NFL Heroes

As we all know, getting old sucks. You have to pay bills, everything randomly hurts, it takes longer both to get drunk and to recover from the previous night’s (or weekend’s) drunkenness, and you no longer have that wonderful naiveté that comes with youth. That sense of bright eyed wonder permeated every facet of childhood. Think back to whomever you idolized as a child. Parent, older brother, local member of Congress (HA!), Hulk Hogan, or probably for most DFOers, an NFL player or three. I have a hunch that you lionized this childhood hero to the point that you thought he or she was without flaw, and if any of your peers criticized your idol, then you defended his/her honor with the single-minded devotion that comes with being a young person incapable of seeing how anyone can be right about someone you know oh so well.

For me, that NFL hero was Dan Marino. “But wait, BFC,” an imaginary person reading this concurrently with me writing it might say, “aren’t you a die-hard Chicago Bears fan who grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, which is nowhere near Miami, Pittsburgh, or Sicily?”  Yes, but…I guess it’s DFO confession time.

My (fake) internet name is BrettFavresColonoscopy, and for my entire childhood, I was a sports bigamist. Despite rooting for the Bears, going to games in Chicago with my parents, even having an uncle who claimed he was poker buddies with Sid Luckman, despite all that, my favorite player growing up was Dan Marino. I practiced imitating his three step drop in the front yard of our suburban Chicago house. I had a Dan Marino jersey that I wore with pride.  At one point, my childhood bedroom looked like the opposite of Ray Finkle’s. I subscribed to Dolphin Digest. I had a little Dan Marino figurine that played audio of the call from the “clock play” game, and after the snippet from the broadcasters, Marino’s voice came on to explain that he signaled they were going to spike the ball, but then he didn’t, he threw it, surprised the Jets, and scored a ‘touched down.’ I was young and stupid enough to think this was a cool explanation from a cool dude, not a rote recitation from someone who didn’t give a shit about me and was just cashing a check.

It was a good play, though. Click through to watch the video. Photo credit: NFL.com

Which brings us back to the naiveté. I memorized Dan Marino’s stats and watched any Dolphins games that happened to be on Chicago TV and/or highlights on the weird tapes that Sports Illustrated and the Sporting News used to “give away” with subscriptions. I knew how many yards he had thrown for (eventually 61,361), how many of his TD passes were caught by Mark Duper (55) and how many by Mark Clayton (79), and I had even convinced myself that Yatil Green was just the deep threat he needed to right the ship and get back to a Super Bowl with that defense starting to come around. (News flash: he was not). More importantly, I had convinced myself that this man with a cannon for an arm also had to be a good person, a person worth my time, energy, and adulation. So when some friends in junior high school told me that Dan Marino was, well, an asshole, I adamantly disagreed and argued until I was blue (aqua?) in the face insisting that there was NO WAY his teammates could be sick of him yelling at them all the time since he was such a great leader, and there was NO WAY he wasn’t exactly as awesome as he seemed in Ace Ventura (a movie I saw 11 times in theaters) even though he was literally acting, and there was NO WAY those rumors of him cheating on his wife were true because, hey, he won the NFL Man of the Year award in 1998, and they only give that thing out to players that are leaders on and off the field. I didn’t just argue these points, I believed them to my very core. And don’t get me started on the “he would have won XX Super Bowls if he had a defense/a running game/the West Coast offense/both achilles tendons/full contractual rights to his soul in the afterlife” argument. I made those points constantly, and again, believed them. I could have written this slobbering piece of typeset fellatio: http://www.thephinsider.com/2015/7/19/9000165/were-not-really-debating-whether-dan-marino-is-the-best-quarterback.

How could I not trust the guy on the left? The guy on the right, though… Photo Credit: http://moviepilot.com/posts/2814890

But then, like the rest of you, I grew up and a couple of things changed. First of all, I went to college, and a connection with a team my favorite player retired from seemed, well, stupid, giving me a little bit of dispassionate distance. More importantly, I was able to grasp that we can look up to and respect people and still recognize their flaws as humans. We don’t necessarily need to worship them as heroes. This was a tough enough lesson to learn with my parents, and their shortcomings were front and center on a daily basis. And in the case of Marino, I used the internet for a lot more than crazy flash videos and porn and found things like this, this, this, the rumors that he was handsy and pushy with waitresses at Hooters, the smarminess that makes this seem plausible, and of course, the fact that he had a secret lovechild with one of the many women he slept with that are not named Claire Marino. Way to make me look like an asshole, Dan!

This evolution from adoration to “I still think he’s the greatest quarterback of all time, but he’s probably a douchebag” was more painful than it should have been. Seeing Marino get irritated on the CBS pregame show (even if the Amazon Super Bowl ad was supposed to show that he’s in on the joke) was another reminder that I had bought the good guy marketing plan and there were no refunds or exchanges when the shine came off. It also made me examine/realize that if my hero was a dick, who else was a dick? Was anyone genuine? Would Charles Barkley’s point extend well beyond athletes to everyone else I admired? If Marino wasn’t what he appeared, was I a failure for picking such a shitty hero? (The answer to the last one is obviously no; I’m a failure for so many other reasons).

In all honesty, even if I had idolized someone that wasn’t rumored to be a jerk, I’m sure I would have gone through a similar process. Our sports heroes are superhuman to us growing up, and then at some point we find out that they’re just human. It’s inevitable and normal and unfair to begin with, but it’s still more than a little disappointing to have the bloom come off the rose. In a way, this player worship is a microcosm of what we have all struggled with the last two seasons, loving football and hating what the NFL has become all at the same time. At some point we have to accept the flaws or quit rooting altogether.

To turn from the maudlin to the interactive, what about you, [DFO]ers? Who was your NFL hero growing up, and what did he do to disappoint you? Do you want to talk about it?

0 0 votes
Article Rating
BrettFavresColonoscopy
BFC is a Chicago native transplanted to our nation's capital and transplanted again to the mountain West, then to SoCal, then back to the mountain West, and then again back to our nation's capital. He enjoys football, whisky, and the oxford comma.
Subscribe
Notify of
97 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

[…] to be my favorite number. Not to be contrarian about good luck and bad luck, but because I was a big fan of Dan Marino. Now I don’t think I have a favorite number, which is probably healthier.  Nah, it’s […]

[…] kick things off with that classic Nirvana song about Dan Marino, another gun-slinger with no behavioral shortcomings or desire to be on TV […]

Col. Duke LaCross

Football: Walter Payton. In my opinion, he was the greatest player of all time. Virtually unstoppable, he was blinding fast in the open field, but never shied away from contact. He seemed to relish it as he bowled over linebackers and DB’s alike. Hell, he even had a pretty decent QB rating on halfback option plays. The dude could do it all, and he was pretty much the closest thing I had to a real-life super-hero as a kid. I’m about 99% sure I invited him to my 8th birthday party. I don’t think we’ll ever see another player like that again, a graceful, yet violent runner that played for 13 seasons and only missed ONE game. But his retirement was the first time I realized what it was like to have to walk away from something because you’re just too old and broken down to do it anymore. Off the field he was known as a tremendous humanitarian, and even though it’s come out about his post-Super Bowl temper tantrum and that he was a fairly troubled individual post-retirement, it doesn’t sully his image in my eyes.

The day he died, I had just transferred to a new college for my junior year and I was driving out to the airport to pick up my roommate when the news of his passing came over an update on the radio. I actually had to pull my truck over to compose myself. Outside of close family members and friends passing away, I can’t recall anyone’s death having that effect on me.

Fuck Charles Martin and the Green Bay Packers in the ass with a spiked billy club for all of eternity for robbing him of a chance at a second ring.

Baseball: Don Mattingly, but he hasn’t really done anything disgraceful, except coach the Dodgers.

King Hippo

/threadjack

OUT OF THE FA CUP with you, Redshite!!!!!

King Hippo

That’s what Everton supporters call Liverpool Football Club. Or sometimes just the shite for short.

Sill Bimmons

Stanley Shite on the South Coast.

Defensive Back Mike Wallace

/WARNING: Incoming wall of text.
Usually, this would be where I would talk about Air McNair, but I have a different story today. In 6th grade, I remember the New Orleans Saints surprising everyone with an upset win against the “Fastest Show on Turf”, in the playoffs. This was after the Doom Patrol was long gone AND just a year after the disastrous Ricky Williams trade. The main reason for this incredible season was the defensive line, (48.5 of the 66 team sacks) led by La’Roi Motherfuckin’ Glover.

http://sportsnola.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/glover_pumped_wht.jpg

montythisseemsstrangetome

God I hated Jim Haslett back in those days.

Still do, come to think of it.

Cuntler

I almost feel bad for SAWXXXX fans that loved Curt Schilling, considering how he turned out. Then I remember they are Pats fans, so HAHAHAHAHAHA fuck them.

Unsurprised

Bo Jackson.

It killed me when he got injured and it was clear that he wasn’t going anywhere after that.

Unsurprised

BOZTED

King Hippo

FUCK was he ever great.

Rikki-Tikki-Deadly

I absolutely REFUSED to believe that it was a significant injury, despite the reports that started trickling in afterwards. Seeing him on the sideline goofing around with his kids, there’s NO WAY, I said.

On the plus side, I haven’t heard anything emerge from his personal life that makes me respect him less. Seems pretty content to keep to himself and let his legend speak for itself.

Unsurprised

Yep. He bow hunts, sells his sweet potato pies, and did some commercials. Nothing wrong with that.

Lothar of the Hill People

When the White Sox got Bo post-hip replacement, he wrote an Op-Ed in the Tribune thanking Chicago for the opportunity to play again.

It was wonderful. It was all about how he loved the game and looked forward to enjoying all the little stuff again–like breaking bats over his knee when he struck out.

And then his first at-bat in a Sox uniform was a home run. It was magical.

Sill Bimmons

This…this is madness…

http://gawker.com/exit-rubio-pursued-by-a-robot-1758037399

He’s a ghost.

Buddy Cole's Halftime Show

But fake spikes can’t melt Pete Carroll’s defense.

theeWeeBabySeamus

I’ve never bought anything but Thin Mints.
And WTF is a Golden Yangle? That sounds like an R Kelly song.

blaxabbath

Saw Thin Mint Coffee Mate at the store. If they’re in bed with Nestle, they don’t need my $8/box for like 12 cookies.

theeWeeBabySeamus

Can’t decide which is funnier.
Kiss Him!!!! OR Stab Him!!!!

Sharkbait

Where was that anti kiss gear when Suzy Kolber was around?

Buddy Cole's Halftime Show

The Stabfather

theeWeeBabySeamus

Art Schlichter

Nah, just kidding. That poor bastard was hardly around long enough to become a footnote, let alone be idolized.

Sill Bimmons

You just know some nutcase Buckeye fans still carry a torch for that idiot.

theeWeeBabySeamus

As a young (and still mostly naive) adult, I always loved Palmeiro. When he got traded to Baltimore I was pretty excited about it. Then on his second stint in Baltimore the whole steroid thing started unraveling.
I was old enough by then to be not so naive, but also old enough, and with my own life’s difficulties to understand human foibles, temptation, etc. As well as to be forgiving about it, not that he or anyone else needs my forgiveness.
Used steroids? So did everyone else. Lied to congress about it? Those fuckers don’t deserve the truth anyway.

Coming full circle….his kid Preston now plays first base for my alma mater (NCSU), and as a season ticket holder I’ve had a couple of brushes with greatness, having short interactions with him. He’s there just about every game to watch his kid play (his kid is good, too).

Great guy, loves his kids. I am not ashamed of my adulation of him at all, in spite of the mistakes.

JerBear50

I liked Palmerio and remember being pissed as a kid when the Cubs traded him because of the whole banging Sandberg’s wife thing. It did however make room for my soon-to-be favorite player, Mark Grace, to stick at 1st.

scotchnaut

For hockey (didn’t really have a choice, did I?) it was Darryl Sittler of the Toronto Maple Leafs. He was talented, had charisma and put a shitty team on his back. I always expected that Gretzky would destroy his 10 point game but it never happened. (nobody talks about his 5 goal game in the playoffs against Bernie Parent in his prime) He does so much work for various charities they must be sick of him by now. He gave his All-Star jersey to Terry Fox, for christsake.

Football-wise it was Lawrence Taylor. I know, I know. BUT HE WAS SUCH A RIDICULOUS BEAST. It seemed to younger me that he single-handedly pulled the Giants out of a 15-year funk. Down through the years a buddy of mine is always right on top of things when LT gets arrested and sends me a notification. That’s friendship.

theeWeeBabySeamus

Little known fact, at least other than locally…
LT’s college coach at U*NC was named Dick Crum.
Yep…still funny.

Old School Zero

Football: LaDanian Tomlinson got me fully back into NFL fandom, though Junior Seau had really set the stage for that.

Sports: Tony Gwynn. When the strike happened when he was having a historic season, that’s when I said ‘fuck baseball’.

Sill Bimmons

I loved Tony Gwynn and that Expos team.

Fuck that strike.

Beerguyrob

This, times everything. Youpi was the best.

Sill Bimmons
scotchnaut

THE EXPOS WERE FINALLY GOING TO DO IT!

Alas, small market teams only get one or two shots at a title before the big boys rape them of their talent.

Spanky Datass

Yes! I was stationed in Japan at the time and every thing about that strike made me say “FUCK BASEBALL!” too.

JerBear50

I had really hoped LT would stay healthy and end up with the rushing record. I felt he would have been a much more worthy successor to Payton than Elmit Smurf.

Sill Bimmons

For baseball, of course it was Pops.

http://www.stpetersburg-realestate-insider.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/willie-stargell4.jpg

Thing is, he wasn’t always Pops.

Look at this fucking guy:

comment image

That’s the guy who hit 20 or more doubles 10 times.

Who hit 5 or more triples 5 times.

Who used to warm up swinging a 4-foot piece of steel pipe.

Greatest Pirate ever.

nomonkeyfun

Someone would like to disagree, but he was too much a gentleman.
http://mlb.mlb.com/images/0/8/2/90245082/Clementearm2_f79hgjrs.gif

What a fucking cannon.

Sill Bimmons

Clemente was the Pirates greatest player ever.

Pops just became the team in a way that rose above his play.

theeWeeBabySeamus

Those guys sucked.
-Barry Bonds

theeWeeBabySeamus

I totally get the love for Stargell (and Clemente too). Both deserve it. Both great players and people.
But fuck ’em both anyway…
’71 and ’79 WS’s were crushing for folks of my ilk….which is to say Baltimorons. Especially ’79…fucking 3-1 lead. Fuck you too, Kent Tekulve.
/tears may soon flow

Sill Bimmons

/sorry not sorry

theeWeeBabySeamus

I wouldn’t be either.

Sill Bimmons

Jack Lambert.

No one ever made fun of him, and he never embarrassed me.

His Wikipedia entry doesn’t even have a Personal Life section.

No one ever heard of him, then he played, then no one ever heard from him again.

http://www.mcmillenandwife.com/images/lambert_yeah.jpg

ballsofsteelandfury

This. A million times this.

blaxabbath

Can’t say I’ve ever known Jay Cutler to go out of his way to hassle anyone.

Lothar of the Hill People

Walter Payton was one of my football heroes. Indestructible on the field, and a genuinely nice guy off it–nice enough to me, at least. None of the stories I’ve heard about him off the field have tarnished his “hero-ness” for me–if anything, they’ve humanized him and made his on-field accomplishments even more mythic.

Non-football hero-wise, when I was young, I idolized Eddie Van Halen. Now, I still respect him as a great guitarist, but the guy is a raging asshole.

Beerguyrob

I hate how he’s thrown Michael Anthony under the bus, and respect the hell out of Sammy for sticking by Michael’s side.

indieguy

Albert belle. I always thought he was a cool guy and I was to young to really get his antics.

nomonkeyfun

My team was the ’86 Mets.
Even as an 8-year old I knew they were one of the worst collections of human beings of all time, except for the stands of a 49ers game.

But, I was really woken up by Doc going into rehab a week before the start of the ’87 season.

Don T

Luis Suárez. I’ll vouch for him as the young BFC did for Marino.

ballsofsteelandfury

But he’s not a biter! He’s a gentle nibbler!

Plus, he’s on Barcelona. That gives him credit for five years of assholishness.

Don T

/takes out Nixon’s Enemies List
//can’t find pen FUCK!

montythisseemsstrangetome

“I was almost lionized but it turned out the Cowboys drafted me instead.”

– Emmitt Smith

laserguru

For football it was Alan Page and he never did one single thing to disappoint me, well apart from finishing his career with the Bears.

Baseball was The Hawk, Andre Dawson. The only thing he did wrong was having really shitty knees that impacted the end of his career.

JerBear50

Loved Dawson. Wrigley might be an old dump, but luckily for Cubs fans it was an old dump with soft grass in the outfield.

jjfozz

And for football, Johnny Unitas.

I met him several times around Baltimore, and he was just a nice, open person – with the most mangled hands you’d ever see. Had time for every person who came up to say hello.

He came into a clothing store I used to work at, and he wrote a check, which noted he was in receivership, or something like that. So the guy who took the check turned to me and said, “Should we get ID?”

I almost cold cocked him, instead I said, “There’s no need for that. We all know who #19 is.” And then Johnny U laughed and winked at me.

True story, bro.

Rikki-Tikki-Deadly

It would have been better if you’d said “We all know who Earl Morrall is.”

Sill Bimmons

Stillers released him, called him “too dumb to play football.”

That’s why the Steelers didn’t win shit until they hired Charles Henry to run things.

Beerguyrob

Being only 8 when the Seahawks began, I was only a Packers fan because it angered my father (Vikings) and I liked the colour green. Lyn Dickey never did anything to disappoint me, because I could only read about games in SI.

Since I’m Canadian, I’m going to use hockey and mention what a vainglorious asshole Phil Esposito was. He defended Alan Eagleson right up until it was proved he’d also taken money from Phil.

Rikki-Tikki-Deadly

One of the things about being a Raiders fan is that I never actually believed (even when I was a little kid, I don’t think) that any of the players were actually decent human beings. So not a lot of potential for letdown there.

As for me, though, it was Mike Tyson. I wasn’t that huge of a fan, but I literally couldn’t BELIEVE that he would rape someone.

jjfozz

Saw my childhood hero – Brooks Robinson – at a funeral, of all places. Stood outside next to my wife getting antsy until she said to me, “Do you need to go to the bathroom?”

“No, that’s fucking Brooks Robinson standing there. RIGHT. THERE. Do you not get that?”

Yup, argued at a funeral.

theeWeeBabySeamus

She started it.

montythisseemsstrangetome

O.J. Simpson but he never did anything bad that I heard about.

Beerguyrob

Those two years of 49ers paycheques was kinda selfish.

Sill Bimmons

He had a little run-in with the cops about 20 years ago.

Wasn’t a big deal.

litre_cola

Randall Cunningham. Reason I am an Iggles fan. A sad, sad Iggles fan who is used to crushed expectations.

Sidenote, I bought a signed Randall football, I was so excited that I found it, I neglected to notice he signed it #7, his Vikes number.

King Hippo

John Elway. Like Marino, also a womanizer and kind of a dick. But I don’t think he was ever borderline assault-y about it.

I take almost nothing seriously in terms of disagreement, but Marino is the only (albeit wrong) alternative to Elway from his QB generation that will pacify me in a GOAT discussion. Montana was merely figurehead captain of the all-star team.

It’s hard to compare across eras, but I am pretty confident with Unitas-Elway-Manning, and in 10 years it will likely be Unitas-Elway-Manning-Newton.

Bloody Lethal

comment image?w=770

theeWeeBabySeamus

Never gets old.

theeWeeBabySeamus

Which works out well because everyone hates Cam already.
You know….other than his body shop guy.

blaxabbath

Kurt Warner and Fitz, locally, are overall good dudes that I hope today’s Phoenix youth can look back on and not be completely ashamed to have rooted for them.

From my generation, I think Ken Griffey Junior is about the most beloved athlete (I also have never heard a bad thing about Wayne Gretzky) from any sport.

King Hippo

Despite his politics, I REALLY like Warner as a human being.

But overall “kill your heroes” is a good sentiment (unless your hero is a cat or a dog), because humanity in general is just goddamned awful.

Bloody Lethal

Gretzky is supposedly a jerk, but I also take the he’s a jerk stories with a grain of salt because I imagine most people are annoying when you’re Wayne Gretzky. Also he got tied up in some gambling accusations. For me, I don’t mind being a jerk or gambling so he’s still the Great One.

Spanky Datass
Cuntler

Who was your NFL hero growing up, and what did he do to disappoint you?

1. Walter Payton, cheated on his wife, huffed nitrous oxide in his garage, died.

2. Mike Singletary, coached the 49ers and showed them his ass, is a crazy person.

3. Joe Montana, told everyone he was going to go upstairs and masturbate.

montythisseemsstrangetome

I thought that was WHY Joe Montana was your hero.

King Hippo

Re #2, how did they sane him up for that entire “30 for 30” like that? I know the stroke explains Buddy, I would guess that they just used 25% of Ditka’s footage and let selective editing do its magic.

Loved how they revealed how everybody on the team looked at Ditka as if he was a fucking joke, even at the time he was being fellated in the media.

Unsurprised

#3 is a plus, not a minus.

Personally, and seriously, it was when he became the confused and rattle-headed old man in the Papa John’s commercials.

Unsurprised

I guess that was redundant. Still. Sad.

King Hippo

Bradshaw and Montana are living proof that you could be a pretty good QB with a barely room temperature IQ.

I guess The Ben, too.

Sharkbait

Troy Aikman for me. To the point where I have a signed 75th Anniversary jersey that my Giants fan fiancee is constantly trying to set on fire.

Bloody Lethal

A flaming Troy Aikman seems to fit…

blaxabbath

Also, I did a google search for “Dan Marino Tackling Buddy” because I had one of those toys growing up (along with my Ultimate Warrior and Hulk Hogan wrestling buddies) and the 4th hit is:

Trent Green – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

blaxabbath

Tim Tebow.

But he’s actually a great human being off the field and, bonus, I’ve never played a down of football in my life and I can mimic his throwing motion perfectly!

Bloody Lethal

BFC this is great. I mean as I’ve gotten older, I’ve prayed more and more of my favorites just stay out of the media in general. I was a huge Jerry Rice fan (who wasn’t?) and I had this jersey that I wore 24 hours a day for like 4 years even after it had been torn in our annual Thanksgiving football game. While I think my transition to accepting they are not heroes was seamless, because I was able to compartmentalize it to an extent. Or I’ve buried it deep deep down. But, I really never was able to accept how stupid they were. I mean have you heard Jerry Rice break anything down? He stutters more than he would getting jammed at the line. Why did you have to make yourself human? Just hang em up and live on in infamy. Don’t ruin it by talking.

Bloody Lethal
montythisseemsstrangetome

I was actually okay with Jerry Rice until he put on a Cowboys jersey for a fucking McDonald’s commercial.

Sill Bimmons

Receivers are the dumbest players on the field.

All they have to do is run to a spot.

They don’t have to know shit about any other position.