Chandler#81 Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 He didn’t have as many yards, but he scored 23 TDs including 7 receiving, 5.5ypc, 15.2 ypc You decide. Click Watch on YouTube 3 1 3
nucci Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 I think he was better. That was amazing to watch him that year. No one could stop him. We just had no defense 3
US Egg Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 What he did in '73 was thought impossible to achieve. What he did in '75 was total dominance unlike any RB. Glad I witnessed both yrs. It's too close to call for me. 3 1
Beast Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 IMO, 1973 was better because the Bills had a decent passing game in 75. In 73 it was just stop OJ. The Bills had a pee-wee passing game in 73. 2
Greg S Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 Only RB to rush for over 2000 yards in just 14 games. Sorry Eric but OJ has the real record for most yards in a single season. 2 1
US Egg Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 10 minutes ago, clearwater cadet said: Didn't know Dom Deluise's less funny brother was a Steelers fan. 1
Chandler#81 Posted July 2, 2021 Author Posted July 2, 2021 8 minutes ago, nucci said: That was a fun game to watch. Terry ‘Bumpkin’ Bradshaw wouldn’t allow us to lose 🤣 Chandler#81 was fantastic as well!😎 1
Thurman#1 Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 (edited) Love those helmets. IMO, no, '73 was better, but watching OJ again is a treat. Thanks for giving me the excuse. What I notice is how he'd make little set-up moves 5 - 7 yards before he reached the guy, to get him just where he wanted him. He was so precise, but also violent when he wanted to be. Love how he just tosses the ball to the ref. Edited July 2, 2021 by Thurman#1 2 1
nucci Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 34 minutes ago, Chandler#81 said: That was a fun game to watch. Terry ‘Bumpkin’ Bradshaw wouldn’t allow us to lose 🤣 Chandler#81 was fantastic as well!😎 as always 1
Greg S Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 14 minutes ago, Thurman#1 said: Love those helmets. IMO, no, '73 was better, but watching OJ again is a treat. Thanks for giving me the excuse. What I notice is how he'd make little set-up moves 5 - 7 yards before he reached the guy, to get him just where he wanted him. He was so precise, but also violent when he wanted to be. Love how he just tosses the ball to the ref. You ain't kidding.
RJ (not THAT RJ) Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 For a big chunk of '75 he was on pace to break 2000 yards again, and he also scored more TDs and was a more effective receiver... that was by far his most complete year as a football player. Alas, that 1975 year has to be remembered as one of the greatest missed opportunities in Buffalo sports history. 4-0 start, then up 14-0 early at home on MNF against the Giants, looking like no one could stop them. Then.... pfffffft. They lose focus in that game, miss a chip shot FG then lose at the buzzer, and everything unravels. Defense evaporates (they blow a 28-7 lead at home against the Colts to lose 42-35, they play MNF in Cincy and the Bengals never have to punt), two painful losses to the Dolphins (of course... the first where a Leypoldt XP miss [he had a talent for inopportune shanks] haunts them in a 35-30 loss, the second on the Mercury Morris Fumble). Sigh. What made it worse is that as the season unraveled, Saban got itchy feet complaining about management, OJ started talking about retiring to go into the movies, and dissension grew, setting the stage for the completely ugly collapse of the team in 1976. It would take years to get back to respectability. Can't help wondering how much would have been different if Leypoldt had hit that 19-yard figgie in the 4th quarter on Monday night against the Giants. Of course 1975 was also the year the Sabres started the season like a house on fire (in a good way) and looked set to be a perennial Cup contender, only to fall apart in the playoffs against the damned Islanders for the first and not the last time. (Yes, I was 8 then, and yes I have spent way too much time thinking about such things.) 3 1
Original Byrd Man Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 Definitely brings back some old memories. Thanks for posting. 1
Stranded in Boston Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 Thanks Chandler! Please keep the "old stuff" coming! 😀 1
Chandler#81 Posted July 2, 2021 Author Posted July 2, 2021 7 minutes ago, Stranded in Boston said: Thanks Chandler! Please keep the "old stuff" coming! 😀 Please post more, “old stuff”! 😉 1
Stranded in Boston Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 35 minutes ago, RJ (not THAT RJ) said: Alas, that 1975 year has to be remembered as one of the greatest missed opportunities in Buffalo sports history. 4-0 start, then up 14-0 early at home on MNF against the Giants, looking like no one could stop them. Then.... pfffffft. They lose focus in that game, miss a chip shot FG then lose at the buzzer, and everything unravels. Defense evaporates (they blow a 28-7 lead at home against the Colts to lose 42-35, they play MNF in Cincy and the Bengals never have to punt), two painful losses to the Dolphins (of course... the first where a Leypoldt XP miss [he had a talent for inopportune shanks] haunts them in a 35-30 loss, the second on the Mercury Morris Fumble). Sigh. ... (Yes, I was 8 then, and yes I have spent way too much time thinking about such things.) "Thanks" for that, RJ 😑 ... Indeed, it was painful to watch the Bills collapse in '75, despite OJ's brilliance. I'm a little older than you, LOL, but it's amazing how long those disappointments sticks with you from when you're young ... And I'll never forget (or forgive!) that loss to Miami. The Bills were mounting a furious comeback, and the Morris fumble would have given them the ball deep inside Miami territory. Instead, Jerry Frickin' Bergman calls it a non-fumble, and -- to rub salt in the wound -- slaps Pat Toomey with a 15-yard penalty for pushing an official out of the way to get to the loose ball!! My brothers and I almost smashed the TV ... This is probably a false memory, but I could swear that the Buffalo Evening News published Bergman's home address the next day! 4 minutes ago, Chandler#81 said: Please post more, “old stuff”! 😉 took me a second ... 😅 3
mannc Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 3 hours ago, Chandler#81 said: He didn’t have as many yards, but he scored 23 TDs including 7 receiving, 5.5ypc, 15.2 ypc You decide. Click Watch on YouTube One thing people forget…at the beginning of the 1975 season, OJ was already 28 years old, an age at which most modern RBs (even great ones) are on the scrap heap…if only the Bills hadn’t used him as a decoy in his first three years in the league. And as these videos show, OJ had very good hands….in today’s game, would he be an WR1? That’s where the alpha athletes end up now… 1
Ned Flanders Posted July 2, 2021 Posted July 2, 2021 That was a great YouTube clip with the NFL Films music. Great find, thanks for posting. I was at the game vs. New England when OJ scored four TDs. As has been mentioned, the '75 team was marred by lost opportunities and a porous defense. 8-6 could have easily been 11-3 with some help on the defensive side of the ball. 1
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