CREAM OF WHEAT, BOYS PLAYING FOOTBALL
Check out these football images:
CREAM OF WHEAT, BOYS PLAYING FOOTBALL

Image by George Eastman House
Accession Number: 1971:0056:0027
Maker: Nickolas Muray (American 1892-1965)
Title: "CREAM OF WHEAT, BOYS PLAYING FOOTBALL"
Date: 1936
Medium: "color print, assembly (Carbro) process"
Dimensions: Dimensions Unknown
George Eastman House Collection
General – information about the George Eastman House Photography Collection is available at http://www.eastmanhouse.org/inc/collections/photography.php.
For information on obtaining reproductions go to: www.eastmanhouse.org/flickr/index.php?pid=197100560027.
football

Image by [phil h]
Seme Beach, Southwest Province, Cameroon.
December 2005.
—
(as for the presentation: just couldn’t deal with the flatness of flickr today…
)
you might appreciate ‘football’ On White
to see some additional impressions from Cameroon go here.
Pick up a greeting card or a print of this image at my online store.
Pittsburgh Steelers Legend Terry Bradshaw
There is no arguing that the Pittsburg Steelers have been one of the more effective teams inside the history in the National Football League, and have certainly been the most effective when it comes to the Super Bowl. In the course of the team’s 67 years as a franchise, they have played in the most title games inside AFC than any NFL team, and have also won much more of those contests. With a total of six victories inside Super Bowl, they reign supreme. In fact, since the 1970s, there has not been a decade that did not have at least one of its Super Bowl games using the Steelers as being a participant. Their greatest years, on the other hand, would have to be that period that saw them win four Super Bowl titles under one single quarterback: the Steelers legend Terry Bradshaw.The man with all the arm of steelHowever modern fans may perhaps not know it, given his current status as a sports analyst and commentating partner from the fantastic Howie Extended, Bradshaw was once far better known as Mister Steel Arm. In the course of his fourteen years using the Steelers, he had one in the strongest arms within the game – an arm that was only dwarfed by his ability to project an image of solid steel on the field. To be a player who made the play decisions from the huddle himself, Bradshaw was undoubtedly just one in the finest quarterbacks ever to lead any team. However credit is often given exclusively the Pittsburgh’s famed Steel Curtain defense from the 1970s, the play of Terry Bradshaw was as responsible as anything else for the incredible success individuals Steelers teams enjoyed.As a leaderAs the number one draft selection from the Steelers in 1970, Bradshaw had little to do in his first season with the team. When he did begin in that second season, he had some trouble adjusting towards the game at the professional level. That actuality, along with his southern accent and continual interceptions led several in the media to assume that he was just a dim-witted country boy who was in over his head. Terry ignored the comments and concentrated on his play, eventually becoming the ideal of his generation. Individuals who argue that reality have only to take into account the eight divisional titles and four total Super Bowls he won being a member on the Steelers. How great was he?Forget everything you have heard about how Bradshaw was excellent only because the Steel Curtain defense was fantastic. That’s sheer nonsense. The simple fact is that much of that defense’s strength came from the actuality that Bradshaw had an arm like a cannon. While using ever-present threat of a Bradshaw lengthy ball, opposing defenses had to loosen their grip at the line, allowing the Steelers running game to be a lot more powerful than it otherwise might are already. The Steelers defense was thus able to get plenty of rest while their offense dominated the clock. Bradshaw was never as dumb as he was accused of being either. His response to such insults has always been to remind the listeners that football has in no way been the equivalent of rocket science – although if it was rocket science, Bradshaw would are already a PhD.
check out our Pittsburgh Steelers Watch or our Dallas Cowboys Bedding or our Denver Broncos Watch
Why do Americans call football “soccer” and the rest of the world calls it football?
style = “float: left; margin: 5px; font-size: 80%”>
by Ed Yourdon
michaelpuss69 question : Why do Americans call football “soccer” and the rest of the world calls football ?
Where do we get “football” from? Why do we Americans call it football like the rest of the world? I mean, our football has not even include the foot, unless you’re kicking Best Answer.
Reply from
paz.amor.futbol:]
ive asked this question .. Here are the answers I am are .. http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index; _ylt = AsScV3Zru9mw5u8E0PYa.V_ty6IX;? _ylv qid = 3 = 20080620204059AApB9a6
Add your own answer in the comments!