Tom Brady

Skeptic1959

Gold Member
Oct 30, 2020
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While everyone is bowing to the feet of Tom Brady and naming him the G.O.A.T. consider this....lost in this shuffle is the accomplishments of the late Otto Graham. For those who don't know sports history, this legendary quarterback for now had surpassed Brady's league titles with SEVEN. And for all the noise about Brady being in his 10th Super Bowl, he falls far from what Graham did in his 10 years in pro football. From the time he debuted in 1946, Graham and the Cleveland Browns made it to the league title game EVERY YEAR Graham was calling the signals.

10 straight league titles, 7 championship rings. Even Mr. Brady has missed the playoffs occasionally. Otto Graham DID NOT. Also Graham's winning percentage for his career was .803 (57-13-1) while Brady's is currently at .769 (230-69).

So before anyone goes crowning Tom Brady as the G.O.A.T. at quarterback Otto Graham's accomplishments SHOULD NOT go unnoticed.
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There will be an article on this topic of G.O.A.T.s in the coming week on Abstract Sports.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946. Math must be hard for you.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946.
J. Mayo Williams - Wikipedia
During the 1920s, he played professional football and one of three black athletes (along with Paul Robeson) to play in the fledgling National Football League during its first year.
There.
Dumbfuck.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946.
J. Mayo Williams - Wikipedia
During the 1920s, he played professional football and one of three black athletes (along with Paul Robeson) to play in the fledgling National Football League during its first year.
There.
Dumbfuck.
Somebodys lying.

.

Looks like it was you dumbfuck.

" Paul Robeson was a true renaissance man. He was an effective political activist. He was a world-renowned singer and actor. He was an All-America football player who also played in the precursor to the NFL. "
 
While everyone is bowing to the feet of Tom Brady and naming him the G.O.A.T. consider this....lost in this shuffle is the accomplishments of the late Otto Graham. For those who don't know sports history, this legendary quarterback for now had surpassed Brady's league titles with SEVEN. And for all the noise about Brady being in his 10th Super Bowl, he falls far from what Graham did in his 10 years in pro football. From the time he debuted in 1946, Graham and the Cleveland Browns made it to the league title game EVERY YEAR Graham was calling the signals.

10 straight league titles, 7 championship rings. Even Mr. Brady has missed the playoffs occasionally. Otto Graham DID NOT. Also Graham's winning percentage for his career was .803 (57-13-1) while Brady's is currently at .769 (230-69).

So before anyone goes crowning Tom Brady as the G.O.A.T. at quarterback Otto Graham's accomplishments SHOULD NOT go unnoticed.
View attachment 452091

There will be an article on this topic of G.O.A.T.s in the coming week on Abstract Sports.
Not all his championships were NFL championships.
 
While everyone is bowing to the feet of Tom Brady and naming him the G.O.A.T. consider this....lost in this shuffle is the accomplishments of the late Otto Graham. For those who don't know sports history, this legendary quarterback for now had surpassed Brady's league titles with SEVEN. And for all the noise about Brady being in his 10th Super Bowl, he falls far from what Graham did in his 10 years in pro football. From the time he debuted in 1946, Graham and the Cleveland Browns made it to the league title game EVERY YEAR Graham was calling the signals.

10 straight league titles, 7 championship rings. Even Mr. Brady has missed the playoffs occasionally. Otto Graham DID NOT. Also Graham's winning percentage for his career was .803 (57-13-1) while Brady's is currently at .769 (230-69).

So before anyone goes crowning Tom Brady as the G.O.A.T. at quarterback Otto Graham's accomplishments SHOULD NOT go unnoticed.
View attachment 452091

There will be an article on this topic of G.O.A.T.s in the coming week on Abstract Sports.
Not all his championships were NFL championships.
My question is did he play against the top athletes of his time? We know that whites didnt like to be showed up by Black athletes back then.
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
Fuck off you racist,,, Why do you have to throw race into everything?
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946.
J. Mayo Williams - Wikipedia
During the 1920s, he played professional football and one of three black athletes (along with Paul Robeson) to play in the fledgling National Football League during its first year.
There.
Dumbfuck.
Somebodys lying.

.

Looks like it was you dumbfuck.

" Paul Robeson was a true renaissance man. He was an effective political activist. He was a world-renowned singer and actor. He was an All-America football player who also played in the precursor to the NFL. "
You said 46, not 49. And thats the first DRAFTED player, you illiterate tree monkey.
"precursor to the NFL" all it takes is a name change, huh? :lol:
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
Fuck off you racist,,, Why do you have to throw race into everything?
:laugh:

Its relevant. We know for a fact white people like to claim they are the best but they frequently conspire to keep the competition away so they can fell better about themselves.
 
While everyone is bowing to the feet of Tom Brady and naming him the G.O.A.T. consider this....lost in this shuffle is the accomplishments of the late Otto Graham. For those who don't know sports history, this legendary quarterback for now had surpassed Brady's league titles with SEVEN. And for all the noise about Brady being in his 10th Super Bowl, he falls far from what Graham did in his 10 years in pro football. From the time he debuted in 1946, Graham and the Cleveland Browns made it to the league title game EVERY YEAR Graham was calling the signals.

10 straight league titles, 7 championship rings. Even Mr. Brady has missed the playoffs occasionally. Otto Graham DID NOT. Also Graham's winning percentage for his career was .803 (57-13-1) while Brady's is currently at .769 (230-69).

So before anyone goes crowning Tom Brady as the G.O.A.T. at quarterback Otto Graham's accomplishments SHOULD NOT go unnoticed.
View attachment 452091

There will be an article on this topic of G.O.A.T.s in the coming week on Abstract Sports.
Not all his championships were NFL championships.
My question is did he play against the top athletes of his time? We know that whites didnt like to be showed up by Black athletes back then.

Not because they "didnt like to be showed up by Black athletes" it was more that they detested the smell in the locker room
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946.
J. Mayo Williams - Wikipedia
During the 1920s, he played professional football and one of three black athletes (along with Paul Robeson) to play in the fledgling National Football League during its first year.
There.
Dumbfuck.
Somebodys lying.

.

Looks like it was you dumbfuck.

" Paul Robeson was a true renaissance man. He was an effective political activist. He was a world-renowned singer and actor. He was an All-America football player who also played in the precursor to the NFL. "
You said 46, not 49. And thats the first DRAFTED player, you illiterate tree monkey.
"precursor to the NFL" all it takes is a name change, huh? :lol:
Do you feel better now cave monkey? :laugh:


" It wasn't until 1946, in one very special year, that four men endured the taunts, broke the NFL color barrier and opened the door for all those who have followed. "
 
While everyone is bowing to the feet of Tom Brady and naming him the G.O.A.T. consider this....lost in this shuffle is the accomplishments of the late Otto Graham. For those who don't know sports history, this legendary quarterback for now had surpassed Brady's league titles with SEVEN. And for all the noise about Brady being in his 10th Super Bowl, he falls far from what Graham did in his 10 years in pro football. From the time he debuted in 1946, Graham and the Cleveland Browns made it to the league title game EVERY YEAR Graham was calling the signals.

10 straight league titles, 7 championship rings. Even Mr. Brady has missed the playoffs occasionally. Otto Graham DID NOT. Also Graham's winning percentage for his career was .803 (57-13-1) while Brady's is currently at .769 (230-69).

So before anyone goes crowning Tom Brady as the G.O.A.T. at quarterback Otto Graham's accomplishments SHOULD NOT go unnoticed.
View attachment 452091

There will be an article on this topic of G.O.A.T.s in the coming week on Abstract Sports.
Not all his championships were NFL championships.
My question is did he play against the top athletes of his time? We know that whites didnt like to be showed up by Black athletes back then.

Not because they "didnt like to be showed up by Black athletes" it was more that they detested the smell in the locker room
I am assuming you never played football with that comment?
 
In 1921–1923, the Bulldogs played 25 straight games without a defeat (including 3 ties). As of November 2020, this remains an NFL record.
Poor asslips :(
 
Was this before they let Black people play in the NFL? If so it doesnt count. Much like the time before they allowed Black people play in the NBA. The real competition was missing.
There were black players since the NFLs inception.
Like i said in the other thread, 7/8s of what you say is made up.
Hey retard. The NFL begin in 1920. No Black players until 1946. Math must be hard for you.
Excuse me....do the research before you make a comment like that:

Early years[edit]
Charles Follis is believed to be the first black professional football player, having played for the Shelby Steamfitters from 1902 to 1906. Follis, a two-sport athlete, was paid for his work beginning in 1899.[1]

From its inception in 1920 as a loose coalition of various regional teams, the American Professional Football Association had comparatively few African-American players; a total of nine black players suited up for NFL teams between 1920 and 1926, including future attorney, black activist, and internationally acclaimed artist Paul Robeson, as well as famed race record producer J. Mayo Williams. Fritz Pollard and Bobby Marshall were the first black players in what is now the NFL in 1920. Pollard became the first (and until 1989, only) black coach in 1921; during the early-to-mid-1920s, the league used player-coaches and did not have separate coaching staffs.[citation needed]

1927 through 1933[edit]
After 1926, all five of the black players that were still in the subsequent National Football League left the league. Several teams were kicked out of the league that year, and with a large number of available, talented white players, black players were generally the first to be removed, never to return again. For the next few years, a black player would sporadically pop up on a team: Harold Bradley Sr. played one season with the Chicago Cardinals in 1928, and David Myers played for two New York City-based teams in 1930 and 1931.[1]

In contrast, ethnic minorities of other races were fairly common. Thanks to the efforts of the Carlisle Indian School football program, which ended with the school's closure in 1918, there were numerous Native Americans in the NFL through the 1920s and 1930s, most famously Jim Thorpe. The Dayton Triangles also featured the first two Asian-Americans in the NFL, Chinese-Hawaiian running back Walter Achiu and Japanese-Scottish quarterback Arthur Matsu, both in 1928, and the first Hispanic players in the NFL, Cuban immigrant Ignacio Molinet of the 1927 Frankford Yellow Jackets and Jess Rodriguez of the 1929 Buffalo Bisons, played in the NFL during this time frame.[1]

1934 to 1945[edit]
In 1933, the last year of integration, the NFL had two black players, Joe Lillard and Ray Kemp. Both were gone by the end of the season: Lillard, due largely to his tendency to get into fights, was not invited back to the Chicago Cardinals[2][3] despite in 1933 being responsible for almost half of the Cardinals' points, while Kemp quit of his own accord to pursue a coaching career (one that turned out to be long and successful).[4][5] Many observers will attribute the subsequent lockout of black players to the entry of George Preston Marshall into the league in 1932. Marshall openly refused to have black athletes on his Boston Braves/Washington Redskins team, and reportedly pressured the rest of the league to follow suit. Marshall, however, was likely not the only reason: the Great Depression had stoked an increase in racism and self-inflicted segregation across the country, and internal politics likely had as much of an effect as external pressure.[4] Marshall's hostility was specifically directed at the black race; he openly allowed (and promoted) Native Americans on his team, including his first head coach, Lone Star Dietz, widely believed to be a Native American at the time. The choice of Redskins as his team name in 1933 was in part to maintain the native connotations that came with the team's previous name, the Boston Braves.[6] Another reason for Marshall's anti-black sentiment was to curry favor in the Southern United States. Marshall's Redskins had a strong following in that part of the country, which he vigorously defended, and he stood up against the NFL's efforts to put expansion teams in the South until Clint Murchison, Jr.'s successful extortion attempt (Murchison acquired the rights to the Redskins' fight song and threatened not to let Marshall use the song unless he got an expansion team in Dallas) led to the establishment of the Dallas Cowboys in 1960.[7]

By 1934, there were no more black players in the league.[8][9] The NFL did not have another black player until after World War II.

Most black players either ended up in the minor leagues (six joined the American Association and several others found their way into the Pacific Coast Professional Football League) or found themselves onto all-black barnstorming teams such as the Harlem Brown Bombers. Unlike in baseball, where the Negro leagues flourished, no true football Negro league was known to exist until 1946, and by this time, the major leagues had begun reintegrating.[10]
 

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