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-   -   **** The offical D.T. Goes to the hall of fame thread **** (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=211591)

big nasty kcnut 08-08-2009 05:53 AM

**** The offical D.T. Goes to the hall of fame thread ****
 
Congrat D.T. Somewhere i know my mom telling him how much a fan i am.
Posted via Mobile Device

Mr. Arrowhead 08-08-2009 07:55 AM

will be and will always be my favorite not only chief player, but my favorite athlete.

Sully 08-08-2009 08:02 AM

My first several years of having season tickets, I never tailgated. I always went into the stadium early. I wanted to go stand by the field and watch the players warm up. My favorite thing was always watching DT and Neil Smith play catch and run around like kids before the games. I always knew when it was time to begin the trek up to the upper level, when DT was always the last player to jog onto the field for team stretching.

DT was Chiefs football, to me. It's going to be an emotional day.

Ebolapox 08-08-2009 08:04 AM

ya know, it makes me happy that nut is the one that posted this.

KCFalcon59 08-08-2009 09:39 AM

It's a beuuuutiful day in Arrowhead Stadium. I can't wait for the ceremony tonight. Wish I was there. Miss DT.

BigVE 08-08-2009 09:45 AM

There will be tears, oh yes, there will be tears.

Buehler445 08-08-2009 10:40 AM

Thanks for starting this, nut. It's a good day in Chiefs History.

The Poz 08-08-2009 10:40 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Can't wait to throw my DT jersey on tomorrow and wear it with pride all day.

teedubya 08-08-2009 11:23 AM

so it starts at 6pm?

WilliamTheIrish 08-08-2009 12:08 PM

6 pm on NFL Network and ESPN.

Mr. Flopnuts 08-08-2009 12:11 PM

I just hope people can contain their hate of Carl Peterson in this thread. There isn't a man alive that Derrick would have rather had give his speech than Carl, and I hope we can all respect him enough to unleash our CP fury in other threads.

SAUTO 08-08-2009 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. Flopnuts (Post 5958178)
I just hope people can contain their hate of Carl Peterson in this thread. There isn't a man alive that Derrick would have rather had give his speech than Carl, and I hope we can all respect him enough to unleash our CP fury in other threads.

THIS. for sure derrick would be ecstatic that CP is giving the speech

DJJasonp 08-08-2009 12:22 PM

what a great day....albeit a few years late IMHO...but nonetheless, DT becomes an NFL immortal today.

Again, a great day for Chiefs fans, Kansas City, and DT's family and friends.

Coach 08-08-2009 12:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. Flopnuts (Post 5958178)
I just hope people can contain their hate of Carl Peterson in this thread. There isn't a man alive that Derrick would have rather had give his speech than Carl, and I hope we can all respect him enough to unleash our CP fury in other threads.

As long as Carl doesn't make it to be "himself" instead of DT, I'll be fine.

Mr. Flopnuts 08-08-2009 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958208)
As long as Carl doesn't make it to be "himself" instead of DT, I'll be fine.

I bumped the Carl resigns thread, and I hope people will consider using that thread for the tongue lashings.

WilliamTheIrish 08-08-2009 12:49 PM

Gents,

I'm going to be stuck at work during this ceremony. Can I get one of you gracious people to record this and burn a pair of CD's? Need one for my son.

PM me and we can work some details.

Anyong Bluth 08-08-2009 12:52 PM

Agreed, bad karma to waste your energy on being vitrol to him on what should be a joyful day. Its so nice out but I'll have to catch his induction! This day is overdue! Congrats DT! I started really watching football and became a Chiefs fan around 7 years old- just a few years before he became a Chief, so I hold many fond memories of growing up watching him and those awesome defenses w my dad. Guess I lucked out not being old enough to have had to endure all of the pathetic teams of the 8o's fully, but I remember enough to appreciate his arrival being a good marker in the franchise's turnaround... Super Bowl or not, those years provided some great memories and games!
Posted via Mobile Device

DenverChief 08-08-2009 01:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WilliamTheIrish (Post 5958260)
Gents,

I'm going to be stuck at work during this ceremony. Can I get one of you gracious people to record this and burn a pair of CD's? Need one for my son.

PM me and we can work some details.

me too...this would be awesome

Titty Meat 08-08-2009 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. Flopnuts (Post 5958178)
I just hope people can contain their hate of Carl Peterson in this thread. There isn't a man alive that Derrick would have rather had give his speech than Carl, and I hope we can all respect him enough to unleash our CP fury in other threads.

Agree. Also everyone should get along today for Derrick. :bravo: to a beautiful hall of fame induction speech.

tk13 08-08-2009 01:46 PM

Does anyone know what order they're going to be presented in? Especially DT.

Titty Meat 08-08-2009 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tk13 (Post 5958366)
Does anyone know what order they're going to be presented in? Especially DT.

No but I heard Bruce Smith is the last one and I think Ralph Wilson gives his speech before Smith.

Halfcan 08-08-2009 01:58 PM

I was at every home game including playoffs that DT played and several on the road. He should have been in first try-anyone else think different is a dumbfug that never saw how he took over games.

Man I miss him!

Mr. Flopnuts 08-08-2009 01:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halfcan (Post 5958382)
I was at every home game including playoffs that DT played and several on the road. He should have been in first try-anyone else think different is a dumbfug that never saw how he took over games.

Man I miss him!

It's shitty he was punished for dying in a car accident. Had he finished his career and been alive today, there is no doubt he would've been a 1st ballot HOFer.

CoMoChief 08-08-2009 02:27 PM

**** CARL PETERSON........god what an asshole. He's gonna make it a "all about him drafting DT" speech.

Halfcan 08-08-2009 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. Flopnuts (Post 5958385)
It's shitty he was punished for dying in a car accident. Had he finished his career and been alive today, there is no doubt he would've been a 1st ballot HOFer.

I blame Gretz and his shitty speech-made him look like a one trick pony. Maybe he should have pulled the footage of DT knocking the holy piss out of RB's and stripping the ball. DT dominated-end of story.

dirk digler 08-08-2009 02:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958208)
As long as Carl doesn't make it to be "himself" instead of DT, I'll be fine.

This

Coach 08-08-2009 02:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WilliamTheIrish (Post 5958260)
Gents,

I'm going to be stuck at work during this ceremony. Can I get one of you gracious people to record this and burn a pair of CD's? Need one for my son.

PM me and we can work some details.

Thought I would quote this for you.

kcxiv 08-08-2009 02:48 PM

This is the reason why i am a KC Chiefs fan. This man made me a Chiefs fan. Gratz DT no way i am going to miss it.

http://www.colectiva.tv/wordpress/wp...89efm_clap.gif

Mr_Tomahawk 08-08-2009 02:53 PM

http://blogs.pitch.com/plog/derrick%20thomas.JPG

T-post Tom 08-08-2009 02:56 PM

Nice story on DT
 
Thomas was more than just life of party

He drove his Mercedes sedan toward the most crowded corner in Kansas City, surveying a jam-packed Westport intersection on a September Saturday night. With N.W.A.’s “Straight Outta Compton” blasting from the Blaupunkt speakers, Derrick Thomas started to hang a right turn onto Pennsylvania Ave. before calling what appeared to be an audible, settling the car into a diagonal position that swallowed up two crosswalks.

Then, to his passenger’s amazement, Thomas put the Benz in park, killed the engine, set the alarm and prepared to enter the bustling bar a few feet away, the presence of three police cruisers on the block be damned.


I stood in the street and looked at Thomas, the NFL’s best pass-rushing linebacker since Lawrence Taylor, a great player who’ll deservedly be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio on Saturday. He stood on the curb and looked back at me.


“Come on, man,” Thomas exclaimed in his singsong voice, flashing his broad, ivory smile and slightly raising his substantial forehead. “Everyone knows my car!”


It was 1996, and the chipper Chief’s assessment that he owned the town proved to be an accurate one: Hours later we emerged after last call and re-entered the Benz, untouched and devoid of parking tickets. From there DT, pro football’s perpetual Pied Piper, rolled out to an after-hours party, where I watched him befriend a homeless man at the door and, after entering, do the Macarena till his long legs were shot.


That’s how it always seemed to go down with Thomas, and I was hardly the only one lucky enough to get in on the action. Gregarious and indefatigable, Thomas, when it came to co-mingling with his peers, was the most popular player of his era.


Picture a time without microblogging or social networking; without PDAs or text messaging; when email was something you did at your desktop with a dial-up phone line plugged into the back of your computer; when the bloggers of the future sat on couches and mumbled to themselves; when there was no such thing as Caller ID, and only a few people you knew had cell phones.


Go back to that bygone age, and consider the notion that the NFL’s communal pulse ran through Derrick Thomas. Now realize that this is not a stretch, and that there are scores of well-known character witnesses who’d willfully testify that the tenacious tackler of quarterbacks was particularly averse to hitting the sack.


Now here’s the hard part of the story: The party ended in January of 2000 in a horrific burst of slippery tires and smashed metal. Racing to catch a flight on a rain-slicked freeway, Thomas crashed his car and was paralyzed from the chest down, his close friend and passenger Mike Tellis killed on impact. Sixteen days later Thomas suffered a pulmonary embolism at a Miami hospital and died at 33.


There hasn’t been anyone quite like him since, on or off the field.


In the nine years that passed between Thomas’ death and last February’s Super Bowl in Tampa, I hadn’t given much thought to whether my fallen friend’s bust would be displayed in Canton. It seemed almost incidental in light of the tragic way he went out and the messy aftermath – seven kids from multiple mothers, financial loose ends exacerbated by the absence of a will and the inevitable lawsuits that followed.


Certainly, Thomas left behind a legacy that went beyond those complications and exceeded his social status: He was a tireless worker for charitable causes who specialized in improving youth literacy, conspicuously spending his Saturday mornings at the library reading with kids from lower-income areas.


He was also a fantastic defender who made nine Pro Bowls, set an NFL single-game record with seven sacks (he had 126½ during his 11-year career) and had a knack for coming up with pivotal plays at crucial times. Opposing offensive coordinators game-planned around him, and on one particularly memorable day at Arrowhead Stadium in 1994, I saw him hit future Hall of Famer Steve Young so consistently and ferociously that the Niners quarterback blew chunks in the huddle.


So yeah, Thomas absolutely belonged in Canton. But it still took me by surprise when I heard the news on the morning before Super Bowl XLII that he’d been voted into the 2009 class, and my immediate reaction was more euphoric and exultant than I could have anticipated.


Suddenly, it was December of 1997, and I was back in my house in Oakland looking at a list of players who’d been voted into the ’98 Pro Bowl. Thomas, who’d made it for the ninth consecutive year, was one of the first names I circled.


I called his house, got an answering machine and told him congratulations. “That is just an unbelievable achievement for a pass rusher,” I said.


A few days later, I stopped by the Chiefs’ hotel in San Diego the night before they faced the Chargers in their second-to-last regular season game. Emerging from a meeting, Thomas spotted me and, before I could say hello, intoned incredulously, “Whaddaya mean for a pass rusher?”


Caught off guard, I hemmed and hawed for a second before giving my explanation: Sometimes sacks are fleeting, lost when quarterbacks launch ill-advised passes or intentionally ground the ball or run into backside defenders who slop into a takedown. Marquee defensive ends like Reggie White and Bruce Smith, who were also known as great run-stoppers, made the Pro Bowl even when their numbers were down, but the only way a pass-rushing terror like Thomas got to Hawaii was to get to the quarterback. To keep doing that, year after year, was just remarkable.


“I’m not a pass rusher,” Thomas replied, raising his voice. “I’m a football player!”


He glared at me for a second, and then he smiled and changed the subject. A few weeks later, he held court with a bunch of other football players at the Ihalani Resort and Spa’s poolside bar in Ko Olina, and I have seldom laughed so hard while managing not to spill a Mai Tai.


When Thomas’ bust is unveiled on Saturday, I’m going to shed some tears, for there have been few athletes with whom I’ve connected so organically and whose company was so enjoyable to keep. It wasn’t just a joyride, either: The first time we had a meal together, we discussed Thomas’ trouble-prone childhood in Miami that included a month-long stint in juvenile hall for burglary and the way he transformed himself into a self-made football prospect and college-graduate-to-be.


We also talked about the Vietnam combat death of his father, Air Force captain Robert Thomas(notes), and the JFK conspiracy theories Derrick blamed for setting the event in motion. He even had the guts to tell me, on the record, that he believed one of the families responsible for the assassination of a president was the same one which spawned the man (Lamar Hunt) who signed his paycheck.


As I liked to write back in the day, the NFL’s social butterfly could sting like a bee, on and off the field. And almost a decade later, Thomas’ death still stings (as does Tellis’, for those of us fortunate enough to have known the jovial gentleman). Even though I know “58” packed centuries worth of fun and fulfillment into those 33 years, and though I’m certain he would have been one of the people most ill-suited to a wheelchair I’ve ever encountered, it completely sucks that he’s gone.


I miss the hell out of the guy, and I’m a little speck of sand on a crowded beach of fellow mourners.


On Saturday, football’s greatest individual honor will be bestowed upon Thomas. I like to think that he’ll somehow be able to be part of the experience, that he’ll feel a sense of pride and satisfaction, and that the enduring strength of his spirit will bring smiles to our faces and provoke a series of celebrations late into the night.


I truly hope that the great football player is in a better place – and that everyone there knows his car.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 03:09 PM

Beer cracked; procurement of quality buzz commencing!

Let's DO this thing!

C-Mac 08-08-2009 03:13 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Interview of DT and Neil Smith


Great Interview of DT and Neil Smith that I had recorded before the 1996 Thanksgiving Day Game. Talks about his life, his charities and his famous TV commercial with Smith.

KCFalcon59 08-08-2009 03:14 PM

The one things that will absolutely suck today is that I either have to watch and listen to ESPN or be stuck with that loudmouthed idiot Michael Irvin on NFL Network.

Rain Man 08-08-2009 03:20 PM

why the heck can't a person buy a retro pottsville maroon jersey at the hof? all they carry is current teams. what a lost opportunity. after much searching, I found and bought a canton bulldogs t-shirt, but there's no pottsville gear at all.

rod woodson's aunt and uncle were in line in front of us as we checked out. they didn't know dt was going in. in retaliation, I called rod 'charles'.
Posted via Mobile Device

Halfcan 08-08-2009 03:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by T-post Tom (Post 5958500)
Thomas was more than just life of party

He drove his Mercedes sedan toward the most crowded corner in Kansas City, surveying a jam-packed Westport intersection on a September Saturday night. With N.W.A.’s “Straight Outta Compton” blasting from the Blaupunkt speakers, Derrick Thomas started to hang a right turn onto Pennsylvania Ave. before calling what appeared to be an audible, settling the car into a diagonal position that swallowed up two crosswalks.

Then, to his passenger’s amazement, Thomas put the Benz in park, killed the engine, set the alarm and prepared to enter the bustling bar a few feet away, the presence of three police cruisers on the block be damned.


I stood in the street and looked at Thomas, the NFL’s best pass-rushing linebacker since Lawrence Taylor, a great player who’ll deservedly be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio on Saturday. He stood on the curb and looked back at me.


“Come on, man,” Thomas exclaimed in his singsong voice, flashing his broad, ivory smile and slightly raising his substantial forehead. “Everyone knows my car!”


It was 1996, and the chipper Chief’s assessment that he owned the town proved to be an accurate one: Hours later we emerged after last call and re-entered the Benz, untouched and devoid of parking tickets. From there DT, pro football’s perpetual Pied Piper, rolled out to an after-hours party, where I watched him befriend a homeless man at the door and, after entering, do the Macarena till his long legs were shot.


That’s how it always seemed to go down with Thomas, and I was hardly the only one lucky enough to get in on the action. Gregarious and indefatigable, Thomas, when it came to co-mingling with his peers, was the most popular player of his era.


Picture a time without microblogging or social networking; without PDAs or text messaging; when email was something you did at your desktop with a dial-up phone line plugged into the back of your computer; when the bloggers of the future sat on couches and mumbled to themselves; when there was no such thing as Caller ID, and only a few people you knew had cell phones.


Go back to that bygone age, and consider the notion that the NFL’s communal pulse ran through Derrick Thomas. Now realize that this is not a stretch, and that there are scores of well-known character witnesses who’d willfully testify that the tenacious tackler of quarterbacks was particularly averse to hitting the sack.


Now here’s the hard part of the story: The party ended in January of 2000 in a horrific burst of slippery tires and smashed metal. Racing to catch a flight on a rain-slicked freeway, Thomas crashed his car and was paralyzed from the chest down, his close friend and passenger Mike Tellis killed on impact. Sixteen days later Thomas suffered a pulmonary embolism at a Miami hospital and died at 33.


There hasn’t been anyone quite like him since, on or off the field.


In the nine years that passed between Thomas’ death and last February’s Super Bowl in Tampa, I hadn’t given much thought to whether my fallen friend’s bust would be displayed in Canton. It seemed almost incidental in light of the tragic way he went out and the messy aftermath – seven kids from multiple mothers, financial loose ends exacerbated by the absence of a will and the inevitable lawsuits that followed.


Certainly, Thomas left behind a legacy that went beyond those complications and exceeded his social status: He was a tireless worker for charitable causes who specialized in improving youth literacy, conspicuously spending his Saturday mornings at the library reading with kids from lower-income areas.


He was also a fantastic defender who made nine Pro Bowls, set an NFL single-game record with seven sacks (he had 126½ during his 11-year career) and had a knack for coming up with pivotal plays at crucial times. Opposing offensive coordinators game-planned around him, and on one particularly memorable day at Arrowhead Stadium in 1994, I saw him hit future Hall of Famer Steve Young so consistently and ferociously that the Niners quarterback blew chunks in the huddle.


So yeah, Thomas absolutely belonged in Canton. But it still took me by surprise when I heard the news on the morning before Super Bowl XLII that he’d been voted into the 2009 class, and my immediate reaction was more euphoric and exultant than I could have anticipated.


Suddenly, it was December of 1997, and I was back in my house in Oakland looking at a list of players who’d been voted into the ’98 Pro Bowl. Thomas, who’d made it for the ninth consecutive year, was one of the first names I circled.


I called his house, got an answering machine and told him congratulations. “That is just an unbelievable achievement for a pass rusher,” I said.


A few days later, I stopped by the Chiefs’ hotel in San Diego the night before they faced the Chargers in their second-to-last regular season game. Emerging from a meeting, Thomas spotted me and, before I could say hello, intoned incredulously, “Whaddaya mean for a pass rusher?”


Caught off guard, I hemmed and hawed for a second before giving my explanation: Sometimes sacks are fleeting, lost when quarterbacks launch ill-advised passes or intentionally ground the ball or run into backside defenders who slop into a takedown. Marquee defensive ends like Reggie White and Bruce Smith, who were also known as great run-stoppers, made the Pro Bowl even when their numbers were down, but the only way a pass-rushing terror like Thomas got to Hawaii was to get to the quarterback. To keep doing that, year after year, was just remarkable.


“I’m not a pass rusher,” Thomas replied, raising his voice. “I’m a football player!”


He glared at me for a second, and then he smiled and changed the subject. A few weeks later, he held court with a bunch of other football players at the Ihalani Resort and Spa’s poolside bar in Ko Olina, and I have seldom laughed so hard while managing not to spill a Mai Tai.


When Thomas’ bust is unveiled on Saturday, I’m going to shed some tears, for there have been few athletes with whom I’ve connected so organically and whose company was so enjoyable to keep. It wasn’t just a joyride, either: The first time we had a meal together, we discussed Thomas’ trouble-prone childhood in Miami that included a month-long stint in juvenile hall for burglary and the way he transformed himself into a self-made football prospect and college-graduate-to-be.


We also talked about the Vietnam combat death of his father, Air Force captain Robert Thomas(notes), and the JFK conspiracy theories Derrick blamed for setting the event in motion. He even had the guts to tell me, on the record, that he believed one of the families responsible for the assassination of a president was the same one which spawned the man (Lamar Hunt) who signed his paycheck.


As I liked to write back in the day, the NFL’s social butterfly could sting like a bee, on and off the field. And almost a decade later, Thomas’ death still stings (as does Tellis’, for those of us fortunate enough to have known the jovial gentleman). Even though I know “58” packed centuries worth of fun and fulfillment into those 33 years, and though I’m certain he would have been one of the people most ill-suited to a wheelchair I’ve ever encountered, it completely sucks that he’s gone.


I miss the hell out of the guy, and I’m a little speck of sand on a crowded beach of fellow mourners.


On Saturday, football’s greatest individual honor will be bestowed upon Thomas. I like to think that he’ll somehow be able to be part of the experience, that he’ll feel a sense of pride and satisfaction, and that the enduring strength of his spirit will bring smiles to our faces and provoke a series of celebrations late into the night.


I truly hope that the great football player is in a better place – and that everyone there knows his car.


I wondered when this would be posted-should have its own thread. I sent an email to the writer-great stuff!!

T-post Tom 08-08-2009 03:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halfcan (Post 5958573)
I wondered when this would be posted-should have its own thread. I sent an email to the writer-great stuff!!

Go ahead--take it and start a new thread if you like. Good idea.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 04:27 PM

Just saw a little bit of warm up footage from Canton along with some old DT reel, and I'm starting already.:(

Does Kleenex even make a hanky big enough for this day? :)

Hammock Parties 08-08-2009 04:33 PM

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<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/-NLnUFdpROE&hl=en&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/-NLnUFdpROE&hl=en&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>

007 08-08-2009 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KCFalcon59 (Post 5957961)
It's a beuuuutiful day in Arrowhead Stadium. I can't wait for the ceremony tonight. Wish I was there. Miss DT.

Mind if I go?:D

kstater 08-08-2009 04:49 PM

Anyone know the order of induction? What time roughly should we expect to see the weasel up on stage inducting DT?

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:01 PM

Here we go!

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:03 PM

Anybody want to chat, or should we just keep it in the thread?

KCFalcon59 08-08-2009 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 5958657)
Mind if I go?:D

You better hurry or you won't make it. Get me a souvenir!!!


Oh yeah, don't be late tonight. :D :D :D

kstater 08-08-2009 05:09 PM

Try this in the right thread.

From the blimp(helicopter?) cam, a LOT of red in the stands.

Crush 08-08-2009 05:10 PM

Thank you NFL Network for all of these damn commercials.

kstater 08-08-2009 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Admiral Crunch (Post 5958692)
Thank you NFL Network for all of these damn commercials.

ESPN doing it also. Getting them in before the long speeches.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:11 PM

Mean Joe Green! Sweet.

Coach 08-08-2009 05:11 PM

Would be nice if this was done streamed over the internets.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958695)
Would be nice if this was done streamed over the internets.

Why? That's the most out of synch horridness ever.

Coach 08-08-2009 05:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raised On Riots (Post 5958700)
Why? That's the most out of synch horridness ever.

Some people don't have cable TV.

The_Grand_Illusion 08-08-2009 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958701)
Some people don't have cable TV.


Try www.justin.tv

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958701)
Some people don't have cable TV.

My bad, man. Sorry.

LaChapelle 08-08-2009 05:16 PM

Has war chant started yet?

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LaChapelle (Post 5958707)
Has war chant started yet?

We're barely getting underway.

Coach 08-08-2009 05:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raised On Riots (Post 5958704)
My bad, man. Sorry.

It's cool. You didn't know. Hell, I didn't know we'd (wife and I) would be going to her parents for the weekend until the last minute. Needless to say, I'm not too pleased about it, since I would had liked to go home and DVD'rd it.

I just hope that NFL Network will re-play it tomorrow before the ball game, if I were to have a chance to get it DVD'rd.

Coach 08-08-2009 05:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The_Grand_Illusion (Post 5958702)

Dude, you are the ****ING man.

Massive rep.

Slainte 08-08-2009 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958718)
It's cool. You didn't know. Hell, I didn't know we'd (wife and I) would be going to her parents for the weekend until the last minute. Needless to say, I'm not too pleased about it, since I would had liked to go home and DVD'rd it.

I just hope that NFL Network will re-play it tomorrow before the ball game, if I were to have a chance to get it DVD'rd.

Not to worry. I'm sure someone gonna throw it up as a torrent. At least that's what I'm counting on...

The_Grand_Illusion 08-08-2009 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958720)
Dude, you are the ****ING man.

Massive rep.

It is a great day!

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958720)
Dude, you are the ****ING man.

Massive rep.

Sweet, man! Hook it up, and let's get this party started!

Coach 08-08-2009 05:22 PM

http://www.justin.tv/dmca_old_boy

Send Rep to The Grand Illusion.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The_Grand_Illusion (Post 5958723)
It is a great day!

Yeah it is! I love this day because it signifies the start of the new season.

kstater 08-08-2009 05:24 PM

Stevie already on TV.

Coach 08-08-2009 05:24 PM

Derrion!

bevischief 08-08-2009 05:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by big nasty kcnut (Post 5957797)
Congrat D.T. Somewhere i know my mom telling him how much a fan i am.
Posted via Mobile Device

Same here!

Coach 08-08-2009 05:25 PM

Pretty loud cheers for Ralph Wilson Jr.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach (Post 5958732)
Derrion!

He's a lot taller than I thought! Get to MU Son; we need you!

RJ 08-08-2009 05:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kstater (Post 5958731)
Stevie already on TV.



And looking sharp.

Kyle DeLexus 08-08-2009 05:26 PM

Man I should be there

bevischief 08-08-2009 05:27 PM

We all should be...

1ChiefsDan 08-08-2009 05:27 PM

58 Forever.

Congrats DT - the honor is way past due.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chevy369 (Post 5958740)
We all should be...

This.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:30 PM

Hey Goodell; can you wuss the league a little more?

Slainte 08-08-2009 05:30 PM

Dick Eisen. Yay.

bevischief 08-08-2009 05:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by denverdanchiefsfan (Post 5958744)
58 Forever.

Congrats DT - the honor is way past due.

This.

:clap::clap:

Misplaced_Chiefs_Fan 08-08-2009 05:31 PM

Is Ralph the last of the original owners left alive?

Skip Towne 08-08-2009 05:32 PM

Why no Hall of Fame game?

bevischief 08-08-2009 05:33 PM

Midnight central time tonight on NFL network replays number 58's 7 sack game against the Seahawks.

Pioli Zombie 08-08-2009 05:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skip Towne (Post 5958761)
Why no Hall of Fame game?

Sunday Night on NBC. Buffalo and Tennessee
Posted via Mobile Device

LaChapelle 08-08-2009 05:37 PM

There will be a 7th HOF inductee the Seahawks have signed Curry in time to be added to the class of 2009.

Sweet Daddy Hate 08-08-2009 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Misplaced_Chiefs_Fan (Post 5958759)
Is Ralph the last of the original owners left alive?

I'm not sure, but I'm inclined to say yes.


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