unique products to promote your business with unparalleled customer service. A full-on brand supply company. https://Orderapexapparel.com/ Call Tyler! (865)-919-3001 BetUS is your college basketball betting home. Get 125-percent bonus on your first three deposits. Plus 10-percent gambler's insurance. https://bit.ly/OffTheHook125SU3X Boundless Moving From our 2 hour Minimum to Turn Key Operations - We have You Covered! Brainerd Golf Course and Brown Acres Golf Course Golf Chattanooga's best public courses. Tee times available! Just click below. https://secure.east.prophetservices.c... Chattanooga Mortgage Congratulations! Your home search just got easier. Buying a home in Chattanooga has never been easier with Chattanooga Mortgage. https://chattmortgage.com/ City Heating and Air 50 years in East Tennessee. Integrity Matters! Don't trust a fly-by night HVAC company to tell you that you need a new unti that could cost thousands or more. http://www.cityheatandair.com Don Self - State Farm CUSTOMER SERVICE STILL MATTERS! For forty years, they have built their business on taking care of their customers. In the greater Chattanooga area. Call (423)396-2126 or go to http://www.donself.net Dynasty Pools and Spas Imagine having the best spas - made right here in the USA - in your backyard. Well, they're here! Now open, Dynasty Pools and Spas has their brand new showroom open in Athens with the best hot tubs and spas on the market. Delivery? Yes, they can do that. Complete support, spa cover and chemicals to keep your spa bubbling at it's best. That's Dynasty Pools and Spas. http://www.dynastypoolsandspas.com Hemp House The premier hemp dispensary online with a wide variety, great selection and strict standards to ensure you only receive the best in CBD or Delta products. https://hemphousechatt.com/ Use promo code "HOOKED" for 10-percent off. Quality Tire Pro The Eberle family has been serving Chattanooga community since 1957. All major brands of tires. Full Service Automotive. Brake, Alignments, Oil Changes and more. All work is covered by a nationwide warranty! Cherokee Blvd or online at qualitytirepros.com. Say OTH said “Hey Bo!” Ray Varner Ford Local you Trust. Innovation you can afford. http://www.rayvarnerford.com Rick Terry Jewelry Designs We want to be your Jeweler! Looking for affordable game-day jewelry. How about the fire opals? A Tennessee tradition. https://rickterryjewelry.com/ Sports Treasures Carrying Over 5-million Sports Treasures….and so much more! Follow on Facebook for the best sports memorabilia. Daily updates! / sportstreasurestn Tri-Star Hats For the latest in Tri-Star Hats, go to the orginal. Hats, apparel and more!!! http://www.tristarhatsco.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this episode of Tide Talk Live, Stacey and Jake break down more Alabama Crimson Tide football recruiting news and the four Alabama football players who were named to the Walter Camp Football Foundation 2024 Preseason All-American teams. Like, share, and subscribe on YouTube. Don't forget to hit the bell to receive notifications! Free and available on Apple Podcast and Spotify! Powered by the @Bleav Network and Presented by @BetOnlineag_ag #alabamafootball #collegefootball #rolltide
In 1903, the Ontario Rugby Football Union adopted a set of rules for their sport which were codified by Thrift Burnside, the captain of the University of Toronto football team. The rules were major changes to the game of rugby and were largely based on the rules created by Walter Camp for use in American football in the 1880s. However, with those rules, a new game developed that was neither rugby nor American football. Learn more about Canadian Football, its origins and how it is played on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Available nationally, look for a bottle of Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond at your local store. Find out more at heavenhilldistillery.com/hh-bottled-in-bond.php Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free offer and get $20 off. Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month. Use the code EverythingEverywhere for a 20% discount on a subscription at Newspapers.com. Visit meminto.com and get 15% off with code EED15. Listen to Expedition Unknown wherever you get your podcasts. Get started with a $13 trial set for just $3 at harrys.com/EVERYTHING. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Live from the Omni Hotel in New Haven, CT for Walter Camp weekend! The legendary football family stops by to chat with the guys!
With the Super Bowl fast approaching we decided it was probably time we figured out how American Football and the NFL came about. As two life-long football fans we were pretty surprised to find out how this nationwide and global reaching phenomenon got its very humble start. The first recognized college football game took place just 4 years after the end of the Civil War. The game then would be almost unrecognizable to fans today. Well how do we go from the Ivy League to creating a professional league that is now the most popular and riches sport in America, you just hit that play button and let us take it from there.
Learn that the idea of gratitude and giving thanks is an ancient concept for mankind and expressly elevated in the Bible. Review how days of thanksgiving were originally commemorated in the English colonies in Virginia and Massachusetts, with the English dissenters, the Pilgrims, having the most influential celebrations. In the colonial era, Thanksgiving celebrations were centered on particular events and circumstances, and, accordingly, happened at different times. As Americans united against British tyranny, they made continental wide proclamations through the Continental Congress, but again tied to specific events and times. President George Washington issued the first two Thanksgiving Proclamations under the Constitution, and John Adams and James Madison did the same. Thomas Jefferson refused, and after James Madison, Thanksgiving was proclaimed by the States, but not by the President, until Abraham Lincoln. Sarah Josepha Hale's drive to create a uniform, nation wide celebration was embraced by Lincoln and his successors, and it became firmly fixed to the Fourth Thursday of November under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Feasts, running, football, parades, Black Friday, Cyber Monday and Giving Tuesday all flow from this powerful day of gratitude. Highlights include the Bible, Thessalonians 5:16-18, Colossians 2:7, Psalm 100:4, Colossians 4:2, Psalm 92, Philippians 4:6, King Henry VIII, Queen Elizabeth Anne Boleyn, Church of England, John Calvin, Puritans, Common Book of Prayers, King James I, Pilgrims, Mayflower, Plymouth England, Plymouth Harbor Massachusetts, Mayflower Compact, John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Samoset, Squanto, Wampanoag, William Bedford, Thanksgiving commemoration, Melanie Kirkpatrick, Thanksgiving The Holiday at the Heart of the American Experience, William Bradford, Berkeley Plantation a/k/a Berkeley Hundred, The Margaret, John Woodlief, Jamestown, the Starving Time, Chief Opechancanough, Massacre of 1622, Massachusetts Bay Colony, New Amsterdam, First Continental Congress, Second Continental Congress, Day of Humiliation Fasting and Prayer (1776), Henry Laurens, Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1777), Battle of Saratoga, Thomas McKean, Day of Thanksgiving and Prayer (December 18, 1781), George Washington, James Madison, Elias Boudinot, Aedanus Burke, Thomas Tudor Tucker, Federalist Party, Anti-Federalists, Constitution, William Samuel Johnson, Ralph Izard, Washington Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (October 3, 1789 for November 26, 1789), Whiskey Rebellion, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Letter, FDR Thanksgiving Speech (1938), President Lyndon Baines Johnson, Johnson Thanksgiving Speech (1963), President John F. Kennedy, President Ronald Reagan, Reagan Thanksgiving Speech (October 19, 1984 and 1986), President Barak Obama, Obama Thanksgiving Speech (2009), Clinton Pardoning of Turkey Speech (1997), Presidential Pardons of Turkey, Thanksgiving Dinner & Feast, Thanksgiving parades, Grumbles, Macy's, Hudson's, Turkey Trot, National Football League (NFL) Thanksgiving Games, Detroit Lions, Dallas Cowboys, Walter Camp, Collegiate Football Thanksgiving Games, George A. Richards, The Chicago Bears, Saturday Night Live (SNL), Black Friday, Giving Tuesday, Henry Timms, Cyber Monday, and many others. To learn more about America & Patriot Week, visit www.PatriotWeek.org. Our resources include videos, a TV series, blogs, lesson plans, and more. Read the full Declaration of Independence here: https://patriotweek.org/2021/07/24/the-declaration-of-independence-september-11/ Check out Judge Michael Warren's book America's Survival Guide, How to Stop America's Impending Suicide by Reclaiming Our First Principles and History at www.AmericasSurvivalGuide.com, amazon, or other major on-line retailers. Join us! SUPPORT: Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/michael-warren9/support [donations go the nonprofit, nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) Patriot Week Foundation] --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/michael-warren9/support
We are back to our weekly season schedule! There's a ton of news and we can't possibly get to everything, but we did get to a lot of things. Even though we're not big recruiting news guys, we did get to talk a little bit about two new Ohio State recruits, and maybe it says a lot about us that we spent more time discussing the new preferred walk on long snapper than the four-star wide receiver. Preseason is the time for watch lists and at Ohio State, there are usually going to be players on the watch list for every major award. We go through the Walter Camp, Butkus Award, Thorpe Award, and Doak Walker Award watch lists and discuss the Buckeyes from whom folks will be expecting big things in 2023. After that, we dove into the most recent Buckeyes to get their black stripes removed from their helmets. These weren't exactly surprises but they were interesting. We also talked about Omari Abor's unfortunate injury that will once again sideline him “for at least two months.” But wait, there's more! Gene Smith is calling it a career as Ohio State's athletic director next year. We talked a little about the job he's done and who might be the next AD (and why it will take annoyingly longer to get a new one without a new university president). We couldn't possibly not talk about the Big Ten's expansion, with Oregon and Washington joining the party. We also weighed in on why we think the Pac 12 disintegrated and which other schools we could see in the B1G in the coming years. Jim Harbaugh's suspension wasn't officially sanctioned by the committee on rules infractions and for some dumb reason that means he will skate through 2023 without a suspension — instead getting to postpone any consequences until 2024. So...what happens if he jumps to the NFL after this season? [thinking face emoji] Finally, we're bringing you our predictions for how the Big Ten West will shake out by the end of the 2023 season. We surprised each other. Did we surprise you? We're finally back to our in-season broadcast schedule, returning to our weekly format as we ramp up for the 2023 Ohio State football season. In the meantime, feel free to reach out with your feedback and questions below in the comments section or send us an email. Be sure to subscribe, rate, review, and share, and follow the show over on Twitter at @SilvrBulletsPod. As always, thanks for listening! Sign up with MyBookie using our link to receive your welcome bonus: https://mybookie.website/Grant23 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We get quite the education on the Father of American Football, Walter Camp, by Roger R. Tamte, who wrote a very in-depth book on Camp, and Roger comes into the Pigpen to share his wealth of knowledge!Please check out all of the posts we have on Walter Camp here.Join us at the Pigskin Dispatch website and the Sports Jersey Dispatch to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ Email-subscriber.Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't, because they can still be found at the Pigskin Dispatch website.
Being named a preseason all american is a HUGE honor. It shows that numerous people believe you're one of the best at your position. Ohio State has a couple players who many people believe are the best at their position in the country. That's the same belief Walter Camp had while make their preseason All American list. During today's show, Jay Stephens discusses what Buckeyes were named preseason All-Americans by the Walter Camp Football Foundation.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.FanDuelMake Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON.FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Being named a preseason all american is a HUGE honor. It shows that numerous people believe you're one of the best at your position. Ohio State has a couple players who many people believe are the best at their position in the country. That's the same belief Walter Camp had while make their preseason All American list. During today's show, Jay Stephens discusses what Buckeyes were named preseason All-Americans by the Walter Camp Football Foundation. Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. FanDuel Make Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Locked On Ole Miss - Daily podcast on Ole Miss Rebels Football, Basketball & Baseball
Today's Locked on Ole Miss podcast we talk about the spring Jaxson Dart is having so far and what it means for the Ole Miss fans watching. Opposing fan bases have been working overtime to try to import the narrative that he is bad because they want him to transfer to their school. Whether that is the Auburn Tigers, BYU Cougars etc…they are working overtime to insert the Tua like narrative on him. That said his spring has been exemplary and he currently leads the QB competition over Walker Howard an LSU Tigers transfer and Spencer Sanders and Oklahoma State Cowboys transfer. In the second segment of the show we talk about Quinshon Judkins being named as a first team All American by the Walter Camp preseason rankings. This is important to me and as you know I am a student of the game and fun facts are kind of my thing. So being ranked as a first team running back preseason by the group that invented All American teams will never, not be exemplary. In our final segment of the day we do our What you talking about Willis segment and look at the current media environment in and around college athletics and look at it from traditional media and TV to it becoming more segmented and where I think we are headed as fans of college athletics. WANT MORE OLE MISS SPORTS CONTENT? Join our Subtext communityhttps://joinsubtext.com/lockedonolemiss Follow and Subscribe to the Podcast on these platforms:
Locked On Ole Miss - Daily podcast on Ole Miss Rebels Football, Basketball & Baseball
Today's Locked on Ole Miss podcast we talk about the spring Jaxson Dart is having so far and what it means for the Ole Miss fans watching. Opposing fan bases have been working overtime to try to import the narrative that he is bad because they want him to transfer to their school. Whether that is the Auburn Tigers, BYU Cougars etc…they are working overtime to insert the Tua like narrative on him. That said his spring has been exemplary and he currently leads the QB competition over Walker Howard an LSU Tigers transfer and Spencer Sanders and Oklahoma State Cowboys transfer. In the second segment of the show we talk about Quinshon Judkins being named as a first team All American by the Walter Camp preseason rankings. This is important to me and as you know I am a student of the game and fun facts are kind of my thing. So being ranked as a first team running back preseason by the group that invented All American teams will never, not be exemplary. In our final segment of the day we do our What you talking about Willis segment and look at the current media environment in and around college athletics and look at it from traditional media and TV to it becoming more segmented and where I think we are headed as fans of college athletics. WANT MORE OLE MISS SPORTS CONTENT? Join our Subtext community https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonolemiss Follow and Subscribe to the Podcast on these platforms:
Kai Kroeger * 2022 First-Team All-American (ESPN.com)* 2022 First-Team All-American (The Athletic)* 2022 Second-Team All-American (Walter Camp)* 2022 Second-Team All-American (AFCA)* 2022 Fourth-Team All-American (Phil Steele)* 2022 First-Team All-SEC (Unanimous)* 2022 Jim Carlen Special Teams MVP* 2022 Nutrition Award* 2022 Mortell Award Finalist* 2022 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll* 2021 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll* 2020 SEC Coaches' All-Freshman Team* 2020-21 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll Returning All-American and All-SEC punter… emerging not just as a top punter in the SEC and nationally, but becoming one of the best leaders on the team… leads by example but becoming more of a vocal leader as well… does things the right way both on and off the field… averaging 44.2-yards per punt in his career, which ranks second on the school's all-time career list behind Joseph Charlton (45.5)… good athlete who is also one of the best holders in the country… is a perfect 6-for-6 in career pass attempts, including three touchdowns. 2022 Turned in arguably the best seasons by a punter in school history… named a First-Team All-American by ESPN.com and by The Athletic… was a second-team All-American according to Walter Camp and AFCA and a fourth-teamer according to Phil Steele… named first-team All-SEC by the Associated Press, the league's 14 coaches, Phil Steele and USA TODAY… awarded the Jim Carlen Special Teams MVP Award and the Nutrition Award at the team banquet… one of 10 semifinalists for the Ray Guy Award… listed on “Ray's 8” six times during the season and was the Ray Guy National Punter of the Week following the Georgia State game… one of four finalists for the Mortell Award, which recognizes the nation's top holder… named the SEC co-Special Teams Player of the Week following the Vanderbilt game and was the SEC's Special Teams Player of the Week for his performance at Clemson… averaged 46.1 yards per punt this season, the best mark in the SEC, fifth in the country and the second-best single-season mark in school history… 18 of his 58 punts traveled 50 or more yards, including a season-long 79-yarder, the fourth-longest in FBS this season… 29 punts (50 pct.) pinned opponents inside their own 20-yard line… completed all four of his pass attempts, two on fake punts (vs. Georgia and at Florida) and two on fake field goal (vs. Vanderbilt and vs Notre Dame)… threw for 107 yards and two touchdowns, logging a passing efficiency rating of 489.7.. appeared on “Ray's 8” Iist for his performance against Georgia State, Georgia, Texas A&M, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Florida… averaged 49.1-yards on seven punts with a long of 79 in the season-opener against Georgia State, earning Ray Guy National Punter of the Week accolades… averaged 53.6-yards with a long of 69 yards on five punts at Vanderbilt… threw a 48-yard touchdown pass on a fake punt at Florida… saved his best game for last when he averaged 53.7 yards on seven punts at Clemson, with three inside the five-yard line… threw a 23-yard touchdown pass in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl against Notre Dame… named to the SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll. Kai's links: Gamecocks https://gamecocksonline.com/sports/football/roster/player/kai-kroeger/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/kaikroeger_/ Here for the Health of It https://www.hereforthehealthofit.com/
Kai Kroeger * 2022 First-Team All-American (ESPN.com)* 2022 First-Team All-American (The Athletic)* 2022 Second-Team All-American (Walter Camp)* 2022 Second-Team All-American (AFCA)* 2022 Fourth-Team All-American (Phil Steele)* 2022 First-Team All-SEC (Unanimous)* 2022 Jim Carlen Special Teams MVP* 2022 Nutrition Award* 2022 Mortell Award Finalist* 2022 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll* 2021 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll* 2020 SEC Coaches' All-Freshman Team* 2020-21 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll Returning All-American and All-SEC punter… emerging not just as a top punter in the SEC and nationally, but becoming one of the best leaders on the team… leads by example but becoming more of a vocal leader as well… does things the right way both on and off the field… averaging 44.2-yards per punt in his career, which ranks second on the school's all-time career list behind Joseph Charlton (45.5)… good athlete who is also one of the best holders in the country… is a perfect 6-for-6 in career pass attempts, including three touchdowns. 2022 Turned in arguably the best seasons by a punter in school history… named a First-Team All-American by ESPN.com and by The Athletic… was a second-team All-American according to Walter Camp and AFCA and a fourth-teamer according to Phil Steele… named first-team All-SEC by the Associated Press, the league's 14 coaches, Phil Steele and USA TODAY… awarded the Jim Carlen Special Teams MVP Award and the Nutrition Award at the team banquet… one of 10 semifinalists for the Ray Guy Award… listed on “Ray's 8” six times during the season and was the Ray Guy National Punter of the Week following the Georgia State game… one of four finalists for the Mortell Award, which recognizes the nation's top holder… named the SEC co-Special Teams Player of the Week following the Vanderbilt game and was the SEC's Special Teams Player of the Week for his performance at Clemson… averaged 46.1 yards per punt this season, the best mark in the SEC, fifth in the country and the second-best single-season mark in school history… 18 of his 58 punts traveled 50 or more yards, including a season-long 79-yarder, the fourth-longest in FBS this season… 29 punts (50 pct.) pinned opponents inside their own 20-yard line… completed all four of his pass attempts, two on fake punts (vs. Georgia and at Florida) and two on fake field goal (vs. Vanderbilt and vs Notre Dame)… threw for 107 yards and two touchdowns, logging a passing efficiency rating of 489.7.. appeared on “Ray's 8” Iist for his performance against Georgia State, Georgia, Texas A&M, Missouri, Vanderbilt and Florida… averaged 49.1-yards on seven punts with a long of 79 in the season-opener against Georgia State, earning Ray Guy National Punter of the Week accolades… averaged 53.6-yards with a long of 69 yards on five punts at Vanderbilt… threw a 48-yard touchdown pass on a fake punt at Florida… saved his best game for last when he averaged 53.7 yards on seven punts at Clemson, with three inside the five-yard line… threw a 23-yard touchdown pass in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl against Notre Dame… named to the SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll. Kai's links: Gamecocks https://gamecocksonline.com/sports/football/roster/player/kai-kroeger/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/kaikroeger_/ Here for the Health of It https://www.hereforthehealthofit.com/
In this episode of Dogs in Autumn: The History of American Football, I briefly cover the football career of Walter Camp. Reach me @DogsInAutumn on Twitter, or email me at DogsInAutumn@gmail.com Get full access to Dogs in Autumn: Sports History at dogsinautumn.substack.com/subscribe
Gino Torretta was the most celebrated football player in the University of Miami and NCAA history. Torretta won both athletic and academic awards during his prolific career as a Hurricane. He became only the second player in Hurricane history to win the coveted Heisman Trophy Award as the nation's top collegiate football player. He was also honored as the Walter Camp Football Foundation's Player of the Year. The Associated Press, Kodak, Walter Camp and The Football News named Torretta first-team All-American. He also won the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award, The Maxwell Trophy and the Davey O'Brien national quarterback awards. Torretta was a unanimous selection as BIG EAST Offensive Player of the year for two consecutive seasons, the NCAA Today's Top Six Award winner, Toyota Leadership Award winner and Chevrolet Offensive Player of the Year. Torretta finished his Miami career with eleven school passing records, including career attempts (991), completions (555), yards (7,690), total offense (7,772), longest pass (99 yards to Horace Copeland vs. Arkansas, an NCAA record) and most passing yards in a game (485 vs. San Diego State). He was tapped into Iron Arrow, as one of the University's best ambassadors. He has also been inducted into the Orange Bowl Hall of Honor and the University of Miami Hall of Fame.
What's up to my game-changing glass frogs and sartorial shoebills! Welcome to the BNP everyone and thank you for joining. We got a first-rate, five-star, first-class ep for ya this week friends. Zany audio tidbits? You bet your big clacking shoebill beak! Soliloquy about purpose flowing downstream from our connection with Source? As sure as a stick insect looks like a stick. And we welcome back to the pod friend of the show Mark Steeves, founder of Alt Media United and host of My Family Thinks I'm Crazy. Mark and I have a far-ranging chat about transcending the duopoly, creepy shit at Yale, something called "consent management," and he chats about his extensive work studying the "Brotherhood of Death," aka Skull and Bones, a Yale-based secret society of which way too many highly influential people have been a part, such as Prescott Bush, George W. Bush, John Kerry, Henry Luce, the founder of Time Magazine, Walter Camp, the creator of American football and many, many others. We also dive into the origins of the corporation, how the Roman Empire never ended and much more. Interview w/ Mark starts at 27min.Support Mark and Snag Some Merch: https://mftic-podcast.creator-spring.com/For the Outro I read a couple poems by the 19th century French poet Arthur Rimbaud, who penned one of my favorite quotes: "A poet makes himself a visionary through a long, boundless and systematized disorientation of the senses." Sounds like me a on a Thursday night, or Sunday morning, or Monday afternoon... folks, I'm half fungi at this point whuddya want.So jump in, sip on some turmeric n tulsi tea, kick off your boots, don some cozy pajamas, spark up a spliff and enjoy the pod! Help keep the BNP on the air at: patreon.com/noetics, and receive a dream interpretation, original haiku, access to bonus content, lifetime supply of purple cotton candy* and unlimited positive karmaCan haz followers? Check out the BNP on IG @barbarian_noeticsOne time donation: buymeacoffee.com/noeticsThank you as always for subscribing, rating, and reviewing the BNP! Give me those sweet sweet five stars friends! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Thank you for spreading the word and telling a friend about the BNP. It's how we expand our tribe of philosopher-barbarians and craft a better, fairer and more fun world.One Love,Little Raven kaw kaw TRACKLIST FOR THIS EPISODE DREAMCOAST - Ride EVA - Realizations Dykotomi - Corvid CrunkChillHop Beat Tapes - El Train (Mix)Ahead of Our Time - It Ain't Fair MUSIC4Video - Royalty Free Cinematic Trailer Music Bun B - Draped Up (Fair Use Edit: Slowed n Verbed)Los Fabuloso Festival - Para Ti Mi AmorOtis Brown - Southside ChicagoFlow State LoFi - Orange Mood Flow State LoFi - A Calm Winter's Day (Mix)LoFi Angel - Sunset Hip Hop (Mix)The Dynamic Superiors - Leave It AloneBun B - Pushin (Fair Use Edit: Verbed and Slowed) *by "lifetime supply" our marketing team actually means "not included." We picked this trick up from the Dept of Education.Support the show
One of the top experts in early football rules history Timothy P. Brown joins us on the discussion to explain why we read of the coaching exploits of Walter Camp in California. Timothy Brown's FootballArchaeology.com has a daily football factoid that he shares that are really quite interesting in a short read. They preserve football history in a very unique way and we are quite happy that Tim has agreed to join us each week to go over some of his Today's Tidbits. Click that link, and you can subscribe for free to receive them yourself each evening.Join us at the Pigskin Dispatch website and the Sports Jersey Dispatch to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ Email-subscriberMiss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't, because they can still be found at the Pigskin Dispatch website.
Baker Mayfield had some heroics up his sleeve for the Los Angeles Rams in his first game with them. The Atlanta Falcons are making a quarterback change in the middle of a playoff race. The Los Angeles Chargers need a win, the Jacksonville Jaguars need to get real, and the New York Giants need to be competitive. Also, Britney Griner is coming home, Dan Snyder and the NFL were complicit in the toxic workplace culture of the Washington Commanders, USC quarterback Caleb Williams won the Walter Camp and Maxwell awards but TCU quarterback Max Duggan won the best quarterback award, the Miami Heat got a much needed win over the Los Angeles Clippers, and the Florida Panthers beat the Detroit Red Wings.Linktree.com/LockedOnNBALinktree.com/LockedOnNFLLinktree.com/LockedOnMLBLinktree.com/LockedOnNHL Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Baker Mayfield had some heroics up his sleeve for the Los Angeles Rams in his first game with them. The Atlanta Falcons are making a quarterback change in the middle of a playoff race. The Los Angeles Chargers need a win, the Jacksonville Jaguars need to get real, and the New York Giants need to be competitive. Also, Britney Griner is coming home, Dan Snyder and the NFL were complicit in the toxic workplace culture of the Washington Commanders, USC quarterback Caleb Williams won the Walter Camp and Maxwell awards but TCU quarterback Max Duggan won the best quarterback award, the Miami Heat got a much needed win over the Los Angeles Clippers, and the Florida Panthers beat the Detroit Red Wings. Linktree.com/LockedOnNBA Linktree.com/LockedOnNFL Linktree.com/LockedOnMLB Linktree.com/LockedOnNHL Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Locked On USC - Daily Podcast on USC Trojans Football & Basketball
Caleb Williams was named the AP Player of The Year, The Maxwell Award Winner, and the Walter Camp winner, and will take home the Heisman on Saturday. Yet, somehow he wasn't worthy of the Davey O'Brien Trophy. That was given to TCU's Max Duggan. Wonder why?The coaching staff has been on the road checking in on committed recruits before the early signing day, and I tell you who is seeing who.All week we've been talking about the transfer portal, and in this episode, we focus on the defensive needs of players returning to the 2023 roster.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!LinkedInLinkedIn jobs help you find the candidates you want to talk to, faster. Post your job for free at Linkedin.com/lockedoncollege Terms and conditions apply.Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds, and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts!SimpliSafeWith Fast Protect™️ Technology, exclusively from SimpliSafe, 24/7 monitoring agents capture evidence to accurately verify a threat for faster police response. There's No Safe Like SimpliSafe. Visit SimpliSafe.com/LockedOnCollege to learn more.Omaha SteaksOmaha Steaks is a gift from the heart – a gift that will be remembered with every unforgettable bite. Order with complete confidence today knowing you're ordering the very best. Visit OmahaSteaks.com and use promo code LOCKEDON at checkout to get that EXTRA $30 OFF your order.Listen where ever you get podcasts:APPLE: https://apple.co/3Aveb9oSPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/3Reye1rGOOGLE: https://bit.ly/3bHmlATFollow Marc!TWITTER: https://twitter.com/MarcKulkin Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Locked On USC - Daily Podcast on USC Trojans Football & Basketball
Caleb Williams was named the AP Player of The Year, The Maxwell Award Winner, and the Walter Camp winner, and will take home the Heisman on Saturday. Yet, somehow he wasn't worthy of the Davey O'Brien Trophy. That was given to TCU's Max Duggan. Wonder why? The coaching staff has been on the road checking in on committed recruits before the early signing day, and I tell you who is seeing who. All week we've been talking about the transfer portal, and in this episode, we focus on the defensive needs of players returning to the 2023 roster. Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! LinkedIn LinkedIn jobs help you find the candidates you want to talk to, faster. Post your job for free at Linkedin.com/lockedoncollege Terms and conditions apply. Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds, and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! SimpliSafe With Fast Protect™️ Technology, exclusively from SimpliSafe, 24/7 monitoring agents capture evidence to accurately verify a threat for faster police response. There's No Safe Like SimpliSafe. Visit SimpliSafe.com/LockedOnCollege to learn more. Omaha Steaks Omaha Steaks is a gift from the heart – a gift that will be remembered with every unforgettable bite. Order with complete confidence today knowing you're ordering the very best. Visit OmahaSteaks.com and use promo code LOCKEDON at checkout to get that EXTRA $30 OFF your order. Listen where ever you get podcasts: APPLE: https://apple.co/3Aveb9o SPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/3Reye1r GOOGLE: https://bit.ly/3bHmlAT Follow Marc! TWITTER: https://twitter.com/MarcKulkin Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
FROM FOX SPORTS Latest Sports News NEW YORK YANKEES Derek Jeter talks Yankees’ late-season skid, whether another Subway World Series is on the horizon LIFESTYLE Meet the American who shaped modern football: Walter Camp, pigskin pioneer US OPEN TENNIS US... Read More ›
Today we discuss the Stanford Cardinal cast of legendary coaches. Perhaps no other program boasts names that serve as the cornerstone of coaching excellence. Names like Walter Camp, Fielding Yost, Pop Warner, Clark Shaughnessy and Bill Walsh left their imprint on the Mount Rushmore of coaching legends. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jay-abramson/support
Happy 4th of July! This week, the fellas touched on a bit of everything. The show starts with talks of Independence Day, favorite beers, and weekend plans before John abruptly moves the crew into a quick round of trivia. The crew then moves to a game of 20 questions and this week Conor and Chad got the best of Clemens. The Colorado Avalanche won the Stanley Cup and deservingly get their flowers from all three hosts. Somewhere in the mix, Chad goes down memory lane and recalls his days of becoming a Kings fan before accusing the 2002 Lakers of cheating in the WCF (??). The show takes a quick break and the guys return to discuss some MLB and give their World Series, MVP, and Cy Young picks as we near the midway point of the season. With college football only 7 Saturdays away we shift our focus to the field before finally wrapping up the pod. As always Rate, Subscribe, and Leave a Review! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-7th-rounders-podcast/support
In this episode of the Football History Rewind, we will examine the 1921 Foo Ball Code of https://pigskindispatch.com/(searchresults)?q2=%22Walter+Camp%22 (Walter Camp) and his expectation of how the gridiron game should be played. Are we living up to his expectations today? Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) and the https://jerseydispatch.com/ (Sports Jersey Dispatch) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch1.aweb.page/p/92342af4-80c0-41a6-8ea2-80671be8d774 (Email-subscriber) Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount on all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15.
在喜马拉雅已支持实时字幕关注公众号“高效英语磨耳朵”获取文稿和音频词汇提示1.franchises 特许经营权2.monopoly 垄断3.norms 规范4.possession 占有5.territory 领土6.frontiers 边界7.conquering 占领8.devised 设计9.stark 明显10.crucial 至关重要的11.conducive 有利于12.leverage 影响力13.legitimacy 合法性14.merger 合并15.enterprise 企业16.tailor 定做原文National Football LeagueThe NFL(National Football League)is one of the wealthiest and most powerful sports organizations in the world.Many of the single franchises or teams are worth 200-300 million dollars each.As such,each team should be thought of as a major corporation.American-style football,of which the NFL maintains a complete monopoly over the elite professional ranks,has its roots in English rugby,which was played in U.S. Eastern colleges and universities in the nineteenth century.However,rugby did not have features in keeping with American cultural norms.So U.S. football arose out of norms consistent with American society,such as clearly measured possession of territory and the expansion of frontiers through conquering new land.Walter Camp,a Yale player,devised the rules of the American game.In 1880,he introduced“downs”into the game,or breaks so that teams could re-assess their position and prepare for the next attack.This was in stark contrast to rugby's non-stop and more flowing play.This move would years later be crucial to the sport's success.With natural breaks in play,the game would be one conducive to American commercial television,which relies on advertisement breaks for the generation of revenue.Equally important was the later inclusion of the forward pass in the game.This made the game appear more offensive,and the famous“Hail Mary”long pass is to this day one of the most dramatic plays in sport.Football's success as a dominant American sport(alongside baseball)was secured in the 1960s with some important contracts with television networks.The ABC television network sponsored a rival “American Football League” to compete with other dominant National Foot League.ABC television did not hide the fact that the rival league was created for the sole purpose or creating more leverage with advertisers.After gaining greater legitimacy and earning more revenue,the up-start AFL was able to negotiate independently with other television networks and sign on big-name players.The most notable was star quarterback Joe Namath.With the AFL rising as a legitimate business competitor,the NFL and AFL negotiated a merger,resulting in the NFL league,as it is known to this day.Since the merger,the NFL has maintained almost a complete monopoly over American professional football.Football's success,then,has been a reflection of the ideals of American society and,more specifically,of American-style commercial enterprise.The league's success has,in no small part,been due to the relationship between the media and the sport.In a sense,football is a perfect example of a modern media-generated sport,successful linking American norms and values with a sport tailor-made for commercial profit.翻译国家橄榄球联盟美国国家橄榄球联盟(NFL)是世界上最富有和最强大的体育组织之一。许多单一的特许经营权或团队价值2 -3亿美元。因此,每个团队都应该被看作是一个大公司。由美国国家橄榄球联盟(NFL)在职业精英中保持着完全垄断地位的美式橄榄球,起源于19世纪在美国东部的大学和学院中进行的英式橄榄球。然而,英式橄榄球并没有符合美国文化规范的特点。因此,美国橄榄球源于与美国社会相一致的规范,比如明确衡量领土的占有和通过征服新土地来扩张疆域。耶鲁大学的运动员沃尔特·坎普制定了美国橄榄球的比赛规则。1880年,他在比赛中引入了“倒地”战术,即中场休息,以便球队重新评估自己的位置,为下一次进攻做好准备。这与英式橄榄球的不间断和流畅形成了鲜明对比。多年后,这一举措对这项运动的成功至关重要。如果比赛中有自然的休息时间,那么这款比赛将有利于美国商业电视,因为它依靠广告休息时间来产生收入。同样重要的是后来在比赛中引入了向前传球。这使得比赛显得更具攻击性,而著名的“万福玛利亚”长传至今仍是体育运动中最具戏剧性的动作之一。20世纪60年代,由于与电视网络签订了一些重要的合同,美式橄榄球(与棒球一起)成为了美国的一项主要运动,从而获得了成功。美国广播公司(ABC)电视网赞助了竞争对手——美国橄榄球联盟(American Football League),与另外占主导地位的美国国家橄榄球联盟(National Foot League)展开竞争。美国广播公司并没有掩盖这样一个事实,即竞争对手联盟是为了一个目的而创立的,或者是为了增加与广告商之间的影响力。在获得了更大的合法性和更多的收入后,新贵美国橄榄球联盟(AFL)能够与其他电视网络独立谈判,并与大牌球员签约。其中最著名的是明星四分卫乔·纳马斯(Joe Namath)。随着美国橄榄球联盟(AFL)逐渐成为一个合法的商业竞争对手,美国国家橄榄球联盟(NFL)和美国橄榄球联盟(AFL)达成了合并协议,从而形成了如今为人所知的美国橄榄球大联盟。自合并以来,美国国家橄榄球联盟几乎保持了对美国职业橄榄球的完全垄断。因此,橄榄球的成功反映了美国社会的理想,更具体地说,是美国式商业企业的理想。联盟的成功在很大程度上要归功于媒体和体育之间的关系。从某种意义上说,橄榄球是现代媒体创造创造的一个完美例子,它成功地将美国的规范和价值观与一项为商业利益量身定制的运动联系在一起。
Here is what happened in Football History Rewind to 1906, https://pigskindispatch.com/(searchresults)?q2=%22Walter%20Camp%22 (Walter Camp) changes his stance on football's course with more rules revisions. Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) and the https://jerseydispatch.com/ (Sports Jersey Dispatch) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch1.aweb.page/p/92342af4-80c0-41a6-8ea2-80671be8d774 (Email-subscriber) Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount on all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Mentioned in this episode: null null
In this episode of the Football History Rewind, we discuss the intervention of President Theodore Roosevelt to save football from its brutal self and the accomplishments of Walter Camp are reviewed. Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch1.aweb.page/p/92342af4-80c0-41a6-8ea2-80671be8d774 (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount on all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one-week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Mentioned in this episode: null null
Fritz Pollard grew up in Rogers Park, Illinois, a largely white suburb of Chicago. The seventh of eight children, young Fritz experienced racism first hand and learned from his family how to pick his battles and subdue his emotions in order to achieve his goals in a predominantly white world. A three-sport athlete at Lane Tech High, Pollard had notions of attending Dartmouth to follow in the footsteps of his older brother Leslie. But fate intervened. During a stopover in Providence in January 1913, Fritz had his first view of the Van Wickle gates sparkling in the sun; his career at Brown had begun. During the 1915 and 1916 Brown football seasons, Pollard achieved legendary status, compiling “firsts” as frequently as he gained first downs. The first black to play in the Rose Bowl (1916), Fritz was also named to Walter Camp's All America Team, and was the first African American in Camp's backfield. Nicknamed “the human torpedo,” Pollard had almost single-handedly defeated Yale and Harvard (Brown's first win over the Crimson) in 1916. The Bruins were the first college team to defeat both Ivy powerhouses in the same season. For his exploits at Brown, Pollard was elected to the National College Football Hall of Fame in 1954 — the first African American ever chosen. As a professional player, Pollard continued to garner “firsts” in spite of the overt racism of the period. He was among the first African-Americans in the APFL and NFL leagues and, along with Jim Thorpe, was the major gate attraction. A Black man playing football in a predominantly white environment was a novelty in the 1920s. Fritz Pollard was the first African American to play on a championship team (1920), as well as the first Black quarterback (1923) and coach (1919). Pollard's efforts on behalf of African American athletes were Herculean. He organized Black teams such as the Chicago Black Hawks and the Brown Bombers in order to promote integrated competition in professional football. A true renaissance man, Pollard broke barriers of every sort — in business and the entertainment industry, as well as in sports. At various times, he ran a newspaper, an investment advisory firm, and a coal company. His outgoing, engaging personality smoothed many a pathway in the business and professional worlds, and even led to some dabbling in politics.
Topic: Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Grant Garcia discusses the college football national championship game with Georgia taking on Alabama. Dr. Garcia discusses his fandom, a little trivia, injuries to key players and the effects injuries play on the NFL draft. For 152 years college football has been played. Now the first 7 years of the sport didn't resemble anything that we see in today's game, but with the help of a few Ivy League schools and a man called Walter Camp the game as we know it today began to take shape. Dr. Grant Garcia discusses injuries sustained to offensive linemen Emil Ekiyor Jr., tight end Brock Bowers and others. We discuss what NFL physicians look for when assessing players that teams may potentially draft. I also challenge Dr. Garcia with some trivia, and we discuss why Brown football is better than Michigan. Just kidding. That's a not-so-subtle shot at his buddies. It's a fun and informative show to kick off the new year. We would like to wish everyone a Happy New Year. Recognized again as one of Seattle's Top Doctors in 2021. Dr. Garcia also was an assistant team physician for the Chicago Bulls and Chicago White Sox. During residency, he also cared for players on the New York Giants, New York Mets, US Tennis Team, New York Rangers, New York Knicks, and Brooklyn Nets as well as many collegiate athletes. Thank you for listening and have a wonderful holiday season. Podcast: NYSEA radio on Spotify, Apple, iheart, Audacy, Audacity, and many other platforms. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nyseasportstalk/support
WSJM Sports December 17, 2021 NFL Last night Kansas City Chiefs 34, Los Angeles Chargers 28, OT Saturday Las Vegas Raiders @ Cleveland Browns 4:30 pm New England Patriots @ Indianapolis Colts 8:20 pm Sunday Arizona Cardinals @ Detroit Lions 1 pm - Rock 107 WIRX Carolina Panthers @ Buffalo Bills, 1 pm Dallas Cowboys @ New York Giants, 1 pm Houston Texans @ Jacksonville Jaguars, 1 pm New York Jets @ Miami Dolphins, 1 pm Tennessee Titans @ Pittsburgh Steelers, 1 pm Washington @ Philadelphia Eagles, 1 pm Atlanta Falcons @ San Francisco 49ers, 4:05 pm Cincinnati Bengals @ Denver Broncos, 4:05 pm Green Bay Packers @ Baltimore Ravens, 4:25 pm Seattle Seahawks @ Los Angeles Rams, 4:25 pm New Orleans Saints @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 8:20 pm Monday Minnesota Vikings @ Chicago Bears 8:15 pm Chiefs Top Chargers In OT The Kansas City Chiefs are closer to another AFC West title after outlasting the Los Angeles Chargers in overtime. Travis Kelce scored on a 34-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes in OT to send the Chiefs past the Chargers, 34-28. Kelce caught a tying 7-yard touchdown pass with 1:16 left in the fourth quarter, then ended the game with his catch-and-run in overtime. Justin Herbert gave the Chargers a 28-21 lead with 2:19 remaining on a 8-yard TD pass to Keenan Allen. Mahomes finished 31 of 47 for a season-high 410 yards with three touchdowns and an interception. Kelce had 10 receptions for a career-best 191 yards and two touchdowns. NFL Updates Protocols In Response To COVID-19 Cases The NFL has updated its protocols in reaction to an increase in COVID-19 cases around the league, and it is pushing booster shots as the most effective protection against the coronavirus. As part of its protocol changes, the NFL is requiring masks regardless of vaccination status, and remote or outdoor meetings. It also is stopping in-person meals and prohibiting outside visitors while on team travel. Chief medical officer Allen Sills cited the omicron strain for the uptick in positive tests. The league is also making some changes to its protocols that would allow vaccinated players who test positive to return sooner. Approximately 100 NFL players across the 32 teams have tested positive this week. NBA Last night Indiana Pacers 122, Detroit Pistons 113 Chicago Bulls @ Toronto Raptors - POSTPONED Pistons Lose 13th Straight Caris LeVert scored 20 of his 31 points in the first half and was 12 of 18 from the field as the Pacers sent the Pistons to their 13th straight loss, 122-113. Justin Holiday added 17 points for Indiana, which shot 50% in taking a 70-64 halftime lead. Saddiq Bey led the Pistons with 28 points and 10 rebounds, while first overall pick Cade Cunningham added 19 points for Detroit. NHL Last night Carolina Hurricanes 5, Detroit Red Wings 3 Tonight Nashville Predators @ Chicago Blackhawks 8:30 pm Red Wings Fall To Hurricanes Nino Niederreiter's second goal of the night broke a third-period tie in the Hurricanes' 5-3 victory over the Red Wings. Niederreiter snapped a 3-3 deadlock 18 seconds into the final period to lead the short-handed Hurricanes. Carolina was without team scoring leader Sebastian Aho, second-leading scorer Andrei Svechnikov, captain Jordan Staal, Ian Cole, Seth Jarvis and Steven Lorentz due to COVID-19 protocol. NCAA Football MSU Loses Walker Michigan State All-American running back Kenneth Walker is skipping the Peach Bowl and his senior season to enter the NFL draft. Walker made the announcement on social media yesterday. He was named Big Ten Running Back of the Year and picked up the Walter Camp and Doak Walker awards. High school basketball Boys Last night Decatur 58, Bloomingdale 42 Loy Norrix 50, Portage Northern 44 Portage Central 55, Mattawan 45 Gull Lake 78, Kalamazoo Central 75, OT Girls Last night Benton Harbor 41, Lake Michigan Catholic 33 Bloomingdale 50, Decatur 22 Bridgman 38, River Valley 20 Kalamazoo Central 59,
The guys give thoughts on the Red Wings and Pistons' seasons so far and recap the Steelers vs Vikings matchup. Kenneth Walker wins the Walter Camp player of the year. The Loins face the Broncos this weekend. Plus:UFC 269 PreviewAround the NFLOnline petition to change the name of Wildcat Stadium to “Tate Myre Stadium":https://www.change.org/p/oxford-high-... Listen Live on FB, YouTube and TwitterFollow The Woodward Sports Network!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/woodwardspo...Twitter: https://twitter.com/woodwardsportsFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/WoodwardSports/Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/woodwardsportsTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@woodwardsport...Watch our Shows Live on Youtube, Facebook & TwitterThe Morning Woodward Show | Monday - Friday 8am-10am Big D Energy | Monday - Friday 11am-1pmThe Bottom Line | Monday - Friday 3pm-5pmWoodward Bets | Monday - Friday 6pm-7pm / Saturday & Sunday 9am-10am
Today on BDE the crew discusses last night's TNF game, the ridiculous Rutgers vs Purdue game, AFC/NFC playoff matchups, and the leading QBs, RBs, and WRs in the NFL. Plus:BDE Pick 'emNeal's Get Right Special - North of the BorderTap Tap Tap innnn
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At the beginning of anything that has become great you generally have a group of special people that added just the right ingredients to build something fantastic. For America you had the Founding Fathers like Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Adams and Hamilton. In Motown Music we had Smokey, Aretha, the Supremes, Marvin Gaye and of course Berry Gordy. However football had its early founding stars too like Walter Camp, DeLand and a man named Amos Alonzo Stagg. We are very thankful, honored, and humbled to be placed in the top spot of American Football History Podcasts by https://blog.feedspot.com/american_football_history_podcasts/ (Feedspot.com!) it is you the listeners and our fantastic expert guests that take us to these heights. Thank you! Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount off all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
Back in the early 1900's a player named James Hogan of Yale had some special perks to play ball at the school. We will take a look at them and see how they could have had a darker side that may have involved the Father of FOotball himself. Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount off all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
A deep look at the early development of football. Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount off all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
On this episode of the Football's History Headlines we discuss two safeties for the "Hunter" Dryer, the down and distance rules introduced by W. Camp as well as many more HOF Legendary stories. Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount off all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
On this Best of episode of Football's History Headlines we discuss how Camp creates football, as Grange and Brady have great performances and Racial and Gender barrier breakthroughs occur all on October 18! As well as many more HOF Legendary stories. Miss our football by the day of the year podcasts, well don't because they can still be found at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website). Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Go to https://my.captivate.fm/SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/Row1 )for access to the full Row One catalog for gallery prints and gift items. Plus, get a 15% discount off all prints on the Row One Pictorem Gallery with coupon code SHN15. Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
On this episode of the Football's History Headlines we discuss the changes to the football code made by Walter Camp and the NCAA Football Rules Committee in 1924, the NFL's announcement of a world-wide league as well as many more HOF Legendary stories. Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) Get a free one week subscription to Newspapers.com by visiting http://SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers (SportsHistoryNetwork.com/newspapers). And with a paid subscription, you'll also be helping to support the production of this and other Sports History Network shows. We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
One of the most decorated players in CFB, Notre Dame Legend Chris Zorich, talks about the past + future of Irish Football. Plus, the 1988 National Championship season, Catholics vs Convicts, HC Lou Holtz + More!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Justin Fields & Adelaide Aquilla Named Ohio State Male & Female Athlete's of the Year Why Ohio State fans can expect big things from Tyreke Smith 3 Buckeyes make Walter Camp Foundation Pre-Season all american first team Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus.Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The College World Series gets underway this weekend with Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Mississippi State out in Omaha - hear from some of the SEC Network's experts with their thoughts on the SEC's chances.Also, preseason recognition for some SEC football players as the Walter Camp preseason teams are out - we tell you who made it.And we go Around The Conference with plenty of SEC football tidbits, and we hear some clips from Cole Cubelic on The Paul Finebaum Show, as he tells us why he's high on Kentucky and Mississippi State this year, and not very high on Auburn. Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSECSupport Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus.Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
NIL bill continues through Ohio political system, Tyreke Johnson, former Ohio State football 5-star prospect, transfers to Nebraska, Former Ohio State quarterbacks Braxton Miller and Troy Smith hope to bring an IMG Academy-style prep school to Ohio, Quarterback Justin Fields, shot put national champion Adelaide Aquilla named Ohio State Athletes of the Year and Ohio State football's Chris Olave, Thayer Munford, Haskell Garrett named Walter Camp preseason All-Americans. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The College World Series gets underway this weekend with Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Mississippi State out in Omaha - hear from some of the SEC Network's experts with their thoughts on the SEC's chances. Also, preseason recognition for some SEC football players as the Walter Camp preseason teams are out - we tell you who made it. And we go Around The Conference with plenty of SEC football tidbits, and we hear some clips from Cole Cubelic on The Paul Finebaum Show, as he tells us why he's high on Kentucky and Mississippi State this year, and not very high on Auburn. Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSEC Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline AG There is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus. Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Justin Fields & Adelaide Aquilla Named Ohio State Male & Female Athlete's of the Year Why Ohio State fans can expect big things from Tyreke Smith 3 Buckeyes make Walter Camp Foundation Pre-Season all american first team Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline AG There is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus. Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
- With the playoffs set to expand, how does it impact Georgia's National Championship chances? How does it impact College Football in its entirety? - Who was on the Walter Camp pre-season All-American team and who was left off? - What to expect from Georgia's front seven in 2021 Follow us on Twitter: @DawgsDailyPod @Jeremiah_Stod7 @DKFunderburk @22_Jman Like us on Facebook: Facebook.com/DawgsDailyPod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dawgsdailysi/message
Fritz Pollard grew up in Rogers Park, Illinois, a largely white suburb of Chicago. The seventh of eight children, young Fritz experienced racism first hand and learned from his family how to pick his battles and subdue his emotions in order to achieve his goals in a predominantly white world. A three-sport athlete at Lane Tech High, Pollard had notions of attending Dartmouth to follow in the footsteps of his older brother Leslie. But fate intervened. During a stopover in Providence in January 1913, Fritz had his first view of the Van Wickle gates sparkling in the sun; his career at Brown had begun. During the 1915 and 1916 Brown football seasons, Pollard achieved legendary status, compiling “firsts” as frequently as he gained first downs. The first black to play in the Rose Bowl (1916), Fritz was also named to Walter Camp's All America Team, and was the first African American in Camp's backfield. Nicknamed “the human torpedo,” Pollard had almost single-handedly defeated Yale and Harvard (Brown's first win over the Crimson) in 1916. The Bruins were the first college team to defeat both Ivy powerhouses in the same season. For his exploits at Brown, Pollard was elected to the National College Football Hall of Fame in 1954 — the first African American ever chosen. As a professional player, Pollard continued to garner “firsts” in spite of the overt racism of the period. He was among the first African-Americans in the APFL and NFL leagues and, along with Jim Thorpe, was the major gate attraction. A Black man playing football in a predominantly white environment was a novelty in the 1920s. Fritz Pollard was the first African American to play on a championship team (1920), as well as the first Black quarterback (1923) and coach (1919). Pollard's efforts on behalf of African American athletes were Herculean. He organized Black teams such as the Chicago Black Hawks and the Brown Bombers in order to promote integrated competition in professional football. A true renaissance man, Pollard broke barriers of every sort — in business and the entertainment industry, as well as in sports. At various times, he ran a newspaper, an investment advisory firm, and a coal company. His outgoing, engaging personality smoothed many a pathway in the business and professional worlds, and even led to some dabbling in politics.
Today's episode: Chris Carter updates you on Pitt football's latest recruiting moves with several 3-star commitments and a couple interesting prospects warming up to the program. He'll also explain what Calijah Kancey has to do to live up to his preseason All-American designation from Walter Camp. Music is Chill Baby by Nerdboy. Find that song and more from his label, at Renaissance Music. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Coach Parker's Coaching Youth Football Tips and Talk Podcast
What is the Beast Formation? It is the Yale Single Wing Formation from the 1920s developed most likely by Walter Camp. Tom Flores in his Coaching Football book diagrams the Yale Single Wing. I found the Beast Formation in 1994 while doing research on football formations in the Playmaker Football Software app on the Apple Mac. I was coaching my first pee wee team and wanted something easier to teach than the Power I which we were struggling with at the time as new youth football coaches. I eventually wrote a book about the Yale Single Wing in the Power Wing Beast Offense for Youth Football. The main Beast Formation (Beast Tight) has an unbalanced offensive line with 3 sniffer blocking backs aligned behind the 3 outside offensive lineman in the formation. The Blocking Backs / Sniffers stand right behind the OL with their hands on the OLMs hips to give them a nice push off at the snap. The main Running Back / Beast Back is aligned in a shotgun just behind the A gap or strong side OG. You can also align the RB under center. This Beast Formation variation is a power running short yardage formation although many long yardage gains occur routinely. This formation is very strong in the C, D, E gaps. For more information on the Beast Offense head over to CoachParker.org for more info. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/coachparker/support
Here are some of the headlines we hit on in this episode: Author Roger Tamte shares insight and knowledge on the man that helped create American Football into the sport it is today. Roger's book is https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/66fkm2qp9780252041617.html#:~:text=Walter%20Camp%20made%20the%20development,the%20passions%20of%20the%20nation. (Walter Camp and the Creation of American Football.) Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
Here are some of the headlines we hit on in this episode: We celebrate Walter Camp, Herb Joesting, Bill Redell and Tony Boselli as well as talk about the big NFL shake up in 1963. Come join us at the https://pigskindispatch.com/ (Pigskin Dispatch website) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear!) We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
Today we have a special guest, Darin Hayes, host of the Pigskin Dispatch podcast, to discuss Walter Camp, head coach of the Yale Bulldogs from 1888-1892, and the Stanford Cardinal from 1892, 1894-1895 and his impact on college football. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jay-abramson/support
Walter Camp, Amos Alonzo Stagg and Pop Warner all make the press in our exciting headlines for January 7. Come join us at https://pigskindispatch.com/ (https://pigskindispatch.com/) to see even more Positive football news! Sign up to get daily football history headlines in your email inbox @ https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Email-subscriber (Email-subscriber) We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Want more Sports History delivered to your ears, come see this podcast and many more at the Shttps://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (ports History Network) found at SportsHistoryNetwork.com your Headquarters of Sports' Yesteryear! We would like to thank the https://footballfoundation.org/ (National Football Foundation), https://www.profootballhof.com/players/ (Pro Football Hall of Fame), https://www.onthisday.com/ (On this day.com) and https://www.pro-football-reference.com/ (Pro Football Reference) Websites for the information shared with you today. Support this podcast
When the United States entered World War I, it signaled the end, for a while, to the landscape of college football. So many of the young men playing the game, put their college careers on hold, withdrew from school and joined the military to fight for their country. They left school and found themselves in “training camps” across the U.S., learning how to fight and preparing for deployment to help defeat Germany, Bulgaria, Austria, the Ottoman Empire. Thankfully, a majority of these men, young and older, never left the U.S. as the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918. But, while they were training, the college stars of the day, and college stars who had preceded them still had a thirst to play the game. So they formed teams, challenged other camps and, ultimately, schedules were created, games were played, playoffs staged and championships won. War Football was a “thing”. Games between military bases were highly contested and replaced America’s thirst, for the time-being, to watch college football. In fact, fans from across the land came out in huge numbers to watch. The success of War Football couldn’t be understated. In fact, when money was needed for various types of funds to help the military, fans turned out in big numbers. The games were so well played, the competition was so strong that men like renowned football reporter Walter Camp started writing about them. All-America teams were named. Games between the best were contested, even the 1918 Rose Bowl was contested by two military teams, with the Mare Island Marines beating the Camp Lewis Army, 19-7. All of this led to such men as George Halas recognizing the fact that a professional game, with the right organization managing it, could be created and just two years after the armistice was signed, the American Professional Football Association was created. Two years later, 1922, it was renamed, the National Football League. Chris Serb, who wrote the book, “War Football: World War I and The Birth of The NFL,” joins Sports’ Forgotten Heroes for a most interesting topic on the world of football prior to the formation of the NFL. Links: Sports' Forgotten Heroes website Sports' Forgotten Heroes Patreon Page Sports' Forgotten Heroes twitter © 2020 Sports' Forgotten Heroes
The Headlines of the Gridiron of October 21 are quite important, and ones you will not want to miss! We also feature great music by Mike and Gene Monroe along with Jason Neff & great graphics from time to time from the folks at http://www.gridiron-uniforms.com/GUD/controller/controller.php?action=main (Gridiron-Uniform Database). Come join us at https://pigskindispatch.com/ (https://pigskindispatch.com/) to see even more Positive football news! We would like to thank the National Football Foundation, Pro Football Hall of Fame and Pro Football Reference Websites for the information shared with you today. To purchase your very own Pigskin Dispatch gear and support the podcast please visit our https://www.zazzle.com/store/pigskindispatch (Pigskin Dispatch merch store) Support this podcast
…dedicated to teaching NFL fans about the rich history of the game we all know and love. Arnie Chapman
Episode 10 of the Simple Kicking Podcast features two excellent kickers from the Big 10 Conference. 2019 Consensus All-America, Keith Duncan, who is the kicker for the University of Iowa Hawkeyes, and Jake Pinegar, who is the kicker for the Penn State Nittany Lions. This is a roundtable discussion on how these elite kickers prepare for and perform in big games. Regardless of the situation, listen to how they both relate to each other’s hard work. All-American kicker Keith Duncan shakes hands with Head Coach Kirk Ferentz after each made field goal or PAT. After kicking numerous game winning field goals, you might feel Keith’s calm demeanor as he tells the story of ending the Michigan Wolverines playoffs hopes in 2018. Fans rushing the field, is a byproduct of his mental progression & maturity. A former walk-on, Duncan is considered the best college football kicker. In 2020, he too was named to Lou Groza preseason Watch List in 2020,. Additionally, he was named to the preseason first-team All-America by Walter Camp, Phil Steele and Athlon Sports, preseason first-team All-Big Ten by Athlon Sports and Phil Steele. Here are his stats: 29/34 as a junior, making 100% of his kicks inside 40 yards. Coached by James Franklin and Joe Lorig, Pinegar is an Iowa native. Listen to his bizarre recruiting story. He was a starter as a true freshman in 2018,, breaking the Penn State freshman scoring record. Another record he tied for is a Penn State long field goal of 45 yards in the Cotton Bowl Classic vs the University of Memphis at the Dallas Cowboys AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The record was previously held by current New York Jets placekicker, Sam Ficken. Pinegar shares why his mindset is critical to his early success, especially in big games vs. the Ohio State University Buckeyes at Beaver Stadium in State College, PA. In fact he was recently named to the 2020 Lou Groza Award watchlist for the upcoming season. In 2019, he converted 11/12 field goal attempts. Reid Fergsuon, who is the long snapper for the Buffalo Bills, shared a story of nerves that is found on this podcast episode. Please check out Reid’s episode below: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c58683uzemc&t=1448s Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/247pZKPeigXoYzO3uDeNTq Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-6-reid-ferguson-nfl-long-snapper-buffalo-bills-69/id1521447540?i=1000487065100 Google Play: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zb3VuZGNsb3VkLmNvbS91c2Vycy9zb3VuZGNsb3VkOnVzZXJzOjg0MDI0OTUyMy9zb3VuZHMucnNz/episode/dGFnOnNvdW5kY2xvdWQsMjAxMDp0cmFja3MvODY5OTA1Nzk1?sa=X&ved=0CAsQzsICahcKEwiQ6oyanaPrAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ&hl=en You may also find the Simple Kicking Punting Tracker, or Punt tracker app on the App Store helpful in charting your kicks and punts https://apps.apple.com/us/app/simple-kicking/id1492643118 Follow @SimpleKicking on: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/simplekicking Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/simplekicking Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/simplekicking Web: https://www.simplekicking.com Please follow Keith Duncan: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/keithdunc3/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/keithdunc3 Please follow Jake Pinegar: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jakepinegarr/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/jpinegar10 Making it to the NFL is hard, after speaking with Rob Roche in a previous episode we learned the difference between getting a job vs. keeping a job. Please check out that episode here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-5-rob-roche-nfl-agent-discusses-nfl-kickers/id1521447540?i=1000486373906 You may also find the Simple Kicking Punting Tracker, or Punt tracker app on the App Store helpful in charting your kicks and punts https://apps.apple.com/us/app/simple-kicking/id1492643118
Nebraska Legend Eric Crouch talks about his road to Lincoln, The 2000 Fiesta Bowl, his favorite play not named "Black 41 Reverse Flash Pass", overcoming adversity and his multiple awards, including a funny story on how he found out about his induction into the College Football Hall of Fame!
Notre Dame Legend Chris Zorich reveals untold stories about the last National Championship for the Irish, Meeting Bob Hope during award season, The Fiesta & Orange Bowl, Lou Holtz Tales, The Pink Locker Room and the origins of the half-shirt jersey.
I checked Twitter while I was writing these show notes and noticed that today—the very day we are releasing an episode about two billionaire NFL owners—the Washington Reds***s have announced that they are “conducting a study” that will likely end up with them changing the team name. Almost simultaneously, the NFL announced that it would play Life Every Voice and Sing (also known as the Black national anthem) prior to week #1 games, resulting in a bunch of reactionary psychos getting #BoycottNFL trending on Twitter. Unfortunately, we recorded this episode a couple days ago, so none of that made it into the episode. In the News (5:40) We only discuss one news item this time, which is a summary of how billionaires have fared during the pandemic. Turns out, they’ve done quite well. In fact, in 2020, the average billionaire added 20% to their wealth so far. Meanwhile, the other 99% of us have collectively lost $5.6 trillion in wealth. Consequently, we should understand the pandemic crisis for what it is: a massive wealth transfer to those who need it the least. Billionaire #1 (16:00): Denise Debartolo York (5/10 on the DKMALI) Chad researched Denise Debartolo York, heiress to the Debartolo real estate fortune that was built by Edward Debartolo, Sr. She is most well known for being owner of the San Francisco 49ers, although she took it over only after the former owner, her brother Eddie, was found guilty of bribing a Louisiana governor $400,000 to get a riverboat casino license. The Debartolo family has long-standing involvement with the Youngstown mafia. If you are unfamiliar with Youngstown, OH (aka Crimetown, USA) and its history, we think you’ll find this entertaining. We also recommend checking out the readings below, because we barely scratch the surface of the extremely bizarre mafia history of Youngstown. Billionaire #2 (46:50): Jeffrey Lurie (4/10 on the DKMALI) Joe’s billionaire is owner of the Philadelphia Eagles, and he is, as Joe describes him, “a mostly uninteresting person.” Given his uninterestingness, which is a problem we often run into on Zero Sum Empire, Joe decided to look into the history of football as a sport. He introduces us to Walter Camp, the “Father of American Football,” who not only invented football in the 19th c., but also wrote a bunch of books like “Keeping Fit All the Way” that extol the virtues of things like “purity,” and “cleanliness,” and other normal stuff that doesn’t raise any red flags whatsoever. I think we arrive at the conclusion that the NFL is an organized crime syndicate whose product is violence and whose cost of doing business is the regular production of dead bodies. Links: I had a whole segment about Jim Traficant planned that didn’t make it into the show. This story from The New Republic does a nice job of summarizing his career and the general vibe of Youngstown. https://newrepublic.com/article/68973/crimetown-usa How Eddie DeBartolo got caught in a scandal that cost him the 49ers: https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/02/18/how-eddie-debartolo-got-caught-in-a-scandal-that-cost-him-the-49ers/ Short film on Youngstown mafia: https://youtu.be/lnjx9oCa5KI https://gangsterreport.com/the-san-francisco-49ers-the-mob-super-bowl-teams-ownership-group-has-alleged-dark-history/ https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/19/sports/football/nfl-100-violence-american-culture.html https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2014/05/29/teddy-roosevelt-helped-save-football-with-a-white-house-meeting-in-1905/ https://books.google.com/books?id=KFDCUPCIU7kC&pg=PA98-IA10&lpg=PA98-IA10&dq=cincinnati+commercial+tribune+grim+reaper+football&source=bl&ots=mT6p5fGXfk&sig=_TaCFvOpOVB9ZQw4eTyAaDxBLfw&hl=en&sa=X&ei=RpuGU-zbLZSksQTi2IHAAg#v=onepage&q=cincinnati%20commercial%20tribune%20grim%20reaper%20football&f=false
One of the most decorated Notre Dame players, DT Chris Zorich, talks about his road to South Bend, Great stories about the master-motivator, Legendary head coach Lou Holtz, The Miami / N.D. rivalry including the 1988 "Catholics verse Convicts" game, the 1989 Fiesta Bowl and the last national championship for Notre Dame.
Walter Camp has come out and named their 2020 Pre-Season All-America teams and now we know college football is officially back! We dive into an early look at what players have the attention of college football's best, and who we need to be paying attention to this fall. There are some of the usual suspects on the, some forgotten star, and some players that will make you say who!! Get excited CFB is close!!! The Destination Devy Patreon is LIVE!! Join #TheSQUAD and the All-Gas Army on Patreon for even more exclusive content http://www.Patreon.com/allgasDestination Devy @DestinationDevy – one of many great podcasts from the Dynasty League Football (@DLFootball) Family of Podcasts – is hosted by Ray Garvin featuring weekly dynasty football content focused on developmental prospects in the college football world. Special thanks Jordan Richards (@ChaBoyJRich) for the content creation behind the Destination Devy, Trivion McKenzie (@TTzMac702) for his song, “Attitudes,” and special thanks to the Dynasty League Football Family of Podcasts and the entire DLF staff for the ongoing support! Please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Follow the show and send questions to the podcast on Twitter, @DestinaitonDevy!
Walter Camp has come out and named their 2020 Pre-Season All-America teams and now we know college football is officially back! We dive into an early look at what players have the attention of college football's best, and who we need to be paying attention to this fall. There are some of the usual suspects on the, some forgotten star, and some players that will make you say who!! Get excited CFB is close!!! The Destination Devy Patreon is LIVE!! Join #TheSQUAD and the All-Gas Army on Patreon for even more exclusive content http://www.Patreon.com/allgasDestination Devy @DestinationDevy – one of many great podcasts from the Dynasty League Football (@DLFootball) Family of Podcasts – is hosted by Ray Garvin featuring weekly dynasty football content focused on developmental prospects in the college football world. Special thanks Jordan Richards (@ChaBoyJRich) for the content creation behind the Destination Devy, Trivion McKenzie (@TTzMac702) for his song, “Attitudes,” and special thanks to the Dynasty League Football Family of Podcasts and the entire DLF staff for the ongoing support! Please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Follow the show and send questions to the podcast on Twitter, @DestinaitonDevy!
BATON ROUGE – LSU's record-setting wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase and cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. have both been named to the Walter Camp Preseason All-America Team, the organization announced on Thursday.
Seth and Dr. Sap return for a second season of The Teams, brought to you by… The Sponsor: With a 10-year treasury low rates are about to follow, so if you're buying a home soon or looking to refinance, you should talk to Matt Demorest at HomeSure Lending now and see if you can't lock that baby in. In addition to being more ethical, knowledgeable, hands-on, intelligent, and fun to work with, Matt also never royally screwed over John Beilein in a failed bid to upset Michigan's basketball program. Previously: 1901, 1925, 1932, 1947, 1950, 1964, 1976, 1980, 1988, 1999 Special Guest this Week: Craig Ross, who was merely a 2,850-year-old druid when… 1. ORIGINS OF THE GAME (starts at 0:45) Composite of the Harvard-McGill game, courtesy of the McCord Museum at McGill Everything you think you know is wrong. Field and town games were purposely ignored through history, which puts a shroud over our records of these games going on in myriad forms throughout the Middle Ages. The American tradition comes out of England. We track the history of baseball because they're linked and it got there first. "Football" refers to all the soccer- and rugby-like games played with a large ball as opposed to "Handball" which used a smaller ball or "Stickball" from which tradition comes field hockey. Football at Michigan: a guy named William Gailey, who also wrote "The Yellow and the Blue," and also Cal's alma mater, organized these 11-on-11 games that might have been more like soccer. There was also the tradition of "The Rush" which was a violent diag battle where the goal was to throw the other team over their fence. Muscular Christianity and the cultural shift toward a mass appreciation athletics. The athletics movement on campus: students organize sports as they like, create their own athletics association. Pushball on Ferry Field in 1907. [UM Bentley Library] Rutgers-Princeton: 100% soccer, but the rugby-like game (and things similar to rush) were around. Michigan wanted to play a soccer-like against Cornell but the game was canceled by Cornell. When does it become football? Rules tensions between places that had rugby- or soccer-like traditions but all called it "football." Harvard-McGill play a game of rugby with a round ball and 15-on-15, had a second game scheduled that was 13-on-13, and it's not clear if it was played. "Food poisoning" means they got drunk. Return game is in Montreal, has an oblong ball, is a very plausible argument that it was rugby. Craig thinks it was still 15-on-15 but it was definitely more like football than soccer. Harvard had a hard time finding opponents for their "Boston Rules" game—found Tufts. Walter Camp: a situational extremist, as opposed to the open, moving rugby game. What helped Camp win out was everyone was mad at Dartmouth, the extremist who wanted a game more like The Rush. Banned things like dressing like an orc from Warcraft. 2. THE FIRST GAME (starts at 50:00) A drawing of the first game from the UM Palladium, 1880 [courtesy UM Bentley Library] Camp's rules win out in late 1878, Michigan gets challenged by Racine and delays until next spring. Michigan puts on blue belts and blue hose and heads out to play a timed game of 11-on-11. We discuss the rules and the method of scoring a touchdown. Michigan dominates play, scoring the first TD in the first inning (half) but not converting it despite the Michigan fans and their umpire saying the ball went over the crossbar—like that's never going to happen again. Irving K. Pond scores another TD late and DeTarr makes the extra point good for a 1-0 victory (in modern terms it's 13-0). 3. THE TEAM AND THE TORONTO GAME (starts at 26:04) THREE-QUARTER BACK Edmond H. Barmore (IN): First quarterback in football. Son of a steamboat builder, director of the athletic association, graduated in 1881. Mustache came along. Moved to LA and got into the transfer business. Feted the 1901 team. Check out this mustache progression: HALFBACK Charles E. Campbell (Detroit): Dad was a regent and law prof, caught the opening kickoff. Studied under Angell, big-time lawyer and civic leader in Detroit. Trustee of Mariner’s Church where I volunteer, where there’s a picture of him. HALFBACK (didn’t make Chi trip): Collins Johnson (GR): Surgeon at Harper’s Hospital (overlooking the grounds where they played Toronto). Then was the district surgeon in GR for the railway. Made breakthroughs in Typhoid Fever at his lab in later life. RUSHER John Chase (AA): Doctor, later General John Chase, Colorado National Guard commander. Dad was one of the first treasurers at Mich. Founded Denver Medical College. Known for leading troops against strikers: Ludlow Massacre was under his men. RUSHER Irving K. Pond (AA): Engineer, son of a state senator. Architect who built a lot of the Arts & Crafts architecture in Chicago, including the Home Insurance Building, Hull House, The Lillie House, and the Lorado Taft Midway Studios, the Oregon Public Library, and the Union at Purdue and the Michigan Union. Rival of Frank Lloyd Wright. Also an amateur acrobat. RUSHER Richard DePuy (North Dakota): on the 1878-1882 teams. Brother William was on the team one year. Became a physician in Jamestown, part of a company that became Johnson & Johnson. RUSHER/KICKER/CAPTAIN David DeTarr (Iowa): First captain. Became a doctor in his hometown. LEFT SIDE Randolph Thomas “RT” Edwards (AA): Father of Tom Edwards, the star tackle for the 1925 team. Owned the rule book (family brought a rugby rule book from Warwickshire, England). Lawyer and teacher and manager of a Seeds sales office. LEFT SIDE Frank Reed (AA): Nothing available. RIGHT SIDE Jack A. Green (Austin, TX): Nothing available. RIGHT SIDE William W. Hannan (Dowagiac): Best athlete at the school, recruited by the athletic association but liked Law better. Became a real estate developer, top real estate guy in Detroit in the 1900s. GOALKEEPER Charles S. Mitchell (Minnesota): Newspaper publisher/editor, editor in chief of the Washington Herald. Founder of the Athletic Association at UM. Captain of the senior football team. Attorney when he graduated. FORWARD Frank Gates Allen (Aurora, IL): Moline Plow Company and the bank in Moline, Illinois. His home is the Moline Board of Education building. SUB William B. Calvert (AA) SUB Albert Pettit (AA): Real estate in Baton Rouge, LA: Grandfather of the basketball Hall of Famer. We don't know how the Toronto game was organized but it took place on the ballpark they had recently built in an attempt to get what would become the Detroit Tigers into the majors. Two-hundred and fifty students got on a train that morning. The game started late because Michigan didn't arrive on time. It ended in a 0-0 tie. Little is known about the play because the newspapers covering it focused on the rules. -------------------------------------------- MUSIC: "Meet Me in Chicago"—Buddy Guy "I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General"—Gilbert & Sullivan “Across 110th Street” THE USUAL LINKS Helpful iTunes subscribe link General podcast feed link What's with the theme music? It was fine to be learned and study but you really need to be a man.
Martin, who went to Pittsburgh, then logged a great NFL Career with the Patriots & Jets...Named Walter Camp's Man of the Year...with Rob & Ben in New Haven
Chris is now an analyst at Fox Sports after a stint with ESPN...NFL Vet at Walter Camp Weekend
Will Allen was a Walter Camp All American at Ohio St and he's back for the weekend festivities in New Haven
On the latest episode, Scotty and Kyle interview and tell a story to Tyler Smith of arenafanatic.com. The guys go over a little bit of american history and also to celebrate the 150 years of football discuss Walter Camp, Bear Bryant, and John Heisman and so many others. Who knew Teddy Roosevelt got hurt playing football and once upon a time there had to be a rule to not kill someone on the field. We also hear from Tyler on some of his season previews and sorry to all Tennessee fans out there. Please follow us on facebook, twitter, instagram. Also subscribe and rate and review would be appreciated. If you have any story ideas please email us at thetaradiddles@gmail.com
Tweet This episode we fire up the DeLorean and head back to learn about the more prominent rule changes in NFL history. https://thefootballhistorydude.com/episode1/ (Episode 1) discussed how Walter Camp, The Father of American Football, helped transform the game from soccer and rugby closer to the style we are used to seeing today. However, this style of American Football was still very basic and dangerous. Throughout the past 100 years, the NFL has shifted to a pass-friendly league, predicated on high scoring affairs to maintain fan engagement. This episode starts with the forward pass and Teddy Roosevelt's demand to improve player safety, and it runs through the timeline to discuss some of the more impactful rule changes in NFL history. So strap on your seat belt, and let’s get ready to take this baby up to 88mph. GET YOUR FOOTBALL HISTORY DUDE MERCHANDISE HERE!!!! Connect with the show: Visit the show notes for this episode https://thefootballhistorydude.com/about-the-show/ (Visit me on the web - my about page) https://thefootballhistorydude.com/contact/ (Contact the show) https://twitter.com/FHDude (Follow me on Twitter) Subscribe on YouTube Promotions: FREE ENTRY TO DRAFTKINGS AMAZON MUSIC UNLIMITED FREE TRIAL AMAZON PRIME FREE TRIAL FREE AUDIOBOOKS FROM AUDIOBOOKS Read Full Transcript Are you interested in sharing your favorite football moment on the show? This is your chance to share your story with all my listener’s. http://www.myfootballmoment.com (Click here to share your favorite football moment) LINKS FROM THE SHOW https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJjiIuH1VnY (NFL 100 Super Bowl Ad - The 100 Year Game) Evolution of the NFL Rules - NFL Operations The NFL Competition Committee https://operations.nfl.com/the-rules/ (The Rules - NFL Football Operations) NFL - Health & Safety Rules Changes Pro Football Hall of Fame - Forward Pass Legalized Bleacher Report - 16 of the Best NFL Rules History.com - How Teddy Roosevelt Saved Football https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0Ivf_bvjJg (YouTube - 20 NFL Players Responsible for Rule Changes) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkCPJuWw58Y (YouTube - How the Rules of American Football Have Changed) Below are some relevant items to this episode. (Note - As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases) Please enter your name. Please enter a valid email address. Thanks for subscribing! Please check your email for further instructions. " /> Mash This Button to Subscribe to the Newsletter Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again. Support this podcast
The Ex Patriot and Current Giants O-Lineman chats with Rob and Ben at the Walter Camp Event Friday in New Haven
Mike Golic is the Walter Camp Man of the Year, The Former Notre Dame player and NFL Alum co-hosts "Golic and Wingo" - Joins the Rob Dibble Show
New Haven is about to become the capital of the football world. From Nick Saban and Tua Tagovailoa to Mike Golic and Larry Fitzgerald, the stars of football will be arriving for the Walter Camp Football Foundation Weekend. Hear from Al Carbone, as he talks about the organization, the upcoming weekend, and gives his thoughts on the state of Connecticut high school football.This episode was edited by Stephen Sanzari.
We discuss the legacy of Walter Camp, the incredible All American Team celebration, weekend activities and New Haven Pizza. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sportsbizradio/support
What links Walter Camp, Lucius Banks and Harry Sunderland? As our latest ten-minute history tour explains, they've all played parts in rugby league's dream of establishing itself in the United States. Listen to the complete story of how league almost came to America in the 1930s. For more on the history of rugby and the other football codes, follow me on Twitter @collinstony and at www.rugbyreloaded.com
Walter Camp This episode we fire up the DeLorean and head back to explore the life and career of Walter Camp, the Father of American Football. He was an excellent halfback at Yale University in the late 1800's, but his biggest contribution to the game of football was leading the charge to make the game a mainstay in the country. Walter Camp worked tirelessly to make rule changes to the game to make it more appealing and resemble what you and I now know as the National Football League. Strap on your seat belt, and let's get ready to take this baby up to 88mph. Connect with the show: https://thefootballhistorydude.com/episode1/ (Visit the show notes for this episode) https://thefootballhistorydude.com/about-the-show/ (Visit me on the web - my about page) https://thefootballhistorydude.com/contact/ (Contact the show) https://twitter.com/FHDude (Follow me on Twitter) Subscribe on YouTube Click below for the transcript. I have included affiliate links to Amazon throughout the transcript to complement the episode. If you purchase through these links it will support the show at no extra cost to you. Read Full Transcript The Father of American Football's Early Life The Father of American Football was born on April 7, 1859, in New Britain, Connecticut. Our hero's name is Walter Chauncey Camp. He attended Hopkins Grammar High School in New Haven, Connecticut as a young man. Yale was the college of choice for our hero, where he received his bachelor's degree in 1880. While at Yale it was said he was given the honor of class poet, which I believe helped him convey his message to the masses when he would inevitably end up suggesting monumental rule changes to the game of football. Upon graduating with his bachelor's degree from Yale, our hero attended the Medical School of Yale to pursue his dream of being a doctor. He would later realize he had more interest in sports, and the millions of NFL fans around the world will end up being grateful for this life audible he called. In 1882, he gave up his dream of being a doctor and started working at the Manhatten Clock Company. A year later he would start with the New Haven Clock Company, where he would rise through the ranks to ultimately becoming the President in 1903. An article from the New England Historic Society had a fitting quote that stated, “leave it to a clockmaker named Walter Camp to turn a chaotic excuse for a brawl into the game of precision and time limits we now know as football.” Walter Camp's Playing and Coaching Days Camp played Varsity for Yale as a halfback from 1877 to 1882. He was apparently small (156 pounds), because there was a quote from Nathaniel Curtis to then Yale captain Gene Baker that stated, “you don't mean to let that child play, do you? He will get hurt.” It makes me wonder how much the diminutive size of Camp played into the yearning to generate innovation and propose safety changes to the game of football. While at Yale, Camp was the captain of the team in 1878, 1879, and 1881. This was the equivalent of a head coach during these days because there was not a true designated head coach. Walter would end up becoming part of the Intercollegiate Football Association in 1880, which allowed him to participate in many of the meetings that would ultimately change the game into what it looks like today. In 1888 he served as Yale general athletic director, head advisory football coach, and chairman of the Yale football committee. He held this position up until World War 1, which at the time was called The Great War. While serving as the treasurer of Yale's Financial Union, Camp helped the school accumulate $100,000, which would help aid in the construction of the Yale Bowl in 1914. This stadium was the first bowled stadium in America, and it helped pave the way for other bowled stadiums to be built. Camp would go on to become the first official head coach of the Yale team from 1888 to 1892. Due to his... Support this podcast
This week we go over some of the pro players that analysts have been comparing the draft prospects to, which teams are visiting which players and some of my favorite late round sleepers at QB, RB and WR! (Hint for the RBs, I love short guys!) Most of the pro player comparisons are from Lance Zierlein and the team visits are from Walter Camp and I have included links to them below.ZierlienWalter FootballFollow me on Twitter - @BogmanSports
Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield at Walter Camp
The big man will be in New Haven for the Walter Camp! We'll see him and you there.
Dr. Tom Lally joins us in this episode to discuss the Walter Camp Foundation and All American team and the National College Football Awards Association.
Show notes: What do you do? 5:20 - "The Season 6 finale for 'Game of Thrones' drew the largest audience in the history of the series, with 8.9 million viewers tuning into HBO on Sunday night, according to Nielsen." 17:12 - Who built the pyramids in the Giza pyramid complex? Skilled workers feasting on prime beef? And when? Graham Hancock is the writer whose name Casey was seeking. 21:30 - Five-year plans of China - first plan put in place in 1953; thirteenth plan put in place in 2016 (no apparent hundred-year plan) Popularity of the name "Millard" in the U.S. over time: Teddy Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary of the Navy between April 19th, 1897 and May 10th, 1898. 12:30 - New Horizons team (pre-cursor to the full-fledged NASA mission) was formed in December 2000, so the mission has been in the works for fifteen-plus years. 13:34 - Breakthrough Starshot (and The Herlihy Boy) 27:30 - "Yo we like a twig in the nile we just flowin'" - Lovely Daze by DJ Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince 28:10 - Ken Burns's Stanford commencement speech 37:18 - Obama on same sex marriage; 2008: "I believe that marriage is the union between a man and a woman." (0:03) 2012: "I think same sex couples should be able to get married." (3:04) 38:33 - Mount Rushmore: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln. The average American can name eight presidents, according to this survey. All four "Rushmore" presidents were in the top ten of the most remembered presidents, with the exception of Teddy Roosevelt. 38:43 - Millard Fillmore (January 7, 1800 – March 8, 1874) was an American statesman who served as the 13th President of the United States from 1850 to 1853. He was the last Whig president, and the last president not to be affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican parties. Places named after Fillmore: Fillmore, New York; Fillmore County, Minnesota; Fillmore County, Nebraska; Millard County, Utah and its county seat, Fillmore, Utah; Millard Fillmore Elementary School, Moravia, New York; Fillmore Elementary School, Davenport, Iowa; Millard Fillmore Gates Circle Hospital, Buffalo, New York; Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital, Williamsville, New York; Millard Fillmore Academic Center at the University at Buffalo's Ellicott Complex; Fillmore Glen State Park, New York; Fillmore Park in Alexandria, Minnesota; Fillmore Street and the surrounding neighborhood in San Francisco after which, in turn, the Fillmore Auditoriums were named, both East and West. 40:00 - Dan Carlin's Hardcore History podcast, episode 49, "The American Peril" on the Spanish-American War 42:20 - RadioLab podcast episode on American football. On November 6, 1869, Rutgers and Princeton played what was billed as the first college football game. However, it wasn't until the 1880s that a great rugby player from Yale, Walter Camp, pioneered rules changes that slowly transformed rugby into the new game of American Football. The Spanish–American War was fought in 1898. 45:16 - ISideWith Political Quiz 46:35 - Apollo 13 film was released in 1995. Moon landing conspiracy theories 48:15 - NASA funding as percentage of GDP peaked at 4.41 in 1966. 48:20 - Lyndon B. Johnson's term as President began in 1963 upon John F. Kennedy's assassination. 48:26 - The last flight of an Apollo mission was on December 7th, 1972. 48:40 - Apollo 17 marked the sixth moon landing. 50:40 - Buzz Aldrin supports private sector involvement in space travel. 51:40 - In fiscal year 2015, military spending is projected to account for 54 percent of all federal discretionary spending, a total of $598.5 billion. 52:08 - Particle Fever film 54:00 - Some Earthlings attempt to enumerate international space law via the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs. 57:05 - The United Launch Alliance is, in fact, a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed. Presidential approval ratings appear to typically go down over the course of the term in office, but what about historical voter satisfaction with the candidate choices? There were twelve manned Apollo missions (1 and 7 through 17). 59:20 - Third party payer systems: "funky" because the direct relationship between buyer and seller is severed. 1:00:05 - Dealing with insurance companies can feel similar as a consumer to dealing with any oligopoly. 1:03:00 - 1:04:15 - Scientific paywalls as a taxpayer double-dip. 1:09:00 - The biotech company Amgen had a team of about 100 scientists trying to reproduce the findings of 53 “landmark” articles in cancer research published by reputable labs in top journals. Only 6 of the 53 studies were reproduced (about 10%). 1:09:20 - John Oliver on scientific research
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, Sports Illustrated and WIRED magazines teamed up to speculate about the state of football fifty years from now, at the time of Super Bowl 100. Of course, the big question that arises when considering the future of the football is whether the sport will even exist decades from now, given the evidence of severe brain disease in many former players. Historian Julie Des Jardins argues that if we want to gain a better understanding of the current challenges to football, it’s best to look back to its early decades. Football had its critics from the very beginning, when young men were severely injured and even killed on the field. The sport had to reform itself to survive. As Julie shows in her new biography of legendary Yale coach Walter Camp, even the founding father of American football recognized that change was necessary for the game to continue. In Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man (Oxford University Press, 2015), Julie presents the first scholarly biography of the man who devised the rules that distinguished American football from its English forebears, rugby and soccer. For decades, from the 1880s until his death in 1925, he was a leading figure in shaping how the game was played as well as the broader culture of football. A self-made man of unfailing character, Camp saw football as the ideal exercise for training young men of courage and morality. At the same time, he understood the need to adapt his convictions; Camp named non-white players to his All-America team, and he came to accept professional football as a legitimate option for players leaving college. Camp always insisted that physical violence was the incontestable core of football, but he also recognized the changes of the times and held that football had to meet them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, Sports Illustrated and WIRED magazines teamed up to speculate about the state of football fifty years from now, at the time of Super Bowl 100. Of course, the big question that arises when considering the future of the football is whether the sport will... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, Sports Illustrated and WIRED magazines teamed up to speculate about the state of football fifty years from now, at the time of Super Bowl 100. Of course, the big question that arises when considering the future of the football is whether the sport will even exist decades from now, given the evidence of severe brain disease in many former players. Historian Julie Des Jardins argues that if we want to gain a better understanding of the current challenges to football, it’s best to look back to its early decades. Football had its critics from the very beginning, when young men were severely injured and even killed on the field. The sport had to reform itself to survive. As Julie shows in her new biography of legendary Yale coach Walter Camp, even the founding father of American football recognized that change was necessary for the game to continue. In Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man (Oxford University Press, 2015), Julie presents the first scholarly biography of the man who devised the rules that distinguished American football from its English forebears, rugby and soccer. For decades, from the 1880s until his death in 1925, he was a leading figure in shaping how the game was played as well as the broader culture of football. A self-made man of unfailing character, Camp saw football as the ideal exercise for training young men of courage and morality. At the same time, he understood the need to adapt his convictions; Camp named non-white players to his All-America team, and he came to accept professional football as a legitimate option for players leaving college. Camp always insisted that physical violence was the incontestable core of football, but he also recognized the changes of the times and held that football had to meet them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, Sports Illustrated and WIRED magazines teamed up to speculate about the state of football fifty years from now, at the time of Super Bowl 100. Of course, the big question that arises when considering the future of the football is whether the sport will even exist decades from now, given the evidence of severe brain disease in many former players. Historian Julie Des Jardins argues that if we want to gain a better understanding of the current challenges to football, it’s best to look back to its early decades. Football had its critics from the very beginning, when young men were severely injured and even killed on the field. The sport had to reform itself to survive. As Julie shows in her new biography of legendary Yale coach Walter Camp, even the founding father of American football recognized that change was necessary for the game to continue. In Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man (Oxford University Press, 2015), Julie presents the first scholarly biography of the man who devised the rules that distinguished American football from its English forebears, rugby and soccer. For decades, from the 1880s until his death in 1925, he was a leading figure in shaping how the game was played as well as the broader culture of football. A self-made man of unfailing character, Camp saw football as the ideal exercise for training young men of courage and morality. At the same time, he understood the need to adapt his convictions; Camp named non-white players to his All-America team, and he came to accept professional football as a legitimate option for players leaving college. Camp always insisted that physical violence was the incontestable core of football, but he also recognized the changes of the times and held that football had to meet them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, Sports Illustrated and WIRED magazines teamed up to speculate about the state of football fifty years from now, at the time of Super Bowl 100. Of course, the big question that arises when considering the future of the football is whether the sport will even exist decades from now, given the evidence of severe brain disease in many former players. Historian Julie Des Jardins argues that if we want to gain a better understanding of the current challenges to football, it’s best to look back to its early decades. Football had its critics from the very beginning, when young men were severely injured and even killed on the field. The sport had to reform itself to survive. As Julie shows in her new biography of legendary Yale coach Walter Camp, even the founding father of American football recognized that change was necessary for the game to continue. In Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man (Oxford University Press, 2015), Julie presents the first scholarly biography of the man who devised the rules that distinguished American football from its English forebears, rugby and soccer. For decades, from the 1880s until his death in 1925, he was a leading figure in shaping how the game was played as well as the broader culture of football. A self-made man of unfailing character, Camp saw football as the ideal exercise for training young men of courage and morality. At the same time, he understood the need to adapt his convictions; Camp named non-white players to his All-America team, and he came to accept professional football as a legitimate option for players leaving college. Camp always insisted that physical violence was the incontestable core of football, but he also recognized the changes of the times and held that football had to meet them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kyle Van Noy was named to All-America teams by Walter Camp (second team), CBSSports.com (third team), Athlon Sports (third team), Lindy's (third team) and Phil Steele (third team) while receiving honorable mention from Sports Illustrated.Van Noy is one of the best and most versatile linebackers in this draft class with his trademark high motor play to go along with excellent football intelligence.The BYU standout spoke with Joe Everett of Rookie Draft at the Senior Bowl to share his thoughts on the NFL Draft process and to talk about his collegiate career.
Kyle Van Noy was named to All-America teams by Walter Camp (second team), CBSSports.com (third team), Athlon Sports (third team), Lindy's (third team) and Phil Steele (third team) while receiving honorable mention from Sports Illustrated.Van Noy is one of the best and most versatile linebackers in this draft class with his trademark high motor play to go along with excellent football intelligence.The BYU standout spoke with Joe Everett of Rookie Draft at the Senior Bowl to share his thoughts on the NFL Draft process and to talk about his collegiate career.
A number of modern sports are credited to a particular 19th-century founder. The inventive work of some of these figures, like basketball’s James Naismith, American football’s Walter Camp, and judo’s Jigoro Kano, is firmly planted in history. But there are others, such as Abner Doubleday and William Webb Ellis, who are certainly historical figures but whose moments of sporting genius are wrapped in legend. And then there is Tom Wills, the man now credited as the primary inventor of Australian rules football. There are statues in Wills’ honor, commemorating his work as a drafter of rules, a player, and an umpire in the mid-19thcentury. But as Greg de Moore discovered when he set out to learn about this distinctly Australian sport, the circumstances of Tom Wills’ life have been largely unknown. To start, Greg learned that Wills had taken his own life, in a horrific manner, by plunging a scissors into his chest. As an academic psychiatrist with a research interest in suicide, he set off to investigate what drove Wills to this act. Starting at its troubled end, Greg went on to research the whole of Wills’ life, producing the first serious biography of this important figure in the history of Australian popular culture: Tom Wills: First Wild Man of Australian Sport (Allen and Unwin, 2011) The subtitle of Greg’s book is appropriate. Tom Wills was a 19th-century example of the prodigiously gifted, narcissistic, and ultimately self-destructive male athlete. Like Mickey Mantle or George Best, Wills could not maintain a relationship, manage his fortune, or hold a job after he left the field. Nor could he handle his drink. Although his end was shocking and unusual, the downward spiral is familiar to those who follow sports, in any country. At the same time, while this is a story common to all sporting cultures, Tom Wills’ life opens a window to the history of colonial Australia. His life intersected with episodes of violence between white settlers and Aborigines, as well as moments of reconciliation. He took great pride in his English education, yet his father was committed to the idea that Australia distinguish itself as a separate nation. As Greg explains at the start of our interview, the first spark of this project had come when he was living in New York City and wanted to learn what was distinct about his homeland. Certainly, Tom Wills is a representative figure of Australian history. But he also should be viewed as a compelling character of modern sport. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A number of modern sports are credited to a particular 19th-century founder. The inventive work of some of these figures, like basketball’s James Naismith, American football’s Walter Camp, and judo’s Jigoro Kano, is firmly planted in history. But there are others, such as Abner Doubleday and William Webb Ellis, who... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A number of modern sports are credited to a particular 19th-century founder. The inventive work of some of these figures, like basketball’s James Naismith, American football’s Walter Camp, and judo’s Jigoro Kano, is firmly planted in history. But there are others, such as Abner Doubleday and William Webb Ellis, who are certainly historical figures but whose moments of sporting genius are wrapped in legend. And then there is Tom Wills, the man now credited as the primary inventor of Australian rules football. There are statues in Wills’ honor, commemorating his work as a drafter of rules, a player, and an umpire in the mid-19thcentury. But as Greg de Moore discovered when he set out to learn about this distinctly Australian sport, the circumstances of Tom Wills’ life have been largely unknown. To start, Greg learned that Wills had taken his own life, in a horrific manner, by plunging a scissors into his chest. As an academic psychiatrist with a research interest in suicide, he set off to investigate what drove Wills to this act. Starting at its troubled end, Greg went on to research the whole of Wills’ life, producing the first serious biography of this important figure in the history of Australian popular culture: Tom Wills: First Wild Man of Australian Sport (Allen and Unwin, 2011) The subtitle of Greg’s book is appropriate. Tom Wills was a 19th-century example of the prodigiously gifted, narcissistic, and ultimately self-destructive male athlete. Like Mickey Mantle or George Best, Wills could not maintain a relationship, manage his fortune, or hold a job after he left the field. Nor could he handle his drink. Although his end was shocking and unusual, the downward spiral is familiar to those who follow sports, in any country. At the same time, while this is a story common to all sporting cultures, Tom Wills’ life opens a window to the history of colonial Australia. His life intersected with episodes of violence between white settlers and Aborigines, as well as moments of reconciliation. He took great pride in his English education, yet his father was committed to the idea that Australia distinguish itself as a separate nation. As Greg explains at the start of our interview, the first spark of this project had come when he was living in New York City and wanted to learn what was distinct about his homeland. Certainly, Tom Wills is a representative figure of Australian history. But he also should be viewed as a compelling character of modern sport. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices