Skip to main content

Done with the NFL for the year

 
I feel like my position on the NFL is stuck between two prevailing opinions of football, with few sharing my perspective.
 
On one end are the people who are madly devoted to the league, they tailgate, leap on tables, hold Super Bowl parties, place bets, play in five fantasy leagues and collect the hell out of the star players. On the other end are the people who have dropped football from their lives -- It's barbaric, it shortens lives, it worships only money and some of its participants are some of the worst humans in sport.
 
I am neither of those perspectives (though I share traits from both). I like the NFL season -- far more than college football, which I can't wait to ignore forever. I am excited when the NFL starts, I appreciate it when there's no more MLB season, I enjoy the community that encircles the Bills and it is one of the few connections to my favorite city and the time I lived there.
 
I can't give it up. But it wears on me. too.
 
When was there a Super Bowl matchup that I really liked, one in which one of the participants wasn't hated or one in which I wasn't flat-out bored over? Packers-Steelers (2011)? Colts-Bears (2007)? It's been awhile.
 
I have no interest in this one, I will be rooting for a loser. As someone who can find something interesting in whatever baseball game is happening, I can't do the same for football. It will always be second-best.
 
Same goes for the cards. I will collect them -- mostly the vintage kind. But it's in between baseball pursuits. But since football is the thing right now (and because I received some cards), I'm returning to my 1979 Topps football chase. You remember 1979, right? When Chiefs and Eagles weren't a thought in the postseason? Good times.
 
 

 I received these '79s from Cardboard Catastrophes. Jeff found them at a show. They are in beautiful shape. This particular card was the last of the Earl Campbells that I needed for the set. The Oilers were my favorite team at the time and Campbell my favorite player. It's a shame what the NFL did to the Oilers and Earl Campbell.
 
 

Steelers leaders does not include Lynn Swann because much like Earl Campbell, Topps didn't have the rights to feature the superstar, which seems like a major miss. Good thing I was a youngster and didn't notice things like that.
 
 

The final leaders card I needed, featuring the two biggest quarterbacks of the day. It seemed like the Cowboys and Steelers were always in the Super Bowl when I was arriving at the sport. It says a lot that Bradshaw is in the public eye -- still -- and I couldn't tell you what Roger Staubach is doing. Right in line with their personalities when they were players.
 
 

Another quarterback titan of the time. Fran Tarkenton stayed in the public realm a little more than Staubach after his career but he's really up there now and I haven't heard about him in awhile. The first Super Bowl I ever saw was Super Bowl XI with the Vikings and Raiders and I was rooting for the Vikings. In true NFL fashion, the Super Bowl said, "no, your team can't win," and I probably should have quit following football right there and then instead of staying and becoming a Bills fan of all things.
 
Anyway, the Tarkenton photo is classic, but I can see why folks would prefer the 1977 card.
 

 Quite a difference.
 
 

Finally, here's Bradshaw again, hogging the post (I promise this card has borders, the slight curl of the cards plays havoc with the scanning cropping tool). Every time I see him on the Fox panel, I want to scream "retire already!" But I'm sure he can't.
 
Those are some very nice additions and most of the big names that were left on my want list. About all I have left are the Joe Theismann and Rocky Bleier cards and a handful of checklists. Seven cards in all. I should be able to take care of that quite easily.
 
I will watch the Super Bowl -- I'm off, what else am I going to do? But it's not going to come near to what baseball's big finale did for me. Will I still be watching highlights four months later? Absolutely not.

Comments

Doc Samson said…
I remember watching both quarterbacks play back in the day. Totally different styles. Tark was more of a playmaker and Bradshaw was more of a mad bomber. I will watch the game on Sunday and have no dog in this fight.
Jimetal7212 said…
Done? Allen just won MVP. Good day for the Bills.
night owl said…
More of a consolation prize.
bryan was here said…
If the Eagles weren't in it this year, I probably wouldn't watch, or just watch passively.
I always thought it odd that there weren't Lynn Swann cards after 1977. I at least knew Earl Campbell had an endorsement deal with Skoal chewing tobacco, so that probably tracks.
Best part of the Superbowl Sunday.... We have an annual tradition of making guacamole with one of my two sons. Literally thats what make me look forward to the day.
Tony Lehman said…
I am actually a hardcore college football fan and pretty much stopped caring about the NFL about 10 years ago. I think it's because my wife and I both care a lot about college ball, and by the time Sunday comes, I really have had enough football after 12+ hours on Saturday. I've thought about collecting college cards but I've decided against it for now.
John Bateman said…
Terry Bradshaw has been in the NFL limelight for 55 years now(1970 number 1 pick), I can't think of any other person like that other than Connie Mack
Matt said…
And I am the complete opposite of this. I will watch, be a die hard as football NFL is all year long
Anonymous said…
As a Vikings fan in the 1970s, those 1979 cards just crushed me. The Vikings were already obviously in decline, looking more old, small, slow, tired and weak with every season. So for the 1979 cards, they used a bunch of pictures of the Vikings from an early-season road game at Tampa Bay, where in the blistering sun and heat, the Vikings on the sidelines looked more old and tired than ever. The Tarkenton, Marshall, Eller, Yary cards are particularly depressing, and even a young Sammie White looks like he's succumbing to the heat too. The Vikings actually won that game 24-7 and played very well that day, but you sure wouldn't know it from looking at their 1979 cards. Plus Tarkenton had already retired by the time the 1979 cards came out, so his card was kind of a "death mask" of his career, and to me the picture they chose was a disgrace for a player who was possibly the most dynamic in NFL history to be shown looking so drawn and tired.
AdamE said…
I used to be one of those mad NFL fans. I watched ever single game that came on TV no matter who was playing. Over the years though I have slowly dropped to only watching my team, Sunday, Monday Night Football, and the playoffs. Then it was just my team, MNF, and the playoffs. Now it is just my team and the playoffs. This had been a long term thing. I can't place when I became numb to the rest of the NFL but it was pre 2006; I only know that because Thursday Night Football still doesn't register as a thing in my brain and google says it was been weekly since 2006. I forget that is a thing until my team plays on a Thursday. Also, that, table thing, that's only Buffalo. lol
Nick Vossbrink said…
I successfully gave up football around a decade ago. I don't like watching guys get hurt and I really hate the way the league and teams treat municipalities. Was hard though since I grew up with it. Has gotten even harder now that my kids have been into it the past few seasons.

I've been watching again. With them. In large part so I can teach them what to look for and pass on what I know about the sport.
Fuji said…
A. The 1978 NFL Passing Leaders card is really cool. I like seeing legends paired up on cards.

B. I was really hoping for a Redskins vs. Bills Super Bowl, so not overly excited about tomorrow's game. I'm gonna quietly root for the Chiefs... only because I want to see Mahomes win three in a row.
GCA said…
I love watching football best of all the sports. I can't even get local baseball anyway. And the "minor" league(s) are even better. Loved the AAF, watched the new USFL and the UFL.
I'll check for a '79 Thiesmann.....