Can you guess the order of the NFL’s all-time leaders in coaching wins?

Following the death of Don Shula, the NFL’s all-time leader in coaching victories, let’s take a look at his win total and those who rank behind the Miami Dolphins legend. Totals include playoff and Super Bowl/League Championship Game wins.

Following the death of Don Shula, the NFL’s all-time leader in coaching victories, let’s take a look at his win total and those who rank behind the Miami Dolphins legend. Totals include playoff and Super Bowl/League Championship Game wins.

1. Don Shula (347)

(RVR Photos-USA TODAY Sports)

Shula has the most victories (347) ever, Shula won an NFL-record 347 games, including playoff games and two Super Bowl victories, and guided the Dolphins to the league’s only undefeated season (17-0) in 1972.

 

10 of the most notable NFL players who also played in the MLB

Since the 1920s, close to 70 athletes have played for both leagues. And, for various reasons, these are 10 of the most notable.

The MLB’s Opening Day ceremonies would have kicked off today, had the sports world not been suspended indefinitely without play due to the coronavirus pandemic. One of the greatest moments in sports, the first day of baseball always produces a wave of nostalgia for the players and fans, an ageless stretch from the young to the old.

The trashcan jokes alone would have made this year’s festivities memorable, but alas, there will be no crack of the bat, no soothing PA announcements, no flyovers, and no snark at the Astros’ expense. All that is left—other than the enjoyable reruns of yesteryear—is list of NFL players who also played in the MLB.

Some history: Both leagues have interwoven throughout the decades, beginning in the 1920s when several MLB players joined teams in the newly formed NFL. (Before the ’20s, star baseball players, like Christy Mathewson, played both but the NFL was not yet official.)

Since then, close to 70 athletes have played for the MLB and NFL. And, for a few interesting reasons, these are 10 of the most notable.

Let’s play ball!

Jim Thorpe

(Photo by National Baseball Hall of Fame Library/MLB via Getty Images)

Thorpe was the original do-it-all athlete, which included gold medals and even pro basketball. He played major league baseball for the New York Giants, Cincinnati Reds, and Boston Braves. During those years, Thorpe also played football. He began his career with the Canton Bulldogs, which was part of the inaugural 1920 NFL season, and then played for (and coached) a handful of teams after that. Surrounded by the fame of his heroics at the Olympics, Thorpe was a major draw for both sports, though football would turn out to be his more decorated. No other two-sport star has played for more NFL teams (six) than Thorpe.

60-year anniversary: How the Cowboys’ star formed in the universe

Everything is bigger in Texas, including the stories. But the truth behind the birth of the Dallas Cowboys is plenty wild on its own.

All heroes need an origin story. The one that goes with America’s Team is a doozy.

January 28 marks the 60th birthday of the Dallas Cowboys. On that date in 1960, the city of Dallas was granted an NFL franchise; one that would eventually evolve into a flagship enterprise for the league, the most valuable sports franchise on the planet, and one of the most recognized brands in history.

It’s difficult to imagine today’s NFL without the Dallas Cowboys.

They are a TV ratings juggernaut, a merchandising cash cow, and a year-round global empire that can often overshadow the wins and losses of the actual football season, sometimes even rendering the games themselves minor afterthoughts.

But there was a time before Jerry, Dak, and Zeke. A time before Romo and Dez. A time before Jimmy and the Triplets. A time before Staubach, Dorsett, and Doomsday. A time, even, before Tom Landry. In the 1970s, there was a popular T-shirt that read, “And on the eighth day, God created the Dallas Cowboys.”

The real story of the team’s creation is in many ways even epic and incredible.

Chapter 1: A Texas-sized flop

Before there was even a seed that grew into the idea that eventually became the Dallas Cowboys, there had to be fertile ground in which to take root. And in 1952, eight years before the Cowboys would be born, that fertile ground existed in the imagination of Clint Murchison, Jr.

Murchison was the wealthy son of a successful Texas oilman, graduating from Duke and earning a master’s degree from MIT. After Clint Sr. died, Clint Jr. and his brother took over the family business, with various moneymaking interests that included the company that manufactured Daisy BB guns, Field and Stream magazine, and, of course, oil.

A 29-year-old Murchison was one of fewer than 18,000 people in attendance on a late September Sunday at the famed Cotton Bowl, located on the Texas state fairgrounds. Taking the field were the visiting New York Giants and, for the very first time, a team called the Dallas Texans. The home team had previously been a New York club, too- the Yanks- having played in Yankee Stadium before being sold to a group of Lone Star State businessmen, relocated to Dallas, and named the Texans.

The Texans’ first game in their new home was largely unremarkable. Their only score in the 24-6 loss came after a fumbled punt return by a Giants defensive back named Tom Landry, who would go on to play a much larger role in Dallas football lore for generations.

Three more home games followed for that Texans team, all losses, and all poorly attended. The owners bailed on the club and returned control to the league. The Texans played the remainder of their 1952 schedule on the road, even their final two “home” contests. They finished 1-11 and were outscored 427-182. Almost half the roster retired for good at season’s end. The National Football League’s initial experiment in Dallas would go down in the books as a Texas-sized flop.


Chapter 2: Breaking in to the club

Everything was bigger in Texas, except the appetite for pro football. The sport itself was indeed king there, but it was played on Fridays at local high schools and on Saturdays by college kids. The NFL was a mainstay (albeit second fiddle to Major League Baseball) in Midwestern cities like Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia. It was the only game in town in tiny Green Bay. It had even ventured west to Los Angeles and San Francisco. Pro football simply wasn’t quite ready, however, to expand to the South.

Murchison, though, was enthralled. He attempted to buy the failing Texans franchise, but league commissioner Bert Bell had already agreed to sell the club to Carroll Rosenbloom, who would move the team to Baltimore and set up shop as the Colts. But the young Texas businessman sensed a whale of an opportunity.

“I wanted the fun of being able to see professional football in my hometown,” Murchison later said of his early infatuation. He turned his sights to other struggling NFL franchises, searching for one that he could buy and move to Dallas.

The 49ers wouldn’t sell. The Chicago Cardinals wouldn’t relocate from the Windy City. Murchison even came close to purchasing the Washington Redskins, until owner George Preston Marshall changed his terms at the eleventh hour and spoiled the deal. Murchison would hold a grudge over it for years.

But Clint Murchison Jr. wasn’t the only son of a Southern oil tycoon looking to put pro football in Dallas.

Continue…

George Halas, Mike Ditka, Dan Fortmann latest Bears selected to NFL 100’s All-Time Team

Three new Bears were added to the NFL 100’s All-Time Team with head coach George Halas, TE Mike Ditka and OG Dan Fortmann.

Three more Chicago Bears have been selected to NFL 100’s All-Time Team, including a head coach, tight end and offensive guard.

When discussing the greatest coaches in NFL history, it’s impossible not to mention Papa Bear himself, George Halas. Not only would there not be an NFL without Halas, but he found success as head coach of the Bears. He led the Bears to six NFL championships (1921, 1933, 1940, 1941, 1946, 1963).

Halas, a two-time NFL Coach of the Year, is the second-most winningest coach in NFL history with a record of 318-148-31.

Mike Ditka was the first tight end voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and rightfully so. Before he led the 1985 Bears to glory, Ditka revolutionized the tight end position as a Bear.

Ditka, a two-time All-Pro and five-time Pro Bowler, became the first tight end to eclipse 1,000+ receiving yards in a season as a rookie in 1961, which also garnered him Offensive Rookie of the Year.

He also won an NFL Championship with the Bears in 1963 and also went on to win Super Bowl VI with the Cowboys.

Dan Fortmann was one of seven offensive guards chosen to the NFL 100’s All-Time Team, and he’s got quite the resume.

Fortmann won three NFL Championships with the Bears (1940, 1941, 1943). He was a 4-time First-Team All-Pro, 3-time Pro Bowler and a member of the 1930s All-Decade Team.