My rant for today: I'm not very familiar with the playing career of player-turned-coach Dick Nolan, who recently died. He was obviously held in high esteem by the NFL fraternity and the sports media, as he was the subject of many accolades.
What caught my eye was what Frank Gifford said of Nolan the player, a defensive back from the mid-'50s to the mid-'60s, as quoted in Sports Illustrated: "He made himself into not just a good player, he was an extraordinary player. He didn't have the physical talent to do it all. He just willed himself. He was tough -- as good as there comes in that respect."
So even in the NFL of the '50s and '60s, a white defensive back could only excel not through his physical ability, but by willing himself. Pretty good trick. Using Gifford's formula, I am going to will myself to fly, to accurately predict the outcomes of sports events, and to will Natalie Gulbis to find me irresistible.
Dick Nolan was a great defensive back because he was a supremely talented athlete with a tough mind to boot. Why is that so hard to say?
During his long stint on Monday Night Football, Gifford used to periodically wax poetic about the "beauty" of black athletes. Gifford was a greatall-around player himself for the Giants, admired for his style and athleticism, but now, much like Cris Collinsworth and other former white players,he downplays his own accomplishments and those of the players of his era in order to march in step with theparty line of overwhelming black supremacy in athletic ability.
Of course Nolan's racist son Mike, the head coach of the 49ers,knows what Gifford means, the one who said at a press conference earlier this year that if he focused just on acquiring players of good character, he would "end up with a lily-white team that doesn't beat anybody.''
Yeah, well now he has apredominantly black team that doesn't beat anybody. Caste clowns both.
What caught my eye was what Frank Gifford said of Nolan the player, a defensive back from the mid-'50s to the mid-'60s, as quoted in Sports Illustrated: "He made himself into not just a good player, he was an extraordinary player. He didn't have the physical talent to do it all. He just willed himself. He was tough -- as good as there comes in that respect."
So even in the NFL of the '50s and '60s, a white defensive back could only excel not through his physical ability, but by willing himself. Pretty good trick. Using Gifford's formula, I am going to will myself to fly, to accurately predict the outcomes of sports events, and to will Natalie Gulbis to find me irresistible.
Dick Nolan was a great defensive back because he was a supremely talented athlete with a tough mind to boot. Why is that so hard to say?
During his long stint on Monday Night Football, Gifford used to periodically wax poetic about the "beauty" of black athletes. Gifford was a greatall-around player himself for the Giants, admired for his style and athleticism, but now, much like Cris Collinsworth and other former white players,he downplays his own accomplishments and those of the players of his era in order to march in step with theparty line of overwhelming black supremacy in athletic ability.
Of course Nolan's racist son Mike, the head coach of the 49ers,knows what Gifford means, the one who said at a press conference earlier this year that if he focused just on acquiring players of good character, he would "end up with a lily-white team that doesn't beat anybody.''
Yeah, well now he has apredominantly black team that doesn't beat anybody. Caste clowns both.