Posted on 10/09/2017 12:20:35 PM PDT by Impala64ssa
Yelberton Abraham Tittle, the Hall of Fame quarterback whose career spanned 17 professional season, has died at the age of 90.
Tittle may be best remembered for the iconic photograph of him by Morris Berman of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, showing him as he attempted recover from being beaten and bloodied by a brutal hit by John Baker of the Steelers in 1964, his final season. The 38-year-old Tittle suffered a concussion and broken sternum on the play, but played through his injuries and didnt miss a game that season.
An All-SEC quarterback at LSU and MVP of the 1947 Cotton Bowl (a snowy game that was referred to as the Ice Bowl before a more famous NFL game took that name), Tittle was drafted by the Lions in the NFL but chose instead to play for the Baltimore Colts of the All-America Football Conference from 1948 to 1950.
When some AAFC teams joined the NFL, the Colts and other AAFC teams folded (the team later called the Baltimore Colts was a new franchise), and in a draft for the players from those teams Tittle was chosen by the 49ers. After spending his first two seasons as a backup in San Francisco, Tittle became the 49ers starter in 1953 and was chosen to the NFLs third annual Pro Bowl.
Tittle lasted 10 seasons in San Francisco, and he made an impact off the field as well as on. In 1954, Tittle became the first professional football player featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated. In 1957, Tittle coined the term alley-oop for a play in which his 6-foot-3 receiver R.C. Owens would plant himself in the end zone and jump as high as he could, and Tittle would throw him a high pass. The term would later become associated with basketball, but Tittle came up with it first.
By 1961, the 49ers thought Tittle was way past his prime, and they traded him to the Giants. But he found his second wind in New York, being named to the Pro Bowl each of his first three seasons in New York and winning the league MVP award in 1963, when he led the league in completion percentage, touchdowns and yards per completion.
Tittle is remembered as a great passer, a great leader and as one of the toughest quarterbacks in history. And hes remembered as the subject of one of the greatest sports photographs ever taken.
Well I should probably just quit. I of course meant to say “H”.
I remember being in the living room watching the NY Giants on a black and white TV on Sunday afternoon in the early 1960’s. I was young and my attention span was short but I definitely remember Y.A. Tittle and the Giants.
I also remember Johnny Unitas, Raymond Berry and Lenny Moore of the Baltimore Colts.
I also remember seeing the Green Bay Packers on TV.
He died of shame
Shame kills
I also had an electric football set in the 1960’s. I got it for Christmas one year. You lined up the little plastic players, turned on the switch and the field buzzed and the players went around in different directions.
Yup,I had one of them also. Made by Eldon Toys? What a racket they made.
back when Giants like Y.A and Sam Huff were MEN!
RIP and may God Bless
There goes a bit more of my past. When we played pick-up football in the neighborhood lot, when we kids began shouting, Im Bart Starr, Im Paul Hornung,........invariably, Y.A. Tittles name was one of the first selected by one of us.
Johnny Unitas was the best of the old time QBs. Called his own plays.
Early years at Anapolis.
Later, the 'Flying Quarterback' with the Dallas Cowboys...
I remember when he played for the Pensacola Navy Goshawks. Back then most of the military bases of any size had a football team.
Eglin AFB was the Eglin Eagles.
Little story about Staubach... coming out of high school he was recruited by two schools only - Navy and Purdue. Long after his playing days were over he was asked how things would have been different if he had gone to Purdue...
“You would never have heard of Bob Griese...”
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