The ultimate trick play
Posted: Sun Jul 25, 2004 10:39 pm
If you've never been to footballresearch.com, check it out. It is the site of the Professional Football Researchers Association, and they have a ton of good reading up there.
Anyway, I was reading this article about the Oorang Indians, an NFL team from Marion, Ohio coached by Jim Thorpe and stocked entirely with American Indians (many of them Chippewa).
Their very first game was Oct. 1, 1922 against the Dayton Triangles.
Check out this play:
The most unusual Dayton touchdown was the last. After Huffine had scored the next-to-last TD, the Indians kicked off to Dayton. Gus Redmond caught the ball, but instead of running with it, he punted it right back to the Indians. This completely confused the tribe. One Indian touched the ball, and then Dayton's Glenn Tibb scooped it up and ran 41 yards to the end zone.
I have no idea if that would be a legal play anymore. But can you imagine trying that deep into a blowout win?
http://www.footballresearch.com/article ... pic=oorang
Anyway, I was reading this article about the Oorang Indians, an NFL team from Marion, Ohio coached by Jim Thorpe and stocked entirely with American Indians (many of them Chippewa).
Their very first game was Oct. 1, 1922 against the Dayton Triangles.
Check out this play:
The most unusual Dayton touchdown was the last. After Huffine had scored the next-to-last TD, the Indians kicked off to Dayton. Gus Redmond caught the ball, but instead of running with it, he punted it right back to the Indians. This completely confused the tribe. One Indian touched the ball, and then Dayton's Glenn Tibb scooped it up and ran 41 yards to the end zone.
I have no idea if that would be a legal play anymore. But can you imagine trying that deep into a blowout win?
http://www.footballresearch.com/article ... pic=oorang