Joe Namath Highlights (Final Version)

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • I completely re-made the previous video I made for Joe Namath. Namath was an AFL icon, guaranteeing victory in Super Bowl III. He had a quick release and one of the strongest arms ever. Namath was the first player to throw for over 4,000 yards in a season. Also considered one of the most overrated players in NFL history.

Комментарии • 316

  • @SanDmaNTheFreakTrucker
    @SanDmaNTheFreakTrucker 10 месяцев назад +18

    Notice, every TD he throws is to a receiver that is covered pretty well. In those days, defensive backs could mob pass catchers downfield so it was MUCH harder to complete passes. Today’s game offers pass offenses so many more advantages. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve watched Dak Prescott or whoever complete passes to wide receivers that don’t have anyone around them for 5 or 10 yards. It’s insane. Namath was a monster.

  • @65TossTrap
    @65TossTrap Год назад +25

    As a 14 year old I watched him warm up at RFK stadium in 1975 preseason. He was very focused and when that big windmill of an arm came over the top the ball was going 30-40 yards downfield like a frozen rope. I have never seen any one quite like him.

    • @dlarta7265
      @dlarta7265 Год назад +2

      I saw him in Denver in '74 as a kid. I didn't understand the significane, but man he could throw!

    • @aarondigby5054
      @aarondigby5054 11 месяцев назад

      There were plenty of rifle arms in the seventies.

  • @patrickr.5900
    @patrickr.5900 11 месяцев назад +29

    Namath had the purest throwing motion of any QB in history in my opinion. Up and out (quick release) and 50 yards downfield like he was throwing darts. Pretty sure Dan Marino's dad saw Namath (both from western PA) throw and taught his son to throw the same way. The only other QB that comes to mind that was able to throw with no windup was Terry Bradshaw.

  • @merkury06
    @merkury06 2 года назад +49

    Joe Namath had an Arm! I never realized it but he looks like a modern QB. Compared to his era and before especially, I can see why he was a phenom in the late 60s.

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 2 года назад +4

      absolutely ... he would have been successful today with the freedom receivers now have !!!

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr Год назад +1

      @@brucewayne3602I don't think so. His legs would be too fragile for the huge defensive
      Linemen of today. With protection yes!

  • @roberttauber4927
    @roberttauber4927 11 месяцев назад +7

    What made Namath both great and very unusual is he had both exceptional arm strength and touch. He bad a unique ability to throw deep balls that were very catchable.

  • @michaelwoehrl1746
    @michaelwoehrl1746 11 месяцев назад +6

    From watching this you see almost all his passes were right on the mark hitting the receiver in stride. Remarkable!

    • @johnr5252
      @johnr5252 11 месяцев назад +1

      His passes over the middle were perfect. They were thrown on a rope and hit the receiver in stride. Beautiful.

  • @johnconnor6725
    @johnconnor6725 11 месяцев назад +4

    Broadway JOE
    Was
    The SHOW ! ! ! ! !
    The first Legiondary
    QB.
    Before we had all the coverages like we have now, he was what he said. The MAN !

  • @pdm2201
    @pdm2201 Год назад +8

    Namath is in the Hall of Fame because of one game. And he deserves to be there.

  • @boblozaintherealworld3577
    @boblozaintherealworld3577 3 месяца назад +2

    And strong props to the players who CAUGHT all those passes. Big league talent.

  • @johnr5252
    @johnr5252 11 месяцев назад +4

    Loved watching Joe play. Nobody could throw a ball like he could.
    Awesome.
    To win a SB with the Jets is all you need to know.

  • @blakebrown84
    @blakebrown84 11 месяцев назад +2

    Joe Namath is a Hall of Famer quarterback coming out of University of Alabama where he won a national championship there. He was a record-breaker, a trendsetter, and a Super Bowl winner. He was one of the most famous and influential quarterbacks of all-time. He quickly became a fan favorite by the media after nicknamed Broadway Joe. He became the first quarterback to pass for more than 4,000 yards in a season. He was known for his flamboyant style, his nightlife and his commercials.

  • @donnienewell8069
    @donnienewell8069 2 года назад +65

    and the Jets never returned to the super bowl . 51 years and counting .Namath is a legend , with the greatest throwing arm in history , sad his knees were destroyed .

    • @michaelbglovier1116
      @michaelbglovier1116 2 года назад +4

      I watched Joe growing up and yes to bad his knees got destroyed. I grew up in Dearborn, Mi suburb of Detroit. I am 62 years old and still waiting for the Lions to get to a Super Bowl. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr 2 года назад

      I agree. He was the man of quarterbacks, him and Marino.

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr 2 года назад

      Absolutely Hos great ability was marred though by his addiction. He was a childhood hero of mine.

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 2 года назад

      his knees changed his career, even affected his throwing to some degree ... He will always be Super Joe, reason the NFL suddenly merged with the AFL !!!

    • @chaycequintana1928
      @chaycequintana1928 Год назад

      Id say marino had the best arm. Montana was the best qb overall. Namath is right there w marino as far as just a pretty ball

  • @elevenb1933
    @elevenb1933 2 года назад +14

    My favorite of all time. We need that type of confidence again. We need that style and substance. Especially we need the winning attitude. Nobody was better than Joe Willie Namath. He was and always will be the most important athlete in pro football. He made the leaguer with the super bowl 111 victory. No question about it.

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  2 года назад +3

      We also need another QB to wear a fu manchu besides Joe Flacco....

    • @elevenb1933
      @elevenb1933 2 года назад

      @@dukewilson14 also that wears a great fur coat on the sidelines

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  2 года назад

      @@elevenb1933 Don't forget about doing pantyhose commercials....

  • @joeleicht5764
    @joeleicht5764 2 года назад +157

    When you look at Namath's career stats, it might seem like he has no business being in the Hall of Fame. But younger fans don't realize that if Tom Brady, Joe Montana, Dan Marino, Brett Favre and other legends played under the same rules that Namath did (which made the passing game much more difficult) they would not have been able to put up the numbers that they did.

    • @elevenb1933
      @elevenb1933 2 года назад +21

      The reason he belongs in the hall of fame is because he is the most important man in football. He made the league with that win. AFL became legitimate after that.

    • @michaelbglovier1116
      @michaelbglovier1116 2 года назад +16

      Absolutely agree with you, the owners bitched to the league to change the rules to protect their investments aka quarterbacks.

    • @Bob-eo6uh
      @Bob-eo6uh 2 года назад +7

      You also have to put into account the IQ’s of guys like Manning and Brady. The rules might be different, but they have picked apart some MUCH more complicated defensive schemes. Put Joe Namath in today’s game and he’ll still throw over 20 picks a season because the coverages and looks on defense aren’t as basic as they were back then. Brady and Manning would thrive in the 60’s and 70’s. The defenders were way slower and not as smart as defenders today. It’s not always about who’s tougher but who’s smarter

    • @elevenb1933
      @elevenb1933 2 года назад +16

      @@Bob-eo6uh the major difference is that today the quarterbacks are protected. Brady. Manning would never last 20 years. Namath and all those guys took brutal hits with no penalty’s Big big difference. Grass fields also. Also the receiver was also hit very hard. Look it up. It was a far tougher game then.

    • @Bob-eo6uh
      @Bob-eo6uh 2 года назад +4

      @@elevenb1933 Y’all kill me with the brutal hits and no penalties. As if after the players commit a roughing the passer foul, it’s supposed to take the pain away from the hit the QB just took. And just because a game is tougher doesn’t mean it’s HARDER. I’ll take Brady or Peyton’s brains over Namath’s toughness any day of the week. Plus none of those QBs took care of their bodies back then either which is why they didn’t last long. You smoke cigarettes and drink beer all day, of course you won’t last long and you’ll get hurt more. I’ve seen side by side comparison of the hits that all QBs have taken. That “back in the old days” narrative is so exaggerated, it’s pathetic

  • @Robert-gg1er
    @Robert-gg1er 8 месяцев назад +5

    Joe Namath called all of his own plays with 90% of them being audibled at the line of scrimmage against the Colts in SB 3. He picked them apart in the 3rd quarter which was the turning point in the game. They blitzed him relentlessly but his quick release was unstoppable in the game.

    • @soulivan827
      @soulivan827 4 месяца назад

      It was like when Marino gave the 85 bears their only loss. Quick release to pick apart that brutal defense.

  • @nlb4697
    @nlb4697 Год назад +6

    truly still one of greatest eras, as coming of age , AFL, NFL, Packers, Cowboys for teams, still some of greatest players too Sayers Kansas Comet, Mad Bomber Lamonica, Namath of course, Bambi Allworth, Charly Taylor, some of Tarkenton's scrambles are still unbelievable, Jurgensen looked like he just came from a bar near the stadium same for Kilmer, Bullet Bob Hayes, Otis Taylor, Dawson, Jim Hart, Joe Kapp, Roman Gabriel, what a name for QB, Warfield, Maynard, Sauer, FEARSOME FOURSOME, PURPLE PEOPLE EATERS, just awesome great memories

    • @nlb4697
      @nlb4697 Год назад

      omg how could I forget Johnny Unitas, shame on me, but there you are and there you go, many more too, just off top of my head,

    • @aarondigby5054
      @aarondigby5054 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@nlb4697Unitas was the first big name qb I heard of Johnny U. Played really great in a lotta big games, consummate pro.

  • @Eddie-jz6ss
    @Eddie-jz6ss 11 месяцев назад +3

    One of the great one's!

  • @melvinhunt6976
    @melvinhunt6976 11 месяцев назад +5

    Throwing Motion or whatever you call it, he still threw the prettiest ball in NFL history to this day!

  • @flintfleming3935
    @flintfleming3935 Год назад +6

    I echo those sentiments from Spike Lee. Growing up in Lakeview, Long Island , I remember riding my bike to Hofstra U... ,, and watching The Jets practice, u could actually hear the football HISS WHEN HE THRU IT.. HE WAS THAT GUY.. !!!!

    • @TC-dw6wg
      @TC-dw6wg 11 месяцев назад +1

      Spent many a day over at Hofstra watching the Jets practice.

  • @Mike-ge7pe
    @Mike-ge7pe 9 месяцев назад +3

    Namath was before my time, but my simplest understanding of him was that he was the first QB to play the game ahead of the receiver. Not that he was the first to lead receivers with throws, but that the expectation was that he was going to drop it in the bucket as the rule and not the exception. This allowed the offense to play incredibly fast and forced defenses to play on their heels and sacrifice certain attacking tendencies in order to not get beaten. There’s a clear distinction of what the game looked like before the Jets won the SB and after. The NFL had to adapt to a game that could get behind the defense on any given play.

  • @jackcarraway4707
    @jackcarraway4707 2 года назад +34

    Namath is sadly a highly misunderstood player, especially by younger fans that go strictly by stats. He had his flaws, but questioning his place in the Hall of Fame is ludicrous. You can ask any coach, including Bill Belichick, and they will all tell you Namath is one of the most talented QBs to play the game despite the fact he played on bad knees and less than stellar teams his entire career.
    If he entered the league healthy he would have been the Dan Marino of the 60s and 70s.

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr 2 года назад +1

      Thank you ! I agree

    • @Yeomannn
      @Yeomannn Год назад +4

      With his quick release and impeccable deep ball Namath was the Marino of his era, along with Sonny Jurgensen

    • @therealgamerv8970
      @therealgamerv8970 Год назад

      I see Otto graham and think this guys way better then Namath and played in even worse qb conditions

    • @iamtman1
      @iamtman1 Год назад

      Marino never had healthy knees either as a pro.

    • @stevenpollard5171
      @stevenpollard5171 Год назад

      And many games were played in muddy conditions.

  • @nedmerrill5705
    @nedmerrill5705 2 месяца назад

    Joe Namath was a revolutionary player in several ways. First, the AFL was a passing league, and the AFL style of play revolutionized pro football in the late 1960s. Namath was the best passer in the AFL (two time AFL MVP). Second, the AFL's passing orientation, demonstrated by Namath and the other AFL QBs, excited football fans and became a threat to the NFL's established popularity, motivating the merger. Third, Namath's Jets SB III win demonstrated parity between the AFL and NFL. Fourth, Namath encouraged the freedom of athletes (and the rest of us) to "do your own thing" and enjoy life. Joe Namath was the epitome of the late 1960s lifestyle and was a cultural phenomenon.

  • @scottmcdonald3345
    @scottmcdonald3345 8 месяцев назад +4

    And you know what Joe Namath didn’t do? He didn’t throw 20 damn bubble screens every game. He threw down the field.

  • @3putt548
    @3putt548 Год назад +10

    Namath was amazing. He couldn’t scramble but boy he had pinpoint accuracy and could read every defensive scheme they would throw at him!

    • @michaelmisczuk1188
      @michaelmisczuk1188 11 месяцев назад +1

      He could scramble at Alabama. Then, came the knee injuries.

    • @peterwall583
      @peterwall583 11 месяцев назад

      If Broadway Joe played in today's NFL he would be unstoppable

  • @khalilwilliams3176
    @khalilwilliams3176 Год назад +4

    He’s one of those players you had to watch to understand his greatness….. to that I say, Watch These Nuts.

  • @JackSquat54
    @JackSquat54 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was a teenager playing touch football in New Jersey when Joe won a Superbowl. Although Joe had a rifle arm, his running backs weren't too shabby. I'll never forget them either, Matt Snell and Emerson Boozer. The best 1-2 punch in football back then. Their combined total yards were about 1500 a season.

  • @jvidr
    @jvidr 2 года назад +4

    I will always have a special place for Joe Willie, Secretariat, Muhammad Ali, Wilt Chamberlain, John Brodie, Archie Manning, Danny Abramowicz, Fred Bilntikof, Lance Rentzel, Charlie Sanders, Calvin Hill, , Duane Thomas, Larry Brown, Charlie Taylor, Larry Bird, Robert Parish, Kevin Mackenzie, Dennis Johnson, so many more that I admire.

  • @ralphscalise3385
    @ralphscalise3385 Месяц назад

    Great compilation! Happy to see that he that its recognized that he was more than just stats. When I hear or read rumblings that he should not be in the HOF, it makes me cringe. Many younger fans do not understand how the the deck was stacked against the passing game in those days. His pure passing ability truly revolutionized the passing game into what it resembles today.

  • @AK-sq1jl
    @AK-sq1jl 2 года назад +19

    Crazy how the first 3 Superbowls were won by Alabama QBs including both the NFL and AFLs first wins.

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr 2 года назад +1

      I never realized that! Thank you!

    • @AK-sq1jl
      @AK-sq1jl 2 года назад +2

      @@jvidr Yes sir and Alabama is also tied with Purdue for the most Super Bowl winning QBs by College. Bart Starr won the first 2 with the Packers, Joe Namath with the Jets in the 3rd SB, and Kenny Stabler won a SB with John Madden and the Raiders in the 70s.

    • @sneakerfacevids441
      @sneakerfacevids441 Год назад

      And now Alabama is only known for its racism and crooked Governor Ivy….and Anti American senator Tuberville , who tried to kneecap America’s military by putting his own partisan agenda before the country’s needs. Alabama doesn’t even deserve to be a state anymore.

  • @ronniecozzi8385
    @ronniecozzi8385 Год назад +5

    Namath was the best natural quarterback ever. Best footwork, peripheral vision, arm, quickest release, touch. He even hid the ball on fake handoffs better than anyone on his occasional bootleg runs. He could take a hit. Plus he called his own game. If he passed out of the shot gun with 4 wide receivers he would have thrown for 70,000 yards. And he probably played less than 9 seasons if you add up all his games played.

    • @iamtman1
      @iamtman1 Год назад

      Marino was the best pure QB ever.

    • @ronniecozzi8385
      @ronniecozzi8385 Год назад

      @@iamtman1 Close but he played in better conditions. Very close. Joe was better.

    • @iamtman1
      @iamtman1 Год назад +1

      Marino by a mile. Even Namath said marino reminded him of himself except marino took it to another level.

    • @stevenpollard5171
      @stevenpollard5171 Год назад

      Even after all these years, people are saying Joe was not that good and bringing up other QB’s. SMH.

  • @louiespray
    @louiespray 11 месяцев назад +2

    I bought his book "A matter of style" when I was a kid. It had foldout strobe photos of his throwing motion taken by Walter Lloos (sp?) Of Sports Illustrated. I was enamored with Joe. Wish I would have kept that book!

  • @MrStones1963
    @MrStones1963 2 года назад +7

    Namath's last rushing TD at 6:35. The footage is from ground level. It has been years since I saw an overhead view. Perhaps my favorite NFL play ever, where Joe bootlegs. The sight of 21 players going right, while Joe practically tiptoes left into the endzone is incredible.
    #13 is prominent in this video, which I watched just minutes after learning of his passing.

    • @MagSeven7
      @MagSeven7 11 месяцев назад

      Agreed. I was at the game at the Yale Bowl. I had seats near field level and to this day can vision a pass he threw to Rich Caster I believe about 30 yards on a line just flicking his wrist. To this day, I thnk he had the best arm I've ever seen on a pro QB.

  • @mccormick0615
    @mccormick0615 Год назад +3

    In my 70 years, NO quarterback had the instincts, field vision or ability of Joe Willie

    • @dougamundson6836
      @dougamundson6836 7 месяцев назад

      You must not have watched much football.

  • @David-jl6hr
    @David-jl6hr 7 месяцев назад

    As a kid playing sandlot football, Joe Namath my favorite quarterback and is today.

  • @depaola63
    @depaola63 4 месяца назад

    In a word 💫IMPACT 🏈✊ people who don’t realize this man’s greatness do not know the game of football ✨ Joe was THE MAN! 🏆✊❤️

  • @rufuspipemos
    @rufuspipemos 11 месяцев назад +3

    To this day perhaps the fastest release of all-time. Marino came close.

  • @bamagirl218
    @bamagirl218 2 года назад +7

    No one was better and no one will ever be better. Love you Joe👍

  • @keithmotsinger918
    @keithmotsinger918 3 месяца назад

    As a Baltimore Colt , 13 yrs old hated joe willie for a while SB3 . But later grew up ,some That shootout with Johnny U. and Namath much later in their careers was something . P.A. has some great qb's from that place . Like some Colt players not shure got over that game. But 66 now helps .

  • @jerrysabbagh1499
    @jerrysabbagh1499 Год назад +2

    Namath and Maynard..Legend

  • @kelvinkloud
    @kelvinkloud 2 года назад +4

    the modern form and technique of pocket passing that brady has perfected found its template w/ joe willie.

  • @Slimjim260
    @Slimjim260 11 месяцев назад +1

    Music is fabulous!

  • @mjhzen8313
    @mjhzen8313 11 месяцев назад +3

    Namath was one of the greatest passers. Of course, it didn't hurt that he had a group of great receivers.

    • @dennispacelli1007
      @dennispacelli1007 8 месяцев назад

      Pete Lammons George Sauers Don Maynard PLUS Emerson Boozer and Matt Snell in the backfield

  • @johnwilson3819
    @johnwilson3819 2 года назад +1

    Legend. 1969. My year, of course!

  • @victorsforza3247
    @victorsforza3247 Год назад

    When Joe was healthy he was something else to watch after 1969 and that tough loss to the KC CHIEFS in the AFL PLAYOFFS at cold Shea stadium he was rarely healthy he missed alot of Games but he 1. Was the 1st QB to throw for 4000 or more yrds(4007) 2. He beat a great Oakland raiders team in an exciting AFL championship game 27-23 3. He guaranteed a win in SB 3 as an 18-21 pt underdog vs a 13-1 colts team. He was a big celebrity off the field with movies, 📺 commercials the ladies WOOHOO. He was the 💣 💣

  • @williamtaylor5193
    @williamtaylor5193 Год назад

    0:15 gives me chills, and Madden's narration says it all.

  • @xchiro1818
    @xchiro1818 11 месяцев назад +1

    If Namath had good knees, he probably would've broken every passing record on the books at the time.

  • @spiritualarchitect4276
    @spiritualarchitect4276 11 месяцев назад

    This video should be called "9 Minutes of Joe Namath Touchdown Passes"

  • @majorbarnes4090
    @majorbarnes4090 Месяц назад

    These are some nice touch down passes thrown.

  • @flintfleming3935
    @flintfleming3935 Год назад

    And when it counted, in the biggest game ,, he delivered.. All u need is ONE,, AND HE and The Team Got It...!!

  • @PaulAlexander-u6r
    @PaulAlexander-u6r 8 месяцев назад

    There will never be another like him again

  • @patrickr.5900
    @patrickr.5900 11 месяцев назад +2

    Namath was the first QB to throw for over 4,000 yards in a season. In a 14 game season.

  • @brucewayne3602
    @brucewayne3602 Год назад +1

    Joe's magic !!!

  • @artistamisto
    @artistamisto 4 месяца назад

    5:14 - The Namath to Caster version of "The Catch" from 11/24/74. Looks like the same play as Montana to Clark from 1981. Following a 6-game losing streak the Jets upset the Dolphins 17-14 in Shea during a 6-game winning streak to close out their 1974 season.

  • @debbiehenson1096
    @debbiehenson1096 10 месяцев назад

    Broadway Joe, the biggest and brightest star⭐to ever play in the NFL.

  • @shanontierney9834
    @shanontierney9834 2 года назад +2

    THANK YOU THE KNOWLEDGE!!!! TO WATCH LEGENDS

  • @flintfleming3935
    @flintfleming3935 Год назад

    Joe Namath will 4 ever be my all time QB.. He was very unfairly underrated.. He thru more picks than TD's, but... He WAS STILL THAT GUY..

    • @iamtman1
      @iamtman1 Год назад

      Underrated??? Most overrated player in NFL history.

  • @SAOProductions1955
    @SAOProductions1955 Год назад +1

    Swagger? The Hungarian Howitzer had some!

  • @carlo6230
    @carlo6230 11 месяцев назад +1

    THE OLDER I GET...,THE MORE I LIKE HIM,.. HIS BIKER MOVIE CC AND COMPANY...IS FUNNY..NOW ..BUT HE KICKED ASS IN IT.... JOE IS GREAT

  • @FrederickKimble
    @FrederickKimble 6 месяцев назад

    Mister Joe Nameth had a superstar quarterback career .

  • @richgaeta7970
    @richgaeta7970 Год назад +2

    Come back Joe!

  • @frankguidera6828
    @frankguidera6828 Год назад +3

    Perfect thrower of the football

  • @gregorymccreary5396
    @gregorymccreary5396 3 дня назад

    Did NOTTTT know he played for my Rams !!

  • @grayghostmoseby7123
    @grayghostmoseby7123 Год назад +1

    Best thing about Joe is, he wasn’t only a great quarterback but he’s always been a great guy

  • @richardmeo2503
    @richardmeo2503 8 месяцев назад +1

    Imagine what he could have done with 2 good knees. Sunday in NY was church, ronis and Jets football

  • @flintfleming3935
    @flintfleming3935 Год назад

    Let's not forget tht the passing game in football back then was not relevant until JOE NAMATH made it.. NO DOUBT!!!

  • @melvinhunt6976
    @melvinhunt6976 8 месяцев назад

    Had absolutely the Prettiest Throwing Motion in History!

  • @shadyphoenix
    @shadyphoenix 2 года назад +1

    I feel like I am being needed

  • @marioduran6671
    @marioduran6671 2 года назад +1

    Crazy the goal post r in the touch down zone

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  2 года назад

      the goal post started off right on the goal line; must've been awkward running plays with the goal post directly in front of you lol.

  • @ScottHammonds-so7md
    @ScottHammonds-so7md Год назад

    I remember watching all these games with my grandpa when I was a kid!!! He was Jets all the way!!! Broadway Joes arm strength made to wre the defense could not stack the box!!!

  • @donholmes4476
    @donholmes4476 Год назад

    MAKE SURE JOE NAMATH’S #12 STAYS RETIRED!!!🏈
    He was the catalyst for the AFL becoming equal to the NFL and forever changed the sport of professional football!
    Please educate these young people about these landmark moments in American sports history!
    It seems the sports media in America has lost these vital intangibles and we are left with these historically bankrupt youths who cannot appreciate where they came from!

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  Год назад

      I heard A-Rod is wearing #8 so 12 is safe for now.

  • @williamtaylor5193
    @williamtaylor5193 Год назад +2

    Even fans of Joe's don't realize that they never saw the real thing. Before his knee injuries, Joe could run with the best of them. He was impossible to defense at Alabama.

  • @robertkees6048
    @robertkees6048 5 месяцев назад

    It takes a little bit out of my sails to see him passing in a Rams uniform, oh well, that's life.

  • @charlesgorman4919
    @charlesgorman4919 2 года назад +2

    Namath was legit regardless of his stats.

    • @therealgamerv8970
      @therealgamerv8970 Год назад

      How his stats were decent for that time not even great

    • @therealgamerv8970
      @therealgamerv8970 Год назад

      And 1 Superboel I mean come on so many qbs have won 1

  • @wlupolice1762
    @wlupolice1762 Год назад +9

    When you look at Namath's statistics, they aren't all that impressive and people question his place in the Hall of Fame. He had an impact on the game that went beyond Super Bowl III. In a lot of ways, he drew people to football like Muhammad Ali drew fans to boxing. You wanted them to either win or lose. The press followed them. Yeah, Joe's place in in the game is secure. After all, it's the "Hall of Fame", not the "Hall of Statistics"

    • @MinisterManDan
      @MinisterManDan Год назад +2

      Joe had some amazing stats though, it’s just people can’t wrap their heads around the fact that rule changes and the advancement of the kicking game have fundamentally changed football strategy and game theory.
      If it’s 3rd and 8 on your own 25 in 1967, a deep bomb shot that gets picked off is a much better play than a punt, because the punt is only going 35-40 yards with minimal hang time so there’s gonna be a return and there’s a 20% chance it gets totally shanked and goes like 15-20 yards. The bomb that got intercepted gave you a chance at a score and got you better field position. Judging Joe and QBs of his era for interceptions thrown when the context is totally different is peak “I think I’m smart but I’m not” shit.

  • @brucedavis3816
    @brucedavis3816 11 месяцев назад

    Guy played on a torn ligament!!! A torn ligament!!!! That puts you out over a year!!! He was a pretty boy put tough!!!

    • @dennispacelli1007
      @dennispacelli1007 8 месяцев назад

      Playing on dirt didn't help at the Polo Grounds

  • @jvidr
    @jvidr Год назад

    Since Joe Willies retirement, he has had two knee replacements, two hip replacements, and a shoulder replacement. He spends time with his 6 grand kids.

  • @Gardenstategreat1225
    @Gardenstategreat1225 Год назад +2

    I cant believe people even think he isnt HOF material. Do people even realize how hard it was to throw for 4k? In that era it was unheard of. Even after the injuries he still was mobile enough. Look at his mechanics and movements. He looks like a modern qb. He played in a antiquated system for
    Modern times. Of course he wont match the numbers. Noone does from this era besides unitas.

    • @4392amtrak
      @4392amtrak Год назад +1

      And it was in a 14 game season

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr Год назад +1

      He threw for what 4007 years a in 14 game schedule in rougher times for passers.

    • @jvidr
      @jvidr Год назад +2

      He and Unitas hooked horns one day and together threw for almost 900 yards. Unitas threw 2 touchdowns and Namath 6. What a day that was! It's called the Namath Unitas Shootout.

  • @SingleTax
    @SingleTax Год назад +1

    If Namath had the same knees he did as a junior in college, he'd be star in today's NFL. Both his throwing arm and overall football smarts were that exceptional.

  • @Mr1gladiatore
    @Mr1gladiatore Год назад +2

    Namath didn't have the stats to merit the HOF but as was mentioned in this film it's the impact he had on the game. By winning the SB he made the AFL legitimate because prior to that victory the majority of the country saw the AFL as an inferior league. The QBs of today wouldn't have these overblown stats had they played under the rules and conditions that Namath had to play under and how many remember that the QB called the plays back then.

  • @khari3390
    @khari3390 2 года назад +1

    after watching these highlights and seeing him in the pocket idk why madden got this man running round like lamar jackson

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  2 года назад +1

      He was pretty athletic, but multiple knee injuries in college and the AFL/NFL took away the mobility that he had.

  • @mikewatts6813
    @mikewatts6813 Год назад

    No QB before or so nice threw a football better than Namath - the absolute best ever.

  • @johnoneill7947
    @johnoneill7947 Год назад

    Joe "Big Daddy" Namath was a fan favorite.

  • @Kimble-fsk
    @Kimble-fsk 10 месяцев назад

    Mister Broadway Joe Namath .

  • @Fireyninjadog
    @Fireyninjadog 2 года назад +2

    He threw 5 picks against the 1-12-1 bills in 1968, his cindella season where he won super bowl 3, and afl mvp. Heck the bills were 19 point underdogs, and got 3 pick sixes

    • @defunddemocrats2470
      @defunddemocrats2470 Год назад

      @ FieryNinjaDog what’s that got to do with the price of tea in China any team can win on any given day let alone a quarterback, have a bad game I love taking a double digit dog on the money line

    • @Fireyninjadog
      @Fireyninjadog Год назад

      ​@@defunddemocrats2470 namath cost his team the game, if you exclude the pick sixes he threw, jets win 35-16, with the pick sixes, jets lose 37-35

  • @JL-ec1by
    @JL-ec1by Год назад +2

    Namath carried a league (AFL) on his back for 5 years, then brought along the 1970 merger by winning the Super Bowl.

  • @tomloft2000
    @tomloft2000 11 месяцев назад +1

    For good or bad, he had a guy named Emerson BOOZER in his backfield.

  • @daledevine3515
    @daledevine3515 Год назад

    his passes were bombs.....love ann margaret movie too

  • @xchiro1818
    @xchiro1818 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hey, wait a minute... why aren't all those receivers wearing sticky gloves?

    • @NWOWCW4Life1
      @NWOWCW4Life1 7 месяцев назад

      I mean, stickum and other kinds existed then.
      Soo..

  • @urbanlegendsandtrivia2023
    @urbanlegendsandtrivia2023 6 месяцев назад

    LOL!!!
    Bear Bryant said Joe Namath was the GOAT.
    John Madden said Joe Namath was the GOAT.
    He lost about 100 TD passes because his coach ran inside the 30-yard-line instead.
    He threw interceptions on third downs on purpose because they were as good as a punt.
    Joe Namath literally retired as the all-time NFL passing leader at 197.6 YPG.
    He was the undisputed top player in the AFL for five years, winning two passing titles, an MVP, and an AFL Championship.
    Gale Sayers had a lame 39 rushing touchdowns, but nobody says he is overrated.

  • @sickotwist9802
    @sickotwist9802 Год назад

    Joe Willie was just good😁

  • @martinmasten4107
    @martinmasten4107 Год назад +1

    Even at that time Namath gave games away by sheer pride and arrogance. Super Bowl 3 showed what he could have been. You can only wonder what he could do with a system like Bill Walsh’s. 6:58

    • @iamtman1
      @iamtman1 Год назад

      He did nothing in Super Bowl 3. 16 points ko TDs. The defense carried the show intercepting Baltimore twice in the end zone.

    • @martinmasten4107
      @martinmasten4107 Год назад

      By today's standards he didn't do much. But he time and again broke the Colts blitz, which helped them control the clock. He called most of the audibles. He played the game given him. He completed well over 50% of his passes. Which was out of character for. Had a few things gone differently, if Morral saw Orr, if the defensive player had caught an interception right in his hands, it could have been very dramatically different. And Namath may have resorted to his usual habit of throwing high risk passes.

  • @johnduffy865
    @johnduffy865 Год назад

    Would it be too much to ask that you actually show footage from 1968 instead of 1972-4? Rich Caster (88) wasn't on the Super Bowl Jets team, nor was Eddie Bell (7).

    • @dukewilson14
      @dukewilson14  Год назад

      I took highlights throughout Joe's whole career, so it just worked out that way that there were more highlights for me to use from '72 to '74 instead of '68.

  • @Goldone99
    @Goldone99 Год назад +1

    Did he go to Alabama like That MAC guy 🤔?

  • @tomdaniel438
    @tomdaniel438 11 месяцев назад +1

    If it wasn't for Joe neymouth, there would not be a Super Bowl. Still, the first 2 super bowls were blowouts. And there was talk about discontinuing it until the long came joe

  • @coryzeke3771
    @coryzeke3771 Год назад

    I can say one thing… a good QB is a Good QB you can tell the throwing motion

  • @DvdAvins
    @DvdAvins 2 года назад +2

    There were 3 QB;s back in the day who'd give you a chance down 14 points with 3 minutes to play: Namath, Bert Jones, and Staubach. Staubach ahd the best overall career, of course. But for a 2-minute drive, given equal offensive lines and equal receiver corps, I'd go with Namath.
    As for the interceptions, consider the kinds of passes he was throwing. No wide to the flat in those days. With a bad team in his latter years with the Jets, an interception 40 yards downfield was as good as a punt, so you might as well try the fly.

  • @frankguidera6828
    @frankguidera6828 Год назад

    He came into the nfl with a destroyed knee

  • @georgestevens1502
    @georgestevens1502 Год назад

    Also can see what a great receiver Don Maynard was.

  • @dallasroy3003
    @dallasroy3003 2 года назад

    Uu wee Reggie Sanders! O wow! Brian Jordan!!

  • @adrianoparatore7368
    @adrianoparatore7368 4 месяца назад

    Namath was awesome…the ppl in the comments are suffering from presentism…judging someone based on the standards of today rather than the time they existed or in this case played…
    This coming from a die hard Brady and Patriots fan.