Quick Takes
In May 1997, the L.A. Times published J.R. Moehringer's "Resurrecting the Champ," a heartfelt non-fictionalized story chronicling the life of a professional boxer who was homeless and living on the streets. The writer and the boxer became sewn at the hip. Samuel L. Jackson’s portrayal of the fallen fighter is outstanding. The movie, along with its interesting twist, is in theaters now. See it!
Great line I heard; Rex Grossman has more ups and downs than Paris Hilton. I would alter it a bit; Grossman has more downs than Paris Hilton has ups and downs. At least Paris Hilton’s consistent.
Story of the Week
DON MEREDITH
Dallas Cowboys fans have bittersweet memories when it comes to the lanky "Dandy" Don Meredith. Bitter because he could never get them the NFL Championship Dallas came so close to getting. Sweet because he helped put them on track for a winning spirit unmatched in NFL circles.
Meredith came to the Cowboys in 1960 out of local Southern
Methodist University. Cowboys fans expected the hometown hero to lead the year
old franchise to the promised land. Early in his career he was tiny Eddie
LeBaron's understudy. Head coach Tom Landry believed that quarterbacks needed up
to five years of seasoning before being ready to bark out signals in the NFL as
a starter. Meredith began starting, albeit sharing the spot with LeBaron, in
1961. Dandy Don won Tom Landry's vote of confidence in 1965 and the quarterback
job remained his until he retired in 1969.
Meredith led the Cowboys to the long defunct Playoff Bowl in
1965 against the Baltimore Colts, after finishing second in the NFL Eastern
Division behind the Cleveland Browns. The game was not a pretty sight, losing
35-3, yet it was the beginning of what would turn out to be a common event, the
Cowboys in the NFL playoffs.
The following year Dallas began the season thoroughly
whipping their first four opponents, averaging 45 points a game, and the league
knew they were to be reckoned with. By the end of the year Dallas had upended
Cleveland as Eastern Division Champions, and won the right to face the Green Bay
Packers in the Cotton Bowl. 1966 was also the first year of the Super Bowl. The
game was called the AFL/NFL World Championship. The Dallas-Green Bay winner
would earn the right to play the AFL representative.
Dallas put up a tough fight, getting back into the game after
falling behind 14-0. There was no intimidating the Cowboys this day. Vince
Lombardi's Packers were in for the fight of their lives.
The Cowboys were driving for the tying score when Dallas
called the play that would haunt them for years. Dallas had the ball deep in
Green Bay territory, down 34-27. Landry called a short out pass to tight end
Pettis Norman, used primarily as a blocker and not receiver. Meredith did not
have confidence in Landry's choice of plays. What transpired was frustrating.
Norman was wide open on the play, but because Meredith did not expect Norman in
that position, Meredith threw the ball short. Norman, instead of catching the
ball and jogging into the end zone, ran back for the ball and Green Bay tackled
him at the two yard line. On the subsequent play, a pass into the end zone,
rookie linebacker Dave Robinson hit Meredith, and the pass flew out of control
from Dandy Don and into the arms of Packer safety Tom Brown.
Unfortunately for Meredith, that play labeled him for the
rest of his career. Despite Dallas playing the game of their lives, truly their
first playoff game, all people recalled were those two final plays. Though blame
could have gone to many people -- Landry included for those last pair of plays
-- Meredith bore the brunt of the criticism.
Meredith played three more years, taking the Cowboys to their
second NFL Championship game, also against the Packers, and two Divisional
Championship games against the Browns. His only playoff win was against
Cleveland in the 1967 Divisional Championship prior to the Ice Bowl against
Green Bay. Dallas thrashed the Browns, 52-14. Meredith eventually lost his next,
and last, three playoff games before retiring unexpectedly in 1969.
In retrospect, Meredith provided the leadership Dallas needed
to begin their winning tradition. Meredith played with a broken nose, when he
could barely breathe. He was sacked and pounded often, yet rarely missed a game,
except when they would not let him play. In an era where cornerbacks were
allowed to bump and run with receivers throughout the field, Meredith was as
effective as anyone, especially in 1966 when he won the NFL Most Valuable Player
Award.
"Dandy" Don Meredith remains an all time favorite
quarterback, despite never winning an NFL Championship. Cowboy fans still love
remembering Don Meredith leading the Cowboys. Time has illuminated the
achievements his career, and "Dandy" Don is most often remembered as the
courageous leader Dallas had when the tradition of Cowboys victory started.
Don's NFL
Highlights:
First Dallas Cowboys Quarterback to pass for over 400 yards in a game - 460 vs.
San Francisco 49ers 11/10/63.
Two-Time Pro Bowl Selection.
NFL Player of the Year (1966).
Played in consecutive NFL Championship games (1966-67).
Three Straight Division Titles.
Set a franchise record for the longest pass completion (95 yards -Nov. 11,
1966).
Added to the Dallas Cowboys Ring of honor (1976).
After his playing career, Don Meredith was one of Monday
Night Football's original broadcasters (1970-73, 77-83). He and Howard Cosell
made MNF the most unique and fun sports coverage of all time. Don was colorful
and talented in that booth.
Singer: "Turn out the lights, the party’s over" near the end of a Monday Night Football game when it appeared the winning team had the game well in hand.
Philosopher: “If ifs and buts were candy and nuts, we’d all have a Merry Christmas.”
Last Week’s Trivia
In 1996, Nate Thurmond was voted one of the 50 greatest players in NBA history to coincide with the league’s 50th anniversary. The NBA Hall-of-Famer, once collected 18 rebounds in one quarter. He was also the first player to accomplish another tremendous feat in a game. It was a quadruple-double; 22 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists and 12 blocked shots in one game. It happened on the first night of the 1974-75 season, making his Chicago Bulls debut against the Atlanta Hawks. Nate Thurmond was one of the top NBA centers I’ve ever seen.
Trivia Question of the Week
Who holds the NHL’s all-time highest plus-minus rating for one season? (The plus-minus rating refers to goals a player’s team scores versus goals that player’s team allows while he is on the ice.) See next week’s Sports Junkie for the answer.