New England Football Player Cards Pat's team set. 10. Marty Schottenheimer RC. joe kapp, Nance etc. 1971. Topps.15/32. Pat's team set. 21. w/CL, Hannah IA, Morgan IA. Brock football Bros. 1983.Topps. http://www.hockomock.net/patriots/binder1.htm
Extractions: YEAR BRAND CARD # TYPE # of CARDS Player Name(s) Bowman single Francis Kilroy Front office (Pat's) Bowman single Ken MacAffee Home: North Easton Topps single Ken MacAffee Home: North Easton Topps single Babe Parilli Green Bay (later Pat's) QB Topps single Stan Jones Line Coach (Pat's)/HOF Topps Pat's team set Dee, Parilli etc Fleer Pat's team set Burton, Saban, Flowers etc Topps single Raymond Berry Head coach/HOF Topps single Stan Jones Line Coach (Pat's)/HOF Fleer Pat's team set Burton, Lott, Songin etc Topps single Raymond Berry Head coach/HOF Topps single Stan Jones Line Coach (Pat's)/HOF Fleer Pat's team set Cappelletti RC, Lott etc Fleer Pat's team set Buoniconti RC, Long SP Gannon RC, etc Topps Pat's team set Buoniconti, Addison SP Cappalletti etc Philadelphia single Raymond Berry Head coach/HOF Topps Pat's team set Buoniconti SP, Addison SP Cappalletti, Parilli etc Topps Pat's team set Buoniconti, Addison Cappalletti, Parilli etc Topps Pat's team set Huarte, Buoniconti Cappelletti etc YEAR BRAND CARD # TYPE # of CARDS Player Name(s) Topps Pat's team set Jim Nance RC, Buoniconti
Memorable Football Games In Recent Years football Games in Recent Years. Cal vs Stanfurd, Nov 20, 1982. Cal entered theBig Game with a surprising 64 record under first year head coach joe kapp. http://www.csua.berkeley.edu/~yoda/cal/memfootball.html
Extractions: Cal entered the Big Game with a surprising 6-4 record under first year head coach Joe Kapp. Although 5-5, Stanfurd was promised a berth in the Hall of Fame Bowl if they won, and quarterback John Elway was shooting for the Heisman Trophy. The Bears onside kick team was in disarray as safety Kevin Moen fielded the squib kick at the Cal 46. Moen tossed the football to Richard Rodgers, who lateralled to freshman Dwight Garner. In desperation as he was being tackled, Garner managed to pitch the ball back to Rodgers. At this point several players and the entire Stanfurd Band rushed onto the field thinking that the game was over. Meanwhile, Rodgers reached the Stanfurd 46, where he pitched to wide receiver Mariet Ford. Racing down the field, Ford was trapped by three Stanfurd players near the 25. While throwing his body into the Cardinal defenders, Ford blindly tossed the ball over his shoulder toward Moen. Cal vs Stanfurd, Nov 22, 1986
Football Star Cards For Sale At Baseballcards.net football Cards Listed. Johnson Charlie Joiner Ed Too Tall Jones Dave Jones DeaconJones Lee Roy Jordon Sonny Jurgensen Napoleon Kaufman joe kapp Alex Karras http://www.baseballcards.net/pages/fbstars.htm
Extractions: Football Cards Listed Alphabetically For Sale (call or e-mail for players you are interested in) E-mail infob@baseballcards.net or call 1-800-803-3898 with want list for each player. Dan Abramowicz Herb Adderly Troy Aikman Derrick Alexander Marcus Allen Mike Alstott Lance Alworth Morten Andersen Ken Anderson Ottis Anderson Reidel Anthony Doug Atkins John Avery Tavian Banks Tony Banks Tim Barber Lem Barney Bobby Bell Ray Berry Jerome Bettis Steve Beuerlein Tim Biakubutuka Fred Biletnikoff Michael Bishop Jeff Blake George Blanda Drew Bledsoe Rocky Bleier Mel Blount David Boston Terry Bradshaw Cliff Branch John Brodie Robert Brooks Tim Brown Larry Brown Roosevelt Brown Willie Brown Isaac Bruce Mark Brunell Buck Buchanan Chris Burford Ron Burton Dick Butkus Earl Campbell Billy Cannon Gino Cappaletti Harold Carmichael Chris Carter Ki-Jana Carter Chris Chandler Wayne Chrebet Todd Christensen Dwight Clark Gary Clark Ben Coates Kerry Collins Curtis Conway Tim Couch Roger Craig Randy Cross Germane Crowell Larry Csonka Daunte Culpepper Randall Cunningham Mike Curtis Ben Davidson Stephen Davis Terrell Davis Willie Davis Len Dawson Steve DeBerg Richard Dent Eric Dickerson Dan Dierdorf Trent Dilfer Corey Dillon Tony Dorsett Jim Druckenmmiller Warrick Dunn Kevin Dyson Quinn Early Robert Edwards Troy Edwards Henry Ellard John Elway Bert Emanuel Jim Everett Kevin Faulk Marshall Faulk Brett Favre Joe Ferguson Doug Flutie Dan Fouts Antonio Freeman Irving Fryar Roman Gabriel Joey Galloway Charlie Garner Larry Garron Eddie George Jeff George Joe Germaine Terry Glenn Austin Gonsoulin Tony Gonzalez Elvis Grbac
MSNBC - Error 404 Yale, running back, 197072 joe kapp, California, quarterback Trull, Baylor, quarterback,1961-63 joe Walton, Pittsburgh A full section on college football Odds. http://famulus.msnbc.com/famulusspt/apmegasports02-13-190654.asp?spt=cfb
SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports -- The Play joe kapp was here a few weeks ago, and I told him, 'I guess you had faced a similarsituation for the Denver Broncos in a Monday Night football game against http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/college_football/20021118-9999_1s18play_z.h
Extractions: November 18, 2002 There's the band, of course. Everybody always remembers the band, spilling onto the field in red coats and white hats, 10 and then 20 and then 50 and then 100, raising trumpets and trombones and saxophones and playing Stanford's unofficial fight, "All Right Now," when all wasn't right. There are the Cal players, fielding the kickoff from Stanford and desperately pitching the ball to one another as the clock ticked to 0:00. Kevin Moen to Richard Rodgers to Dwight Garner to Rodgers to Mariet Ford to Moen again. There is the Cal coach, who instilled in his players a never-say-die attitude no matter the situation, no matter how insurmountable the mountain. There is the game itself, known as the Big Game, which had acquired quite a reputation for producing improbable finishes typical of two schools known more for their acumen with the periodic table than with the pigskin.
SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports -- THE GAME And THE AXE the despair of Cal players and a tearful coach joe kapp. the voice of Bears radioannouncer joe Starkey thrilling finish in the history of college football http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/college_football/20021118-9999_1s18timeseri
Extractions: November 18, 2002 "The Play." Even so, the games have a history of being remarkably close, with nearly half being decided by a touchdown or less. The average score: 16-15. The schools ultimately decided to award the Axe to the winner of the annual Big Game, framed in glass with a plaque of all the scores. Under 1982 it says, Cal 25, Stanford 20. Except when Stanford is in possession of the Axe, when it reads: Stanford 20, Cal 19. THE T-SHIRT Quick to make a profit from a five-lateral kickoff return through a marching band, Cal's bookstore began selling yellow T-shirts with "The Play" diagrammed on them (the Stanford band is in red). Thousands of shirts have been sold since. You can purchase a 20th anniversary "The Play" shirt for $16 at calbears.ocsn.com/store THE HERO Kevin Moen was a senior tight end who had not scored in his Cal career when he suddenly found himself weaving through red-clad Stanford band members as time expired, ultimately smashing into trombonist Gary Tyrrell. Moen was so upset that Stanford had apparently won the game on Mark Harmon's field goal that he wasn't in the huddle when Richard Rodgers beseeched his teammates to keep pitching the ball, to keep the play alive no matter what. "The Big Game is about excitement and unpredictability," says Moen, a real estate broker in the Palos Verdes area. "My advice to anyone attending is: Don't leave early. You never know what is going to happen."
The Star Archive - Joe Kapp More Autographs Links Add Information Link to this Page Print. Listinglast updated on May 23rd, 2002, AD joe kapp. (football player/coach). http://www.stararchive.com/starc2000/sl/9976.html
TV Guide Online - [Movie Database] Several sportscasters and former football players appear in the film in characteror as themselves, including joe kapp, Carl Weathers (ROCKY), Paul Hornung http://www.tvguide.com/Movies/database/ShowMovie.asp?MI=19726
TV Guide Online - [Movie Database] gridiron stars the guards boast onetime Viking quarterback joe kapp and Packer Nostranger to football himself, Reynolds, an All-Southern Conference halfback http://www.tvguide.com/movies/database/ShowMovie.asp?MI=5013
Extractions: The Play still arouses stong emotions among the players and coaches who participated. AP By John Donovan, CNNSI.com At the beginning of almost every game, the Palos Verdes Colts, a Southern California Pop Warner team, try a trick play of some kind. Taking the kickoff one way, then stopping and throwing across the field. Running a double reverse. A flea-flicker. Things like that. "Just some ways to get a little creativity into it," says their head coach, Kevin Moen, "and keep the other team off balance." It's a lot of fun for the 13- and 14-year-olds who play for Moen, a 41-year-old Southern California real estate agent. And it's just as much fun for Moen, who is preaching now what he pulled off to perfection two decades ago. It was 20 years ago this week that Moen, then a senior at the University of California, capped what is easily the single most famous play in football history. Moen's name may not be up there with Flutie or Elway. But Moen belongs. He was the one who dashed the final 25 yards through the Stanford band, finally landing deep in the end zone on an unsuspecting trombonist, to score the winning touchdown on The Play.
Extractions: Nov. 22, 1986 The Golden Bears came into the Big Game with a 1-9 record, an eight-game losing streak and a lame-duck coach in former Cal quarterback Joe Kapp. He may not have been a successful mentor, but Kapp knew how to beat Stanford. Four years earlier, Cal employed the Play, the multi-lateral kickoff return through the Stanford band, to beat the Cardinal. Though No. 16 Stanford was 7-2 going into this matchup, Cal controlled the game throughout. No. 9 Oct. 29, 1921 The Praying Colonels came north from Kentucky to shock the Crimson, the Miami of its day (think about that for a minute). Harvard entered the contest with a 25-game unbeaten string, but Centre was no slouch. Quarterback Bo McMillin, who would lead the Praying Colonels to an undefeated season, scored the game's only touchdown on a 32-yard run early in the third quarter. July 22: Blue Ribbon Previews:
IHSA Boys Football Class 1A Yearbook Boys football Class 1A Yearbook, 199899. Gabler, Kyle O'Connor, John Gilbert, TylerDonahue, JR Gisi, BJ Healy, Will Stump, Matt Papoccia, joe kapp, Mike Wahl http://www.ihsa.org/activity/fb/1998-99/1year.htm
Extractions: Boys Football Class 1A Yearbook Front row, from left: Mgr. Jared Gregory, Ryan Markey, Cole Krieg, George Toubekis, Chris Rogers, Jared Murphy, Jay Castlebury. Second row: Mgr. Lucas Kelly, Marc Huston, Josh Fink, Will Wood, Andy Dietz, Kyle Huston, Ryan Robinson, Bart Ellefritz, Gabe Pettit, Eric Huston, Mgr. John Unruh. Third row: Nate Fink, Mgr. Lamar Kelly, Wyatt Green, Willie Thompson, Adam Stoverink, Justin Wachtendorf, Brad Dixon, Curtis Bisby, Luke Wessel, Scott Roberts, Asst. Coach Bill Reed. Fourth row: Asst. Coach Bill Lapp, Mgr. Darec Kramer, Nathan Reid, T. J. Menn, Mark Jacob, Joe Spangler, Jeremy Kerr, Joe Carlisle, Jordan Fink, Mark Carlisle, Justin Morehouse, Head Coach Jim Unruh. Back row: Asst. Coach Lyle Klein, Abe Huls, Blake Rea, Ryan Shirey, Chase Ufkes, Andy Trusley, Billy Cramer, Jamie Whitcomb. Not pictured: Jared Smiddy, Jared Carlin. Sterling (Newman Central Catholic) Comets Class 1A Runners-Up Front row, from left: Mgr. Chad Haley, Darren Bellini, Christopher Dohn, Ryan Dawson, Brian Demmer, Eric Warren, Luke Kobbeman, Brandon Rosengren, Jonathon Turnroth, Andrew Papoccia, Jake Amesquita, Mgr. Tyler Wescott. Middle row: Trainer Allison Maas, Tim Fritts, Nigel Collins, Mitch Magnafici, Pat Hermes, Jeremy Steder, Brandon Musgrave, Nathaniel Nguyen, Toby Paxton, Tim Bruketta, Jesse Whitebread, Trainer Katie McBride. Back row: David Gabler, Kyle O'Connor, John Gilbert, Tyler Donahue, J.R. Gisi, B.J. Healy, Will Stump, Matt Papoccia, Joe Kapp, Mike Wahl, Ray Larkey, Trainer Mary Miller.
California Alumni Association At UC Berkeley Former Cal coach, quarterback, and allaround football legend joe kapp 59 repeatedlast week that he is forsaking tequila until Cal makes it back to the http://www.alumni.berkeley.edu/Alumni/Cal_Monthly/December_2002/How_the_Axe_came
Extractions: Current Issue February 2003 Recent Issues December 2002 November 2002 September 2002 June 2002 ... February 2000 Historical Issues After 1990 December 1999 November 1999 September 1999 June 1999 April 1999 February 1999 December 1998 November 1998 September 1998 June 1998 April 1998 February 1998 December 1997 November 1997 September 1997 June 1997 February 1997 September 1996 June 1996 April 1996 June 1995 September 1994 April 1993 November 1992 September 1992 November 1991 June 1991 December 1990 The 2002 Cal football season started with a trick play for a touchdown, and ended with the Axe back in Berkeley, both goal posts coming down, and thousands of strangers embracing on the field like battle-weary soldiers after a cease-fire. "I served in World War II, and I have never seen so many people so happy," said my dad, George Jones ’51, tears welling in his eyes (and not just from the bloody Marys). It was the perfect ending to a glorious 7-5 season. For Cal fans everywhere, November 23 was a day of pure love. At Memorial Stadium, love rained down from the hills, from the giant video screen (with multiple showings of the Play), from the flags snapping in the breeze, from the splintery, peeling old wooden benches. From face-painted students to buttoned-down alumni, from rejuvenated players to poker-faced coaches, there was nothing but unadulterated joy.
Football Inventory 117 football COINS AND CAPS. Canadian football League Coins and Caps. 1963 Nalley'sCoins. 858, 145, joe kapp, British Columbia Lions, EX, $50.00. 1964 Nalley's Coins. http://www.sportsantiquities.com/category/inventory.php?sport=football&keyword=
Official Athletic Site - National Football Foundation Player and Back of the Year and Back of the Year by football News joe kappCalifornia-Quarterback-Namedfirst team All-America and first team All-Conference in http://footballfoundation.ocsn.com/genrel/021303aaa.html
Extractions: Feb. 13, 2003 MORRISTOWN, NJ - Seventy-seven players and six coaches have met the criteria and passed through district screening committees to be considered for 2003 College Football Hall of Fame induction and will appear on the ballot as it was released by The National Football Foundation today. The ballot hits the mail this week to the more than 11,000 members of The National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame whose votes will be recorded and submitted to the Foundation's Honors Court, which deliberates and is responsible for selecting the class. The Honors Court, an 11-member panel chaired by Gene Corrigan (former commissioner of the ACC and past president of the NCAA), is made up of athletics directors, conference commissioners, Hall of Fame coaches, and members of the media. A complete list is available at www.footballfoundation.com. The Hall of Fame Class will be announced in late March and inducted at The National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame's 46th Awards Dinner December 9, 2003, in New York City.
South Bend Tribune -- Sports News For Tuesday, August 24, 1999 captures archery title Despite being in first place, joe kapp lined up Notre Damefootball Willaims staying despite suspension With opportunities from football http://www.southbendtribune.com/99/aug/082499/sports/sports.htm
ESPN.com: NCF - What The &@%# ...? Since the Bay Area does not otherwise acknowledge college football as a national dustof the fivelateral kickoff return that Cal coach joe kapp called Grabass http://espn.go.com/ncf/columns/ratto_ray/1463626.html
Extractions: Since the Bay Area does not otherwise acknowledge college football as a national industry, it stands foursquare behind the notion that The Play is the sport's single greatest moment. And hey, we invented the Internet, so you have to trust us on this. But the story of The Play, from the John Elway pass of fourth-and-17 that made Mark Harmon's seemingly game-winning field goal possible, to Kevin Moen's end zone collision with Gary Tyrrell, has been told down to the last detail so many times that to find a relatively untrampled piece of Berkeley's Memorial Stadium is nearly impossible. Well, here it is. The officials' dressing room, where Stanford coach Paul Wiggin had the moment of a coach's lifetime, but was too flummoxed by events to close the deal.