John Madden has passed

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F1nut
F1nut Posts: 49,792
Political Correctness'.........defined

"A doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical minority and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a t-u-r-d by the clean end."


President of Club Polk

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  • SIHAB
    SIHAB Posts: 4,519
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    One of the greats. RIP
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  • JayCee
    JayCee Posts: 1,479
    edited December 2021
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    My dad played jr college football under him in the early 60's. Madden was a stickler for grades and expected high standards both on and off the field. My dad was cut from the team...and went on to graduate with honors. RIP Big John
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  • vmaxer
    vmaxer Posts: 5,116
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    Sad news, RIR
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  • la2vegas
    la2vegas Posts: 602
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    May he rest in peace...
  • Toolfan66
    Toolfan66 Posts: 16,895
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    R.I.P Sure miss the Thanksgiving Day games hearing your voice..
  • Tony M
    Tony M Posts: 11,015
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    He had that football commentator knowledge and voice like Cosell did.

    I ALWAYS liked how Madden explained plays in depth.

    He was also a funny guy, if I remember right.

    R.I.P. Mr. Madden
    Most people just listen to music and watch movies. I EXPERIENCE them.
  • pitdogg2
    pitdogg2 Posts: 24,554
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  • audioluvr
    audioluvr Posts: 5,432
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    R.I.P. :(
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    There is about a 5% genetic difference between apes and men …but that difference is the difference between throwing your own poo when you are annoyed …and Einstein, Shakespeare and Miss January. by Dr. Sardonicus
  • PSOVLSK
    PSOVLSK Posts: 5,053
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    Legend
    Things work out best for those who make the best of the way things work out.-John Wooden
  • Nightfall
    Nightfall Posts: 10,067
    edited December 2021
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    BOOM! tough acting Tinactin. I don't know why but that's what I remember him for over football even.

    RIP sir.
    afterburnt wrote: »
    They didn't speak a word of English, they were from South Carolina.

    Village Idiot of Club Polk
  • tratliff
    tratliff Posts: 1,662
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    If you didn’t catch the All Madden show on Xmas day on fox you find it. A great show. RIP Coach.
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  • indyhawg
    indyhawg Posts: 1,636
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    RIP. Great Coach and commentator. He will be missed.
  • Milito
    Milito Posts: 1,909
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    One of a kind, he will be missed by all.
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  • motorhead43026
    motorhead43026 Posts: 3,892
    edited December 2021
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    RIP Mr Madden, you and the Raiders smash mouth football played at the highest level.
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    The best way to predict the future is to invent it.

    It is imperative that we recognize that an opinion is not a fact.

    Imagine making politics your entire personality.
  • BlueBirdMusic
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    WHAT A MAN; WHAT A COACH!

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    By JOSH DUBOW, Associated Press

    John Madden, the Hall of Fame coach turned broadcaster whose exuberant calls combined with simple explanations provided a weekly soundtrack to NFL games for three decades, died Tuesday morning, the league said. He was 85.

    The NFL said he died unexpectedly and did not detail a cause.

    Madden gained fame in a decade-long stint as the coach of the renegade Oakland Raiders, making it to seven AFC title games and winning the Super Bowl following the 1976 season. He compiled a 103-32-7 regular-season record, and his .759 winning percentage is the best among NFL coaches with more than 100 games.

    But it was his work after prematurely retiring as coach at age 42 that made Madden truly a household name. He educated a football nation with his use of the telestrator on broadcasts; entertained millions with his interjections of “Boom!” and “Doink!” throughout games; was an omnipresent pitchman selling restaurants, hardware stores and beer; became the face of “Madden NFL Football,” one of the most successful sports video games of all-time; and was a best-selling author.

    Most of all, he was the preeminent television sports analyst for most of his three decades calling games, winning an unprecedented 16 Emmy Awards for outstanding sports analyst/personality, and covering 11 Super Bowls for four networks from 1979-2009.

    “People always ask, are you a coach or a broadcaster or a video game guy?” he said when was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. “I’m a coach, always been a coach.”

    He started his broadcasting career at CBS after leaving coaching in great part because of his fear of flying. He and Pat Summerall became the network’s top announcing duo. Madden then helped give Fox credibility as a major network when he moved there in 1994, and went on to call prime-time games at ABC and NBC before retiring following Pittsburgh’s thrilling 27-23 win over Arizona in the 2009 Super Bowl.

    Burly and a little unkempt, Madden earned a place in America’s heart with a likable, unpretentious style that was refreshing in a sports world of spiraling salaries and prima donna stars. He rode from game to game in his own bus because he suffered from claustrophobia and had stopped flying. For a time, Madden gave out a “turducken” — a chicken stuffed inside a duck stuffed inside a turkey — to the outstanding player in the Thanksgiving game that he called.


    When he finally retired from the broadcast booth, leaving NBC's “Sunday Night Football,” colleagues universally praised Madden’s passion for the sport, his preparation, and his ability to explain an often-complicated game in down-to-earth terms.

    Al Michaels, Madden's broadcast partner for seven years on ABC and NBC, said working with him “was like hitting the lottery.”

    “He was so much more than just football — a keen observer of everything around him and a man who could carry on a smart conversation about hundreds and hundreds of topics. The term ‘Renaissance Man’ is tossed around a little too loosely these days, but John was as close as you can come,” Michaels said.

    For anyone who heard Madden exclaim “Boom!” while breaking down a play, his love of the game was obvious.

    “For me, TV is really an extension of coaching,” Madden wrote in “Hey, Wait a Minute! (I Wrote a Book!).”

    “My knowledge of football has come from coaching. And on TV, all I’m trying to do is pass on some of that knowledge to viewers.”

    Madden was raised in Daly City, California. He played on both the offensive and defensive lines for Cal Poly in 1957-58 and earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the school.

    Madden was chosen to the all-conference team and was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles, but a knee injury ended his hopes of a pro playing career. Instead, Madden got into coaching, first at Hancock Junior College and then as defensive coordinator at San Diego State.

    Al Davis brought him to the Raiders as a linebackers coach in 1967, and Oakland went to the Super Bowl in his first year in the pros. He replaced John Rauch as head coach after the 1968 season at age 32, beginning a remarkable 10-year run.

    With his demonstrative demeanor on the sideline and disheveled look, Madden was the ideal coach for the collection of castoffs and misfits that made up those Raiders teams.

    “Sometimes guys were disciplinarians in things that didn’t make any difference. I was a disciplinarian in jumping offsides; I hated that,” Madden once said. “Being in bad position and missing tackles, those things. I wasn’t, ‘Your hair has to be combed.’”

    The Raiders responded.

    “I always thought his strong suit was his style of coaching,” quarterback Ken Stabler once said. “John just had a great knack for letting us be what we wanted to be, on the field and off the field. ... How do you repay him for being that way? You win for him.”

    And boy, did they ever. Many years, the only problem was the playoffs.

    Madden went 12-1-1 in his first season, losing the AFL title game 17-7 to Kansas City. That pattern repeated itself during his tenure; the Raiders won the division title in seven of his first eight seasons, but went 1-6 in conference title games during that span.

    Still, Madden’s Raiders played in some of the sport’s most memorable games of the 1970s, games that helped change rules in the NFL. There was the “Holy Roller” in 1978, when Stabler purposely fumbled forward before being sacked on the final play. The ball rolled and was batted to the end zone before Dave Casper recovered it for the winning touchdown against San Diego.

    The most famous of those games went against the Raiders in the 1972 playoffs at Pittsburgh. With the Raiders leading 7-6 and 22 seconds left, the Steelers had a fourth-and-10 from their 40. Terry Bradshaw’s desperation pass deflected off either Oakland’s Jack Tatum or Pittsburgh’s Frenchy Fuqua to Franco Harris, who caught it at his shoe tops and ran in for a TD.

    In those days, a pass that bounced off an offensive player directly to a teammate was illegal, and the debate continues to this day over which player it hit. The catch, of course, was dubbed the “Immaculate Reception.”

    Oakland finally broke through with a loaded team in 1976 that had Stabler at quarterback; Fred Biletnikoff and Cliff Branch at receiver; tight end Dave Casper; Hall of Fame offensive linemen Gene Upshaw and Art Shell; and a defense that included Willie Brown, Ted Hendricks, Tatum, John Matuszak, Otis Sistrunk and George Atkinson.

    The Raiders went 13-1, losing only a blowout at New England in Week 4. They paid the Patriots back with a 24-21 win in their first playoff game and got over the AFC title game hump with a 24-7 win over the hated Steelers, who were crippled by injuries.

    Oakland won it all with a 32-14 Super Bowl romp against Minnesota.

    “Players loved playing for him,” Shell said. “He made it fun for us in camp and fun for us in the regular season. All he asked is that we be on time and play like hell when it was time to play.”

    Madden battled an ulcer the following season, when the Raiders once again lost in the AFC title game. He retired from coaching at age 42 after a 9-7 season in 1978.

    Madden was a longtime resident of Pleasanton, California, a Bay Area suburb. A 90-minute documentary on his coaching and broadcasting career, "All Madden," debuted on Fox on Christmas Day. The film featured extensive interviews that Madden sat for this year. His wife, Virginia, and sons Joseph and Michael were also interviewed for the documentary.

    John and Virginia Madden's 62nd wedding anniversary was two days before his death.

    ___

    43ihz5wm4gbu.png

    FILE - Former Oakland Raiders coach John Madden practices the electronic charting device Telestrator on Jan. 21, 1982, in Pontiac, Mich., for the upcoming NFL football Super Bowl broadcast on CBS.




    "Sometimes you have to look to the past to understand where you are going in the future"


    Harry / Marietta GA
  • tonyb
    tonyb Posts: 32,906
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    RIP Football was never the same after he left.
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  • mrbigbluelight
    mrbigbluelight Posts: 9,259
    edited December 2021
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    Madden and Summerall were THE broadcast team bar none.
    He knew his stuff and was so much fun to listen to

    As a coach of Lyle "He oughta be in jail for that" Alzado, Lester "StickEm. Hands" Hayes, Ken "Is He Sober Enough to Play Today" Stabler and the rest of the malcontent, over the top, psycho nuts that played for him.... man, that made a Raiders game Must Watch football. 🤗👍

    Thanks Madden, you done did good ! 😇
    Sal Palooza
  • JayCee
    JayCee Posts: 1,479
    edited December 2021
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    JayCee wrote: »
    My dad played jr college football under him in the early 60's. Madden was a stickler for grades and expected high standards both on and off the field. My dad was cut from the team...and went on to graduate with honors. RIP Big John
    Dad just emailed me this:
    "He was a class act in the class room & field. in 1963, who would have guessed he would become a legend!"

    Another tidbit I'd forgotten, Madden was also a history teacher.
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  • WagnerRC
    WagnerRC Posts: 2,139
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    RIP, The Fox special is a must see.
  • pitdogg2
    pitdogg2 Posts: 24,554
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    WagnerRC wrote: »
    RIP, The Fox special is a must see.

    Most Excellent that special was !!
    I'm glad to have caught it especially now considering the circumstances
  • gmcman
    gmcman Posts: 1,754
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    Sad to hear.

    I agree John and Pat were an epic duo. I always got a kick out of John's screen diagrams after a play. I guess that was his "chalkboard".

    RIP