The Draft Of All Drafts, Simply Mind Boggling

Eight starters out of one draft, the 1975 Boys' draft, is clearly number 1. Nice runner-up to 1974 Steelers. Webster was an admitted steroids guy who died early because of such use. I doubt he would have made it without the roids.
Webster also had CTE.
Back then I am guessing alot of player used steroids, and other things.
 
In God’s Coach, his 1990 tell-all history of the Tom Landry-era Dallas Cowboys, Skip Bayless wrote that Randy White, the Cowboys’ Hall of Fame defensive lineman, started bulking up on steroids in the mid to late 1970s. He quotes White as saying he started using them after lining up against the Pittsburgh Steelers’ hulking offensive linemen. “Man”, White said, “I’d look across the line at those Steelers with their sleeves rolled up on those huge arms, and well, I had to do something. I figured they were using steroids too.”
skip bayless?
gotta do better than that POS
 
skip bayless?
gotta do better than that POS
Bayless used to be a halfway decent sportswriter. Then, he decided he wanted to be more than that.

This seems to be more about you not wanting to believe that the Manster did steroids. At the time he did it, not as much was known about steroids and they were not a banned substance. It was just something players did to get stronger without knowing consequences.

Here's a Tulsa World article about it if you want to pay to read it: https://tulsaworld.com/archive/article_a4763a35-4eaf-5e23-948a-ceb36527b594.html

I'll choose to believe Bayless in this instance because it just wasn't a big deal for players back then.
 
In God’s Coach, his 1990 tell-all history of the Tom Landry-era Dallas Cowboys, Skip Bayless wrote that Randy White, the Cowboys’ Hall of Fame defensive lineman, started bulking up on steroids in the mid to late 1970s. He quotes White as saying he started using them after lining up against the Pittsburgh Steelers’ hulking offensive linemen. “Man”, White said, “I’d look across the line at those Steelers with their sleeves rolled up on those huge arms, and well, I had to do something. I figured they were using steroids too.”
Strange you mention. As part of post #9 I was about to say if he used juice, so were the dudes trying to block him. Decided to pull it so as to not take away from the other point. I didn’t read that book either.

I dunno, if I was tasked with moving from LB to DT, I may have done the same.
 
Bayless used to be a halfway decent sportswriter. Then, he decided he wanted to be more than that.

This seems to be more about you not wanting to believe that the Manster did steroids. At the time he did it, not as much was known about steroids and they were not a banned substance. It was just something players did to get stronger without knowing consequences.

Here's a Tulsa World article about it if you want to pay to read it: https://tulsaworld.com/archive/article_a4763a35-4eaf-5e23-948a-ceb36527b594.html

I'll choose to believe Bayless in this instance because it just wasn't a big deal for players back then.
that is true about it not being a big deal back then; I just have found Bayless lied about so much that I will never take his word that day is day and night is night
 
I thought another great play was Preston Pearson’s sidline catch on 4th down. Didnt see in the video. Roger was maginicent
It was at the 45 second mark of the video. I'm pretty sure it was 4th and 17. He caught it at the 50 yard line at the sideline. That saved the game. Game over if they don't convert.

You'll also see a security guard come in from right to left and attempt to kick Pearson while he was down.
 
Webster also had CTE.
Back then I am guessing alot of player used steroids, and other things.
Even into the Jimmy era…plenty of his players were coked out of their minds….but they also had a strong desire to WIN.

Now it’s all about the bag. As fans we don’t get any of that, we just get to fund it.

But hey, those that don’t know any other version of the game seem to like it, and like betting on it, so there we are.
 
Strange you mention. As part of post #9 I was about to say if he used juice, so were the dudes trying to block him. Decided to pull it so as to not take away from the other point. I didn’t read that book either.

I dunno, if I was tasked with moving from LB to DT, I may have done the same.
Back then, I don't think too many saw it as any worse than using any other bodybuilding supplement.
 
that is true about it not being a big deal back then; I just have found Bayless lied about so much that I will never take his word that day is day and night is night
As a newspaper editor, I'm not a fan of Bayless and his sensationalist form of journalism, but I've never seen any proof that he made up his newspaper reports. He did print rumors, such as some about Aikman, and I have little respect for that.

Here's a good article about his work: https://www.theringer.com/2016/09/0...s-really-wrote-about-troy-aikman-8aade8f5a612
 
As a newspaper editor, I'm not a fan of Bayless and his sensationalist form of journalism, but I've never seen any proof that he made up his newspaper reports. He did print rumors, such as some about Aikman, and I have little respect for that.

Here's a good article about his work: https://www.theringer.com/2016/09/0...s-really-wrote-about-troy-aikman-8aade8f5a612
Bayless printed unsubstantiated rumors that he wanted to be true
and then doubled down on when called out on them
if that is not lying its pretty much the same thing
 
If someone said the Cowboys will have one draft like this, you would say it is impossible. But I was there many moons ago in NYC cheering on the greatest draft haul in NFL history:

1. Hall of Fame DT, an instant impact and generational talent
2. Three starting offensive linemen, two of who made the Pro Bowl several times
3. Three starting LB's, two of whom made Pro Bowl, one several times. The third was a solid starting LB. One LB ran a 9.5 100 yard dash and returned kickoffs as a rookie.
4. A strong safety who started only one year, 1979, but was a premier third safety who would play on passing downs and would have started on most NFL teams. He had All-Pros Cliff Harris and Charlie Waters ahead of him. He was a turnover machine.
5. A starting punter
6. A quality backup fullback, 3rd down back and and occasional starter, who came ready to play all roles as a rookie
7. A backup center and answer to a great trivia question: who was the center for Roger Staubach on the historic miraculous Hail Mary TD pass to Drew Pearson in the 1975 playoffs? The starting center John Fitzgerald had injured is right hand and could not snap well and this rookie #57 came in and became part of the legendary pass in Cowboys history. Everyone needs to see this final drive. Drew Pearson caught passes totaling 86 yards on this drive, a superman performance.

Introducing, the Dirty Dozen of 50 years ago, 1975! The greatest draft in NFL history.
MiscPassingRushingReceiving
RndPlayerPickPosYrsFromToAP1PBStwAVGCmpAttYdsTDIntAttYdsTDRecYdsTDCollege/Univ
1Randy White HOF2DT14197519887911116209000Maryland
1Thomas Henderson18LB6197519800132975000Langston
2Burton Lawless44G6197519800012282000Florida
3Bob Breunig70LB101975198403962135001210Arizona St.
4Pat Donovan90T91975198304764129000Stanford
4Randy Hughes96DB6197519800011977000Oklahoma
5Kyle Davis113C219751978000621000Oklahoma
6Rolly Woolsey148DB419751978001944000Boise St.
7Mike Hegman173LB121976198700854170000Tennessee St.
8Mitch Hoopes200P31975197700032513210032300Arizona
9000Rutgers
100Millersville
11000Oregon St.
12Cincinnati
13Herbert Scott330G101975198423768140000Virginia Union
14Scott Laidlaw356RB

That draft (The Dirty Dozen) led to 3 SB appearances and 2 SB wins. The Cowboys appeared to be fading, having missed the playoffs the previous year for the first time since 1966. The Steelers had an even greater draft in 74 with 4 Hall of Famers. Randy White was the only Hall of Famer from the 75 draft.
 

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