rccollins
Sophomore
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2012
- Messages
- 2,199
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It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
Three most underappreciated Canes greats of all time Jim Otto, Ted Hendricks and Ottis Anderson. GOATS before the U was the U.
It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
Three most underappreciated Canes greats of all time Jim Otto, Ted Hendricks and Ottis Anderson. GOATS before the U was the U.
Otto was not a great player at UM. His success in the AFL has caused many to revise history. He was a good player, but not even drafted by the NFL. He was very undersized coming out of college.
It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
Three most underappreciated Canes greats of all time Jim Otto, Ted Hendricks and Ottis Anderson. GOATS before the U was the U.
Otto was not a great player at UM. His success in the AFL has caused many to revise history. He was a good player, but not even drafted by the NFL. He was very undersized coming out of college.
It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
Three most underappreciated Canes greats of all time Jim Otto, Ted Hendricks and Ottis Anderson. GOATS before the U was the U.
Otto was not a great player at UM. His success in the AFL has caused many to revise history. He was a good player, but not even drafted by the NFL. He was very undersized coming out of college.
Holy crap you're old...![]()
You mean Ottis right? not Otto....U or not U Ottis was a monster both at UM and at the NFL with the Giants. Both Ottis and Cane Jim Burt were stars at that SuperBowl.Great player even late in his nfl career. He's one of my dad's favorite all time Giants for putting them on his back to win that Super Bowl.
You mean Ottis right? not Otto....U or not U Ottis was a monster both at UM and at the NFL with the Giants. Both Ottis and Cane Jim Burt were stars at that SuperBowl.Great player even late in his nfl career. He's one of my dad's favorite all time Giants for putting them on his back to win that Super Bowl.
It's almost a crime that we let these players and these performances slip from our memories. Or, worse yet, pretend like it didn't happen because we weren't alive at the time.
We've had great players in the past. Don't ignore them.
Three most underappreciated Canes greats of all time Jim Otto, Ted Hendricks and Ottis Anderson. GOATS before the U was the U.
It was an absolute treat to watch Ottis Anderson for 4 years. Greatest feet of any Canes back. He'd plant and dart in any direction. The first defender was paralyzed and had no chance.
Plus he was tough with great understanding of leverage. Speed was good but not great, somewhat similar to Duke Johnson. If everything broke perfectly a young Anderson could take it the distance but he relied on the early burst and separation, not the late throttle.
Anderson carried those Cane traits to his early years with the Cardinals, particularly as a rookie. I remember when he terrorized the Cowboys in his NFL debut and Hollywood Henderson was absolutely stunned, raving about Anderson.
Unfortunately Anderson got too heavy after a couple of years and also somewhat nicked. His prime as a jitterbug guy with power wasn't as long as it should have been. Consequently many younger fans remember him from the plowhorse days as a Giant, and have no clue how special and elusive he was as a youngster.
Anderson was very well known as a Cane. I remember the local media campaign entering his sophomore year, "Come see O.J. run." His image as #47 was all over the newspaper ads for season tickets. But it wasn't nearly the extent of Ted Hendricks, who was already a legend as a collegian. I think it was Luther Evans who tagged him with the great nickname, "The Mad Stork." Evans covered the Canes beat for the Herald and then switched to horse racing late in his career. He had a very, very popular low key local Sunday night radio show from 10:30 PM to 1 AM every Sunday night on WKAT. Those were the years in which sports talk radio was almost exclusively at night, particularly the prime time hours. Daytime sports talk was virtually unheard of.
I can't comment on the Jim Otto years. Before my time. I saw him as a pro with the Raiders. Based on everything my dad told me, I'm confident Otto wasn't a star in college. Dad raved about Don Bosseler. I have a YouTube clip on my channel from 1956 that includes the final half of Bosseler's famous long touchdown run at Gainesville. Dad also mentioned Mario Bonofiglio quite often. I think he was a clever quarterback from my parents' era as Canes students in the early to mid '50s.