No, it's the 50th Anniversary Senior Bowl All-Time team, announced by game officials after counting thousands of ballots from fans who voted in the spring of 1999 as part of the game's 50th Anniversary Celebration.
Joe Namath. Walter Payton. Steve Largent. Jerry Kramer. Ed "Too Tall" Jones. "Mean" Joe Greene. Ray Nitschke. Franco Harris. The list goes on and on, and they serve as the perfect reminder of the game's impressive history which helped ignite the celebration of five decades of Senior Bowls.
The most hotly-contested race was for the game's best-ever quarterback. With four of the greatest signal callers in NFL history -- Joe Namath, Terry Bradshaw, Dan Marino and Brett Favre -- vying for the top spot, fan balloting was pretty evenly split among the impressive quartet.
Namath, who passed for 246 yards in the 1965 game and was the first player in NFL history to throw for more than 4,000 yards in a single season, edged out Bradshaw, a fellow member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and MVP of the 1970 game, 1,230 votes to 1,066.
The team's leading vote getter was kicker Morten Andersen, who easily led all kickers with 3,116 votes or 76 percent of the total votes cast.
Other top vote getters were the NFL's all-time leading rusher Walter Payton at running back; Pro Football Hall of Famers Steve Largent at wide receiver, Gene Upshaw at offensive line and Joe Greene at defensive line; former Alabama All-American and Dallas Cowboys great Lee Roy Jordan at linebacker; and 1998 Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee Paul Krause, the NFL's all-time interception leader, at defensive back.Seven members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame -- Bradshaw, Doak Walker, Frank Gifford, Jim Taylor, Kellen Winslow and Sam Huff -- were on the ballot but didn't garner enough votes to make the team, while two other Hall of Famers -- quarterback Len Dawson and linebacker Joe Schmidt -- didn't even make the final ballot. The NFL's all-time leading passer, Dan Marino, didn't make it, nor did several other NFL greats such as Thurman Thomas, Sterling Sharpe, John Stallworth, Alex Karras and Dick Anderson, just to name a few.
Since 1950, nearly 5000 of the top senior college stars have played in Mobile's annual talent showcase. From that list of names, a master ballot of the game's best-ever players was submitted to National Football League coaches and general managers. Their votes were then calculated to determine the names which appeared on the official ballot from which fans selected the all-time team.
POS | NAME | SCHOOL | SENIOR BOWL YEAR |
QB | Joe Namath | Alabama | 1965 |
RB | Walter Payton | Jackson St. | 1975 |
RB | Bo Jackson | Auburn | 1986 |
RB | Franco Harris | Penn St. | 1972 |
WR | Steve Largent | Tulsa | 1976 |
WR | Lynn Swann | USC | 1974 |
WR | Art Monk | Syracuse | 1980 |
TE | Ozzie Newsome | Alabama | 1978 |
OL | Gene Upshaw | Texas A&I | 1967 |
OL | Jerry Kramer | Idaho | 1958 |
OL | Mike Webster | Wisconsin | 1974 |
OL | Randall McDaniel | Arizona St. | 1988 |
OL | Tom Banks | Auburn | 1970 |
POS | NAME | SCHOOL | SENIOR BOWL YEAR |
DL | 'Mean' Joe Greene | No. Texas St. | 1969 |
DL | Ed 'Too Tall' Jones | Tennessee St. | 1974 |
DL | Bubba Smith | Michigan St. | 1967 |
DL | Jack Youngblood | Florida | 1971 |
LB | Lee Roy Jordan | Alabama | 1963 |
LB | Ray Nitschke | Illinois | 1958 |
LB | Derrick Thomas | Alabama | 1989 |
LB | Ted Hendricks | Miami | 1969 |
DB | Paul Krause | Iowa | 1964 |
DB | Dale Carter | Tennessee | 1992 |
DB | Albert Lewis | Grambling | 1983 |
DB | Roger Wehrli | Missouri | 1969 |
K | Morten Andersen | Michigan St. | 1982 |
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