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-   -   Football RIP Gale Sayers (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=333770)

Funkstown 09-23-2020 11:07 AM

Gale Sayers one of my all time favorite Jayhawks and my cousins favorite football player(they’re from Chicago). Man what a loss for the Jayhawks and the Bears. His tribute to Brian Piccolo pulls strings on a man’s soul.

JohnnyHammersticks 09-23-2020 11:32 AM

Met him in the late '80s when I was but a wee, shy little lad. Mustered up the courage to go say hi to him and tell him that I read his book, and he looked down at me and totally shined me. Complete dick.

RIP, jerk face.

Rain Man 09-23-2020 01:19 PM

He should have played for the Chiefs when they drafted him. If he had done that, he would have been famous.

Eleazar 09-23-2020 01:26 PM

Who?

Rain Man 09-23-2020 01:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eleazar (Post 15188425)
Who?

Exactly. He was some guy that the Chiefs drafted, and he never showed up to camp.

alanm 09-23-2020 02:48 PM

Fifty-five years ago, recruitniks weren’t much of a thing. That’s good, because anyone following the Gale Sayers saga of 1961 just might have been sent over the edge.
Back then, a college football recruiting class wasn’t wrapped in a tidy bow in early February. Instead, the offers – legal and otherwise – continued through the spring and into the summer – sometimes all the way into September. So did what we now call commitments and decommitments. Little if anything was binding until the player began attending class.
https://www.huskermax.com/games/1961/sayers.jpg Sayers was a Nebraska prep sensation who had college coaches drooling. Near the end of January of 1961, in his final semester at Omaha Central High School, he announced Iowa State was his college destination. That would have been just days before the modern-day signing date, but the University of Nebraska and coach Bill Jennings weren’t about to give up. Sure enough, by late May it was believed Sayers had flipped to the Huskers, and Jennings confirmed in June that the star running back had accepted Nebraska’s scholarship offer and signed grant-in-aid papers.
End of story? Yogi Berra hadn’t yet coined the phrase, but it was a textbook case of “it ain’t over till it’s over.”
Fast-forward two months to Aug. 19th. In a jaw-dropping performance, Sayers scored four touchdowns in the Nebraska Shrine high school all-star game. Afterward, he gave no hint – publicly, at least – that he was wavering. Behind the scenes, though, the University of Kansas was coming after him hard, even offering to bring Sayers’ older brother, Roger, to Lawrence in a package deal. After Roger Sayers’ school, Omaha University, complained to the NCAA, Kansas coach Jack Mitchell dropped that part of the offer but continued wooing Gale.
https://www.huskermax.com/games/1961/jennings.jpg All this was long before recruiting became a spectator sport in its own right, so what happened next came as a blindside hit to most Husker fans. On Sept. 8th, just 10 days before the start of the fall semester in Lincoln, Sayers announced he was reversing field once more and enrolling at Kansas. This time, Jennings waved the white flag, saying Nebraska would do nothing more to try to dissuade Sayers from leaving his home state.
So Sayers was a Jayhawk, and the rest is history. He went on to Hall of Fame careers in both college and the NFL. Whenever the greatest running backs of all time are debated, his name is prominently in the mix. The only consolation for Nebraska was that the “Kansas Comet” never tasted victory against the Cornhuskers. Even in defeat, however, Sayers registered the longest-ever run from scrimmage by a Nebraska opponent. At 99 yards, it’s a record that cannot be broken.
While far from typical, Sayers’ story was hardly unique. In fact, the shoe was on the other foot for the Huskers when quarterback Dennis Claridge made an even later switch from Minnesota to Nebraska in 1959.
Clearly, a greater degree of order and sanity was needed. It arrived less than 18 months after Sayers’ eleventh-hour reversal in the form of a joint Big Eight-Southwest Conference letter of intent. Not long after that came the national letter of intent. But it wasn’t until the early 1980s that a national signing day was established.
Had there been binding February commitments 55 years ago, would Gale Sayers have ended up somewhere other than Kansas? Would all that drama have been avoided? Perhaps. But it’s also quite possible that similar events simply would have played out several months earlier than they did. In any case, at least those Shrine Game fans would have known whether or not to dream big.

alanm 09-23-2020 02:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15188449)
Exactly. He was some guy that the Chiefs drafted, and he never showed up to camp.

Didn't the Bears have him and Butkis squirreled away in a hotel somewhere?

Rain Man 09-23-2020 02:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alanm (Post 15188613)
Didn't the Bears have him and Butkis squirreled away in a hotel somewhere?

I don't recall. I do remember one time reading that he seriously considered KC, but decided that Chicago was a better place for an African American fellow to live. I don't know George Halas' race policies, but we know that Lamar was very progressive in signing African Americans, so it wouldn't have been a team management issue. Maybe Gale liked deep dish more than barbecue.

srvy 09-23-2020 03:00 PM

Just arrived back at the office for this bad news. RIP Kansas Comet.

KChiefs1 09-23-2020 04:19 PM

Could have been a Chief & won a Super Bowl.

RIP

PHOG 09-23-2020 04:32 PM

The Kansas Comet. RIP

mlyonsd 09-23-2020 04:51 PM

He was before even my time. Legend. RIP.

Halfcan 09-23-2020 04:52 PM

RIP one of the All-time greats!

KChiefs1 09-23-2020 05:00 PM

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/G4SF3h9tvtk" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe><iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/fmwKMfvSf5A" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

oldman 09-24-2020 08:44 AM

I remember seeing him play at KU, 1963 and 1964.


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