Hail To The Redskins.....
“HAIL TO THE REDSKINS: GIBBS, THE DIESEL, THE HOGS, AND THE GLORY DAYS OF D.C’S FOOTBALL DYNASTY” by Adam Lazarus
Hail To The Redskins
A fact-filled and highly entertaining account of the Washington Redskins’ glory days under Joe Gibbs in the 1980s and early 199s, back when the ‘Skins used to actually score points, play defense, and win games. Reading this book will make my fellow Redskins fans pine harder than ever for the good ol’ days.
HTTR
RANDOM STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS (and noteworthy passages):
—p. xi: “A smart, rational debate over this topic could fill up every single page of this book. But I think these pages are better used for celebrating and remembering the glory days of the franchise. Doing so without use of the word ‘Redskins,’ however, would be historically inaccurate, clumsy, and ultimately absurd. During the years in which this true story takes place, roughly 1981 through 2007, the professional football team in Washington was known as the Redskins, so I refer to that team and those players as “‘Redskins.’ To do otherwise would be locking a piece of history in the basement or brushing it with a new coat of paint.” A-freaking-men! Too bad the PC Thought Police and snowflakes and SJWs can’t apply that same rational thought to Confederate statues!!
—p. 9: “On January 22, 1969, Gibbs agreed to leave Tallahassee for Los Angeles, where he would become John McKay’s offensive line coach at the University of Southern California (USC). Despite a slight pay cut, the job offered several fringe benefits: not only would the growing Gibbs family (Pat was pregnant) be closer to both Joe and Pat’s roots, but USC featured the best running offense in all of college football and they routinely attracted top-tier recruits. In the four years prior to Gibbs’s arrival, the McKay offense churned out two Heisman Trophy–winning ball carriers, Mike Garrett in 1965 and O. J. Simpson in 1968. Both would be playing on Sundays by the time Gibbs arrived on campus, but the Trojans’ ground attack remained college football’s gold standard. With Clarence Davis, Sam Cunningham, and quarterback Jimmy Jones—dubbed the All-Black Backfield—USC pounded opposing Pac-8 defenses, averaging nearly 250 rushing yards per game. Teaching USC’s offensive linemen the specifics and nuances of McKay’s offense came naturally to Gibbs, and not just because he had been a guard and center for nearby San Diego State. Don Coryell invented the I-formation, and upon taking a job as an assistant at USC in 1960, he taught John McKay the entire scheme.” FIGHT ON, TROJANS, and R.I.P. and God bless, John McKay!!! ✌️✌️✌️
—p. 26: Mike Rae, Fight On!!
—p. 41: “Following the crowd-pleasing effort against Minnesota, ‘The Diesel’ characteristically ignored all interview requests, donned his customary camouflage pants and shirt, and then walked into the parking lot. There he autographed a female fan’s shoe, tossed back a shot of tequila, washed it down with half a can of beer that an old friend handed him, and drove home.” Haha, classic. Oh, the stuff people could get away with back in the day....
—p. 46: “Before an eager audience at Tuesday’s press event he [Riggins, that is]regaled dozens of reporters with his insights into the D.C. limelight, explaining, ‘If you’re a public figure in Washington, you’re just a piece of toilet paper: you know you’re going to get smeared, the trick is not to get flushed down.’” LMAO, Riggo, effing priceless!!
—pp. 131-132: “The only other school he considered signing with was the University of Southern California. As a fourteen-year-old in 1969, Williams became a fan of the Trojans when head coach John McKay started a sophomore African American quarterback named Jimmy Jones. “There were only two schools I wanted to play for out of high school, either Grambling or USC, mainly because of Jimmy Jones,” Williams said. “Besides Jimmy Raye at Michigan State, there weren’t many black quarterbacks playing at the major universities. So I was a fan of SC, mainly because of that.” But McKay and the Trojans—who won twenty-two games and a Rose Bowl with Jones—didn’t recruit Williams to Southern California in 1973.” Oh, what might’ve been. Still though, one more reason to love the Redskins; HTTR and Fight On, Trojans!!
—pp. 135-136: “Nearing the draft, Tampa Bay’s head coach John McKay—the same man who entrusted his high-powered offense to Jimmy Jones nine years earlier—sent a member of his staff to evaluate the prospect. At Carroll High School in Monroe, where the education major was volunteering as a student-teacher, Doug Williams met Joe Gibbs, the Bucs’ new, first-time offensive coordinator. In between classes and lunch with Williams and his girlfriend, Janice, at McDonald’s, Gibbs administered a handful of pop quizzes to test the quarterback’s football knowledge.” What goes around, comes around, all’s well that ends well, etc....