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Brett Keisel loses the chin-sweater!!!

http://http://www.wtae.com/r/26904337/detail.html   How long did it take to shave that thing? Rumor is that he lost 25 pounds from having it shaved off.   Clearly there is now no contest for the greatest beard in sports:   On behalf of all fans, I hope Keisel immediately starts growing another beard.   Mostly so can have a face-off with Sebastian Chabal (above).

 

  I asked this question twice on two other threads so either no one KNOWS’s , the post wasn’t clear ,it’s appears written in Chinese on everyone but my monitor or you all just want to ignore Randall/ (smart move no doubt)    Forcing me to create it’s own thread   How did the Cards end up like this with Albert Pujols ?    Why does he have to end up anywhere but St louie is what I’m asking?   This is a big mess and if I’m a Cards fan I’d be asking one serious question , like for instance , If I’m the Cards decision makers , On a  certain ,( small market ) or whatever budget , then Why would I spend 120 mill on Matt H at the start of 2010, when I know next year I’m going to be needing that cash to sign one of the GREATEST” players in the game? Sorry guy but don’t give me the “well they needed Matt then and there it was their shot” , cause that dog don’t hunt! They could have passed on Holliday thus using the $ money to sign Al? Cause now you’d be saying 130mill and we know they have that to spend now? So once again tell me how they let it get to this? If they had waited to tackle Pujols contract instead of spending that $ on Matt … I mean come on , who can’t see this Train coming ?    I work with power tools and I’m not buying a black and decker lithium battery operated impact drill for 120$ when I know that next year Bosch will be coming out with theirs for 298$ close to three times the $ but it is 5 times the drill  ? I’ ll make do with what I have in the meantime.

 

______________________________________   http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/The-top-10-Super-Bowl-quarterbacks?urn=nfl-316996   This is the first of many Super Bowl lists we’ll put up at Shutdown Corner, and we might as well start with the quarterbacks. Not every Super Bowl has been won with a great quarterback at the helm, but since 23 of 44 possible MVPs have been quarterbacks, it’s a good place to begin. Before the arguments set off, this list is just about which quarterbacks have been the greatest Super Bowl performers, win or lose. The “Greatest of All Time” argument is for another day; this is our take on the top 10 for the NFL’s biggest game. Neither quarterback playing in Super Bowl XLV — Ben Roethlisberger (notes) and Aaron Rodgers (notes) – is on this list, but each one has a very realistic shot at an all-time legacy under the right circumstances.   1. Joe Montana, San Francisco 49ers Money, money, money. The clutchiest quarterback of all time forged his reputation in four Super Bowls through the 1980s. Montana was impressive enough when he was beating the daylights out of the Miami Dolphins and Denver Broncos , but the two Super Bowls the 49ers won against the Cincinnati Bengals (by a total of nine points, and especially in Super Bowl XXXIII, when his 92-yard, last-minute drive was the difference) forever defined him as the perpetually unflappable, viciously accurate quarterback with the even pulse and the killer instinct. He holds Super Bowl records for highest passer rating (127.8), most consecutive completions (13, against the Broncos in XXIV), and best touchdown-to-interception ratio (11-0).   2. Kurt Warner (notes) , St. Louis Rams / Arizona Cardinals A controversial pick over Brady to be sure, but Warner proves the fallacy of the “quarterback win” in Super Bowl competition — when it comes to pure performance, he has done as well as any player we’ve ever seen. His two Super Bowl “losses” are by a total of seven points and both at the very last second, and his Super Bowl win came at the expense of the Tennessee Titans , who came up 1-yard short in the most famous goal-line play ever. His three games are the three highest passing-yardage games in Super Bowl history (414, 377, and 365 yards). Two of those games were with the Greatest Show on Turf, and the third was with an Arizona Cardinals team that completely fell apart upon his retirement.   3. Tom Brady (notes) , New England Patriots The only way you’re ever going to be “the next Montana” is to bag a few Super Bowls, and Brady has obviously fit the bill. He’s also been the engine of the only team to win 14 or more games in a decade, which may be even more impressive. We saw the first glimmer of greatness as Brady was driving downfield in Super Bowl XXXVI, as he got Adam Vinatieri (notes) in field-goal range against Warner’s Rams. His team’s wins and losses have all been close in the great game, but he’s solidified his name as the best quarterback of the salary-cap era by putting up amazing performances in all four of his appearances, including New England’s loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII, when he set the Super Bowl record for most passes in a game without an interception.   4. Terry Bradshaw, Pittsburgh Steelers Yes, he had Franco Harris, a ridiculous cadre of receivers, and the greatest defense in NFL history in his four Super Bowls, but Bradshaw was the rightful MVP of the Steelers’ third and fourth Super Bowl wins, and someone had to throw all those NFL Films chestnut catches by Lynn Swann and John Stallworth. Bradshaw did his magic in a different era, when completion percentage was less of an issue and the downfield bomb was a primary weapon — as such, it’s not a surprise that he holds the record for the highest-average career pass gain of any Super Bowl quarterback (an incredible 11.10 yards per completion). He’s the only quarterback in Super Bowl history to average more than a first down per pass attempt, which helps ensure his place near the top of this list.   5. Bart Starr, Green Bay Packers You thought that the Lombardi Packers were all about the ground game and defense? Wrong, Cheesehead-breath! By the time the first two Super Bowls came around, the Green Bay offense was as much about Starr’s ability to throw the deep ball. In an era when a 200-yard passing game was considered a good day, Starr finished his Super Bowl résumé with 452 passing yards in two games, a long pass of 62 yards, three touchdowns, and the first two MVP awards. The ultimate “game manager” closed out the Lombardi era as he began it — as the personification of the Lombardi philosophy.   6. Jim Plunkett, Oakland/L.A. Raiders Plunkett is an interesting case. After a horrid start to his career in New England and San Francisco, he’s nobody’s Hall of Famer, but by the time he got to Oakland as an afterthought in 1979, he was surprisingly ready to lead the Raiders’ last two successful Super Bowl charges. Like Brady, Plunkett only got the opportunity because of an injury to the starter (Dan Pastorini’s broken leg), but he made the most of it, outdueling Ron Jaworski in Super Bowl XV and Joe Theismann in Super Bowl XVIII. Plunkett didn’t have incredible stats in either game, but it’s as much about what he didn’t do — throw any interceptions — and he did have an 80-yard pass play in XV. One of the NFL’s better late-career comebacks.   7. Roger Staubach, Dallas Cowboys Roger the Dodger may have “lost” two of the greatest Super Bowls of all time — both to the Steelers — but it wasn’t for lack of trying on his part. Staubach threw three picks in Super Bowl X, but played among his best games in XIII, when his Cowboys lost 35-31. Staubach really showed off when the ‘Boys beat the snot out of the Dolphins and Broncos, going 29 of 43 for 302 yards, three touchdowns, and no interceptions.   8. Steve Young, San Francisco 49ers As with Drew Brees (notes) , sometimes it takes just one game to get on this list. Because of Dallas’ dominance in the early 1990s, and the Packers’ return to form in the later part of the decade, Young had just one shot at the ring, and he went after it with the finest performance any quarterback has ever had in a Super Bowl — 24 of 36 for 325 yards and six touchdowns. In one game, Young got the Montana monkey off his back and made himself a name as one of the NFL’s all-time greats.   9. John Elway, Denver Broncos Elway was on the losing side of the first three Super Bowls he played in, but after nearly a decade of waiting to get back, he helped win the final two championships he had a chance to. After willing three sub-par teams to Super Bowls they probably shouldn’t have been in, Elway had more balanced teams in the 1997 and 1998 seasons, and that was the key to it all. Bonus points for taking home the MVP award in his last game, and beating Dan Reeves, the former Broncos coach who once wanted to trade him to the Washington Redskins .   10. Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints WHAT? No Ben Roethlisberger on this list? Not quite yet. If Big Ben defines a Steelers win in Super Bowl XLV as he did in XLIII, he’ll hit the middle of the all-timers, but the stinkbomb he put up in Super Bowl XL is still a blotch on the record. I’d rather add Brees to this list — in his one Super Bowl opportunity, he brought the Saints back from a 10-0 deficit (tied for the greatest opening deficit overcome with the Doug Williams Redskins) with his ruthless efficiency. We remember the Tracy Porter (notes) interception and Sean Payton’s decision to open the second half of Super Bowl XLIV with an onside kick, but Brees’ 33-of-40 performance, in which he threw for 290 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, was the difference against Peyton Manning (notes) and the Colts. ________________________________________________

 

Congrats to one of the greatest defenders to ever don the black and gold. Well deserved. 43- I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, you are the man. http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6078149   http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=da1_1293785692   http://www.nflrush.com/video/top-10/2153

 

I find it curious that those who wrote so sanctimoniously about Vick haven`t chirpped a word about one the the greatest players in NFL history. Now,he may also be one of the more ego-manical self destructive personalities ever to play in the NFL.However he has a long history of criminal felonious behavior.To that end then what is it that stops people from tearing at ol LT??Just wondering aloud.

 

Im bored and with no baseball I enjoy stirring things up.  So we dont have anymore arguments I had to post this because one poster was bragging that the phillies are unbeatable with cliff lee and ryan Howard.  When I stopped laughing, for arguments sake I will make most everyone happy on this site.   Ryan Howard is like god, he is the best hitter to ever walk the planet, or even on water. The Babe would be jealous of Howard, Lou Geherig was a wimp compared to Howard, and ted williams wouldnt qualify to carry Howard’s Jock strap.  Ryan Howard should replace jesus on the cross, the pope should bow to the greatest hitter of all time.  Forget big Papi crushing marianio riveria twice to get them into the world series, Ryan Howard is the best, ok, are all you people happy now, Ryan Howard rose from the dead and taught everyone else how to hit.  Oh yeah, he also heals the sick.

Nov 132010
 

   Who’s the greatest player to have NOT made it into the Hall of Fame ?  Just off the top of my head I think Steve Garvey is a pretty good candidate. I mean this guy was in 10 All-Star games, won 4 gold gloves, drove in 100 runs five times, batted over .300 seven times, has the NL record for consecutive games played, and played in five World Series (winning one). He even won an MVP.    I was absolutely not a Garvey or Dodger fan. I mean I am a lifelong Giants fan and when it came to the World Series of the late 70′s I was pulling for the Yankees. But those were some good Dodger teams and besides all of Garvey’s numbers I think he is a good representative for those Dodger teams. It would also be good if along with a name you could explain why you believe that the player you have named is worthy of induction into the Hall of Fame. I also think it really isn’t necessary to mention players that are not even eligible for consideration, Pete Rose for example.

Oct 272010
 

   With all the “Year of the Pitcher” talk and comparisons of todays best against greats of the past. I’ve been thinking alot about who was actually the best of all time.  I am going to get the ball rolling by saying that I think Sandy Koufax is the greatest pitcher of all time. Koufax was just so completely dominant and overpowering, Just go back and take a look at the numbers, the e.r.a. alone is unbelievable.

Oct 222010
 

I’m sick of hearing how great Ryan Howard is.  I’ve yet see him do anything great when it really counts.  So the question is who would I rather have in game 7 of the WS come to bat in the bottom of the 9th with the bases loaded, Ryan Howard or overpaid former red sox disaster Julio Lugo.  I would pick Lugo is bad as he is , he did get a few key hits when he played for the Red Sox.  The bases loaded in game 7, I would bet money Ryan Howard would choke as usual and strike out or ground into a double play.  The difference between Lugo and Howard was that everyone acknowledged Lugo stunk, but because Howard hits 18 homeruns in meaningless games he is the greatest.  Ryan Howard wouldn’t qualify to carry the jock straps of players like Ortiz, Jeter, Youkilis, A Rod, V Mart, I could name another 30 players.  What is the lovefest with a loser who holds the record for striking out 13 times in a WS.  He stunk last year, he stinks this year, and Ive watched him over the last 6 years and I always thought he was good for the NL, he is far from great or even really good.  He is the epitiome of CHOKE.   Julio Lugo, the Sox realized their mistake and finally dumped him, the Phillies should do the same for Howard, get rid of the loser.

 

Some of the names will bring back memories to some of us. Greatest Quarterbacks in the NFL Hall of Fame

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