Saw the news this week that the Washington Commanders announced plans to retired Darrell Green's #28. My first reaction was something along the lines of, "what took them so long?". There aren't many ex-Skins more iconic than Green, nor many moments more memorable than him walking down Eric Dickerson.
But after I dug into it a bit, I realized that the Washington franchise really doesn't retire numbers, or it didn't (with one notable exception) in the Era That Shall Not Be Discussed. In fact, not one player from the Golden Gibbs Era has his number retired. Nary a hog, regretfully not a Riggo, monstrously no Monk, terribly not a Theismann, mournfully no Mann, distressingly no Dexter.
The Washington franchise has been pretty stingy when it comes to retiring numbers (and ain't that in keeping with Little Danny Starfucker's ethos: waste money on washed up big names, skimp on stuff that might make fans happy). Turns out they're not alone.
Retire Riggo! |
The Bears (14), Giants (14), and Niners (12) are profligate, while the Bengals (speaking of stingy owners) and Jags have one retired number each, one of which you'd easily guess, and the other you never would.
I enjoyed my little trip down NFL numerological history. Hope it'll keep you entertained for at least a few minutes.
7 comments:
The Rams haven’t retired Kurt Warner’s number?
Washington actually retired Bobby Mitchell's 49, not Charley Taylor's 42. But Taylor is on a short list of good candidates. Riggo and Russ Grimm as well.
But Darrell Green is a no-brainer. Lovable all the way and man, was he amazing. For a long time.
If you like old #28 or just nice things happening to nice people, watch this. Cool stuff.
Riggo was never going to have his number retired with Snyder here because the dude spoke his mind about the crappy regime. Glad the perestroika allows that as a possibility now.
Am I currently looking at tickets for Magic-Cavs game 6? You’re goddam right I am.
May need a review of Rob's daughter's dance production and if the bottle of tequila enhanced or hindered the performance.
i'm hoping i can get a video of the piece, because writing about dancing is like fucking about architecture, or something. in my unbiased opinion, it was brilliant. more importantly, it was 100% authentically my unabashedly and proudly unique kid's ethos writ large and public. the tequila comes later, apparently.
Mark did you get tix?
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