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Tyreek Hill, Patrick Mahomes look to connect the dots in SB LV texasguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from texasguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
To hear tales of the early Super Bowls, they weren’t considered anywhere near the show that is made today out of the big game. They same could be said of Ohio State involvement in the games during that era. Through the first two Super Bowls, just one Ohio State player suited up, and it didn’t go well for him. Jim Tyrer was the starting left tackle for the Kansas City Chiefs, who lost the first Super Bowl 35-10 to the Green Bay Packers. In fact, even in the AFL and NFL league championship games - the forerunners to today’s conference championship games that began with the 1970 AFL-NFL merger - there wasn’t much going on in terms of Ohio State participation. ....
Take 5: Players with most to gain in Super Bowl LV saltlakecitysun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from saltlakecitysun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
[email protected] Submitted photo Marion Motley, shown here in a publicity photo from the early 1950s, was one of four black players who integrated professional football in 1946, a year before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball. Jackie Robinson is famous and celebrated for integrating Major League Baseball in 1947. Professional football integrated the year before, but the four players who accomplished that feat largely are forgotten. A half-hour documentary premiering Friday hopes to bring attention to the greatest of those four athletes, Canton native Marion Motley. “Lines Broken: The Story of Marion Motley” will air nine times on PBS Western Reserve and its Fusion channel for Black History Month. ....
Anthony Sabatini wants to ruin Apalachee Parkway for Jon Ausman. That’s the road that runs from Miami to the Georgia line, straight through the heart of Polk County. In Tallahassee, it makes a 90-degree turn at Monroe Street and the Parkway right in front of the Capitol, where mass demonstrations are held and governors go to get sworn in. Ausman, Florida’s longest-serving member of the Democratic National Committee, didn’t like it when they named the Washington airport for President Reagan. He’s less than thrilled about Sabatini’s plan for Tallahassee’s scenic thoroughfare. “The naming of a state road or any facility should be done only for those who have lived an exemplary life,” said Ausman, who’s no longer on the DNC. “Trump with numerous negative court findings, a double impeachment and a record-breaking record of lying does not qualify.” ....