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1963 NFL Football Sunday Human Targets NY Giants Tittle - 2-Page Vintage Article

$ 8.94

Availability: 20 in stock
  • Sport: Football
  • Year: 1963

    Description

    1963 NFL Football Sunday Human Targets NY Giants Tittle - 2-Page Vintage Article
    Original, vintage magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 10 1/2" x 13 1/2" (27 cm x 34 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    "Get the Quarterback" is the name of the game. Through the rough National Football League
    massive linemen hurl themselves at smaller quarterbacks, hoping to stir a spark of terror. Says
    one, "They can't tell me they don’t scare, because I've seen it in the corner of their eyes.”
    SUNDAY’S HUMAN TARGETS
    In just a few days now the end-zone
    camera will be zooming in for a close-
    up, and the crouching quarterback will
    fill the screen. Under his eyes he will
    wear lampblack like warpaint. On his
    head a warrior's helmet will sit. Then,
    clear and staccato, the crack pro quarter-
    back will bark commands.
    A portrait of a captain, it will seem on
    the screen, a captain confident, rugged,
    unafraid—to the layman. “Do you know
    what I say to myself?" says Ed Brown, a
    highly competent professional who plays
    quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
    “You know what 1'11 be saying when I
    see that close-up of the tough quarterback
    in the play-off game? 1'11 be saying, the
    poor guy is going to get creamed."
    National League football, approaching
    its climactic championship game, is our
    most explosive demonstration of sanc-
    tioned mass violence, and in the eye of
    the violence stands the quarterback.
    However he may appear, he is cheerlessly
    aware that he is his team's jugular vein
    and that the opposition would not weep
    were he put out with an injury. This has
    been true since the popularization of the
    T formation in 1940; but in just the past
    few years the quarterback's occupational
    hazards have increased sharply. Coaches,
    despairing of attempts to cover bumble-
    bee pass-receivers, placed new emphasis
    on smothering the passer. Thus, on one
    recent Sunday Y. A. Tittle, the skilled,
    elusive New York Giant veteran, emerged
    with blood streaming down his face, not-
    withstanding the face bar he wore;
    Philadelphia’s Sonny Jurgensen retired to
    the sidelines, his throwing arm bashed by
    a 245-pound tackle; and Green Bay
    quarterback Bart Starr, slugged by a
    defensive halfback, left the brawl and the
    game with a broken hand.
    Men who make their living playing de-
    fense are transformed the moment they
    see a quarterback light out from behind
    his cup of blockers. One shot at him in
    open field can decide a game. The job is
    more difficult under a pileup, where the
    quarterback can snuggle up to layers of
    beef, but a knee or an elbow placed
    firmly against the small of his back does
    damage and is judicious.
    At times, Chicago quarterback Bill
    Wade wishes he were a halfback for a
    play or two. Halfbacks block, and a hard
    block makes a nice repayment to an
    opponent who has been uncouth. "But
    a quarterback,” Wade points out, “is a
    piece of merchandise that has to last
    twenty games. You've just got to condi-
    tion yourself to being a target.”
    14015-AL-631221-06