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CONFIRMED: Kenny Stabler Passes Away
local15tv.com ^ | July 9 2015

Posted on 07/09/2015 4:28:54 PM PDT by boycott

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To: ChildOfThe60s
"Hey...I was born in Oakland, back when real Americans were still being born there. My football heroes were all Raiders. The Mad Bomber, The Snake, George Blanda (football god to me) and a long list of others."

I was in the SF Bay area at that time too. Loved Blanda, disliked Darrell Lamonica...loved Fred Blittencoff, etc. I moved to Houston and Stabler followed me there too. ((Ha, ha)

41 posted on 07/09/2015 9:15:20 PM PDT by blam (Jeff Sessions For President)
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To: Flavious_Maximus
Steeler fan here too. Didn't like the Raiders of that era. But Stabler was a guy that I enjoyed watching.

He was from that era when all the good quarterbacks wore #12. Bradshaw, Stabler, Staubach, Namath, Griese, and Joe Ferguson of the Bills (ok, that is a stretch)

42 posted on 07/09/2015 9:23:40 PM PDT by Pappy Smear
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To: Osage Orange

This is what happens when I post using my phone without my glasses.


43 posted on 07/09/2015 9:28:40 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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To: boycott

A very sad day for the Bama Nation. Condolences and prayers for his family. He really was one of a kind. RIP.


44 posted on 07/09/2015 9:35:45 PM PDT by CrimsonTidegirl
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To: edpc

Me too, Colts fan. Those Bert Jones teams could never get past the Raiders and Steelers.


45 posted on 07/09/2015 11:46:26 PM PDT by Rummyfan (Let us now try liberty)
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To: boycott

A competitor and when he was playing, for or against the Raiders, it was exciting. I don’t know if we see that now, in ways, the Golden Age of Football. Before too, I have to say, The Raiders had Darryl Lamonica, pretty darn exciting as well, well, those were my football cards, all things considered, I think by 1980, the NFL started going downhill.


46 posted on 07/10/2015 8:15:19 AM PDT by BeadCounter
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To: boycott; All
rose burch stabler photo: Rose and Ken Stabler, Paris 1997 RoseKenStablerParis1997.jpg
Ken Stabler with his [then] broadcaster wife Rose Stabler at a cafe' in Paris in 1997
______________________________________

"Stabler was married three times. He married Isabel Clarke in 1968 and divorced in 1971.[13] He was married to Debbie Fitzsimmons from 1974 to 1978.[14]

In 1984 he married former Miss Alabama Universe (1979) Rose Molly Burch. The couple filed for divorce in 2002.[15]

Stabler had three daughters, Kendra, Alexa, and Marissa.[16]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Stabler#Personal

47 posted on 07/10/2015 11:07:06 AM PDT by ETL (ALL (most?) of the Obama-commie connections at my FR Home page: http://www.freerepublic.com/~etl/)
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To: Mariner

Those were, without a doubt, among the best days in pro football, as long as I’ve been around anyway. Not bad for horse racing either, with THREE Triple Crown winners! Secretariat (1973), Seattle Slew (1977), and Affirmed (1978). Affirmed was the last until just last month when American Pharoah broke the long drought.
__________________________

From wiki...

Stabler was drafted in the second round of the 1968 NFL Draft by the Oakland Raiders. He did not get a chance to play until 1970, and during 1968 and 1969 spent time playing with the Spokane Shockers in the Continental Football League.[4] Stabler first attracted attention in the NFL in a 1972 playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. After entering the game in relief of Daryle Lamonica, he scored the go-ahead touchdown late in the fourth quarter on a 30-yard scramble. The Steelers, however, came back to win on a controversial, deflected pass from Terry Bradshaw to Franco Harris, known in football lore as the Immaculate Reception.

After suffering severe knee injuries, Stabler became less a scrambling quarterback and more a classic, drop-back passer, known for accurate passes and an uncanny ability to lead late, come-from-behind drives. During the peak of his career, he had a receiving corps consisting of sprinter and multiple Hall of Fame finalist Cliff Branch, Hall of Fame receiver Fred Biletnikoff, and Hall of Fame tight end Dave Casper. The Raiders’ philosophy was to pound teams with their running game, then stretch them with their long passing game.

Although Stabler lacked remarkable arm strength, he was a master of the long pass to Branch, and accurate on intermediate routes to Biletnikoff and Casper. As a starter in Oakland, Stabler was named AFC player of the year in 1974 and 1976, and was the NFL’s passing champion in 1976. In January 1977 he guided the Raiders to their first Super Bowl victory, a 32-14 win over the Minnesota Vikings. In the 1977 AFC playoffs against the Baltimore Colts, Stabler completed a legendary fourth-quarter pass to Casper to set up a game-tying field goal by Errol Mann. This play, dubbed the “Ghost to the Post,” sent the game to overtime; the Raiders won 37-31 after Stabler threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Casper.

After subpar 1978 and 1979 seasons in which the Raiders failed to make the playoffs- primarily due to the retirement and departures of key contributors during the Super Bowl run in 1976 (most notably head coach John Madden, George Atkinson, Clarence Davis, and Fred Biletnikoff - Stabler was traded to the Oilers for Dan Pastorini prior to the 1980 season, after a lengthy contract holdout. Stabler left the Raiders as their all-time leader in completions (1,486), passing yards (19,078), and touchdown passes (150). The Oilers, in turn, saw Stabler as the missing ingredient that could finally get them past the rival Steelers and into the Super Bowl. However Houston lacked the exceptional talent on offense that Stabler had thrived with in Oakland, as Earl Campbell and Casper- who was also acquired in a trade from the Raiders- were the few potent weapons they had. Meanwhile, Pastorini lost the starting job in Oakland to Jim Plunkett after an injury, and Plunkett then led the Raiders over Stabler and the Oilers in the playoffs. Bum Phillips was fired shortly after the season. Without the popular head coach that rejuvenated an otherwise woeful Houston franchise, Stabler had a mediocre season in 1981 but re-joined Bum Phillips by signing with the Saints in 1982. By this time, however, the 37-year-old Stabler was no longer in his prime and the Saints were still a fairly dismal franchise. The 1983 season was Stabler’s best as a Saint. He started 14 games, and while the team’s record in those games was only 7-7, Stabler was the starter for the final game of the season, in New Orleans, against the division rival Los Angeles Rams. Had the Saints won that game, they would have finished 9-7 and reached their first trip to the playoffs. Alas, the Rams pulled out the victory late in the 4th quarter, 26-24. The Saints then acquired veteran Richard Todd before the 1984 season and Stabler retired in the middle of that season.

Stabler was known for studying his playbook by the light of a nightclub jukebox and for his affinity for female fans[citation needed]. As Hall of Fame guard Gene Upshaw said, “When we were behind in the fourth quarter, with our backs to our end zone, no matter how he had played up to that point, we could look in his eyes and you knew, you knew, he was going to win it for us. That was an amazing feeling.”

Stabler was the fastest to win 100 games as a starting quarterback, having done so in 150 games, which bettered Johnny Unitas’ previous mark of 153 games. Since then, only Terry Bradshaw in 147 games, Joe Montana in 139 games and Tom Brady in 131 games have reached 100 wins more quickly.[5] Stabler is also the only quarterback from the NFL’s All-1970’s team not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In a recent NFL feature listing the top 10 players not in the Hall of Fame, Stabler was listed at number six, partly due to his off-field scandals,[6] which in the 1970s were less prominent, or it could be that he never emulated the success he achieved in Oakland.

In the early part of 1974, Stabler and several NFL stars agreed to join the newly created World Football League. Stabler signed a contract to play for the Birmingham Americans. “I’m as happy as can be. Getting with a super organization and the financial benefits were key factors, but the biggest thing to me is getting back home. Getting to play before the people in the South is where it’s at for me. In two years I’ll be in Birmingham if I have to hitchhike,” he said. “If I can do for the WFL what Joe Namath did for the AFL, I will feel that I have really accomplished something. I was born in the South and raised in the South and played football in the South. Oakland could have offered me as much money as Birmingham but they couldn’t have let me play in the South.” The WFL would end up folding mid-way through the 1975 season, and Stabler remained in the NFL without ever playing in the WFL.

For his successes in the NFL, Stabler was named the twenty-seventh greatest quarterback of the post-merger era by Football Nation.[7]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Stabler#NFL_career


48 posted on 07/10/2015 11:57:28 AM PDT by ETL (ALL (most?) of the Obama-commie connections at my FR Home page: http://www.freerepublic.com/~etl/)
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To: military cop

RIP Snake.
“A proud Foley Lion.
A Bear Bryant Bama man.
RLTW
Foley, Class of 85”

Since he was born December 25, 1945

I don’t think he was class of 85, maybe 65


49 posted on 07/11/2015 8:24:31 PM PDT by FR_addict (Boehner needs to go!)
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To: FR_addict

Wow.

He was saying that he, military cop, is Foley High Class of ‘85.


50 posted on 07/11/2015 8:28:57 PM PDT by petitfour
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To: FR_addict

Good story from one of the Mobile TV stations here:

http://wkrg.com/2015/07/10/coach-recalls-ken-stabler-showed-brilliance-at-young-age/


51 posted on 07/11/2015 8:31:23 PM PDT by petitfour
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To: FR_addict

No. But I would be Foley High School Class of 85.

RLTW


52 posted on 07/12/2015 3:26:27 PM PDT by military cop (I carry a .45....cause they don't make a .46....)
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