When Namath won the Superbowl little he knew the impact the game has today. It was the gift that keeps giving. He was one of the early pioneers. Well, deserved!
My eyes tear up everytime i see this. The poise. The persona. The characters. The Stadium. These are my Jets. Best game ever. “I got a long route if you need it” “Winning. Nothing else matters to me! WINNING. I catch one or ten. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS FLY HIGH DON MAYNARD. REST IN HARMONY #13 🕊 Forever a Legend!!!!!!!
Besides being a great receiver, Don Maynard is surely one of the funniest guys to ever play the game. One classic concerns his difficult negotiations with Weeb Ewbank over a salary increase. The punch line is when Ewbank tells Maynard he will give him a very small increase, but insists Don not tell any of the other players. Maynard replies, "Don't worry coach, I'm as embarrassed about the amount as you are".
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
From a historical standpoint, Super Bowl III was the more celebrated game, but as far as a game - down for down, quarter for quarter, the weather, etc... This was a better game. Would love to see this game again in it's entirety, as it's been nearly 50 years ! Love this old AFL footage !
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
100% agree. Today's NFL is too political and boring to watch. Only watch college football... which still maintains the thrill of the game and respect all players give to each other.
One others thing The Mad Bomber has left us watch towards the end where he and Lamonica are standing face to face and Lamonica gives him a Pat on the helmet! Just oozes respect RIP #3!
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
At a time when the physical play on the field was at times down right nasty this game, the weather, in New York no less proved that Joe Willy should be named among the greatest QBs of all time.
There is not enough mentioned about the incredible toughness of Joe Namath! Played injured, and what about that tackle! I remember seeing a clip where he handed the ball off in a reverse and then FLATTENED a defensive end thus springing the running back free for a substantial gain! I liked how they commented how the AFL Championship was tougher then the Super Bowl!
Right on, I JUST noticed after ALL of these years,, I mean, I know how tough a competitor and guy Joe was/IS, but man, the dislocated fingers, extra hard hits in FRIGID conditions against the BIG BAD Raiders, and throwing that AWESOME block, WOW, just watch today's game (For how long???), where the kickers and quarterbacks feebly/embarrassingly run along and then JUMP/BAIL-OUT to safety, not attempting to or even make it LOOK like they are TRYING to stop a ball carrier, and then seeing Broadway Joe lowering the BOOM on that guy!!!!!!!!
Namath to Maynard.....Namath to Sauer.....Namath hands off to Snell.....Deadly offense of The New York Jets.....Shea Stadium was one of the best sports venues.....to be in the crowd for The Jets was nothing short of spectacular.....
I watch this vid at least once a week during the season...gives me goose bumps every time. Namath was one tough s.o.b. I was 10 yrs old in December, 1968 and a Raiders fan, but soon became a Namath fan after this game.
Not really a fan of the Jets or Raiders, but just wanted to say that football back then was real football. A catch was a catch, a fumble was a fumble, you didn't have all these technical bs rules to tell you which was which. QB's took there beatings like men, they didn't cry about it like QB's of today, hence look at the beating Namath took in that game and the Jets still won.
Namath was a GREAT quarterback! The thing that impressed me most about this footage, was the tackle Joe Willie put on George Atkinson after he intercepted Namath! NO QUARTERBACK in today's NFL would have have stuck his nose in to make a tackle like that! I was a QB and Joe Willie was the player I tailored my game after!
@@michaelleroy9281 Actually, Stabler was drafted in 1968 in the second round. His first training camp with the Raiders was not good. He did not make the active roster, and was on the practice squad. In 1969, he was a mess, and almost quit football. He came back in 1970. I believe 1970 is listed as his rookie year, when in reality it was not. He had rough start. The rest is history.
The great Don Maynard is so underrated at WR! ( 11,000+ yds and 88 TD's in his career!!) He was clutch!! HOF! * Namath has that great smile to this day! The guy had a life like Elvis!
My father FRANK NANIA was a barber - in Flushing , New York - by the intersection of Sanford avenue and Main Street - Where you could see just by walking over a little bit in the distance SHEA STADIUM - And one of his customers was New York Jets middle linebacker # 51 - RALPH BAKER who was that season - also watch HIM in the SUPER BOWL 3 on January 12 1969 - game too - see him recover the ball - a couple of times at key moments - RALPH BAKER used to bring in these sneaker /shoes to my father as gifts - a few times too - for ME when I was a teenager - 1969 -1970 - white sneakers with black striped designs on them - they looked like football type shoes without the cleats - yes - I remember it well , Joe Nania
i love watching these old clips from the sixties and seventies, i was lucky to start watching football from the late sixties onward....thank you for the great upload..
a cannon right arm....TOUGH....desire....A REBEL....will to win......QUICKEST RELEASE IN FOOTBALL....the ONLY thing that held him back was his knees...but he STLL CHANGED THE GAME FOREVER!!!
I was at this Sunday afternoon on December 29 1968 AFL Championship game at Shea Stadium in Flushing , New York with my cousin Carl Di Tomasso and our friend Pete Donofrio - Yes we all 3 went and as planned jumped over the fence in the area side that faced the number 7 train because it was never really guarded by security - We also made it down to the sidelines and the ushers did not seem to mind these 3 teenage boys who did not have tickets that wanted to get a closer look at the game - NEW YORK JETS 27 - OAKLAND RAIDERS 23 !
Amazing great memories…and what a game to be at, we sat and the watched the entire game on a 20” black and white set, forever Joe and the world champion Jets.
Funny, I always wanted to know where good 'Ole Pete was that day. We wanted to play Monster Tag and needed another player. He lived two doors down from us....The Dunn's. His mother was so sweet and let us kids hop over the walls from house to house on good old 150th Street.
no one played more games at qb in tough conditions then namath. that wind was consistently tough. that should always be remembered when you hear the people talking about his poor stats.
God bless all those players. Joe Namath Don Maynard George Saur... all of those guys were fantastic. The American Football League revolutionized the game! Before the merger with the NFL to be able to watch two games every single week on NBC was a treat! It was a virtual lock that the morning game from the West Coast that is would include Namath and the Jets. Then the afternoon game would always have either the Chiefs the Raiders or the Chargers. No matter what Sundays were full of excitement because of the AFL!
As a lifelong fan from the mid 60's, I have to say that the NFL sharing these videos is GREAT for the game in numerous ways. I think you (NFL Films & NFL) spending EXTRA effort in sharing these videos (the whole timeline and genres) will pay off in a broader fan base that will come to appreciate that even though nothing is 'perfect', that does not mean it can't be a hell of a lot of fun along the way. On a side note: Thank you (NFL) also for your growing support for players and outreach to local communities. I realize there are some owners that have different goals but other owners (e.g. Ravens, Seahawks:-( seem to have a symbiotic and supportive 'team' approach to community outreach. That is, the front office encourages and supports players community outreach efforts. I would also plug the Ravens environmental record. It is QUITE impressive and worth showcasing by the NFL Films. Thanks again. ALWAYS been a fan.
In case you didn't know kids, there was a time waaaay back in the 20th century, when the Raiders were actually good, and the Jets had an actual franchise quarterback!
Just read Maynard's book 'You Can't Catch Sunshine'. Very enjoyable. Anybody that questions Joe Namath's ranking as one of the greatest QBs of all time never lived to watch him from 1965 to 1974. This guy had such an impact. To me Hollywood can be measured as before Brando and after. Pro Football is the 45 years pre- Namath, then every thing after. To heck with career stats measured against today's run free wide receiver era.
In June 2019 Joe Namath was selected by Pro Football Journal as Player of the Decade for the period covering 1965-75: nflfootballjournal.blogspot.com/2019/06/players-of-decade1965-75.html?m=
Say he's among all time greatest quarterbacks in the history of American football. WALTER CAMP might agree. EDDIE ROBINSON might agree. BEAR BRYANT, WEEB EWBANK and VINCE LOMBARDI would agree.
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Joe Namath Was A Tough Son Of A Gun. He Played The Game With Guts, Heart, & Toughness. That's Why He's In The HOF. You Were The Heart, & Soul Of The New York Jets. Much Love.
The last time the Jets were good, which was before I was born and my father was still in Vietnam on the U.S.S. Saint Paul(May he Rest In Peace 3/28/47 - 1/11/20). Been a Jets fan since 1981.
Marino should've been the heir apparent to Namath [let's not even count Todd & others]. Both Joe & Dan had quick releases; both were from Pennsylvania steel mill country; both had a bad knee & both were available for the Jets to draft. But they drafted Ken O'Brien 'cause they found out that Marino liked to "party" in college. What a mistake!!
Namath was a remarkable athlete. Had a rocket for an arm, and you ever see his vertical leap. His famous jump pass. Throwing his back out on Raquel Welch took a few years off his career.
Before his knees were ripped as a jr in college, he could dunk a b-ball behind his back. Also could run a 4.6 40..... the Namath you see here was literally nearly a cripple.... playing on pure instincts, wooden legs and one of the greatest natural arms ever.
I remember watching this game live. I grew up in Cleveland. The Browns were hosting the Colts at the exact same time and our game was blacked out locally so this was the only game on the TV that day. What I most remember was that after the game a kid (about my age) jumped in this little jet mobile car and drove it across the field. I was jealous.
The Jets Raiders rivalry was a great one back in those days. Namath and Lamonica battled back and forth. The QBs took a beating. Different game today. That is why it is hard to look at QB stats and compare the different eras.
Statistically, it's a shame that Namath played during that era when you could pound the hell out of quarterbacks and mug receivers going down the field because he was as talented as anyone that played the game. No one threw a prettier, tighter pass than Joe Namath. To watch him just flick his wrist and send a football on a line down the field was a thing of beauty and I've never seen any quarterback since who threw like Namath.
@Mac of All Trades He threw a better deep ball than Favre. Both prone to picks. Namath could have been like Rogers if he stayed healthy. But the Favre comparison works.
Namath put up crazy stats in some of the worst conditions. This game was a perfect example at Shea stadium. Trying to pass in high, gusty and cold winds. I remember him throwing a 10 yard out pattern. He threw it 15 yards ahead of the line of scrimmage. Wind bent it back 5 yards to Maynard perfectly. Genius.
@@davidvenesky9053 You probably weren't around back then, I was. Teams used to play real football, not this modern, watered-down BS of today. Most owners now are okay just making a profit, only a few really want the SB trophy.
If Namath, as he was at that age, had simply had the same knees he had just before his senior year in college, he could easily have played in today's league. His throwing arm and overall talent as a quarterback were that good. Unfortunately he came into the league with a damaged right knee (damaged to the point of making him ineligible for the military draft), didn't have the luxury of the pass-friendly rule changes that were instituted in 1978, and was subjected to all kinds of physical punishment that would not have been allowed today -- or even twenty years ago.
SingleTax he was incredibly tough which may have been his own undoing. Who now plays when their knee is dislocated and popped back in place? Not healing properly could have hurt more than helped, but he was such a tough competitor. Joe Montana considers him his idol. Enough said.
This is an example of the brainwash people have digested about Namath. For one, Namath couldn't read a defense if you gave him the other team's playbook. He was an interception machine that blew more games than can be remembered. The only reason he'd be able to play in today's era at all is because defenses are in handcuffs, but he'd still be just a mediocre QB today because he lacked the football IQ that a top flight NFL QB has. What people either choose to forget or don't know about is that Namath was in a battle to keep his job a number of times because his play was so often poor. One such battle was with what history would call a total nobody name Mike Taliaferro. He nearly lost his job to Taliaferro and to be clear Taliaferro was not a good QB. Secondly, Namath wasn't some kind of legendary "tough". Resilient sure, but let's not get carried away. Jim Brown was legendary TOUGH, he never missed a game. Third, regardless of not playing in the "pass friendly era", Namath was still near the bottom of his era when it comes to performance from what is considered the top level of QB's. Just compare his stats to Johnny Unitas' for a perfect example, and Unitas played his ENTIRE career in the defensively tougher NFL. Daryle Lamonica was the AFL's best QB and he remained a threat in the NFL. The man only lost 16 ball games his entire career. 16 ball games. Lastly, Joe Montana may consider Namath his idol, but Namath wasn't even good enough to have carried Montana's jockstrap. If Super Bowl 3 wouldn't have happened without the guarantee and win, Namath would've been nothing but a mere footnote in history and rightfully so. His play was nothing more than footnote worthy, but unfortunately people have spent a half century romanticizing on him as more than what he was.
the play by play was from the actual radio broadcast on WABC radio in New York...the announcer was long time Jet broadcaster Merle Harmon...his color guy was former Jet lineman Sam DeLuca....the excerpts were included in a New York Daily News record album entitled "The Super Jets"..
The gentleman is quite right...I have a copy on audio cassette...I remember listening to the Jets games that entire season (the WABC was the very same "Musicradio 77 WABC" that featured Dan Ingram and Cousin Brucie)...stations ID's were prefaced by "Your dial is Jet Set"
I saw Joe's last game a Shea, and It was kinda sad. He didn't have much left at that point. If he played under today's rules, he would have made Brady look like a fool.
I was there for that game. 14 y/o and the 53 yd. catch by Maynard was right in front of us. My father was a big NYG fan and on the long waiting list for season tickets. The day the Jets drafted Namath my father, who went to Alabama in the late 40s, ordered Jets season tickets and our whole family became Jets fans. What a game and what a season. Sadly, it's been a torturous drought since then.
Few QBs were as tough and took such beatings in their careers as Broadway Joe. Don Meredith and Joe Kapp (who dished it out as well as he took it) being in Joe's class. And Joe did it with two bum knees.
Those Kelly Green Jets jerseys were beautiful. To be honest, they were before their time, and Namath being the first QB I had to be when I got a hold of a football, jersey I had to have. It took some years, but...I have a Kelly Green 1968 Namath that I proudly wear. Same fit, same polyester materials. Seing this make me want to put it on. Hahaha
That's what made football special-they played outside and in rugged conditions.Some teams still do it.But I've been in too many domes that make me feel as if I'm in San Juan.
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Notice at the end of the game, Namath in the middle of the field, he could barely walk. Like a boxer at the end of a very tough fight. He took a lot of punishment in this game. His toughness gets overlooked.... finally the bomb to Maynard on the audible was ice veins money... Namath was a gamer. The bigger the moment, the more he embraced it and let his arm shine.
Home games were not broadcast on TV in those days. This included the AFL Championship game. Living in Brooklyn, we always listened to the home games on the radio. The voice you hear calling the game is that of Merle Harmon, the Jet radio announcer from 68 to the early 70's. Sam DeLuca, former OT for the Jets, was his radio partner. I can still hear Harmon's call when Ralph Baker recovered the lateral pass LaMonica attempted at the end of the game. Part of that call is here, but I wanted to here him say again "...And the Jets are going to the Super Bowl!"
My buddies and I had seasons tickets during those "Joe Willie" glory years. Our seats were in the upper deck, and boy did Shea Stadium get cold in late November and December, with the wind blowing in from Flushing Bay.
Johnny Yum ... $15,000.00 in 1968'(adjusted for inflation)is the equivalent of $107,500.00 in 2018' !! Considering that the average player salary in 1968' was $25,000.00 per year($156,000.00 today),then $15,000.00 for winning one football game was a pretty damn good bonus!!
after 3 hits like the ones he took in game, Brady would have been broken in 2 or at the very least cried to the officials. And, play on that type of field...today's QB's have no idea.
@@reddlc28 I don't no if he's a Brady hater but it's a different game today...players today are bigger stronger and faster....alot of the rule changes have made the game safer not because the owners care about the players but because of money...Robert Kraft and the owners don't want to pay players millions of dollars to sit injured on the bench..I was always a Joe Montana fan but I have to tip my hat to Tom Brady he has done amazing things that no one will come close to doing plus alot of players want to play with him...He in my opinion is the GOAT...i have been watching football since 1962 and Tom Brady could have played back then..
Raider fan but what a great game! Broadway Joe was a blast! You could tell the Raiders didn’t feel bad about losing to him. He was sort of a ‘Raider’ - he just played for the Jets. Similar feeling you have about Staubach. Cool qbs that you found yourself rooting for, even if you were a fan of a different club.
Great game from a great era. Namath atones for his pick six by tossing three TD passes. The rivalries in the late AFL involving the Jets, Chiefs and Raiders were among the best in football history. As a kid I would tune in just to see the green, red and (of course) the silver-n-black!
Gentlemen...all rise forTHE AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE! (Aug. 14, 1959- first organizational meeting in Chicago, through to Jan. 17, 1970-end of 1969 AFL All-Star Game, Houston.) DYK...last ball carrier in AFL history...Buffalo Bills HB O.J. Simpson. Game ball flown immediately to Pro Football HOF.
I was 14 when this was played and a Vikings fan but also NFL and AFL Fan and the KC Chiefs vs Raiders big fan of and never missed those games and the Jets with Broadway Joe
When Namath won the Superbowl little he knew the impact the game has today. It was the gift that keeps giving. He was one of the early pioneers. Well, deserved!
Namath to Maynard was always a thing of beauty.
My eyes tear up everytime i see this. The poise. The persona. The characters. The Stadium. These are my Jets. Best game ever.
“I got a long route if you need it”
“Winning. Nothing else matters to me! WINNING. I catch one or ten. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS
FLY HIGH DON MAYNARD. REST IN HARMONY #13 🕊 Forever a Legend!!!!!!!
Amen
Today they replay that catch about 14 times to make sure..
It was always fun to watch the Jets and the Raiders during the late sixties and early seventies.
Besides being a great receiver, Don Maynard is surely one of the funniest guys to ever play the game. One classic concerns his difficult negotiations with Weeb Ewbank over a salary increase. The punch line is when Ewbank tells Maynard he will give him a very small increase, but insists Don not tell any of the other players. Maynard replies, "Don't worry coach, I'm as embarrassed about the amount as you are".
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
From a historical standpoint, Super Bowl III was the more celebrated game, but as far as a game - down for down, quarter for quarter, the weather, etc... This was a better game. Would love to see this game again in it's entirety, as it's been nearly 50 years ! Love this old AFL footage !
Watching this game again or possessing a copy of it is the Holy Grail for Jet fans.
There is no known footage of the entire AFL championship game of this year between the jets and raiders sadly.
I know... We have the highlight from NFL Films narrated by Charlie Jones ; at least that's something.@@xxnetherxx1
#13 on the N.Y. Jets.....
Mr. AFL
R.I.P.
Don Maynard 🏈
God bless our pro football heroes from a by-gone era.
we lost our 2 starters maynard and sauer!
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Maynard Was So Much Fun! God Bless Him! RIP!
Btw how did the Giants let Maynard go? He was a rookie for the Giants in ‘58. Y.A. Tittle to Don Maynard might have been truly amazing
I love watching old NFL footage. Battling in the mud, legal head hits and all time great players!!
100% agree. Today's NFL is too political and boring to watch. Only watch college football... which still maintains the thrill of the game and respect all players give to each other.
This was the old AFL . Great league .
This is the AFL. Show some respect.
True,nfl players now about $$$.sit on bench with a bad finger and make a paycheck.true playing those days.
❤️ oldie NFL football 🏈 🎥 films : it the old football faces& names; NFL never going to have another Joe Namath; Broadway joe
I do wish, I could see this game in it’s entirety. Definitely’d be a good game to watch, an all time AFL classic
I've spent the las week watching Namath interviews. He is my new favorite human
❤️ Joe Namath old Hollywood 🎥 videos & acting stuff
68 AFL championship game was one of the ALL-TIME greatest games, A classic!!
One others thing The Mad Bomber has left us watch towards the end where he and Lamonica are standing face to face and Lamonica gives him a Pat on the helmet! Just oozes respect RIP #3!
I watch this all the time a “ Classic” that Epitomizes Courage
RIP Don Maynard you were one of the greatest!
Don Maynard was a great receiver.
Duke Moose They also had George Sauer, a very sure-handed possession type receiver, on the other side
giants should have kept him
RIP Don Maynard
Really:: Joe Namath favorite target on the football field
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Loved this team. Namath and Maynard, such great names from the greatest era of football.
At a time when the physical play on the field was at times down right nasty this game, the weather, in New York no less proved that Joe Willy should be named among the greatest QBs of all time.
There is not enough mentioned about the incredible toughness of Joe Namath! Played injured, and what about that tackle!
I remember seeing a clip where he handed the ball off in a reverse and then FLATTENED a defensive end thus springing the running back free for a substantial gain!
I liked how they commented how the AFL Championship was tougher then the Super Bowl!
Right on, I JUST noticed after ALL of these years,, I mean, I know how tough a competitor and guy Joe was/IS, but man, the dislocated fingers, extra hard hits in FRIGID conditions against the BIG BAD Raiders, and throwing that AWESOME block, WOW, just watch today's game (For how long???), where the kickers and quarterbacks feebly/embarrassingly run along and then JUMP/BAIL-OUT to safety, not attempting to or even make it LOOK like they are TRYING to stop a ball carrier, and then seeing Broadway Joe lowering the BOOM on that guy!!!!!!!!
Namath to Maynard.....Namath to Sauer.....Namath hands off to Snell.....Deadly offense of The New York Jets.....Shea Stadium was one of the best sports venues.....to be in the crowd for The Jets was nothing short of spectacular.....
I watch this vid at least once a week during the season...gives me goose bumps every time. Namath was one tough s.o.b. I was 10 yrs old in December, 1968 and a Raiders fan, but soon became a Namath fan after this game.
Sane here
Not really a fan of the Jets or Raiders, but just wanted to say that football back then was real football. A catch was a catch, a fumble was a fumble, you didn't have all these technical bs rules to tell you which was which. QB's took there beatings like men, they didn't cry about it like QB's of today, hence look at the beating Namath took in that game and the Jets still won.
Kenneth Hamilton then you had these people with permanent brain damage and early deaths
Ice J -- They new the risks going in.
I agree
Namath was a GREAT quarterback! The thing that impressed me most about this footage, was the tackle Joe Willie put on George Atkinson after he intercepted Namath! NO QUARTERBACK in today's NFL would have have stuck his nose in to make a tackle like that! I was a QB and Joe Willie was the player I tailored my game after!
NFL football playoffs
I remember watching that game with my Dad and older brother. I was 7, but the memories are clear. We were Jets fans.
I was at that game. Greatest sporting event I was ever at. I was 14.
Beautifully restored footage.
Joe Willie was out all night with the ladies night before and still got it done. Only Broadway Joe well Kenny Stabler too. Lol
and what did those two have in common? ROLL TIDE!!!
Kenny Stabler was not on the 68 Raiders he was still at Bama but I do get what you mean
@@michaelleroy9281 Actually, Stabler was drafted in 1968 in the second round. His first training camp with the Raiders was not good. He did not make the active roster, and was on the practice squad. In 1969, he was a mess, and almost quit football. He came back in 1970. I believe 1970 is listed as his rookie year, when in reality it was not. He had rough start. The rest is history.
Broadway Joe Namath King of football field & overnights life
The history of the NFL is a beautiful thing.
The great Don Maynard is so underrated at WR! ( 11,000+ yds and 88 TD's in his career!!) He was clutch!! HOF! * Namath has that great smile to this day! The guy had a life like Elvis!
And this was before tight ends and running backs caught lots of passes.
Country Don Maynard .
Namath was more talented than Elvis :-)
"A life like Elvis" I like it. Even here in Australia we knew all about Broadway Joe in 1968. He was a superstar!
Broadway Joe Namath
My father FRANK NANIA was a barber - in Flushing , New York - by the intersection of Sanford avenue and Main Street - Where you could see just by walking over a little bit in the distance SHEA STADIUM - And one of his customers was New York Jets middle linebacker # 51 - RALPH BAKER who was that season - also watch HIM in the SUPER BOWL 3 on January 12 1969 - game too - see him recover the ball - a couple of times at key moments - RALPH BAKER used to bring in these sneaker /shoes to my father as gifts - a few times too - for ME when I was a teenager - 1969 -1970 - white sneakers with black striped designs on them - they looked like football type shoes without the cleats - yes - I remember it well , Joe Nania
i love watching these old clips from the sixties and seventies, i was lucky to start watching football from the late sixties onward....thank you for the great upload..
a cannon right arm....TOUGH....desire....A REBEL....will to win......QUICKEST RELEASE IN FOOTBALL....the ONLY thing that held him back was his knees...but he STLL CHANGED THE GAME FOREVER!!!
Probably the toughest quarterback to play the game.
Damn good talent...all around. And look at the conditions they played in! And receivers made amazing catches WITHOUT stick-em gloves on.
I was at this Sunday afternoon on December 29 1968 AFL Championship game at Shea Stadium in Flushing , New York with my cousin Carl Di Tomasso and our friend Pete Donofrio - Yes we all 3 went and as planned jumped over the fence in the area side that faced the number 7 train because it was never really guarded by security - We also made it down to the sidelines and the ushers did not seem to mind these 3 teenage boys who did not have tickets that wanted to get a closer look at the game - NEW YORK JETS 27 - OAKLAND RAIDERS 23 !
Amazing great memories…and what a game to be at, we sat and the watched the entire game on a 20” black and white set, forever Joe and the world champion Jets.
Funny, I always wanted to know where good 'Ole Pete was that day. We wanted to play Monster Tag and needed another player.
He lived two doors down from us....The Dunn's. His mother was so sweet and let us kids hop over the walls from house to house on good old 150th Street.
This was a great game Jets were great that year amazing their only super bowl appearance win
no one played more games at qb in tough conditions then namath. that wind was consistently tough. that should always be remembered when you hear the people talking about his poor stats.
God bless all those players. Joe Namath Don Maynard George Saur... all of those guys were fantastic. The American Football League revolutionized the game! Before the merger with the NFL to be able to watch two games every single week on NBC was a treat! It was a virtual lock that the morning game from the West Coast that is would include Namath and the Jets. Then the afternoon game would always have either the Chiefs the Raiders or the Chargers. No matter what Sundays were full of excitement because of the AFL!
As a lifelong fan from the mid 60's, I have to say that the NFL sharing these videos is GREAT for the game in numerous ways.
I think you (NFL Films & NFL) spending EXTRA effort in sharing these videos (the whole timeline and genres) will pay off in a broader fan base that will come to appreciate that even though nothing is 'perfect', that does not mean it can't be a hell of a lot of fun along the way.
On a side note:
Thank you (NFL) also for your growing support for players and outreach to local communities. I realize there are some owners that have different goals but other owners (e.g. Ravens, Seahawks:-( seem to have a symbiotic and supportive 'team' approach to community outreach. That is, the front office encourages and supports players community outreach efforts.
I would also plug the Ravens environmental record. It is QUITE impressive and worth showcasing by the NFL Films.
Thanks again. ALWAYS been a fan.
I love watching this every year around December...good stuff.
In case you didn't know kids, there was a time waaaay back in the 20th century, when the Raiders were actually good, and the Jets had an actual franchise quarterback!
Now that's football blood and guts football.
When football was real...
Julio
No question.👍🏈
Just read Maynard's book 'You Can't Catch Sunshine'. Very enjoyable. Anybody that questions Joe Namath's ranking as one of the greatest QBs of all time never lived to watch him from 1965 to 1974. This guy had such an impact. To me Hollywood can be measured as before Brando and after. Pro Football is the 45 years pre- Namath, then every thing after. To heck with career stats measured against today's run free wide receiver era.
In June 2019 Joe Namath was selected by Pro Football Journal as Player of the Decade for the period covering 1965-75:
nflfootballjournal.blogspot.com/2019/06/players-of-decade1965-75.html?m=
JOE BURNS - very well said - great thoughts of yours - thank you , Joe Nania - Flushing ,New York
Exactly!
say what you want about Joe...those critical passes near the end he threw were perfect.
Say he's among all time greatest quarterbacks in the history of American football. WALTER CAMP might agree. EDDIE ROBINSON might agree. BEAR BRYANT, WEEB EWBANK and VINCE LOMBARDI would agree.
One of the all time great games. Don Maynard is so likable. 🏈
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Joe Namath Was A Tough Son Of A Gun. He Played The Game With Guts, Heart, & Toughness. That's Why He's In The HOF. You Were The Heart, & Soul Of The New York Jets. Much Love.
The last time the Jets were good, which was before I was born and my father was still in Vietnam on the U.S.S. Saint Paul(May he Rest In Peace 3/28/47 - 1/11/20).
Been a Jets fan since 1981.
Rest eternally Mr. Maynard💯
i was there with my dad and brother freezing half to death in the mezzanine and the game was so great it overcame the cold.
Namath -- the first QB to have 4000 yards passing in a season, and it was a 14 game season!
Say what they will about Marino but Namath had the quickest and prettiest release ever.
Jeffrelc
I TOTALLY agree.👍🏈
Marino should've been the heir apparent to Namath [let's not even count Todd & others]. Both Joe & Dan had quick releases; both were from Pennsylvania steel mill country; both had a bad knee & both were available for the Jets to draft. But they drafted Ken O'Brien 'cause they found out that Marino liked to "party" in college. What a mistake!!
Omg I love Joe Namath.I also love the JETS
the team fed off his swagger they had to
Yeah
Namath was a remarkable athlete. Had a rocket for an arm, and you ever see his vertical leap. His famous jump pass.
Throwing his back out on Raquel Welch took a few years off his career.
What was his vertical leap, 6 inches ??
Before his knees were ripped as a jr in college, he could dunk a b-ball behind his back. Also could run a 4.6 40..... the Namath you see here was literally nearly a cripple.... playing on pure instincts, wooden legs and one of the greatest natural arms ever.
@@kelvinkloud He was a dual threat QB in college at Alabama.
I remember watching this game live. I grew up in Cleveland. The Browns were hosting the Colts at the exact same time and our game was blacked out locally so this was the only game on the TV that day.
What I most remember was that after the game a kid (about my age) jumped in this little jet mobile car and drove it across the field. I was jealous.
Namath the Boss. Can't overstate impact of Jets win over Colts in SBIII. Living Legend.
Sounds like Jim Simpson and Al Derogatis on the NBC TV or radio play by play...love this vid.
And not to mention this game lead them to shock the world and won Super Bowl 3 and that proved the AFL was finally a true equal to the NFL
Namath the toughest QB I have ever seen I’m 66 he’s irreplaceable
The Jets Raiders rivalry was a great one back in those days. Namath and Lamonica battled back and forth. The QBs took a beating. Different game today. That is why it is hard to look at QB stats and compare the different eras.
Statistically, it's a shame that Namath played during that era when you could pound the hell out of quarterbacks and mug receivers going down the field because he was as talented as anyone that played the game. No one threw a prettier, tighter pass than Joe Namath. To watch him just flick his wrist and send a football on a line down the field was a thing of beauty and I've never seen any quarterback since who threw like Namath.
Closest I've seen to Joe Willie was Marino...even down to the shoes...but he was able to stay healthier
Dana James How about Sonny Jorgensen, check out Mary Lou by the Creative Force, amazing
@Mac of All Trades He threw a better deep ball than Favre. Both prone to picks. Namath could have been like Rogers if he stayed healthy. But the Favre comparison works.
Namath put up crazy stats in some of the worst conditions. This game was a perfect example at Shea stadium. Trying to pass in high, gusty and cold winds.
I remember him throwing a 10 yard out pattern. He threw it 15 yards ahead of the line of scrimmage. Wind bent it back 5 yards to Maynard perfectly. Genius.
I remember that game...👍🏻
When a team can beat the Raiders in that bygone era, it was truly an accomplishment.
Now when a team loses to the Raiders, that is an accomplishment.
@@davidvenesky9053 You probably weren't around back then, I was. Teams used to play real football, not this modern, watered-down BS of today. Most owners now are okay just making a profit, only a few really want the SB trophy.
raider nation for life but I always liked broadway joe respect!!!
jay love That’s true. Namath was a Raider!
100% agree my friend. Namath was a warrior and a heck of a player. Got huge respect for the guy.
If Namath, as he was at that age, had simply had the same knees he had just before his senior year in college, he could easily have played in today's league. His throwing arm and overall talent as a quarterback were that good. Unfortunately he came into the league with a damaged right knee (damaged to the point of making him ineligible for the military draft), didn't have the luxury of the pass-friendly rule changes that were instituted in 1978, and was subjected to all kinds of physical punishment that would not have been allowed today -- or even twenty years ago.
SingleTax he was incredibly tough which may have been his own undoing. Who now plays when their knee is dislocated and popped back in place?
Not healing properly could have hurt more than helped, but he was such a tough competitor.
Joe Montana considers him his idol. Enough said.
This is an example of the brainwash people have digested about Namath. For one, Namath couldn't read a defense if you gave him the other team's playbook. He was an interception machine that blew more games than can be remembered. The only reason he'd be able to play in today's era at all is because defenses are in handcuffs, but he'd still be just a mediocre QB today because he lacked the football IQ that a top flight NFL QB has.
What people either choose to forget or don't know about is that Namath was in a battle to keep his job a number of times because his play was so often poor. One such battle was with what history would call a total nobody name Mike Taliaferro. He nearly lost his job to Taliaferro and to be clear Taliaferro was not a good QB.
Secondly, Namath wasn't some kind of legendary "tough". Resilient sure, but let's not get carried away. Jim Brown was legendary TOUGH, he never missed a game.
Third, regardless of not playing in the "pass friendly era", Namath was still near the bottom of his era when it comes to performance from what is considered the top level of QB's. Just compare his stats to Johnny Unitas' for a perfect example, and Unitas played his ENTIRE career in the defensively tougher NFL.
Daryle Lamonica was the AFL's best QB and he remained a threat in the NFL. The man only lost 16 ball games his entire career. 16 ball games.
Lastly, Joe Montana may consider Namath his idol, but Namath wasn't even good enough to have carried Montana's jockstrap. If Super Bowl 3 wouldn't have happened without the guarantee and win, Namath would've been nothing but a mere footnote in history and rightfully so. His play was nothing more than footnote worthy, but unfortunately people have spent a half century romanticizing on him as more than what he was.
Nonsense
AllPro777 - one of those losses by Lamonica was SB II
+SpellboundBySiren Nope. Because those 16 losses mentioned only account for his regular season record, not playoffs. Nice attempt though.
the play by play was from the actual radio broadcast on WABC radio in New York...the announcer was long time Jet broadcaster Merle Harmon...his color guy was former Jet lineman Sam DeLuca....the excerpts were included in a New York Daily News record album entitled "The Super Jets"..
The gentleman is quite right...I have a copy on audio cassette...I remember listening to the Jets games that entire season (the WABC was the very same "Musicradio 77 WABC" that featured Dan Ingram and Cousin Brucie)...stations ID's were prefaced by "Your dial is Jet Set"
Seventy seven, W-A-B-C!
have the album re-released on cd a few years ago by fleetwood.
Namath the ultimate combo of charisma, guts, and savvy
Had to have a pair of balls to play football in this era.
Jackson Troy yes sir
Jackson Troy
NO doubt.👍🏈
I saw Joe's last game a Shea, and It was kinda sad. He didn't have much left at that point. If he played under today's rules, he would have made Brady look like a fool.
@@hudsonhawk0016: TB12 camped out roasting marshmallows in your head. lol.
Very brutal era, no doubt.
I was at that game. And as as lifelong sports fan it’s my favorite experience
I was there for that game. 14 y/o and the 53 yd. catch by Maynard was right in front of us. My father was a big NYG fan and on the long waiting list for season tickets. The day the Jets drafted Namath my father, who went to Alabama in the late 40s, ordered Jets season tickets and our whole family became Jets fans. What a game and what a season. Sadly, it's been a torturous drought since then.
Few QBs were as tough and took such beatings in their careers as Broadway Joe. Don Meredith and Joe Kapp (who dished it out as well as he took it) being in Joe's class. And Joe did it with two bum knees.
Those Kelly Green Jets jerseys were beautiful. To be honest, they were before their time, and Namath being the first QB I had to be when I got a hold of a football, jersey I had to have. It took some years, but...I have a Kelly Green 1968 Namath that I proudly wear. Same fit, same polyester materials. Seing this make me want to put it on. Hahaha
Great epic game. I’m amazed, though, at how crystal clear the video was. Ones of the greatest years in NFL history.
👏👏👏❤👍thanks posting man,..🖒🏈
Watched Broadway Joe on Martha MacCallum tonight and was talking about this very game. So here I am. Such a great QB
Maynard was amazing. I love his style. And his focus. Consummate professional.
1968 NY Jets 🔥🔥🔥©
That was a real football players field.
Yeah, but the Jets hated Shea Stadium. The Mets had a better lease.
Yeah, a real football field... without any turf!
I Would Like To See The Original NBC Telecast Of This Game.
i hear you!
apparently does not exist!
Full game available
ua-cam.com/video/RW5GnZCxqIw/v-deo.html
People in NYC/Long Island didn't even see it until midnight that night. It was blacked out in NY.
That's SBIII not the AFL Championship game, tim.
jpwjr1199 definitely I remember listening to WABC 77 with Merle Harmon and Sam DeLuca. The announcers you here in the clip.
That's what made football special-they played outside and in rugged conditions.Some teams still do it.But I've been in too many domes that make me feel as if I'm in San Juan.
Joe Namath and Don Maynard are two of the greatest players to have played their respective positions.
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
Namath all-time great, all-time clutch , all-time superstar!!!!!!
Man....Ben Davidson was in his face on every play in the first half.
Don Maynard. He played in the two most important games in NFL history. And Weeb coached them both and won them both
My favorite Jets game of all time.
3:15 catching a ball like that in the wind and cold with no gloves is something you don't see anymore
I’ll take “Country” Don Maynard over the great Lance Allworth any day of the week. Got to meet wtih him a few times in El Paso where he lived after he retired. Very pleasant person and great competitor.
The concussion protocol in those days was whether the subject could correctly identify a football.
"How many fingers do you see?"
"Eight."
"Close enough."
Notice at the end of the game, Namath in the middle of the field, he could barely walk. Like a boxer at the end of a very tough fight. He took a lot of punishment in this game. His toughness gets overlooked.... finally the bomb to Maynard on the audible was ice veins money... Namath was a gamer. The bigger the moment, the more he embraced it and let his arm shine.
I was 11 then. It was a great time to be a youngster, and a great time to be a AFL fan.
Freeze 5:16 I think he'd agree.
Interesting how both the Jets in 68' and the Chiefs in 69' said the team they feared the most was not the NFL Champion, but Dah' Raiders!
Jon Burrows If the Steel Curtain never existed, there’s a good chance the Raiders win at least another 2 SBs in the 70s.
Interesting how both teams beat "Dah Raiders!"
@@MrAmbassador11 What's more interesting is how you missed his point. It is written.
But in 2019, the Jets kicked our ass and in 2021, the Chiefs beat us twice by a score of 89 to 22.
@@buckchile614 Reading comprehension is a problem for some. Thanks for the support.
Home games were not broadcast on TV in those days. This included the AFL Championship game. Living in Brooklyn, we always listened to the home games on the radio. The voice you hear calling the game is that of Merle Harmon, the Jet radio announcer from 68 to the early 70's. Sam DeLuca, former OT for the Jets, was his radio partner. I can still hear Harmon's call when Ralph Baker recovered the lateral pass LaMonica attempted at the end of the game. Part of that call is here, but I wanted to here him say again "...And the Jets are going to the Super Bowl!"
How 'bout Matt Snell's block on Joe's TD pass to Maynard to take the lead 27-23!!!
Goodness Namath took some really hard hits. 60s was an era of danger man...
when football was so great and men were men. not like today. how great was maynard...loved this time.
My buddies and I had seasons tickets during those "Joe Willie" glory years. Our seats were in the upper deck, and boy did Shea Stadium get cold in late November and December, with the wind blowing in from Flushing Bay.
Namath and Bradshaw were as tough as anyone who’s played. They both took a beating late in their career.
Man back when game was simple. 15k Today nothing to the spoiled Babies nowadays.
Johnny Yum ... $15,000.00 in 1968'(adjusted for inflation)is the equivalent of $107,500.00 in 2018' !!
Considering that the average player salary in 1968' was $25,000.00 per year($156,000.00 today),then $15,000.00 for winning one football game was a pretty damn good bonus!!
after 3 hits like the ones he took in game, Brady would have been broken in 2 or at the very least cried to the officials. And, play on that type of field...today's QB's have no idea.
lmao brain dead Brady hater 💀
@@reddlc28 I don't no if he's a Brady hater but it's a different game today...players today are bigger stronger and faster....alot of the rule changes have made the game safer not because the owners care about the players but because of money...Robert Kraft and the owners don't want to pay players millions of dollars to sit injured on the bench..I was always a Joe Montana fan but I have to tip my hat to Tom Brady he has done amazing things that no one will come close to doing plus alot of players want to play with him...He in my opinion is the GOAT...i have been watching football since 1962 and Tom Brady could have played back then..
Matt you hit the nail on the head.
....and ol Buddy Ryan was the Jets defensive coordinator.
Raider fan but what a great game! Broadway Joe was a blast! You could tell the Raiders didn’t feel bad about losing to him. He was sort of a ‘Raider’ - he just played for the Jets. Similar feeling you have about Staubach. Cool qbs that you found yourself rooting for, even if you were a fan of a different club.
Rest in Paradise Don Maynard.
I know one day they will have that Lombardi back
Great game from a great era. Namath atones for his pick six by tossing three TD passes. The rivalries in the late AFL involving the Jets, Chiefs and Raiders were among the best in football history. As a kid I would tune in just to see the green, red and (of course) the silver-n-black!
great to hear from someone who remembers the great AFL !
Gentlemen...all rise forTHE AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE! (Aug. 14, 1959- first organizational meeting in Chicago, through to Jan. 17, 1970-end of 1969 AFL All-Star Game, Houston.) DYK...last ball carrier in AFL history...Buffalo Bills HB O.J. Simpson. Game ball flown immediately to Pro Football HOF.
I was 14 when this was played and a Vikings fan but also NFL and AFL Fan and the KC Chiefs vs Raiders big fan of and never missed those games and the Jets with Broadway Joe