NFL Unveiled
NFL Unveiled
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The NFL Coach Who Revolutionized Football
This video dives into the legendary career of Paul Brown regarded as one of the greatest football coaches of all time. Explore his innovations, leadership, and lasting impact on the game, which have shaped modern football as we know it.
Переглядів: 40

Відео

They Changed Uniforms, Then Won a Super Bowl
Переглядів 472 години тому
The video highlights how the Denver Broncos’ 1997 uniform redesign coincided with their Super Bowl XXXII victory, following the previous season’s crushing playoff loss to the Jaguars. This defeat fuelled their determination, leading to a historic season.
The 1999 Playoffs Were Absolutely Insane (Bravo NFL Scriptwriters)
Переглядів 624 години тому
The 1999 NFL Playoffs were a wild ride, featuring the unforgettable Music City Miracle, the Jaguars’ crushing 62-7 defeat, the Bert Emanuel catch controversy, and the Titans falling just one yard short in the Super Bowl.
The Worst Way To End a Hall of Fame Career
Переглядів 4007 годин тому
A deep dive into the infamous 62-7 blowout where the Jaguars crushed the Dolphins, marking a tragic end to Dan Marino’s legendary career.
The Failed League the NFL Hopes You Forget (NFL Europe)
Переглядів 839 годин тому
Explore the rise and fall of NFL Europe, the league that aimed to expand American football globally but ended in failure.
The NFL Superstar Who Dominated Every Sport
Переглядів 7 тис.12 годин тому
Explore the incredible journey of Jim Thorpe, the legendary athlete who excelled in every sport he touched. From dominating the NFL to earning Olympic gold medals, this video delves into the life of one of history’s greatest all-around athletes.
From Homeless Zero Star Recruit to NFL Star
Переглядів 7114 годин тому
A compelling journey of perseverance, this video chronicles how Josh Jacobs went from being a homeless, overlooked high school recruit to becoming an NFL star.
Explaining the Worst Blowout in NFL History
Переглядів 3 тис.16 годин тому
Explore the story behind the most lopsided game in NFL history, as the Chicago Bears dominated the Washington Redskins 73-0 in the 1940 Championship.
How To Save an NFL Career: The Resurrection of Geno Smith
Переглядів 7119 годин тому
A deep dive into Geno Smith’s incredible comeback, exploring the key moments and strategies that helped him turn his NFL career around, from backup to starting quarterback.
The Worst Draft Class in NFL History (0 Hall of Famers)
Переглядів 42721 годину тому
Explore the 1992 NFL Draft class, widely regarded as the worst in history. Despite featuring 336 picks, not a single player from this draft has been inducted into the Hall of Fame, making it a cautionary tale for NFL teams.
The Greatest Athlete in NFL History
Переглядів 149День тому
Explore the incredible career of Bo Jackson, a dual-sport legend whose unmatched athleticism made him a force in both the NFL and MLB. Discover why many consider him the greatest athlete to ever play in the NFL.
The Hardest Hitter in NFL History
Переглядів 20 тис.День тому
A look at the career of Dick Butkus, one of hardest hitters and most feared players in NFL history. We dive into his unmatched intensity, brutal tackles, and lasting legacy.
It Took Him 9 Years To Win His First NFL Game
Переглядів 195День тому
Discover the incredible journey of Josh Johnson, the NFL’s ultimate journeyman, who had bounced between 14 teams in his 16 year (and counting) career.
How an Average Player Destroyed A Dynasty...Twice
Переглядів 125День тому
An in-depth exploration of Eli Manning’s unique NFL career, examining the highs of his two Super Bowl victories and the lows marked by inconsistency.
The Most Heartbreaking Loss in Super Bowl History
Переглядів 7914 днів тому
Relive the dramatic conclusion of Super Bowl XXXIV, where the Tennessee Titans fell just one yard short of tying the game against the St. Louis Rams. Explore the pivotal final play that became one of the most memorable moments in NFL history.
The Most Powerful Arm in NFL History
Переглядів 18 тис.14 днів тому
The Most Powerful Arm in NFL History
The NFL’s Most Underrated Offence
Переглядів 14414 днів тому
The NFL’s Most Underrated Offence
How John Elway Saved His Career: The Final Act
Переглядів 12814 днів тому
How John Elway Saved His Career: The Final Act
How Sean Taylor Exposed Sports Media
Переглядів 5714 днів тому
How Sean Taylor Exposed Sports Media
The Greatest Receiver Ever (Not Jerry Rice)
Переглядів 25114 днів тому
The Greatest Receiver Ever (Not Jerry Rice)
The Hidden Truth About the NFL Draft
Переглядів 6114 днів тому
The Hidden Truth About the NFL Draft
How This Superstar Changed the NFL
Переглядів 5521 день тому
How This Superstar Changed the NFL
Explaining the Buccaneers Tragic 0-26 Start (Worst Team in History)
Переглядів 5321 день тому
Explaining the Buccaneers Tragic 0-26 Start (Worst Team in History)
The NFL Legend Who Played 26 Years (Across 4 Decades)
Переглядів 2,1 тис.21 день тому
The NFL Legend Who Played 26 Years (Across 4 Decades)
The First Ever NFL Playoff Game Was a Mess
Переглядів 15521 день тому
The First Ever NFL Playoff Game Was a Mess
How a President Prevented the End of Football
Переглядів 5521 день тому
How a President Prevented the End of Football
When Brock Lesnar Tried To Play in the NFL
Переглядів 18521 день тому
When Brock Lesnar Tried To Play in the NFL
The Time an NFL Player Retired Mid Game
Переглядів 5821 день тому
The Time an NFL Player Retired Mid Game
The Reason NFL Dynasties Fall
Переглядів 2921 день тому
The Reason NFL Dynasties Fall
The NFL’s Linsanity: From Madden Cover to Out of the League
Переглядів 2,4 тис.28 днів тому
The NFL’s Linsanity: From Madden Cover to Out of the League

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @billywalik6411
    @billywalik6411 3 години тому

    So now someone’s going to tell me that Mike McCormick belongs in Canton. BS!

  • @ZeusAmun-pt9dc
    @ZeusAmun-pt9dc 3 години тому

    While I'm a Tennesseean and was a freshman in college I think when this happened my personal favorite Superbowl is the Patriots vs Panthers and I don't like either teams. So would you consider doing a video over that Superbowl? I really think that it's neat and is one of my favorite alternate timelines based off what if?.

  • @jandbyoung1
    @jandbyoung1 3 години тому

    Bullshit. Brett Favre had the strongest arm.

  • @dominicromano1611
    @dominicromano1611 6 годин тому

    Tremendous coach, his innovations and techniques are unmatched.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 6 годин тому

      agreed, an absolute legend

  • @boataxe4605
    @boataxe4605 8 годин тому

    Yep! That was the name of the team that they beat! Thanks for not revising it to whatever they are called now.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 6 годин тому

      man, I couldn't think of a worse name than what they came up with...

  • @Skinnyd4
    @Skinnyd4 10 годин тому

    I remember this game. I bet on Miami, he bet on Jacksonville. Whichever team won, the loser had to pay the winner ten cents per point. Since I'm an Eagles fan, I didn't watch the game, but I was out somewhere that day and they had it on. Someone told me the score and I thought they were pulling my leg. Sure enough, they were not. When I went back the work a couple days later, I paid my colleague, and he admitted that he was expecting to collect maybe three dollars and her he was shocked. 1999... was weird.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 7 годин тому

      haha...yeah 1999 was a crazy season

  • @thomaswolf723
    @thomaswolf723 10 годин тому

    Thorpe played parts of six years in Major League Baseball, mostly with the New York Giants of John McGraw, but hardly dominated the sport.

  • @galm2637
    @galm2637 12 годин тому

    Wow , he can throw a ball forward

  • @roberthudson1959
    @roberthudson1959 12 годин тому

    While Thorpe is one of the world's great athletes, his NFL statistics are uninspiring at best. He scored six touchdowns, four field goals, and three PAT in 52 career games. The Pro Football Hall of Fame credits him with four career touchdown passes.

  • @johnrains8409
    @johnrains8409 23 години тому

    Absolutely, guaranteed, without doubt, indubitably the hardest hitting.

  • @jameswirth3117
    @jameswirth3117 День тому

    The Redskins had quite a number of turnovers. High turnovers almost always lead to blowouts.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 19 годин тому

      right, I think the Redskins had 8 lol

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky День тому

    A major drawback of the rookie wage scale is that teams are willing to drop a young QB knowing they can take one in the first round in April. It’s a vicious cycle.

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky День тому

    Jason Hanson and Darren Woodson will get to the HOF one day.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 19 годин тому

      hard for kickers to get into the HoF, but both worthy!

  • @henrywallacesghost5883
    @henrywallacesghost5883 День тому

    You lose by 50 points it's more than the offense's problem.

  • @ryandonovan5205
    @ryandonovan5205 День тому

    Jeff George. Yeah I said it dude had a bazooka

  • @ThePMcDonald
    @ThePMcDonald День тому

    Sorry, but I disagree ... the HARDEST hitter in NFL history was Slammin' Sam Mills ... elected as the OLDEST non-kicking starter EVER to the Pro Bowl, and the ONLY TRUE-USFL inductee into Canton (the others with USFL tenure were ALL drafted in some fashion and/or pursued by the NFL - Sam was NEVER EVER drafted by an NFL team) ... In the 2017 episode of "A Football Life" on ESPN that was about Sam Mills, Hall of Famer Rickey Jackson stated matter-of-factly that Sam Mills was the greatest with whom he ever played ... seven years after Jackson made Canton, and five years before Sam Mills was FINALLY inducted. To THIS day, former coach of the original USFL Philadelphia Stars, Saints & Colts Jim Mora says that Sam Mills was the greatest, and Coach Mora helped induct Sam into Canton with Sam's widow, Melanie. No shade towards Butkus, but Sam Mills EARNED EVERY BIT of HIS cred ON THE FIELD ... AND PROVED that height isn't all that matters ... all the while, Sam Mills JUST KEPT POUNDING.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled День тому

      that's a name I wouldn't expect, thanks for sharing! I appreciate 'hardest hitter' is subjective

  • @timlies3627
    @timlies3627 День тому

    Thank you

  • @nickchoporis5901
    @nickchoporis5901 День тому

    Pop Warner supposedly brought 2 athletes to a Collegiate track meet once. When asked ' where is your team ', he declared " this is my team. This man runs 1,500 meters, 5,000, and 10,000 meters. This other man, Jim Thorpe, does everything else ... "

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled День тому

      that sums Thorpe up perfectly!

  • @lettybastien4624
    @lettybastien4624 День тому

    2:22. WIND-er, as in ‘wind’ a watch. Not the blowy, breezy wind.

  • @kennethschultz4910
    @kennethschultz4910 2 дні тому

    Ray Nitzke, Chuck Bednarick

  • @arnoldstevenson4427
    @arnoldstevenson4427 2 дні тому

    The best comment ever made about Butkus. Came from Steve Sabol.. him and his dad. Ran nfl films. And seen everthing. On ever player. For all those years. Over 60 yrs. And before. Steve. Die. He said. No one play harder or better than Dick Butkus and he seen them all. Period. !

  • @jimdellavecchia4594
    @jimdellavecchia4594 2 дні тому

    I'm 57 & never had the chance to see him. My father and the older guys confirmed his greatness and ferociousness

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled День тому

      I wasn't lucky enough to watch him either, but glad to know the tales are true!

  • @georgeinfante1106
    @georgeinfante1106 2 дні тому

    Great natural athlete

  • @1Tomrider
    @1Tomrider 2 дні тому

    Greatest LB ever by a country mile, hardest hitter too, and while skill sets and responsibilities vary on Def, it wouldn't be a stretch to say Dick was the greatest defensive player, period, ever - as Howie Long said after he died, "It was like he was immortal, too tough for death to dare to come for him!"

  • @carspiv
    @carspiv 2 дні тому

    He was not a particularly good QB, but Bobby Douglass has to be in the mix. He threw 60 yards without cranking it up. Legend has it that Jack Kemp could throw a football nearly 90 yards. Randall Cunningham had a whip.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled День тому

      agreed, these guys also had cannons

  • @jamesyoung2280
    @jamesyoung2280 2 дні тому

    It's a shame the young fans don't realize players like Butkis and Lambert. Too focused on current players.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 2 дні тому

      I agree James. These players are too good to forget!

  • @bobgall6764
    @bobgall6764 3 дні тому

    Loved the picture of Gerald Ford😂

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 2 дні тому

      haha glad someone noticed that

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky 3 дні тому

    The 1990s Miami Dolphins always collapsed in December. Their last real shot at another Super Bowl was the 1992 AFC Championship Game. In Miami that year. After that it was a long ride to the bottom.

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky 3 дні тому

    I’ll never forget this game. Man, 1999 was just a strange season all around.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 3 дні тому

      right! And the playoffs were particularly wild: music city miracle, this game, one yard short.

  • @BrianHiggins-pi5fk
    @BrianHiggins-pi5fk 3 дні тому

    Wow 🎉 you reposted something thats been done 100 times 🙏

  • @brianb1440
    @brianb1440 3 дні тому

    My father used to tell us of the time Thorpe came to my little Ohio town in the 1930s and put on a punting demonstration. Dad said he would punt the ball from one end zone to the other. And he was nearly 50 by then.

  • @jimherzog5931
    @jimherzog5931 3 дні тому

    A Dallas Cowboy player in the 70s said that Staubach threw the ball so hard that he could throw a football through a car wash and it would not get wet.

  • @chizorama
    @chizorama 3 дні тому

    Elway is the most exciting QB I've watched, well until Mahomes. His problem was that the NFC dominated from the 80's(minus the Raiders two wins) until Elway & company(thanks to Terell Davis) broke the curse in 97.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 3 дні тому

      yeah that NFC streak was wild

  • @bourbonfan1
    @bourbonfan1 3 дні тому

    Bob Lily and Randy White, with a bit of the devil himself!

  • @oshkoshdom2197
    @oshkoshdom2197 3 дні тому

    Butkus would have been great in any era

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 3 дні тому

      agreed

    • @1Tomrider
      @1Tomrider 2 дні тому

      Absolutely - 1st stringers today would be backing Dick up if he was playing now!

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 2 дні тому

      for sure

  • @TheSuperGenius
    @TheSuperGenius 4 дні тому

    I saw Elway warm up at Stanford by throwing a ball 50 yards, ON HIS KNEES!

  • @victorcastillo-dx9vh
    @victorcastillo-dx9vh 4 дні тому

    Not only the best MLB ever...actually he's the best Linebacker all time

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 3 дні тому

      better than Taylor you think?

    • @victorcastillo-dx9vh
      @victorcastillo-dx9vh 3 дні тому

      @@nflunveiled yes. Eventhough different positions LT was OLB in 3-4 defense

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky 4 дні тому

    The World League/NFL Europe failed because the games were absolutely unwatchable. Same reason the 2001 XFL folded.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 3 дні тому

      yeah exactly. It was supposed to increase popularity of the sport, turned into a development league.

  • @redsky8763
    @redsky8763 4 дні тому

    Dick Butkus was an evil man. All of his life he was a bully who liked to hurt others using violence. Hope he mellowed out with age.

  • @David-yw2lv
    @David-yw2lv 4 дні тому

    Athletic skill cannot be acquired, it's something a person is born with.I learned that the hard way.Thorpe was a born athlete.There was string opposition to profesional football when the AFPA began.Most colleges discouraged players from going into the league Red Grange was told how evil it was by his college coach.He asked the man why it was all right for him to be paid for coaching but wrong to make money playing .Grange's entering the league helped make it popular.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 4 дні тому

      definitely, Red Grange was also a key figure in popularising the NFL early on

  • @MikeWoolsey-tx8hh
    @MikeWoolsey-tx8hh 4 дні тому

    I thought this was about Bert Jones?

  • @franzschubertv2874
    @franzschubertv2874 4 дні тому

    Thorpe didn’t dominate in major league baseball by any stretch.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 4 дні тому

      True. I said he was good at some sports and the best at others, then said baseball right after 'the best' which I now see is poorly worded and confusing, sorry for that. I'm not suggesting he was great, or the best at baseball, just that he was good.

    • @717rocket
      @717rocket 3 дні тому

      I heard he couldn't hit a curveball.

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 4 дні тому

    While on the subject of blowouts there are 2 others of note, November 27 1966 Redskins beat the Giants 72-41 November 26 1972 Giants beat the Eagles 62-10 playoff game January 15, 2000 Jaguars beat the Dolphins 62-7 and September 24, 2003 Dolphins beat the Broncos 70-20

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 4 дні тому

      yes there has been some rather brutal blowouts

  • @user-pc1qu3bd6j
    @user-pc1qu3bd6j 4 дні тому

    They broke the mold ,when they made,DB piece out.

  • @ieatoutoften872
    @ieatoutoften872 4 дні тому

    Jim Thorpe was a college football player (0:38) at The United States Indian Industrial School located in Carlisle, PA 17013 (generally known as Carlisle Indian Industrial School)

  • @ieatoutoften872
    @ieatoutoften872 4 дні тому

    This great, factual story is told in the book Carlisle Vs. Army: Jim Thorpe, Dwight Eisenhower, Pop Warner, and the Forgotten Story of Football's Greatest Battle by Lars Anderson

  • @jamesmelcher9355
    @jamesmelcher9355 4 дні тому

    I’m a lifelong Packers fan, but I have so much respect for what George Halas did for the NFL. I read about the basics of this game as a boy, but I had no idea how brilliant Halas was in motivating the Bears to get revenge in the title game. And three Pick Sixes in the third quarter-holy cow. And the part about being asked not to kick extra points was a hoot. Kudos, Papa Bear.

    • @nflunveiled
      @nflunveiled 4 дні тому

      Agreed - the father of the NFL!

  • @PureBleachFilms
    @PureBleachFilms 5 днів тому

    If someone throws a baseball 92mph it’s impossible to throw at football 70 mph. Elway probley threw a football 46 mph which is still crazy fast but no way he threw it 63 mph to 70 mph it’s physically impossible.

  • @garyduke100
    @garyduke100 5 днів тому

    Joe Namath & Dan Pastorini, also Jim Kelly

  • @tonyhill1141
    @tonyhill1141 5 днів тому

    Ton of HOFers on that Bears team.