|
logan goodling (el 16/05/13 a las 10:47 pm)
1:18 # 20- this is my shoe now bitch!
cell166i (el 05/05/13 a las 4:11 am)
The guy is inconceivable by today's standards. There is no one that is even close. NO ONE!
Julian Molina (el 04/05/13 a las 6:25 pm)
# 1 jim brown
sharkbait8088 (el 04/05/13 a las 3:53 am)
Jim Brown was an All American Lacrosse player in college ........ He is up there with Jim Thorpe as one of the greatest American athletes ever ....... And as a note... there were no 300 pound linemen and 235 pound linebackers in Jim Brown's day because crack back blocking as well as blocking below the knees was still legal in those days. So was head slapping, clothes lining and spearing with the helmet.
itzhooper (el 30/04/13 a las 11:10 am)
Okay Jim Brown was great, for his time. Anyone that thinks the level of competition back then was what it is now is highly mistaken. There was no 300 pound defensive linemen, or Linebackers that weigh 235 and run a 4.5...Jim brown played against people that wouldn't even make a roster in todays game. If time travel was possible and we took Adrian Peterson and put him on the same Browns team Jim Brown played for, his rushing records would be set so high no one would ever be able to touch them.
suny123boy1 (el 24/04/13 a las 11:58 pm)
Really? I don't even know what to say about this...
suny123boy1 (el 24/04/13 a las 11:57 pm)
Uggghhh, nice try. Jim Brown had a 9 year career in which he missed no games.
suny123boy1 (el 24/04/13 a las 11:55 pm)
Also it is very important to remember that they were playing shortened seasons of 11, 12 games back then. People seem to forget this a lot.
suny123boy1 (el 24/04/13 a las 11:51 pm)
This is what my father says. He's in his 70's now and has been watching the NFL since he was a kid and he always said that it was like Brown was just on a whole different playing level than everyone else.
suny123boy1 (el 24/04/13 a las 11:49 pm)
I've heard this argument before and I dismiss it every time as people not being truly knowledgeable about football. |