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Last January, the Baseball Hall of Fame announced the Class of 2026,…
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We have been waiting years for this one. Today, the Undertaker broke…
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1991 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project Class. Here we are! …
The Buck Stops Here
It’s the most unpredictable time of the year—MLB Wildcard Week! Kirk Buchner…
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From the Desk of the Chairman
Have you ever asked yourself why some football teams play like they…
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DDT's Pop Flies
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Live Music Head
Project/Objectan interview with André Cholmondeleyby Live Music HeadOriginally published at timessquare.com on…
Beginning his career in 1948 with the Baltimore Colts of the All-America Football Conference, Y.A. Tittle played for the San Francisco 49ers throughout the 1950s, where he was a UPI MVP in 1957 and a four-time Pro Bowler. The Quarterback was traded straight up to the New York Giants for second-year Lineman, Lou Cordileone. Both players were offended that they were traded for the other. Only one of them was right.
Fran Tarkenton began his pro career with the Minnesota Vikings in 1961, but the Vikes did not have a lot of talent around him. The scrambling Quarterback was a star and was a Pro Bowl Selection in 1964 and 1965, but he grew frustrated and demanded a trade. That wish was granted after the 1966 season, when the Giants, hungry for a top Quarterback, traded four high Draft Picks for Tarkenton.
Brad Van Pelt was a two-time All-American at Michigan State, thus bringing a successful resume to the New York Giants who drafted him in the Second Round in 1973.
Playing for your dad is hard. Playing for your father-in-law has to be harder. This was life for Chris Snee, a Boston College product who married the daughter of Tom Coughlin, who became the Head Coach of the New York Giants in 2004. That was the same season that the Giants drafted Snee in the Second Round.