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Remember the AFL


major

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I would have to go through and try to rank the defenses, but I think I can come up with more than three that were better. They may be top ten, but I am not sure about top five. Don't get me wrong. The Chiefs defense that year was pretty good. Except in the AFL Championship Game, the Buffalo Bills still had a decent defense that year (not to the 1964 or 1965 level, but still pretty good). I think what helped the Chiefs' defense that year was a potent offense. It is much easier to play better when you know the opponent needs to throw the ball to catch up.

 

It was the Chiefs offense that was strong I was at the championship game.

 

"In the American Football League, a predominantly offensive league, the Buffalo Bills were a great defensive team. With a linebacking corps of Harry Jacobs, Mike Stratton, and John Tracey; and defensive line stalwarts like Tom Day, Tom Sestak, Jim Dunaway, and Ron McDole, the Bills defense did not allow a rushing touchdown for seventeen straight games over a period of the 1964 and 1965 seasons. Their pass defense was just as good as their run defense, registering fifty quarterback sacks in 1964, still a team record, although it was established in a 14-game season.

 

The Bills won AFL championships in both of those seasons. They were the first American Football League team to win 13 games in a season (1964); were one of only three teams to appear in an AFL championship game for three successive years; and the only AFL team to apear in the playoffs four straight years, 1963 through 1966. Balancing their defensive prowess, the Bills had offensive muscle as well, in stars such as running backs Cookie Gilchrist and Wray Carlton, quarterbacks Jack Kemp and Daryle Lamonica, and receivers Elbert Dubenion and Ernie Warlick."

 

 

The best part was that these were truly our guys. They were Bills. It was nothing like today with every man out for the highest dollar.

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I view the offense as rather pedestrian when compared to the raiders and jets.

Dawson was great, but lots of posters today would complain about his "arm strength." :blink: They had a huge array of backs, but none were stars. Fred Arbanas was primarily a blocker as a TE. At wideout, Otis Taylor was a true superstar. Of course, their OL was superb.

 

Defense was another story. The DL consisted of Aaron Brown, Curley Culp, Buck Buchannon, and Jerry Mays. Four very talented players. The LBs were as good as any. Jim Lynch and Bobby Bell on the outside; Willie Lanier in the middle. The secondary, while less star studded, did boast of Emmit Thomas and John Robinson, who I think belongs in the HOF.

 

Either way, Lanier, Buchannon and Bell are in the HOF, and this was one fierce defense, and they were even big for their time.

 

Btw, thanks. it is great talking about this stuff. :D

 

I believe that Arbanas was blind in one eye.

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It was the Chiefs offense that was strong I was at the championship game.

 

"In the American Football League, a predominantly offensive league, the Buffalo Bills were a great defensive team. With a linebacking corps of Harry Jacobs, Mike Stratton, and John Tracey; and defensive line stalwarts like Tom Day, Tom Sestak, Jim Dunaway, and Ron McDole, the Bills defense did not allow a rushing touchdown for seventeen straight games over a period of the 1964 and 1965 seasons. Their pass defense was just as good as their run defense, registering fifty quarterback sacks in 1964, still a team record, although it was established in a 14-game season.

 

The Bills won AFL championships in both of those seasons. They were the first American Football League team to win 13 games in a season (1964); were one of only three teams to appear in an AFL championship game for three successive years; and the only AFL team to apear in the playoffs four straight years, 1963 through 1966. Balancing their defensive prowess, the Bills had offensive muscle as well, in stars such as running backs Cookie Gilchrist and Wray Carlton, quarterbacks Jack Kemp and Daryle Lamonica, and receivers Elbert Dubenion and Ernie Warlick."

 

 

The best part was that these were truly our guys. They were Bills. It was nothing like today with every man out for the highest dollar.

Yeah I don't think to many of those hardcases worryed much about "not enough night clubs in Buffalo" Just reading those names makes me pissed about the party punks I see today.

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