Thursday, March 20, 2014

Tampa Bay Buccaneers Release Their New Uniforms

UNIFORMS
By John Turney
Two of the Bucs new uniforms, on the right, look like a 'glow' is added to photo
About a week ago the Bucs their new Nike-inspired uniforms. And to be honest, they are not great.

The Tampa Bay Times reported, "It really defines the Buccaneer as a modern superhero for the future," said Todd Van Horne, Nike's creative director for football.".

Okay.

The TBT also had this quote from Bucs co-chairman Ed Glazer, "Any time you have something you've worn for 17 years and had great history in, any change is going to be a little bit new to people … there's no question, once fans get to see the uniforms in person on the players on the field, they're going to love it."

Double okay.

From the Tampa Tribune
“Today marks the culmination of more than two years of research and planning to bring the Tampa Bay Buccaneers into a new and exciting era of our history," Bucs co-chairman Edward Glazer said.
The uniform features what the Bucs said is an energized and richer pewter paired with a brighter, more vibrant shade of Buccaneer Red. In homage to the Buccaneers' early uniforms, the look also features Bay Orange as a new primary trim color and accent on the jersey and pants.
 The Bucs are the first NFL franchise to incorporate a reflective chrome border around the numbers on the front, back and shoulders. The chrome border incorporates a new technologically advanced reflective coating that adds increased readability and a unique glow to the numbers.
 The redesigned wooden ship logo is positioned on the right shoulder and the word "Bucs" on the left. The enhanced flag is displayed on the right and left hip of the pant.
The new helmet, previously unveiled, is highlighted by a more menacing Jolly Roger.
A "More menacing Jolly Roger?"

Okay, thrice.

According to Nike and the Bucs the reflective border is now unique to the Bucs and was to make identifying players on the field much easier for fans as well as broadcasters.

The uniforms have what is called an "integrated Flywire technology" in the neckline designed to "reduce weight and provide a lockdown fit" over the pads.

Another talking point in the release was the technology of the so-called "Nike Elite 51 uniform" which is purported to increase range of motion in the arms and includes a four-way stretch fabrication to provide a streamlined shrink-wrap fit.

"The design focuses on creating a system where the baselayer, padding, jersey, and pant work in concert," the Bucs release said. "Lightweight padding is also integrated directly into the crucial hit zones' in the base layer.

The new name and number fonts feature "beveled edges inspired by historical Buccaneer blade carvings, echoing the modern industrial design inspiration" according to Nike

But the numbers look like digital clock numbers. From Facebook, published by the Orlando Sentinal
Four times, okay.

Our view?  They are just not good. But Bucs fans are stuck with them for five years. We hope they like them—the younger fans just might.

Here are some shots released by the Buccaneers—

Thursday, February 20, 2014

NFL's Fastest Man Competition

LOOKING BACK
by John Turney

Literally taking a page from the excellent book The Pro Football Chronicle: The Complete (Well Almost Record of the Best Players, the Greatest Photos, the Hardest Hits, the Biggest Scandals) by Dan Daly and Bob O'Connell. Pro Football Journal has attempted to update their report on the NFL's Fastest Man competition chronicled in that volume:
Graphic courtesy Collier Books.

As you can see from page 259 Ron Brown had the fastest time, but Darrell Green won the contest every time he entered. Green left little doubt with his declaration, "I am the fastest man in the NFL. I am faster than all the players. I am faster than all the coaches. I am faster than all the general managers, trainers, and the PR men. I am the fastest man in the NFL".

Green sat out 1990 when Ron Brown won again but regained his title in 1991 when he, again, was the fastest man in the NFL.

Although the AP reports quoted are spotty, and a full record of the heats and times have yet to be unearthed, the following is a recap of the 1990s NFL Fastest Man competitions:

1990
Champion: Ron Brown.

"Brown defeated Erik McMillan of the New York Jets, 6.23 to 6.54
Gault beat Eric Metcalf of the Cleveland Browns, 6.31 to 6.34.
Anthony Miller of the Chargers beat (as of yet not found)
Rod Woodson of the Steelers beat (as of yet not found)
Brown ran the next heat in 6.16 seconds, ahead of Rod Woodson's 6.43.
Gault, beat Anthony Miller 6.28 to 6.30.

The final heat:
Ron Brown - 6.18
Willie Gault - 6.32

1991
Champion: Darrell Green

"In the first two heats, Green beat Sam Graddy of the Raiders with a 6.19 clocking and ran the best time of the day (6.13) in beating Mel Gray of the Detroit Lions in his first heat.

Tim Brown beat the Vikings Herschel Walker with a 6.30 time and then bested Anthony Miller of the San Diego Chargers with 6.25 time in his first two heats.

In the other two races, Miller beat Tony Jones of the Houston Oilers and Graddy beat James Williams of the Buffalo Bills. The Graddy-Williams heat was a photo finish.

Green and Brown raced in the championship heat and both finished with a time of 6.17 seconds, but Green edged Ron Brown with his chest at the tape in a photo finish."

1992
Champion: Alexander Wright

"Wright began the day when he won a photo-finish against Buffalo Bills defensive back J.D. Williams in the semifinals. Each ran a time of 6.29. 

The Cardinals Randal Hill beat No. 1 seed Willie Gault of the Los Angeles Raiders in the other semifinal. 

Earlier in the day, Wright bested Pittsburgh's Dwight Stone

J.D. Williams advanced to face Wright by beating and Atlanta wide receiver Michael Haynes in the opening round.

Gault beat Indianapolis wide receiver Clarence Verdin before losing to Hill, who had advanced by beating Detroit wide receiver Mel Gray

In the championship, Wright beat unseeded receiver Randal Hill of the Phoenix Cardinals, 6.14 seconds to 6.20 seconds in the 60-yard race. 

Four-time champion Darrell Green of the Redskins declined to participate in 1992."


1993
Champion: Alexander Wright

"(Michael) Haynes (Falcons) beat Don Beebe (Bills) with a time of 6.34
(Alexander) Wright (Raiders) beat Terrell Buckley (Packers) easily with a time of 6.24
(Randal) Hill (Cardinals) beat Steve Israel (Rams) also very easily with a 6.25
Troy Vincent (Dolphins) upset Anthony Miller (Chargers) with a 6.44

2nd round
Haynes defeats Hill with a time of 6.29
Wright wins over Vincent with a 6.22

In the final heat Wright ran the 60 yards in 6.19 seconds, Michael Haynes, who finished with a  6.20 time."

Pro Football Journal is still searching for the heat-by-heat data for the competition.

1994
There was no competition

1995
Champion: James Trapp

"Trapp (6.26) won the competition after the 1995 season, narrowly beating Raiders teammate James Jett (6.32) - note: Michael Bates also ran a 6.32 but lost second place in a photo finish to Jett. 

Trapp advanced to face Jett by running a 6.25-second 60-yard dash (also reported as a 6.29) to beat defending champion Alexander Wright, earlier he beat Michael Bates. 

Entrants also included two-time defending champion, Glyn Milburn of Denver and Viking Qadry Ismail (and Tyrone Hughes) both (all) of whom Jett prevailed over to meet Trapp in the final."

1996
Champion: James Jett

"Receiver James Jett finished the 60-yard sprint in 6.10 seconds and edged Trapp (6.15) in the final. 

Rams wide receiver Alexander Wright finished third. Wright was clocked in 6.25. The Packers Travis Jervey finished fourth.

Jervey's time of 6.32 seconds was enough to place him fourth overall -- ahead of both Minnesota wide receiver Qadry Ismail (6.4) and Detroit all-purpose performer Glyn Milburn (6.42).

In the finals, Oakland wide receiver James Jett, ran 6.10 and defeated Trapp (6.22) and St. Louis wide receiver Alexander Wright (6.30)."

1997
Champion: Eddie Kennison

"Kennison won the annual NFL Fastest Man event with a time of 6.12 seconds in the 60-yard dash.

In an odd turn, Kennison lost his heat race to Oakland defensive back James Trapp. However, Kennison's time was second-fastest in the preliminaries, and the rules stipulated that he would be allowed to compete in the final heat.

Other players in the field were James Jett of the Raiders and Travis Jervey (and Herschel Walker)."

Giants defensive back Jason Sehorn was also invited.

Jervey (6.40) beat Herschel Walker's 6.48 in one preliminary heat. Jervey went on to finish fourth with a clocking of 6.25 seconds.


************************

1997 marked the end of the competition that lasted a bit over a decade. In looking at the Pro Football Chronicle data combined with the 1990s data we find:

Fastest time in the 1990s: James Jett 6.10.
Fastest time in the 1980s: Ron Brown 6.095

Darrell Green won the most titles with four and that would seemingly verify that he was the NFL's Fastest man.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

PFJ's 2013 All-Pro Team

Here are our picks as the best in the business—
Here are the All-AFC and All-NFC picks:


MVP—Peyton Manning, QB, Denver
OPOY— Peyton Manning, QB, Denver
DPOY—Robert Quinn, DE, St. Louis
OROY—Eddie Lacy, RB, Green Bay
DROY—Sheldon Richardson, DE-DT, N.Y. Jets
Coach—Bruce Arians, Arizona
Comeback—Darrelle Revis, CB, Tampa Bay
Exec—Steve Keim, GM, Arizona
Position Awards:
Offensive Lineman of the Year—Tyron Smith, Dallas
Defensive Lineman of the Year—Robert Quinn, St. Louis
Linebacker of the Year—Lavonte David, Tampa Bay
Defensive Back of the Year—Richard Sherman, Seattle
Running Back of the Year—LeSean McCoy, Philadelphia
Receiver of the Year—Jimmy Graham, New Orleans
Returner of the Year—Cordarrelle Patterson, Minnesota
Special Teams Player of the Year—Justin Bethel, Arizona
Kicker/Punter of the Year—Johnny Hekker, St. Louis


Friday, November 1, 2013

Anatomy of a Seattle Game-Deciding Bomb

By John Turney
Golden Tate beats Jackrabbit Jenkins for a touchdown, or did he?
In a defensive battle Monday night there was one very notable offensive play, a third-quarter 80-yard touchdown pass from Russell Wilson to Golden Tate that put the Seahawks up 14-6 and they held on for a 14-9 win. The Seahawks withheld a late Rams drive and had an excellent goal-line stand with no time remaining to preserve the win as the Rams tried five plays from the inside the seven yards with less than a minute to play and didn't allow the hometown Rams to get a game-winning touchdown.

Here is the 80-yard play—

ABC's Monday Noght Football colorman Jon Gruden broke the play down this way—
"This is the first time I've seen the Rams in two-deep and you see the slot receiver run right down the seam to control the safety and Golden Tate releases to the outside and the ball is thrown, it should be intercepted by Jenkins but he just misjudged the football"

Well, maybe not Coach Gruden who knows there has to be a counter to a seam route versus Cover-2, whether Tampa-2 or Cover-2 latch (a LBer or slot nickel takes the slot/TE man-to-man). If not teams would throw to the "seam/hole" every time they saw Cover-2.

In this case it was a Tampa-2 call with a defensive lineman dropping into one of the short interior zones to get an extra defender short,  so it's five under, hole and two deep—that's the intention anyway. 

Here is our breakdown—
Rams called a version of Tampa-2, but with perhaps a sixth short defender, a DT taking a short zone with nickel back playing to the inside

Here MLBer James Laurinaitis bit too hard on the play-action fake and abandoned his zone which was the "hole" or middle zone between the two deep safeties
Laurinaitis, knowing he cannot get back to the hole, turns the call, essentially, into a MIKE dog and rushes Wilson. The near 1/2 safety sees there is no hole defender and has a seam runner coming at him so he's left with a decision to make.

The near 1/2 safety takes the seam receiver but that leaves the near corner with no deep help, which he is expecting
Wilson gets the ball off, Laurinaitis gets a hit on the QB and Wilson throws to the single-covers go-route to the near sideline (his far sideline)
Wilson's ball is perfect, the CB plays it well, but Tate makes a great play on the ball and with no deep help a what might have been just a long gainer is turned into a touchdown
Additionally, even with the taking of the seam route, the free safety cannot "get there" to stop the play to give the defense a chance to regroup and hold Seattle to a field goal.

So, what may have looked like single coverage on Tate which Wilson exploited, was a defensive call that had deep help, it just couldn't get there because an over-aggressive play-action read caused a domino effect that led to the safety put in a difficult position—a no-win position as it were.
Tate was flagged 15 yards for taunting on the 80-touchdown
So, clearly Coach Gruden has forgotten more football than we will ever know, but we don't think a simple seam route challenging the safety was the issue, per se, it was no hole defender putting that safety in a pickle.

That's what we think, anyway.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Anatomy of a Bomb

LOOKING BACK (Slightly)
By John Turney

Sam Bradford injured his knee Sunday versus the Carolina Panthers and is likely out of the season. The injury seems typical for the kind of luck Bradford has had in St. Louis since being the first overall pick in the 2010 NFL Draft.

When he has protection and receivers who can bring the ball in he's had success. Unfortunately, his pass protection and skills sets for his receivers have been lacking.

However, in the following nine stills (All credits go to NFL Replay) we can see what Bradford is capable of. 

One a first down (a likely running down) in the third quarter the Rams line up with two tight ends right and the Z-receiver (off the line) outside the X-receiver who is in a tight split (inside the numbers). The Z-receiver motions to the two tight end side and the cornerback who was covering him stays with the X-and the corner who was lined up over the X-receiver follows the motion of the Z- receiver across the formation, giving the impression of man-to-man coverage underneath.
However, the Panthers play or audible to Cover-3 with two of the underneath zone players blitzing and one defensive lineman dropping back and replacing one of the blitzers in the short zones.The right defensive end takes the weak flat the right linebacker takes the short middle and the strong safety takes the strong flat.
The Rams run a hard play-action and send the X-receiver (Brian Quick on a deep skinny post) and the Y (tight end) Lance Kendricks runs an 'under' route and the Z-receiver (Chris Givens) runs an 'over' route at a depth of 12-15 yards.
The Rams pass protection slid left, leaving the second TE to blocking the blitzing Thomas Davis and the running back, Zac Stacy, to pick up Luke Kuechly.
The 'under' route by Kendricks is no threat, he runs below the short defenders and Givens's 'over' route is picked up by the free safety after he's passed off by the near cornerback. With no other threats, the corner goes deep to help the far corner who, though in zone coverage, has Brian Quick man-to-man with no over-the-top help since the Givens route drew the free safety.

In zone coverage, your "man" is the guy who crosses your zone in a classic case of how zone coverage becomes man.
Bradford steps up and lets the ball fly, right down the hash marks with the far corner in trail position to Quick:
 Ball arrives and hits Quick in stride:
And Quick is able to stay ahead of the far corner who trailed him but also the near corner who passed off Givens and then tried to give deep help to the far corner. However, when a pass travels 55 yards in the air, that makes for a tough assignment. Sometimes it's referred to as taking the top off of a zone defense:
In all the play gained 73-yards. 

For the season, Bradford upped his passer rating to over 90 and in 6½ games he completed 159 of 262 passes for a completion percentage of 60.7 and totaled 1687 yards, 14 touchdown passes and for interceptions. 

Those numbers put Bradford on pace for numbers like 363/599 on completions and attempt, 3856 yards for 32 TDs and 9 INTs. But in 2013 those will not happen. "The kn-ee, the kn-ee, always the kn-ee"—Howard Cosell

Monday, October 21, 2013

1984 Football News Players of the Week

LOOKING BACK
By John Turney
Starting in 1984 the weekly publication Football News began selection their own players of the week, as Pro Football Weekly began doing in 1978 and as the NFL and Sports Illustrated began doing, also in 1984.

However, there were times they didn't make selections, such as early in the season and over the Thanksgiving break and over the Christmas and New Years holidays.

Here are the first year's selections:
Week Offense Defense
1 No selection No selection
2 No selection No selection
3 Steve DeBerg, Buccaneers Mark Gastineau, Jets
4 John Riggins, Redskins Lawrence Taylor, Giants
5 Dan Marino, Dolphins Kansas City Chiefs Defense
6 Dan Fouts, Chargers Bob Baumhower, Dolphins
7 John Riggins, Redskins Gill Byrd, Chargers
8 Mark Wilson, Raiders Mark Gastineau, Jets
9 Larry Kinnebrew, Bengals Tom Flynn, Packers
10 Eric Dickerson, Rams Jack Youngblood, Rams &
Dave Brown, Seahawks
11 No selection No selection
12 Otis Wonsley, Redskins James Wilkes, Saints
13 Eric Dickerson, Rams Todd Shell, 49ers
14 No selection No selection
15 Eric Dickerson, Rams Scott Radecic, Chiefs
16 No selection No selection
Lots of names most fans will know, but also a nice set of players like Kennebrew, Wonsley, Shell, and Radecic. John Riggins garnered two selections and Eric Dickerson, three. Mark Gastineau was the only defensive player to get named twice in 1984.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Quality or quantity? The Debate Rages on Lynn Swann’s Hall of Fame Credentials

Reprinted from Pro Football Weekly online

******************************

Pro Football Weekly

Quality or quantity? The debate rages on over Swann’s Hall of Fame credentials

By:    John Turney

Monday, Jan. 22, 2001 

Every year for the last 13 years, the day before the Super Bowl, a great debate begins. It entails the pros and cons of former Pittsburgh Steelers WR Lynn Swann and his worthiness of being inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Swann has been the most debated player in the history of the Hall of Fame, having been on the list of final 15 candidates a record 14 times, including the upcoming list for 2001. No player has been a finalist that many times without being voted in. Swann has been on that list every year since he became eligible in 1988. 

This debate has, at times, been very contentious. Myron Cope, the Steelers' radio broadcaster and inventor of the "Terrible Towel," resigned from the selection committee because he felt he was getting too emotional and might be hurting Swann's chances of induction. Some of the voters even dread going over the same territory every year. 

The debate goes something like this: The cons are articulated by people like Sports Illustrated's Peter King, who is one of the fairest and thoughtful voters on the Hall of Fame committee. The naysayers point to the fact that Swann averaged less than three catches per game for his career and say that is simply not a Hall of Fame number. The pro argument, as voiced by the likes of Paul Zimmerman, also at Sports Illustrated, goes something like this, "What do you want, quality or quantity? Swann's catches were mostly made downfield, his catches meant something and he played his best when the stakes were the highest." 

Both sides seem to have merit, which is why there has been a stalemate on that committee for 14 years. There are enough of the voters on the "con" side to block those on the "pro" side but still enough of the pros to keep Swann's name on the list for more than a dozen seasons. 

Swann's nine-year career was indeed short by usual Hall of Fame standards, but it should be noted that Swann had problems with concussions early in his career. He was knocked cold in 1975, a week before he played possibly the best game by a wide receiver in the history of the Super Bowl. The following year George Atkinson gave Swann his second major concussion in two seasons, inciting the debate of whether there was a "criminal element" in the game of football. However, it was not the concussion that cut Swann's career short. 

It was always Swann's plan to play in the NFL for 10 years, but after his ninth, he was offered a television deal that dwarfed what he would have earned in the NFL. In 1982 the players were not pulling in the kind of dollars they are today, so financial stability was a factor. "I weighed the decision of playing another year to getting a foothold into my next career, and I think I made the right choice. I am still in broadcasting." 

Swann has often jabbed at former Steeler head coach Chuck Noll, saying that his type of offense has kept Swann out of the Hall of Fame. Noll was a run-first coach. From 1974 to ’82, the Steelers ran the ball 58.9 percent of the time, among the highest percentages in the NFL for that period. Even in 1978, when the NFL loosened the rules to enhance the passing game, Noll wasn't having any, at least on a regular basis. The Steelers still threw the ball 100 to 150 fewer times than teams like San Francisco, San Diego, Cleveland, Seattle, Minnesota and a few others whose receivers put up big numbers, and therefore gained the attention of the Hall of Fame voters. 

Still, when the Steelers threw, their passes were down the field. During that same period of 1974-82, the Steelers averaged 14.1 yards per completion, the second-highest average in the NFL. While the Raiders talked of the vertical game, it was the Steelers who practiced it most effectively. The Steelers’ offensive game plan was simple: pound the ball with Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier and when a shot was available down the field, take it. Terry Bradshaw's credo, "Throw deep," wasn't just idle talk for the Steelers; it was a reality. 

No one has ever questioned Swann's talent, just his career numbers. However, when looked at in context, his numbers look excellent. Swann averaged 46 catches per 16 games for 753 yards and seven touchdowns. Hall of Famer Charlie Joiner was called by Bill Walsh "the smartest, most calculating receiver the game has ever known." Which may be true, but his career average was not much more than Swann's. Over his 18-year career, Joiner averaged 50 catches and 813 yards and 4.4 touchdowns per 16 games. That is roughly one extra 15-yard curl, a pattern that Joiner was the master of, every four games. Of course, compared to Joiner, Swann averaged an additional touchdown every six games. Joiner retired as the leading pass catcher in NFL history, thanks to some degree to being part of a forward-thinking head coach who put the ball in the air 55 percent of the time. Had Swann played for those Chargers teams, many think he would have put up great numbers in a "Air Coryell" offense. 

The case is similar to Art Monk, who is eligible for the Hall this year. Monk averaged 67 catches for 909 yards and five touchdowns per 16 games. Compared to Swann, Monk averaged about one 1.3 more catches for almost 10 extra yards every game. With Monk, however, you would have to give back a touchdown every seven games. So what do you want, more catches or more touchdowns? The Steelers’ coaches chose an offense that would get them championships. Damn the statistics, full trap ahead. 

The reasonable point here is that eras changed during Swann's career. Great players like Monk and Joiner were on the leading edge of a passing revolution in the NFL that began in 1978. Receptions were easier to get, due to rule changes in pass defense and pass blocking. The numbers that receivers post are more staggering every season, culminating with the St. Louis Rams’ passing offense that broke so many records the past two seasons. 

Of course, the Hall of Fame should never be decided on speculation, but if Swann could play in the Rams’ offense of today, a reasonable observer would have to concede that he would put up huge numbers. Seeing Isaac Bruce — the clean cuts, the body control, the acceleration — reminds some experts of Swann, but with the talent edge going to Swann. The same holds true for Marvin Harrison, who dons Swann's number and slight build, but Swann's athleticism had a certain grace and beauty to it. Swann could have made a living winning those old, made-for-TV "Super Stars" competitions that Swann just dominated. Regardless of what Swannie did, he did it well and with style. 

Swann reflects back to the days when they would watch the Chargers on film and be amazed at the number of balls that were available. "We were lucky to throw 15 to 20 passes a game. In our offense you had to be happy to get three or four in a game; now they get that many in a quarter." Today it would be a different story. "I know with that same group of guys and running a big-time offense like the 1999-2000 Rams, John (teammate WR John Stallworth) and I would do what they are doing today in terms of catches, yards, whatever. Theo Bell, Jim Smith and Bennie Cunningham were all excellent players who could play today. I'll say this: It would be fun." 

The strongest case to be made for Swann is that he played best when it counted most, in the playoffs. Swann did come up huge in 16 postseason games. He caught 47 passes for 906 yards for an 18.9-yard average and nine touchdowns — against playoff competition in a run-first era. In those 16 games the Steelers came out victorious 13 times, including four times in the Super Bowl. Swann made a couple of big catches in the AFC championship game that propelled the Steelers into Super Bowl IX against the Vikings. 

Swann was the MVP in Super Bowl X with perhaps the best "big" game any receiver has ever played. He made four catches, three of the circus variety, for 161 yards, including the game-winning grab. "Terry Bradshaw only threw five passes to me that day." What Swann won't tell you but knows in his heart is that a normal wide receiver could not have made three of those catches. They were too difficult, too unique to his set of skills — in a word, too much Swann. 

He caught the go-ahead pass in Super Bowl XIII that put Dallas in a hole. On that one, Swann called the play in the huddle because he saw the Dallas cornerbacks coming up. He knew they were biting on the three-step drop. So Swann waited for Bradshaw to pump-fake, and that was his signal to blow by the corner. He did, and that touchdown, for all intents and purposes, sealed the Cowboys’ fate that day. 

The following year there was Super Bowl XIV, in which he made a spectacular, leaping 47-yard touchdown reception that gave the Steelers the lead. On that catch, Swann outleaped the Rams’ two best defensive backs, Pat Thomas and Nolan Cromwell. Cromwell was so close to knocking it down that, to this day, it nearly kills Ram fans to see that highlight. A few plays later, Swann was knocked out of the game with yet another concussion, and it became Stallworth's turn to catch the game-winning touchdown pass. 

When Swann decided to retire after nine seasons, he felt he had gotten all he could out of football — All-Pro, Super Bowl MVP, Pro Bowls, Super Bowl rings. All that is left is the Hall of Fame. His choice of health and a new career in the media has definitely affected his chances. Had he played a few more years, his regular-season numbers might look better. But would they make him a greater player? Absolutely not. 

Jerry Rice, the king of all wide receivers, paid Swann the best compliment ever. It was done in a subtle way, the way jocks talk to each other, simple, direct and sincere, "He walked up to me," Swann remembers, "and said, ‘Swannie, you were "the Guy," to everybody.’ "Swann knew what that meant. Swann knew he had made an impact. 

Swann knows that he had an impact. He is secure with the fact he has Super Bowl rings. He is secure in the knowledge that he did his job, he made the touch catches, he went across the middle, he played great in big games, he brought skill and grace to the WR position and also brought intelligence and knowledge of the game. He remembers making an impact his rookie year as a punt returner. He knows the answer to the question: "Was he good enough to be in the Hall of Fame?" The question he can’t answer is whether the selection committee voters know it too. 

The debate will rage once again on Super Bowl Saturday, and the committee will let us know whether quantity or quality. But time may be running out for Swann, who has this year and next to be voted in. Unless that is, Swann becomes the subject of a regular debate at the Hall of Fame Seniors Committee meetings each August. 

Let's hope the air conditioning is in working order for those sessions—if they occur. 

John Turney is the researcher/historian for the Dick Butkus Football Network and a member of the Pro Football Researchers Association.