I watched them all when they aired as an older teen, usually realize it about halfway through...then keep watching. I'm just surprised UA-cam never takes them down.
1995 Detroit Lions: Herman Moore - 126 receptions - 1686 YDs Brett Perriman - 108 receptions - 1488 YDs. Set the record for most receptions by a duo, while Barry Sanders gets almost 1900 all purpose yards and you have freaking Scott Mitchell throwing it to you.
Don't the numbers shows that Mitchell had a *legitimately* great year in 95? Not just a fluke-y sort of "mediocre-to-average in real life, but efficient enough to be favored by some metrics" kind of deal but a legitimately strong year? I understand he was figured out/trash fairly shortly there after, but he always seems to be a little unfairly maligned even during his (admittedly short lived) success
It's still amazing the numbers Marino put up in 1984. 5,084 Yards, 48 TD's. Those would be elite numbers today. He did that in 1984 when 3,500 and 25 TD's were MVP caliber numbers. And looking at those highlight, that receiving core and Marino would do well today.
During that span in the 80s did they EVER have a HalfBack that was anything other than Average? I was young but I don't think I could name you a single RB they had during that ERA.
Coming back to know that Cliff Branch is finally in the HoF and deservingly so..I’m not a raiders fan, but I like watching all these videos and man was a burner 💨💨💨💨
The Posse should be higher on this list! Led to multiple Super Bowl wins. Monk had almost 13000 yards with 68 TDs. Clark had almost 11000 yards with 65 TDs and Sanders had 6500 yards with 37 TDs. Monk got 3 SB and Clark and Sanders got 2. All with Washington. First receiving core to have 3 WR all go over 1000 yards in a single season
I have to agree because they were the original Tripple Threat, everyone else had good receivers and tight ends, but the Posse were the 1ST 3 recieving group that literally gave defensive coaches nightmares
@@royw-g3120 Even if the Posse didn’t have an elite QB by their side, they should still be moved up to #1 on this list for all of those accolades alone. They were such a formidable trio.
@@BigLouJo_XVI Agreed plus they all had different skill sets that complemented each other Monk was the chain mover one season he had about 35 catches on third down -all but one went for a first down. Sanders was a burner, Clark a do everything 5’9” hard case who was happy going across the middle. I was a big fan of Steve Smith as he was kind of a clone of Clark.
1:51 The Indianapolis Colts of the 2000s. 5:49 The Minnesota Vikings of the Late 1990s. 9:29 The Washington Posse. 13:58 The Marks Brothers. 17:30 Ken Stabler and the slithery Snakey offense. 21:58 The first-ever decade at RFK Stadium. 25:22 The West Coast Offense! 30:19 The Los Angeles Rams of the 1950s. 35:02 The Greatest Show on Turf! 40:25 Air Coryell.
Early 2010s Packers were stacked at WR. Greg Jennings, Jordy Nelson, Randall Cobb, Donald Driver, James Jones and Jermicheal Finley. A great unit. Should have won more Super Bowls.
@Harry Engel I always blame Dom Capers for the defensive issues. Lack of talent isn’t it. By the 12 and 13, they had Sam Shields (Pro Bowler) Tramon Williams (Pro Bowler) Charles Woodson (Future Hofer, DPOY, and multiple time All Pro) Micah Hyde (Pro Bowler and All Pro) and Casey Hayward (Pro Bowler. And yet the secondary was the constant issue. There was so much talent and yet they had issues. It had to be the defensive scheme. They needed to fire Capers after both of those Kaepernick losses in 12 and 13.
Nat Moore was a solid consistent WR for the Dolphins in the late 70s and early 80s. He played with Bob Greise , David Woodley and Don Strock through the years. By the time Dan Marino and Duper and Clayton came in he was the solid veteran who brought some leadership to the team and still put up decent numbers
Carter and Moss had FOUR different starting QBs in 3 seasons (Johnson, Cunningham, George, Culpepper) and made them all look like MVPs...putting them way down at number 9 is just hate against the Vikings, plain and simple.
1998 Moss first team all pro 1999 Carter first team all pro 2000 Moss first team all pro 3 different qbs each year Both with 130+ career TDs Both in the hall of fame
@@w41duvernay It's a popularity list. Not to mention that the Eras are way different compared to the NFL of today. Plus in those days players actually had to earn there contracts. I don't give a damn what Era, Jerry Rice is the best receiver PERIOD. And I hated the 49ers too. Again, you still have to recognize greatness.
the Stickum controversy was so trivial. There were no rules against it and most receivers today are using gloves which are more effective than Stickum ever was
Lol let them use stickum. Back then, your life was legitimately in danger if you went across the middle as a receiver. They could jump in a tub of it for all I care. The old game was extremely violent. Todays game, they hardly ever get lit up like they used to.
Gloves are not more effective then stickum tf u talking about lmfaoooooooo u saw Lester Hayes? He didn’t drop shit with that stuff foh never seen a drop with stickum on
But it still nullifies his legacy and career because the stick’um was responsible for Rice’s route running, separation, yards after catch, football IQ (film study), breaking tackles, longevity, and consistency. Without it, he wouldn’t have been able to do any of those things! LoL. Don’t worry, B-Mag: Nobody takes these people seriously. Your point quickly and concisely put that madness to rest 100%. But you used Logic to prove your point, and they’re not logical individuals.
@@topnotchtajmahal7216 The gloves in today’s game??? You flat out don’t know what you’re talking about. How long do you think stickum stayed sticky??? Two plays’ worth of sweat or touching the grass at all, and the dirt decreased the adhesive strength. The gloves today get even stickier when they’re wet. In fact, magnetic gloves are a real thing.
The Niners had help from a man named ARCHIE COOLEY aka THE GUNSLINGER he was the coach of Jerry Rice in college at Mississippi Valley St.Rice said that what he did in his early yrs in San Francisco he did while in college.Once again the SWAC having a strong influence on the NFL.
I think the 1980's/90's 49ers and 1999-2001 Rams had the largest number of overall threats in the passing game--49ers: Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Brent Jones, Roger Craig, & Tom Rathman. Rams: Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt, Marshall Faulk, Az-Zahir Hakim, and Ricky Proehl. That's a lot of guys on the field to try to stop. The "Air Coryell" Chargers were deep in receiving as well and I think are a good choice at #1, constantly bringing in new pieces throughout the 1980's (Eric Sievers, Pete Holohan, Lionel James, James Brooks for awhile...) which went along with the core of Charlie Joiner, Wes Chandler (before him John Jefferson), and Kellen Winslow. All these receiving corps on this list are strong though.
No one will ever top what they did in the second quarter of the Super Bowl in 1988. They had over 300 yards of offense in that one quarter, most of that done through the air to Sanders and Clark. Then you toss in Hall Of Famer Art Monk and that’s a hell of a receiving crew. Although, Miami’s trio under Marino were the scariest set of receivers I can remember.
but this isn't about just a trio of receivers.. it's about the entire receiving corps. and the best corps BY FAR top to bottom is the 80's 49ers. Two WR's including the best to Ever play the game, a RB, a FB, and a TE. And each of them were the very best at their position at that time. That is easily the best receiving CORPS of all time.
Yeah that’s a great point. If you think about it, there have been 5 trios of teammates that have each recorded at least 1,000 receiving yards in a season, and the first 2 were the 1980 Chargers which like you said Gibbs was the offensive coordinator of, and the 89 Redskins which Gibbs was the head coach of.
Gibbs best coach ever in my opinion. Coming from an 80’s and 90’s Redskins fan of course! But yeah, and he won all 3 SB’s with three different QB’s! Oddly enough also, one season was strike shortened and another saw replacement players for a short strike as well. But the ‘91 team had none of that
Washington’s guys were ridiculously great, they were great across multiple QBs! Monk, Clark, Sanders, the earlier-in-the-eighties Alvin Garrett... I’m an Eagles fan, I’ve seen more of those guys than I care to recall 😂...
Even though they weren't mentioned mostly because they didn't win anything, the Cardinals receiving corps of JT Smith, Roy Green, and Awalt/Novacek at TE were pretty formidable. And in 2008 their corps or Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin, and Steve Breaston all were 1,000 yard receivers. Had the Cards won that Super Bowl they would have definitely been on this list.
Moss & Carter are 2 of the top 5 receivers to ever play, period. You add in Jake Reed who had 7k yards in his career as the 3rd option in the passing game? Best ever.
The Posse should be higher. They won two Super Bowls and put up bug numbers with quarterbacks who aren't in the Hall of Fame. The Mark Brothers are ranked higher than them when the question was brought up would they be as good as they were without Marino...
How about the 2000-2003 Raiders Jerry Rice Tim Brown Joey Porter Not the best stat wise together but in terms of name value it’s pretty good. It also wasn’t too long of a stint.
Interesting that even with the NFL being a quarterback-driven league with the rules favoring passing the record for passing yards in a game was set in 1951 (554 yards)! Those 1950s Rams were almost 30 years ahead of Air Coryell! Amazing but true!
Great choice for #1. Remember, this is the same team that had Lance Alworth and Gary Garrison in the late 60s. Air Coryell also had great depth at tight end. They drafted a TE named Sievers who made the all-rookie team and they had another guy named Holohan who probably had the best hands of the three. I sometimes wonder how good a career JJ would have had if he stayed in San Diego instead of becoming the number two guy in Green Bay to Lofty.
The Chargers had close to 2000 yards receiving from the TE position alone in 83 and 84 -and in 84 Winslow missed half the season because his knee was blown out. Don Coryell was the master of the tight end position in San Diego and in St Louis with J.V. Cain and Jackie Smith.
Really no ‘90s bills? James Lofton HOF, Andre Reed HOF, Don Beebe, Thurman Thomas HOF out of the back field plus Pete Metzelaars and Keith McKeller at TE and Steve Tasker filling in whenever you need him
Giants the defensive coordinator Bill Bellichet had to have his d-linemen swat the ball around between plays in the sb to slow them down and get more breathing time.
So let me get this straight, you got two guys for the 70's Raiders who are already IN the HOF, and a third who will someday get there....yeah that corps is WAY TOO LOW!!!!
Stallworth & Swann deserve to be on ANY list of great WRs, but Phil was correct, Pittsburgh had no threat at TE . It was the one place they didn’t have any superstars 😝, and they didn’t need one there. It was such a different time... EDIT: Although I’m not sure I understand why The Marx Bros are on here (#7) and not Swann and Stallworth 🤷♂️. They WERE the Steelers rec corps for all four of those Supes!! EDIT 2: OK, my bad, I hadn’t thought they were gonna spring Nat Moore on me 😝
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic They were pretty awesome, no argument there, and I don’t begrudge anyone considering them the greatest rec corps ever, but I think I’d just as soon have Biletnikoff/Branch/Casper.
Jerry Smith's omittion from the Hall of Fame alone deligitimizes the whole place - he was one of the first modern TEs and put up incredible numbers. It's only bigotry that's keeping him out.
It is a travesty that Jerry Smith is not in the pro football hall of fame he held the record for most career touchdowns for tight end for years. Same goes for Cliff Branch if stallworth and swan are I n the branch should get in with bilenkoff and casper
The 1994 patriots receiver group was underrated. They caught 405 passes. 5 guys with 52 or more catches. Drew bledsoe led the nfl in passing yards thanks to that corp
In my opinion, ain't nobody coming close to tht 98' Vikings Receiver core besides maybe suma them colts teams. Randy Moss, Chris Carter plus Jake Reed. And imma Broncos fan. Summa them Colts teams tho with Edge outta the backfield, Marvin, Reggie and Dallas Clark, yeah solid receiving core. In my opinion tho the 98' Vikings Receiving core was tough to beat. As a ride or die Broncos fan, I don't know if we beat em if they get to the Super Bowl tht year especially with Robert Smith complimenting tht passing game for them Vikes
I think you make a lot of great points. However in my opinion, and I’m not at all trying to be disrespectful, the best receiving core is the Washington Redskins of the late 80’s and early 90’s with Art Monk, Gary Clark, and Ricky Sanders. They not only were the first trio of wide receivers to each have 1,000 yards in a season, but unlike the 98 Vikings or the Colts of the 2000’s the Posse won multiple championships together. I think that accounts for something.
@Harry Engel Yeah, that's their official nickname. I remember hearing The Rock specifically refer to them as such during Kansas City's Super Bowl intros, and the name was meant to play on the insane speed of those three receivers (Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins, & Mecole Hardman)
Cincinnati had a decent pass catching group led by Cris Collinsworth,Pat McNally,Eddie Brown,Issac Curtis.Most ppl underestimated the deep speed of Collinsworth simply because of the obvious reasons SKIN COLORS.If I was his college coach I would have put him on the track team he was a CLASS A high school sprint champion(100YD).
Everyone talks about AIR CORYELL but he got his start in St.Louis with The Cardinals with QB Jim Hart and ppl like Terry Metcalf,Mel Gray then they continued in the '80s with Neil Lomax and Roy Green,Troy Johnson both of whom were deep threats.
Tampa had the talent as well with Kevin House,Jimmie Giles among the ppl paid to catch those MORTAR ROUNDS from Doug Williams in his early years.Giles said he felt Williams did not throw hard enough in his opinion.
2010 Pittsburgh Steelers had Antonio Brown, Antwaan Randle El, Emmanuel Sanders, Mike Wallace and Hines Ward on it's roster. They all were great receivers.
@@howardcosell2022 Respectfully disagree because the vastly underrated Wesley Walker & Al Toon were each SIGNIFICANTLY greater than George Sauer while being a notch or two below Hall of Famer Don Maynard. As for Pete Lammons & Mickey Shuler they’re basically the same guy decent but nothing to write home about.
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic Wesley was terrific and Toon had his moments, but Sauer was as productive as any Jet during his stint. Compare him to the Rob Moore's or Wayne Chrebet's
Rice did have some eyes on him coming out of college, but the knock against him was his college & competition. Both he & Taylor played at pretty small schools, but I agree that Rice was still more of a known commodity than Taylor was coming out of their respective drafts..
@@gluserty Yes Rice put MADDEN TYPE NUMBERS that was the only thing that separated them again if Taylor had his reputation he would have been a 1st round pick.Taylor was a high school sprint champion I saw him in action.Rice was said to have the attention of a few SEC BASED schools but they didn't follow thru.Taylor was a 10.5/21.5 speed demon in the prep ranks.Taylor was a legit 4.40 guy in his playing days.
@@dwightlove3704 It turned out Rice could put up wild numbers in either college or the pros, and I agree that Taylor had the skillset to be a #1 receiver on practically any other team (durability later became a concern for him though). However, I liked what Rice & Taylor did as a duo, and credit the 49ers for that draft steal.
@@dwightlove3704 Well, I suppose, and Bill Walsh tuning in to see college scores in his hotel room and seeing highlights of Jerry Rice, let's not discount that:-). But yeah, having a coach early on that has the kind of offense develops the player is extremely important.
MARK CLAYTON is AND should be a HALL OF FAMER. His #s were hurt playing with guys like Duper, Moore, and many others. Held a Rx record that lasted 20+ yrs and was undersized but survived making a living over the Middle, when careers ended weekly doing that!!!! If Swann is HOF, Mark Clayton deserves his Bust!!!!!
Dude I feel so bad for Jerry Smith, I’m sorry but anyone else who held a record for a quarter of a century would be in the Hall of Fame! There is no logical reason to keep this guy out of the Hall of Fame.
How can you not mention Reed, Lofton or Thomas and the K Gun? Run 6 plays for 83 yds 1:02 out the gate in 1989 and never looked back. Took them to 4 Super Bowls.
The Posse probably should have been higher...first trio to each get 1000 yards in a season and two super bowls playing together on a run-first team with multiple different quarterbacks
As a Cowboys fan I believe that they should be number one. If you look at the 5 trio of teammates in NFL history that each had 1,000 receiving yards in a season, 3 had hall of fame QBs (the 1980 Chargers with Dan Fouts, the 2004 Colts with Peyton Manning, and the 2008 Cardinals with Kurt Warner). Then when you look at the 95 Falcons who also did it, Jeff George is by no means a hall of famer but you could make the argument that talent wise he was better than Doug Williams and Mark Rypien who were the 2 starting QB’s for the Redskins when Monk, Clark, and Sanders each had 1,000 yards in 1989.
If this list were be done today... Chiefs receiving corps of Hill, Hardman, and Kelce would be near the top.. you could make a argument of Tom Bradys Bucs receiving corps for SB55 Evans, Brown, Gronkowski, Co. You could also do Burrows WRs from this season as well.
The run and shoot June Jones Falcons had the only team in history with a 4,000 yard passer, a 1,000 yard rusher, and 3 WRs with 1;000 receiving yards each. Jeff George QB Craig Hayward RB Mathis, Emanuel, Metcalf at receiver.
Jack Tanner The current crop of Bucs WRs led by Mike Evans would bring a obvious smile to your face and there's a guy on their roster that has the physical ability to be one of the top deep threats in the NFL say hello to JUSTIN WATSON he is 6'2 220 with blazing speed 4.35 he is from The University of Penn but he is underutilized in my opinion.
How in the hell can you not have Swann and Stallworth on this list??? They came in the same year and lasted a decade. 4 Super Bowls…1 SB MVP…and Stallworth should have been the MVP in SB14. Stallworth still holds the league record for most Post Season games in a row with a TD catch. 8 straight games and 10 TD’s. Swann’s SB 10 performance will never be matched. 2 of his catches, are listed in the Top 10 catches in NFL History. This list is ok at best. Air Coryell, and The Marx Bros should be 1-2. The league was a running league then.
Totally agree about Steelers..Stallworth also had 3 rec for 150 and 2 tds vs Dallas in sb 13..IN THE 1ST HALF...cramps sidelined him in the 2nd half or he may have had so many yds and tds he would win mvp ..also agree he should have been mvp of sb 14
@@WilliamRyan-x2s Yeah, i know you want corners and safeties as a group. I don't think NFL Films made a video like that (thats where these videos are from)
Good trivia question Who was the first Duo of wide receivers to go for over a thousand yards in the same season? Hint two teams accomplished in the same year so you're looking for four wide receivers two on each team 1979 Patriots Stanley Morgan and Harold Jackson Chargers Charlie Joyner and John Jefferson Just one year coincidentally after the mel blunt rule was issued
I love Julian Edelman story and Julian's probably the second best postseason wide receiver ever Anyway apparently Edelman grew up and actually took Jerry Rice's daughter 2 prom
Anybody who wants to tell us that the late 90s early 2000 Vikings should be number 1 has to explain why they always fell short in the postseason. It's not just some kicker missing the field goal. they did not step up in the big games. In the 2000 NFC championship game Randy Moss quit trying after just one quarter.
Lynn Swann. John Stallworth. Franco. Rocky. It's ridiculous that those 4 guys didn't make the list. Ridiculous. And... I HATE the Steelers, and hope they never win another game. But these guys won 4 SBs in 6 years. Bradshaw was not an accurate passer - 53.5% over those 6 seasons. They don't win any of those SBs without Lynn Swann's amazing catches in each one of those title games. Stallworth is a HOFer, as well. Possibly the greatest WR combo ever. Ever heard of the "Immaculate reception"? That was Franco Harris. Bleier made an incredible TD catch in SB 8 against the Cowboys that sparked their offense. They didn't throw to their TE much, but Bennie Cunningham (14.3 YPR, 20 TDs) and Randy Grossman were good blockers and made their share of clutch catches. THREE Hall of Famers, FOUR SB wins, and good supporting guys. In an era when passing was just beginning to be a primary source of offense - with an erratic QB. I'll take these guys over just about any combo that ever played. Leaving them out of the Top Ten is just silly. To have the Chargers group at the top, when they NEVER won a damn thing? As Randy Moss would say, "c'mon man!" Or Hem Edwards, "YOU PLAY. TO WIN. THE GAME." Those receivers were shut down in almost every playoff game they ever competed in. Look at the 1979 Oilers/Chargers playoff game. Pastorini was hurt. Earl Campbell was out, too. IN SAN DIEGO... Oilers 17, Chokers 14. Horrible list. Where's Irvin, Harper, Novacek, Martin, and Emmitt and Moose? THREE SBs in 4 years. The Packers had a great receiving corps in the 1960's, as well. This video gives too much emphasis on stats from the modern era. Hell, the Cowboys in 1971 had Lance Alworth, Bob Hayes and Mike Ditka - THREE HOF inductees. They won the SB 24-3 with Alworth and Ditka catching TD passes. How about Drew Pearson, Tony Hill, Butch Johnson and Billy Joe Dupree in the late 1970's early '80s? Worst. List. Ever. 😝
I have a very good redskins fan as a best friend... so I've been aware of this long ago.. and I agree.. a a quasi redskins fan for my friend... good for him 👏 👍
No matter how many times I watch these old top 10 shows, I always end up rewatching them again every couple of years.
Facts!
I watched them all when they aired as an older teen, usually realize it about halfway through...then keep watching. I'm just surprised UA-cam never takes them down.
Same here!! These are timeless football artifacts!!
Same.
Same
1995 Detroit Lions: Herman Moore - 126 receptions - 1686 YDs Brett Perriman - 108 receptions - 1488 YDs. Set the record for most receptions by a duo, while Barry Sanders gets almost 1900 all purpose yards and you have freaking Scott Mitchell throwing it to you.
Don't forget Johnie Morton who Had 44 catches and 8tds
Missing the longevity though. But that was impressive with Mitchell as QB.
@Fries He made a mistake leaving MOTOWN
Number one, never was real number one.
Don't the numbers shows that Mitchell had a *legitimately* great year in 95? Not just a fluke-y sort of "mediocre-to-average in real life, but efficient enough to be favored by some metrics" kind of deal but a legitimately strong year?
I understand he was figured out/trash fairly shortly there after, but he always seems to be a little unfairly maligned even during his (admittedly short lived) success
It's still amazing the numbers Marino put up in 1984. 5,084 Yards, 48 TD's. Those would be elite numbers today. He did that in 1984 when 3,500 and 25 TD's were MVP caliber numbers. And looking at those highlight, that receiving core and Marino would do well today.
in todays weak no defense era of football, Marino would damn near throw for 10,000 yards in a season..
During that span in the 80s did they EVER have a HalfBack that was anything other than Average?
I was young but I don't think I could name you a single RB they had during that ERA.
@Sam Overstreet was the potential home run threat they had in the backfield he had 4.36 jets with 220 lbs.
@Fries David Overstreet was my guy during those Marino yrs.
@Sam Too bad Marino never met up with DA BEARS in the '85 Super Bowl he would have his SB RING!!!!!!
Coming back to know that Cliff Branch is finally in the HoF and deservingly so..I’m not a raiders fan, but I like watching all these videos and man was a burner 💨💨💨💨
The Posse should be higher on this list! Led to multiple Super Bowl wins. Monk had almost 13000 yards with 68 TDs. Clark had almost 11000 yards with 65 TDs and Sanders had 6500 yards with 37 TDs. Monk got 3 SB and Clark and Sanders got 2. All with Washington. First receiving core to have 3 WR all go over 1000 yards in a single season
Can you imagine Marino throwing to those three guys? They never had a truly elite QB throwing to them.
I have to agree because they were the original Tripple Threat, everyone else had good receivers and tight ends, but the Posse were the 1ST 3 recieving group that literally gave defensive coaches nightmares
I agree. The Posse was great.
@@royw-g3120 Even if the Posse didn’t have an elite QB by their side, they should still be moved up to #1 on this list for all of those accolades alone. They were such a formidable trio.
@@BigLouJo_XVI Agreed plus they all had different skill sets that complemented each other Monk was the chain mover one season he had about 35 catches on third down -all but one went for a first down. Sanders was a burner, Clark a do everything 5’9” hard case who was happy going across the middle. I was a big fan of Steve Smith as he was kind of a clone of Clark.
Love Villapiano and Atkinson’s support and loyalty to their teammates
it's endearing how biased they are for their Raiders. love it
And rightfully so!
My personal Top 5:
1. 80's 49ers
2. Greatest Show on Turf
3. 90's Vikings
4. Air Coryell
5. 70's Raiders
The Posse???
Reggie Wayne & Torry Holt , NEED to be in the HOF ! It's BEEN long enough , now .
1:51 The Indianapolis Colts of the 2000s.
5:49 The Minnesota Vikings of the Late 1990s.
9:29 The Washington Posse.
13:58 The Marks Brothers.
17:30 Ken Stabler and the slithery Snakey offense.
21:58 The first-ever decade at RFK Stadium.
25:22 The West Coast Offense!
30:19 The Los Angeles Rams of the 1950s.
35:02 The Greatest Show on Turf!
40:25 Air Coryell.
Thanks!
The Colts should be ranked higher!
If you're talking split end, flanker, and tight end, it's hard to argue with the Raiders. Biletnikoff and Casper are in the HOF and Branch will be.
Branch should have been in the class of ('01)
It’s sad he couldn’t give his own acceptance speech
I think the earlier Raiders trio of Wells, Biletnikoff and Chester were slightly better.
Branch is in now and it ends the debate: Raiders trio best ever. All 3 HOFers.
The Colts of the late 50s/early 60s also had three HOF members: Lenny Moore, John Mackey, Raymond Berry. They didn't even make the list.
Early 2010s Packers were stacked at WR. Greg Jennings, Jordy Nelson, Randall Cobb, Donald Driver, James Jones and Jermicheal Finley. A great unit. Should have won more Super Bowls.
@Harry Engel I always blame Dom Capers for the defensive issues. Lack of talent isn’t it. By the 12 and 13, they had Sam Shields (Pro Bowler) Tramon Williams (Pro Bowler) Charles Woodson (Future Hofer, DPOY, and multiple time All Pro) Micah Hyde (Pro Bowler and All Pro) and Casey Hayward (Pro Bowler.
And yet the secondary was the constant issue. There was so much talent and yet they had issues. It had to be the defensive scheme. They needed to fire Capers after both of those Kaepernick losses in 12 and 13.
do u know how many drops we had in the sb? jordy 4, jones 3.... only donald and greg were reliable
Overrated AF only Jordy Nelson was worth mentioning.
Nat Moore was a solid consistent WR for the Dolphins in the late 70s and early 80s. He played with Bob Greise , David Woodley and Don Strock through the years. By the time Dan Marino and Duper and Clayton came in he was the solid veteran who brought some leadership to the team and still put up decent numbers
Carter and Moss had FOUR different starting QBs in 3 seasons (Johnson, Cunningham, George, Culpepper) and made them all look like MVPs...putting them way down at number 9 is just hate against the Vikings, plain and simple.
Someone’s a die-hard Vikings fan. Oh yeah, 0-4, wide left, and Gary Anderson just in case you forgot. Have a great day now.
1998 Moss first team all pro
1999 Carter first team all pro
2000 Moss first team all pro
3 different qbs each year
Both with 130+ career TDs
Both in the hall of fame
The narrator of this video had it right "Moss led group"!!!!!
@@Yono84 Don't forget Jake Reed
Everyone talks about what Moss did against the Cowboys but nobody should forget his debut vs.The Packers on Monday Night Football.
Lol at the dude who said Marvin Harrison is above Jerry Rice. 😂😂
I laughed at that as well. Perhaps that man was drunk during the interview.
No one is above Rice and no one ever will. Greatest Football Player of All Time..
Yea that was an insane take.
As a Washington hater, you had to respect the Posse, the Hogs and Joe Gibbs.
How the F they ended up at Number 8 ? WTF?
@@w41duvernay
It's a popularity list. Not to mention that the Eras are way different compared to the NFL of today. Plus in those days players actually had to earn there contracts. I don't give a damn what Era, Jerry Rice is the best receiver PERIOD. And I hated the 49ers too. Again, you still have to recognize greatness.
People who say the Marks brothers did it on the back of Marino, never had to catch a bullet thrown by Dan himself.
@Fries Yes they were arguably the no.2 WR duo of the '80s
They were a big reason for that 1984 season!
Mark Clayton for HOF!!2024
the Stickum controversy was so trivial. There were no rules against it and most receivers today are using gloves which are more effective than Stickum ever was
Lol let them use stickum. Back then, your life was legitimately in danger if you went across the middle as a receiver. They could jump in a tub of it for all I care. The old game was extremely violent. Todays game, they hardly ever get lit up like they used to.
Gloves are not more effective then stickum tf u talking about lmfaoooooooo u saw Lester Hayes? He didn’t drop shit with that stuff foh never seen a drop with stickum on
But it still nullifies his legacy and career because the stick’um was responsible for Rice’s route running, separation, yards after catch, football IQ (film study), breaking tackles, longevity, and consistency. Without it, he wouldn’t have been able to do any of those things! LoL. Don’t worry, B-Mag: Nobody takes these people seriously. Your point quickly and concisely put that madness to rest 100%. But you used Logic to prove your point, and they’re not logical individuals.
@@topnotchtajmahal7216 The gloves in today’s game??? You flat out don’t know what you’re talking about.
How long do you think stickum stayed sticky??? Two plays’ worth of sweat or touching the grass at all, and the dirt decreased the adhesive strength. The gloves today get even stickier when they’re wet. In fact, magnetic gloves are a real thing.
@@topnotchtajmahal7216
Magnetic gloves. Welcome to reality
The Niners had help from a man named ARCHIE COOLEY aka THE GUNSLINGER he was the coach of Jerry Rice in college at Mississippi Valley St.Rice said that what he did in his early yrs in San Francisco he did while in college.Once again the SWAC having a strong influence on the NFL.
I think the 1980's/90's 49ers and 1999-2001 Rams had the largest number of overall threats in the passing game--49ers: Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Brent Jones, Roger Craig, & Tom Rathman. Rams: Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt, Marshall Faulk, Az-Zahir Hakim, and Ricky Proehl. That's a lot of guys on the field to try to stop. The "Air Coryell" Chargers were deep in receiving as well and I think are a good choice at #1, constantly bringing in new pieces throughout the 1980's (Eric Sievers, Pete Holohan, Lionel James, James Brooks for awhile...) which went along with the core of Charlie Joiner, Wes Chandler (before him John Jefferson), and Kellen Winslow. All these receiving corps on this list are strong though.
tough. id get the greatest show on turf at 1. the big difference is the marshall plan.
80's Niners had TE Dwight Clark as an option as well.
2011 Packers & 2013 Broncos need to be added to this list.
If the Air Coryell Chargers just had a decent D and Chuck Muncie didn’t have a coke problem, 2-4 SB wins would be theirs
The posse is No. 1 in my opinion 💯had a perfect trio of receiving
💯 agree
Ricky sanders and Gary Clark should both be in the hall of fame
No one will ever top what they did in the second quarter of the Super Bowl in 1988. They had over 300 yards of offense in that one quarter, most of that done through the air to Sanders and Clark. Then you toss in Hall Of Famer Art Monk and that’s a hell of a receiving crew. Although, Miami’s trio under Marino were the scariest set of receivers I can remember.
but this isn't about just a trio of receivers.. it's about the entire receiving corps.
and the best corps BY FAR top to bottom is the 80's 49ers.
Two WR's including the best to Ever play the game, a RB, a FB, and a TE. And each of them were the very best at their position at that time.
That is easily the best receiving CORPS of all time.
@@JL-ho1tc the posse is the best receiving corps of all time hands down 💯
No mention that joe gibbs was the offensive coordinator of the air coryell offense in 79 and 80 before going on to coach the posse in Washington.
Yeah that’s a great point. If you think about it, there have been 5 trios of teammates that have each recorded at least 1,000 receiving yards in a season, and the first 2 were the 1980 Chargers which like you said Gibbs was the offensive coordinator of, and the 89 Redskins which Gibbs was the head coach of.
Gibbs best coach ever in my opinion. Coming from an 80’s and 90’s Redskins fan of course! But yeah, and he won all 3 SB’s with three different QB’s! Oddly enough also, one season was strike shortened and another saw replacement players for a short strike as well. But the ‘91 team had none of that
Washington’s guys were ridiculously great, they were great across multiple QBs! Monk, Clark, Sanders, the earlier-in-the-eighties Alvin Garrett... I’m an Eagles fan, I’ve seen more of those guys than I care to recall 😂...
@Harry Engel yes, absolutely!
Don’t forget “Downtown” Charlie Brown just prior to Clark and Sanders joining.
@mattbailey7049 Nice
Good shit. I haven't seen this one in a while
Even though they weren't mentioned mostly because they didn't win anything, the Cardinals receiving corps of JT Smith, Roy Green, and Awalt/Novacek at TE were pretty formidable. And in 2008 their corps or Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin, and Steve Breaston all were 1,000 yard receivers. Had the Cards won that Super Bowl they would have definitely been on this list.
Prior to watching I would have thought Warner would have had both his squads on there.
Mark Duper was Cliff Branch with a extra 30 lbs
Now that Branch finally getting his flowers we can say all 3 of the Raiders corpse are in the Hall of Fame.
NFL 5 year era from 88-93 was my favorite hands down . The players the announcers just everything
Moss & Carter are 2 of the top 5 receivers to ever play, period. You add in Jake Reed who had 7k yards in his career as the 3rd option in the passing game? Best ever.
Wide outs!!!!!!!!!!! Love this position
The Posse should be higher. They won two Super Bowls and put up bug numbers with quarterbacks who aren't in the Hall of Fame. The Mark Brothers are ranked higher than them when the question was brought up would they be as good as they were without Marino...
How about the 2000-2003 Raiders
Jerry Rice
Tim Brown
Joey Porter
Not the best stat wise together but in terms of name value it’s pretty good. It also wasn’t too long of a stint.
Interesting that even with the NFL being a quarterback-driven league with the rules favoring passing the record for passing yards in a game was set in 1951 (554 yards)! Those 1950s Rams were almost 30 years ahead of Air Coryell! Amazing but true!
Great choice for #1. Remember, this is the same team that had Lance Alworth and Gary Garrison in the late 60s. Air Coryell also had great depth at tight end. They drafted a TE named Sievers who made the all-rookie team and they had another guy named Holohan who probably had the best hands of the three. I sometimes wonder how good a career JJ would have had if he stayed in San Diego instead of becoming the number two guy in Green Bay to Lofty.
The Chargers had close to 2000 yards receiving from the TE position alone in 83 and 84 -and in 84 Winslow missed half the season because his knee was blown out. Don Coryell was the master of the tight end position in San Diego and in St Louis with J.V. Cain and Jackie Smith.
Man you don’t see these anymore on NFL. Some of my favorite series of any sport.
New England shut down The '04 Colts in the AFC playoffs by being physical with them the Colts had a obvious lack of size.
That's wrong. The colts defense was horrible. Dwight Freeney, Bob Sanders, all of them was horrible.
Oh please! The Patriots got away with non-stop holding and pass interference because the game was rigged.
Chargers are worthy winners because when Jefferson left, they lost not a step with Chandler.
Really no ‘90s bills? James Lofton HOF, Andre Reed HOF, Don Beebe, Thurman Thomas HOF out of the back field plus Pete Metzelaars and Keith McKeller at TE and Steve Tasker filling in whenever you need him
Thank God somebody else said it, when Marv invented K GUN they didn't know what to do.
Giants the defensive coordinator Bill Bellichet had to have his d-linemen swat the ball around between plays in the sb to slow them down and get more breathing time.
Another classic upload thank issac Green
I love these old lists. The nerds make them and the players hate them
So let me get this straight, you got two guys for the 70's Raiders who are already IN the HOF, and a third who will someday get there....yeah that corps is WAY TOO LOW!!!!
Agreed.
Y2JProblem Yes Branch show have gotten the call for Canton in '01 along with Hayes,Swann
Doug Williams and The Posse had a ridiculous second quarter in that SB.
Stallworth & Swann deserve to be on ANY list of great WRs, but Phil was correct, Pittsburgh had no threat at TE . It was the one place they didn’t have any superstars 😝, and they didn’t need one there. It was such a different time...
EDIT: Although I’m not sure I understand why The Marx Bros are on here (#7) and not Swann and Stallworth 🤷♂️. They WERE the Steelers rec corps for all four of those Supes!!
EDIT 2: OK, my bad, I hadn’t thought they were gonna spring Nat Moore on me 😝
@Fries Franco had hands too, they just didn’t utilize his hands as much
Damn, look at Mr. Winslow absolutely level Mel Blount at 42:09
Thats old mel blount near the end of his career young mel blount that is a diferent story
And your point is that was old now blunt and how many super bowls did we win 4 and 6 years enough said
Air Coryell best ever 🏈🏆🏉
I wholeheartedly disagree with this
@@dumisatonyjohnson8145 Well you’re wrong then. “Air Coryell” wide receiver corps is #1!!!!
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic IDK if they were the best ever, but they’re definitely one of the main subjects in that conversation.
@@tuckercarlsonsmicropenis1283 They’re the best ever!!!!
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic They were pretty awesome, no argument there, and I don’t begrudge anyone considering them the greatest rec corps ever, but I think I’d just as soon have Biletnikoff/Branch/Casper.
70s Steelers need to be on this..if you saw how they played in the postseason and super bowls you would have to put them in
Air Coreal gave us Joe Gibbs, who gave us the Posse, just saying
He's also responsible for the Greatest Show On Turf: they ran Coryell's offense and employed several of his old coaches.
That Rams squad is hands down number 1. They were incredible!
Jerry Smith's omittion from the Hall of Fame alone deligitimizes the whole place - he was one of the first modern TEs and put up incredible numbers. It's only bigotry that's keeping him out.
80s-90s 49ers - A passing attack that span nearly 14 years and 5 superbowls.Narrowly missing a 6th super bowl (THREEPEAT) by a field goal
It is a travesty that Jerry Smith is not in the pro football hall of fame he held the record for most career touchdowns for tight end for years. Same goes for Cliff Branch if stallworth and swan are I n the branch should get in with bilenkoff and casper
We all know why he's not in the HOF
@@georgemcfly3482 Branch,Swann,Hayes should all have been inducted in the class of ('01)
The 1994 patriots receiver group was underrated. They caught 405 passes. 5 guys with 52 or more catches. Drew bledsoe led the nfl in passing yards thanks to that corp
In my opinion, ain't nobody coming close to tht 98' Vikings Receiver core besides maybe suma them colts teams. Randy Moss, Chris Carter plus Jake Reed. And imma Broncos fan. Summa them Colts teams tho with Edge outta the backfield, Marvin, Reggie and Dallas Clark, yeah solid receiving core. In my opinion tho the 98' Vikings Receiving core was tough to beat. As a ride or die Broncos fan, I don't know if we beat em if they get to the Super Bowl tht year especially with Robert Smith complimenting tht passing game for them Vikes
I think you make a lot of great points. However in my opinion, and I’m not at all trying to be disrespectful, the best receiving core is the Washington Redskins of the late 80’s and early 90’s with Art Monk, Gary Clark, and Ricky Sanders. They not only were the first trio of wide receivers to each have 1,000 yards in a season, but unlike the 98 Vikings or the Colts of the 2000’s the Posse won multiple championships together. I think that accounts for something.
Jake Reed was the home run threat for Minnesota before Moss came along.
What about Matt Hatchette?? A nice compliment to those 3..
@@mikkelharvell1602 Yes he was I personally think Hatchette could have started for other teams in the NFL.
@@mikkelharvell1602 Reed was their version of Terrell Owens
Do you remember that year that the Vikings won the super bowl nah me neither
To me the POSSE-ArtMon, CaryClark, RickySanders 🏆
I completely agree. Even as a Cowboys fan I have to say that’s the greatest trio of WR’s in NFL history
GSOT should be number one, it's in the name - they completely changed the game forever and the NFL was never the same.
*Legion of Zoom (2018-present with the Kansas City Chiefs) will be on here in a few years.*
@Harry Engel Yeah, that's their official nickname. I remember hearing The Rock specifically refer to them as such during Kansas City's Super Bowl intros, and the name was meant to play on the insane speed of those three receivers (Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins, & Mecole Hardman)
As a Ravens fan we have all those good and talented defensive players, but when we would play KC we were scared to death of that Receiver Corp.
Cleveland in the early '80s had a decent pass catching core they were called THE CARDIAC KIDS!!!!
@Harry Engel Reggie Langhorne,Dave Logan,Webster Slaughter, Reggie Rucker.
Cincinnati had a decent pass catching group led by Cris Collinsworth,Pat McNally,Eddie Brown,Issac Curtis.Most ppl underestimated the deep speed of Collinsworth simply because of the obvious reasons SKIN COLORS.If I was his college coach I would have put him on the track team he was a CLASS A high school sprint champion(100YD).
Everyone talks about AIR CORYELL but he got his start in St.Louis with The Cardinals with QB Jim Hart and ppl like Terry Metcalf,Mel Gray then they continued in the '80s with Neil Lomax and Roy Green,Troy Johnson both of whom were deep threats.
Tampa had the talent as well with Kevin House,Jimmie Giles among the ppl paid to catch those MORTAR ROUNDS from Doug Williams in his early years.Giles said he felt Williams did not throw hard enough in his opinion.
Yeah slaughter newsome longhorn
2010 Pittsburgh Steelers had Antonio Brown, Antwaan Randle El, Emmanuel Sanders, Mike Wallace and Hines Ward on it's roster. They all were great receivers.
Didn’t they have Santio Holmes as well? That group was elite.
@@thatblackguy-pj1hu Holmes was traded to the New York Jets in 2010.
Remember, and I hate the Steelers but you have to recognize greatness, Lynn Swann and John Stallworth. And they have 4 Championships.
played great in postseason, but outside of the postseason they were pretty much garbage. their numbers are pathetic.
They forgot the jets mid to late 80s,Al Toon,Wesley Walker and Mickey Shuler
Don Maynard, George Sauer, and Pete Lammons were better
@@howardcosell2022 Not really only Maynard was great.
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic Sauer didn't play long, but his 4 year stretch was as productive as any Jet receiver in history
@@howardcosell2022 Respectfully disagree because the vastly underrated Wesley Walker &
Al Toon were each SIGNIFICANTLY greater than George Sauer while being a notch or two below Hall of Famer Don Maynard. As for Pete Lammons & Mickey Shuler they’re basically the same guy decent but nothing to write home about.
@@nikosuavesworldofsportsmusic Wesley was terrific and Toon had his moments, but Sauer was as productive as any Jet during his stint. Compare him to the Rob Moore's or Wayne Chrebet's
If John Taylor had the reputation of Rice coming out of college he would have been a headliner he had more natural speed.
Rice did have some eyes on him coming out of college, but the knock against him was his college & competition. Both he & Taylor played at pretty small schools, but I agree that Rice was still more of a known commodity than Taylor was coming out of their respective drafts..
@@gluserty Yes Rice put MADDEN TYPE NUMBERS that was the only thing that separated them again if Taylor had his reputation he would have been a 1st round pick.Taylor was a high school sprint champion I saw him in action.Rice was said to have the attention of a few SEC BASED schools but they didn't follow thru.Taylor was a 10.5/21.5 speed demon in the prep ranks.Taylor was a legit 4.40 guy in his playing days.
@@dwightlove3704 It turned out Rice could put up wild numbers in either college or the pros, and I agree that Taylor had the skillset to be a #1 receiver on practically any other team (durability later became a concern for him though). However, I liked what Rice & Taylor did as a duo, and credit the 49ers for that draft steal.
@@gluserty The only difference that separated these two guys was ARCHIE COOLEY.
@@dwightlove3704 Well, I suppose, and Bill Walsh tuning in to see college scores in his hotel room and seeing highlights of Jerry Rice, let's not discount that:-). But yeah, having a coach early on that has the kind of offense develops the player is extremely important.
MARK CLAYTON is AND should be a HALL OF FAMER. His #s were hurt playing with guys like Duper, Moore, and many others. Held a Rx record that lasted 20+ yrs and was undersized but survived making a living over the Middle, when careers ended weekly doing that!!!!
If Swann is HOF, Mark Clayton deserves his Bust!!!!!
Exactly. This man had an 18 td season, as a 5'9" WR in a brutal era of defense
Since last season, Marvin Harrison Jr. has been hyped up to be the number one receiver to be drafted and now he will be this year.
Dude I feel so bad for Jerry Smith, I’m sorry but anyone else who held a record for a quarter of a century would be in the Hall of Fame! There is no logical reason to keep this guy out of the Hall of Fame.
2:12 Almost sounds like "What a fuckin catch!"
How can you not mention Reed, Lofton or Thomas and the K Gun? Run 6 plays for 83 yds 1:02 out the gate in 1989 and never looked back. Took them to 4 Super Bowls.
The Bills curse... Sorry man that was a great team.
Funny how stick em has been made illegal but not these modern sticky gloves....same thing
The Posse probably should have been higher...first trio to each get 1000 yards in a season and two super bowls playing together on a run-first team with multiple different quarterbacks
As a Cowboys fan I believe that they should be number one. If you look at the 5 trio of teammates in NFL history that each had 1,000 receiving yards in a season, 3 had hall of fame QBs (the 1980 Chargers with Dan Fouts, the 2004 Colts with Peyton Manning, and the 2008 Cardinals with Kurt Warner). Then when you look at the 95 Falcons who also did it, Jeff George is by no means a hall of famer but you could make the argument that talent wise he was better than Doug Williams and Mark Rypien who were the 2 starting QB’s for the Redskins when Monk, Clark, and Sanders each had 1,000 yards in 1989.
I'm not even a Cowboys fan, but Irvin/Harper/Novacek needs to be on the list.
If this list were be done today... Chiefs receiving corps of Hill, Hardman, and Kelce would be near the top.. you could make a argument of Tom Bradys Bucs receiving corps for SB55 Evans, Brown, Gronkowski, Co. You could also do Burrows WRs from this season as well.
The run and shoot June Jones Falcons had the only team in history with a 4,000 yard passer, a 1,000 yard rusher, and 3 WRs with 1;000 receiving yards each.
Jeff George QB Craig Hayward RB Mathis, Emanuel, Metcalf at receiver.
Dough Williams was amazing!! I know this clips about receiving corps.
Jack Tanner The current crop of Bucs WRs led by Mike Evans would bring a obvious smile to your face and there's a guy on their roster that has the physical ability to be one of the top deep threats in the NFL say hello to JUSTIN WATSON he is 6'2 220 with blazing speed 4.35 he is from The University of Penn but he is underutilized in my opinion.
How in the hell can you not have Swann and Stallworth on this list??? They came in the same year and lasted a decade. 4 Super Bowls…1 SB MVP…and Stallworth should have been the MVP in SB14.
Stallworth still holds the league record for most Post Season games in a row with a TD catch. 8 straight games and 10 TD’s. Swann’s SB 10 performance will never be matched.
2 of his catches, are listed in the Top 10 catches in NFL History.
This list is ok at best.
Air Coryell, and The Marx Bros should be 1-2. The league was a running league then.
Totally agree about Steelers..Stallworth also had 3 rec for 150 and 2 tds vs Dallas in sb 13..IN THE 1ST HALF...cramps sidelined him in the 2nd half or he may have had so many yds and tds he would win mvp ..also agree he should have been mvp of sb 14
This was a good video even tho im late but since im a fan of defense you should make a video of the top 10 Cornerback Safety Core of all time
Here's safeties: ua-cam.com/video/OlGGB_-Wf8U/v-deo.htmlsi=2uV50Pjoq4Weg65g
@@bossfan49 not what I was requesting
@@WilliamRyan-x2s Yeah, i know you want corners and safeties as a group. I don't think NFL Films made a video like that (thats where these videos are from)
Crazy that the run and shoot oilers just got a mention and weren’t at least top 7-8
they top 3 to me
Harrison’s Colts and Moss’s Vikes are so good I’m really curious to see the rest of this list….
Love those receivers, they're an awesome pass catching 😀 corps! 🏈
Good trivia question
Who was the first Duo of wide receivers to go for over a thousand yards in the same season?
Hint two teams accomplished in the same year so you're looking for four wide receivers two on each team
1979
Patriots Stanley Morgan and Harold Jackson
Chargers Charlie Joyner and John Jefferson
Just one year coincidentally after the mel blunt rule was issued
Earnest Givens, Curtis Duncan, Drew Hill and Heyward Jeffries should be in this list!
They should be top 3 honestly
Four of the teams on this list used Don Coryell's offense: Air Coryell, The Posse, Greatest Show on Turf, Colts.
They got this list right #1 was the best air game I have ever seen
I love Julian Edelman story and Julian's probably the second best postseason wide receiver ever
Anyway apparently Edelman grew up and actually took Jerry Rice's daughter 2 prom
Isaac, Torry, Ernie, Az and Marshall should be on there before watching
Post more I live for this shit
Raiders should be #1. 3 hall of famers after branch gets in soon
Cliff Branch, Fred Biletnikoff, and Dave Casper! All three are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. That's got to account for something?
This needs an update for the 2022 Eagles. BROWN, WATKINS, GODDERT MODE, ET AL
Atlanta in the '90s had a decent tandem Andre Rison&Michael Haynes
Raiders #1. Casper , Biletnikoff, Branch. 50's Rams #2.
Anybody who wants to tell us that the late 90s early 2000 Vikings should be number 1 has to explain why they always fell short in the postseason. It's not just some kicker missing the field goal. they did not step up in the big games. In the 2000 NFC championship game Randy Moss quit trying after just one quarter.
How was Issac Bruce not a first ballot HOF.!? 1k receptions, 15k yards, n 90 td's.
Baddest trio ive ever seen JJ Jefferson Joiner winslow. Spectacular offense
Lynn Swann. John Stallworth. Franco. Rocky.
It's ridiculous that those 4 guys didn't make the list. Ridiculous.
And... I HATE the Steelers, and hope they never win another game.
But these guys won 4 SBs in 6 years. Bradshaw was not an accurate passer - 53.5% over those 6 seasons. They don't win any of those SBs without Lynn Swann's amazing catches in each one of those title games. Stallworth is a HOFer, as well. Possibly the greatest WR combo ever.
Ever heard of the "Immaculate reception"? That was Franco Harris.
Bleier made an incredible TD catch in SB 8 against the Cowboys that sparked their offense.
They didn't throw to their TE much, but Bennie Cunningham (14.3 YPR, 20 TDs) and Randy Grossman were good blockers and made their share of clutch catches.
THREE Hall of Famers, FOUR SB wins, and good supporting guys. In an era when passing was just beginning to be a primary source of offense - with an erratic QB.
I'll take these guys over just about any combo that ever played. Leaving them out of the Top Ten is just silly.
To have the Chargers group at the top, when they NEVER won a damn thing? As Randy Moss would say, "c'mon man!" Or Hem Edwards, "YOU PLAY. TO WIN. THE GAME." Those receivers were shut down in almost every playoff game they ever competed in. Look at the 1979 Oilers/Chargers playoff game. Pastorini was hurt. Earl Campbell was out, too. IN SAN DIEGO... Oilers 17, Chokers 14.
Horrible list.
Where's Irvin, Harper, Novacek, Martin, and Emmitt and Moose? THREE SBs in 4 years. The Packers had a great receiving corps in the 1960's, as well. This video gives too much emphasis on stats from the modern era. Hell, the Cowboys in 1971 had Lance Alworth, Bob Hayes and Mike Ditka - THREE HOF inductees. They won the SB 24-3 with Alworth and Ditka catching TD passes. How about Drew Pearson, Tony Hill, Butch Johnson and Billy Joe Dupree in the late 1970's early '80s?
Worst. List. Ever.
😝
36:31 788 yards and 6 touchdowns is spectacular? No, 1,600+ yards and 6 touchdowns the next year is impressive
Aa a 3rd option, that is impressive..and thats what Torry Holt was as a rookie.
@@aaronjackson9385 Big 3 in 1999: Averaged 72 catches, 1,000 yards, and 8 touchdowns
Big 3 in 2000: Averaged 83 catches, 1,312 yards, and 8 touchdowns
@@chuckyjamesamartin1968 didnt they include that entire era on the list?
@@aaronjackson9385 If they did, I wasn't paying attention. Also, I can't remember anything from this video
@@chuckyjamesamartin1968 i knew that 2000 was more productive. They.had the most yarsa gained ever plus they had an atrocious defense.
I have a very good redskins fan as a best friend... so I've been aware of this long ago.. and I agree.. a a quasi redskins fan for my friend... good for him 👏 👍
My boi Isaac always comes through
Warfield, Collins and Morin
Slaughter, Langhorne and Newsome