Thank you for this! I like watching these old NFL Top 10. The commentators in here really know the game. Unlike the new version of NFL Top 10, too many comedians and artists acting wannabe analysts 🤦♂️
I love the old lists, even when I disagree with a list, at least I’m listening to people who know their stuff instead of listening to people who think Jim Brown was a linebacker (that really happened)
I like your list! You should work for NFL Films for making that list! Well I agree that some give good comments/analysis like the ones you've mention above. But I'm annoyed with these overreactions and unfunny comments made by these "casual fans" like Flula Borg. I've rather enjoy listening to insights by local radio hosts like Mark Madden or ex-Raider players like George Atkinson ranting when a Raider doesn't make the Top 10 or even Ray Didinger. Wish the could bring the old ones back and not these "casual fans". It gives you a sense of memorabilia as you watch NFL Top 10 and hear insights/comments/stories from the ones who really know the game.
#6 astroturf. You'll notice that concussions and serious leg injuries skyrocketed in the early '70s after almost all the stadiums started using this. The early stuff was nothing less than a carpet on a concrete slab. Worst thing that happened to sports.
The reason astroturf deserves to be on the list is despite the disastrous impact, short-term, it had on the game...long term, it allowed for even contemplating later evolving surfaces that have been heralded as beneficial, not just by fans, but by players. [Besides..."change" does not necessarily imply intrinsic improvement.]
I haven't taken NFL Films for granted: in the early 1990's ('91-92, episodes airing on ESPN after MNF) I learned about the teams, players, and the NFL itself through this studio, and I'm very grateful.
11:56 One of the few times I agree with Mark Madden - no other sports organization in North America (and maybe the world) has a back catalog, detailing its history in such a clear, cinematic, and alluring way as the NFL.
I was extremely spoiled going from watching NFL Films in the morning and afternoons to watching NFL Primetime on Sunday nights. The biggest insult was Disney bringing NFL Countdown back... on ESPN+. I can't wait for ESPN and Disney to disappear considering they've ruined so much. The NFL is sadly on the decline as well.
Pete Rozelle was one sharp dude. Nobody did as much for the NFL as he did. Made the NFL what it is today and beat out baseball as the national past time in the process. Best commissioner of any sports league ever.
The super bowl wins.... it’s a national holiday.... everyone knows about the super bowl, even non fans, non Americans.... but I guess you could argue that the super bowl being on TV helped it
13:43, I couldn't agree more. I have nothing against people who play fantasy football, but I get seriously pissed off when idiots comment about being angry because a team rested a player and it cost them points. It is as though they have forgotten what the game is actually about.
1:42 Pete Gogolak. 6:12 The West Coast Offense! 9:34 NFL Films. 13:45 The 1978 Rule Changes? 17:24 The Astroturf. 22:01 The Instant Replay. 25:57 The Great, Paul Brown. 30:49 Free Agency. 34:52 The NFL on Television. 40:11 The AFL-NFL Merger. Best of the Rest Game-Changers: 5:26 The Great, Lawrence Taylor. 12:45 Fantasy Football. 30:03 The Legendary, Red Grange. 34:23 The Historical, Pete Rozelle.
Blanton Collier got a championship with his players in 1964, and kept the Browns a perennial playoff team the rest of the decade (including another two conference championship game appearances in 1968 and 1969) and Weeb Ewbank, Bill Walsh, Don Shula, and Chuck Noll each won championships in the league as well. He’s had quite the coaching tree.
But near the end of his life he had to face them pleasant truth that one of his best innovators, Bill Walsh, was someone he refused to promote to head coach and refused to give a positive recommendation for to people elsewhere in the league forcing Bill Walsh to go to Stanford. He would forever have to think that had not made this huge mistake the 49ers success of the 80s could have been his.
It seems a bit odd that NFL Films should name itself to such an honor, but it's undeniable that their films have enriched the fan experience a lot. At least they have for this old geezer. I agree TV should be #1. Thanks for the post.
Man went to the Super Bowl with 4 different quarterbacks in 3 different decades. My dad is a Dolphin fan and whenever I went to his house, he had the team photo of the 72 Dolphins next to his bed. RIP Mr. Shula and f 2020.
The Betting Line changed the game but the NFL does not want to acknowledge that it's benefited by gambling. The betting line increased interest in EVERY game each week and led to eyeballs on tv's and televised advertisements till the very end of each game.
Yes, I agree. It needed to be rated far higher, like number 4. Until then, my hometown Steelers could dominate alone, just by Mel Blount man handling the other team's best wide out within 5 yards. In defiance, we still won two more Superbowls back to back after that. The wimpy Don Shula was the right man to explain this on the video. He's the one who pissed and moaned about Blount's man handling so much, that the league changed the rule to shut him up. It DID make the game more exciting since there was more long passes. But we in the Burgh were all about DEFENSE. And we HATED the rule change.
NFL films should be higher. Without the Sabals, many wondrous memories would have faded to black. Because of their vision and creativity, I'm still watching player who were before my time. Thanks to them and RIP both father and son Sabal.
Yep, just look at basketball. There is no video of Wilt Chamberlain's 100pt game. So many of the old legends of basketball are like mythical figures because of how behind the NBA and ABA were when it came to documenting and broadcasting the game
What I remember when Bill Walsh took over the 49ers was the quarterback taking a few steps back and throwing to a wide open receiver. Timing. That was different than the passing game at the time.
Could Anyone Imagine An Idea For The NFL Draft Lottery? It Would Be Crazy Enough For Anything Or Everything To Happen For The NFL To Make Not Just The Worst Teams But For The Best Teams To Secure And Draft To Top Picks In The Draft Just On The Bounce Of A Few Lottery Balls... Maybe.
@@miguelsandoval1985 Your not alone on this, I also want to see a draft lottery because I am so sick of teams tanking on purpose for the first pick in the draft which can backfire so easily because there is no guarantee on some things here: 1. more then one team can be godawful and they will be fighting to lose on purpose just to get the number one overall pick 2. Any number one first draft pick can be a bust Jamarcus Russell is the best example as well as Ryan Leaf
Stephen Hill - I hate to be a hater here. But these shows have gotten dated and corny. Now when these Top 10 shows were new - they were revolutionary. Time has just moved on. Best to just keep these shows in 2006.
Because the forward pass was legalized in 1906, long before the NFL. Not, however, before pro football started. That was in the 1890s. The NFL started in 1920.
Overall , this film is right on . So many things that I did in my playing days have changed .I was a straight on kicker with a school record of 41 Yd FG !!! Played D end , never recorded sacks back then , but on Offense , you couldn't extend your arms . Being from the late 50s , thru the 60s , into the 70s .even 80s , 90s players were not " nomads " as free agency , salary cap changed NFL football . Yes , this documentary is one that all generations should watch . It clearly shows how the NFL as we know has truly evolved and has really become the national pastime
Gogolak changed the game twice. First by demonstrating the effectiveness of soccer-style kicking, then when the Giants poached him from the Bills, which led to the bidding wars that ultimately caused the AFL-NFL merger.
Let's See How Well The NFL Has Changed Over The Years On The List 10. Soccer Style Kickers 1:41 9. West Coast Offense 6:13 8. NFL Films 9:34 7. 1978 NFL Rules Changes 13:44 6. Astro Turf 17:24 5. Instant Replay 22:00 4. Paul Brown 25:57 3. Free Agency 30:49 2. Television 34:52 1. AFL/NFL Merger 40:10 I''M I MISSING SOMETHING... AGAIN?!!!!!!!
@AVERY HUEBEL Satan: I told them it was 100% and their Special Teams are on my fantasy team. Finally, I shall avenge that "Book of Job" incident and... wait why the ME is Polamalu lining up in the c gap?
I would say that the creation of the AFL had more of an impact than the merger. The AFL decided to play wide open offensive minded football while the NFL remained straight forward run oriented football. Once the AFL did that the NFL became boring. It's like the WHA and recruiting and signing European hockey players making it a faster game forcing the NHL to do the same. Amazing what rebel leagues can accomplish.
During Rozelle's reign, the NFL's marketing was ingenious, as the league partnered with other industries to expand its footprint. It hooked me as a kid in the early 70s. I remember the International House of Pancakes had a big, good-looking insulated mug - red on one side with images of all the AFC helmets, blue on the other side with the NFC helmets. Coca-cola, back when soda came in glass bottles, had bottle caps with a black-and-white image of each of the then 26 teams' helmets on the underside, and there was a prize if you managed to collect each one, I think $500 or something (which was big money back then.) I had an NFL Venus color-by-number set that I sent away for when I saw it advertised in a comic book. Texaco gave away with every fill up glassware with the NFL shield on one side and a regionally determined team helmet on the other. Not to be outdone, Sunoco had player stamps and an album to stick'em in. That album is still one of my most prized possessions. Wanna buy it? It'll cost you $10,000- - -Nah, forget it. I won't sell it (!)
True Value used to have NFL Films VHS tapes as promo items in the early 90s. Got 1 or 2 from my dad every Christmas for a few years. I wore those bad boys out.
The West Coast offense invented in Cincinnati. And ended up costing the Bangels TWO Super Bowls, because Paul Brown didn't think Bill Walsh had what it took to be a head coach. As a 49ers fan, I would like to thank Coach Brown for one of the biggest instances of mental flatulence in the history of professional sports. *points at Paul Brown* "HAW HAW!!!" *Nelson Munce voice*
When Bill Walsh was an offensive assistant with the Bengals under Paul Brown in the 70's, they ran what became known as the "West Coast Offense" . For some unknown reason, Brown did not name Walsh the new Head Coach of the Bengals when Brown retired from coaching after the 1975 season. 6 years later, Walsh got his revenge in Super Bowl XVI before Brown passed away, and again in Super Bowl XXIII.
It wasn't unknown. Walsh wanted to be a head coach..he even had an offer from GB but Paul Brown called them and sabotaged Walsh's chance at an interview..in other words fuck paul brown and his legacy
@@benhub3932 You mean the Manning-Brady rule. After the Patriot rape of Colt's receivers in '02 followed by Brady's knee injury a few years later both teams pushed hard for enforcement of the Mel Blount rule.
I'm not always sure about Mark Madden, but I see his point about Fantasy Football, rooting for guys on teams that aren't your favorite(s) so one can win their league. I mean, I'm cool with Fantasy Football, (especially the video game kind:-), but yeah, things can get awkward.
28:07 Anybody else see Kevin Kolb threw for 300 yards against the Panthers? Wtf? That has got to be a typo. If you're even old enough to know who Kolb was then u would know why that's so baffling
The 8 weeks ago we stood in this same spot speech in the intro was made by Jonathan Vilma before the Jets road wildcard playoff game at New England in 2006 season. The 8 weeks ago he was referring to was the game at New England Jets had won obviously 8 weeks before. Jets would however lose that playoff game to the Patriots
Top 10 things that changed the game. Number 6: Astro Turf Next on NFL Network: Top 10 things we miss about football Number 7: Grass "You know what I miss about football? Grass! Remember when teams played on grass?!"
I think Pittsburgh still does--although I also think they mixed some of that FieldTurf in along with it three or four years back. Still though, your point holds.
@@DRTY3RD no, the Steelers have Kentucky bluegrass. The Steelers would never go back to turf nor the Eagles because both got real sick of playing on turf at home after experiences at the Vet and Three Rivers.
Paul Brown made the Browns, then the Bengals, and the Ravens wouldn't exist without the original Browns... this man is responsible for most of the AFC north's existence.
NFL Sunday Ticket changed everything in football when it was introduced in 1994 on Primestar/Direct TV . In 1994, if you had the Ticket every Any Given Sunday was a doubleheader day on NBC & FOX then later CBS & FOX in 1998.😊
It reduced ties dramatically - you had 11 of them in 1966, and there were four other seasons with 10 or more prior to 1974. The fact is, the average fan doesn't pay $140 of their hard earned to watch a game end in a tie.
I know this came out in 2008, but the rule changes which came out the following season changed the game forever. Not allowed to hit QBs or make big time hits anymore
Not too High , but maybe #7 should be ... when all WR’s completed full programming , in which they would get up and exaggeratedly gesture for a PI flag after ALL incomplete passes no matter circumstances involved. It took a few years to really saturate the WR DNA , but sometime in the early 2010’s this was accomplished at an acceptable rate of 98.4%.
Instant replay also created one of the greatest John Madden lines ever: "I miss the days when, a fumble is a fumble, and if it's a fumble, it's a fumble."
Thing I miss most about football is Al Davis, even if things started to go south for him at the end he was a character as much as anything else and I loved him
Thanks for posting these Top 10s. I feel forced on this one however, to mention THE biggest change that they just glossed over. The advent of the face mask.
@@EmmaBonn96 "Kinda included" doesn't fit when considering the impact of the face mask. NOTHING was a bigger change or had a larger impact on the game of football.
NFL Top 10: Things That Changed The Game (Updated Version). (10) The 1995 Carolina Panthers And 1995 Jacksonville Jaguars (9) The 1920 Akron Pros (8) The 1970 Debut Of Monday Night Football (7) West Coast Offense (6) The 1978 NFL Rule Changes (5) NFL Films (4) NFL Free Agency (3) Instant Replay In The NFL (2) Television And (1) The AFL-NFL Merger Of 1966 And The Birth Of Super Bowl 1 In 1967.
Best Of The Rest: Other Things That Changed The Game In NFL History. (1) Fantasy Football (2) Tom Landry (3) Benny Friedman (4) NFL Records And Milestones (5) Fritz Pollard And (6) Vince Lombardi.
24:44 Oh my God that's adorable. Of course, since we're from the future we can say this: How on EARTH are you expected to watch the replay on THAT screen and come up with a call in 15 seconds??? I hope they had an optician on standby for these guys.
Tom Landry Inventing the 4-3 Defense... should be on the list can you imagine 7 guys on the line no linebackers. The 4-3 Defense. It should be on the list .
It honestly boggles my mind that no one thought to try kicking sidewinder before to Pete Gogolak. Kicking straight on just looks and feels so unnatural - did no one think "There's gotta be a better way"?
television and instant replay are basically the same thing what I remember is like somewhere between 74 and 76 they brought in the fair catch imagine being a punt returner without the option for a fair catch
I am really surprised, and somewhat disappointed, that the introduction of the "platoon system" was not included. Before Red Blair (if memory serves), players went both ways. If a player came out of the game, he could not return during that half. So a player coming out in the first half could return in the second. When football went to platoons with special teams and free substitution, the players could then be bigger and would hit harder. I haven't tracked injuries, but suspect that this contributed greatly to the physical damage incurred by players. If platoons had not come in, football would be a different game.
I'm all for safe play, but they have taken hard hitting out of football. They have officiated defense into touch football. I don't watch as much as I used to. Every reciever walking across the middle of the field.
Everyone mentions the 78 rule changes as the Mel Blount rule, but how did I just realize that the offensive line blocking change was to mitigate the steel curtain.
An interesting video but it only goes back so far. There are other items which were big changes to the game which they didn't mention. How about when they changed the shape of the ball and the change in the passing rules in the 1930s which put passing on the map? How about the 1932 indoor game between the Bears and the Portsmouth Spartans? This was essentially a playoff game because the two teams were tied at the end of the season. This led to east and west divisions and a playoff system starting in 1933. If either of these items didn't happen, the game would be a lot different today. There's also the Bears popularizing the T formation. The book The Best Game Ever was about the 1958 NFL Championship. It mentions that Johnny Unitas and Ray Berry perfected how they practiced passing routes so each knew what the other would do. This is commonplace today but according to the book, wasn't then.
Thank you for this! I like watching these old NFL Top 10. The commentators in here really know the game. Unlike the new version of NFL Top 10, too many comedians and artists acting wannabe analysts 🤦♂️
You're welcome.
I love the old lists, even when I disagree with a list, at least I’m listening to people who know their stuff instead of listening to people who think Jim Brown was a linebacker (that really happened)
I like your list! You should work for NFL Films for making that list!
Well I agree that some give good comments/analysis like the ones you've mention above. But I'm annoyed with these overreactions and unfunny comments made by these "casual fans" like Flula Borg. I've rather enjoy listening to insights by local radio hosts like Mark Madden or ex-Raider players like George Atkinson ranting when a Raider doesn't make the Top 10 or even Ray Didinger. Wish the could bring the old ones back and not these "casual fans". It gives you a sense of memorabilia as you watch NFL Top 10 and hear insights/comments/stories from the ones who really know the game.
Better Enjoy These Lists While It Still Lasts.
I never liked it when the comedians gave their takes on the show. They always tried to be funny and most of the time they weren't.
#6 astroturf. You'll notice that concussions and serious leg injuries skyrocketed in the early '70s after almost all the stadiums started using this. The early stuff was nothing less than a carpet on a concrete slab. Worst thing that happened to sports.
I was at the vet when Poor Tom Waddle blew both his friggin knees out and ruined his career
I agree.
The reason astroturf deserves to be on the list is despite the disastrous impact, short-term, it had on the game...long term, it allowed for even contemplating later evolving surfaces that have been heralded as beneficial, not just by fans, but by players. [Besides..."change" does not necessarily imply intrinsic improvement.]
Wendell Davis of the Bears broke both of his legs at the Vet on that turf.
At least now there are alternative surfaces to use that are safe. But old-school astroturf is nothing more than concrete underneath, as you say
I haven't taken NFL Films for granted: in the early 1990's ('91-92, episodes airing on ESPN after MNF) I learned about the teams, players, and the NFL itself through this studio, and I'm very grateful.
I love NFL Films. I used to watch it after SportsCenter on Sunday nights in 1993 during the NFL season. Great way to learn about the game
im a SUCKER for OG NFL Films. still watch videos from back in the day
Man I really miss watching Madden drawing on the screen in between plays. Most of the time it was a real mess, yet funny.
11:56
One of the few times I agree with Mark Madden - no other sports organization in North America (and maybe the world) has a back catalog, detailing its history in such a clear, cinematic, and alluring way as the NFL.
Wow. Didn’t really think about that.
I was extremely spoiled going from watching NFL Films in the morning and afternoons to watching NFL Primetime on Sunday nights. The biggest insult was Disney bringing NFL Countdown back... on ESPN+. I can't wait for ESPN and Disney to disappear considering they've ruined so much. The NFL is sadly on the decline as well.
Mark Madden would never be Mr. Mellow.
Add to these 10: GLOVES. That’s why we have a league-wide 65% completion percentage.
@@carspivGloves have been around for quite some time. Its more the changes for how Defenses can defend receivers than anything else.
“Hitting a dramatic 16 yard field goal” I can’t hear that without cracking up
Pete Rozelle was one sharp dude. Nobody did as much for the NFL as he did. Made the NFL what it is today and beat out baseball as the national past time in the process. Best commissioner of any sports league ever.
Couldn't agree more.
Night Train Lane? BECAUSE of him, the clothesline and the facemask are illegal -- it was how he tackled. Shoulda at least got a mention.
And invented pick 6
Yep
No; TV has to be #1. Without television the NFL and the other major league sports have the reach, influence and money of AAA baseball.
Agreed.🐻⬇️
The super bowl wins.... it’s a national holiday.... everyone knows about the super bowl, even non fans, non Americans.... but I guess you could argue that the super bowl being on TV helped it
13:43, I couldn't agree more. I have nothing against people who play fantasy football, but I get seriously pissed off when idiots comment about being angry because a team rested a player and it cost them points. It is as though they have forgotten what the game is actually about.
1:42 Pete Gogolak.
6:12 The West Coast Offense!
9:34 NFL Films.
13:45 The 1978 Rule Changes?
17:24 The Astroturf.
22:01 The Instant Replay.
25:57 The Great, Paul Brown.
30:49 Free Agency.
34:52 The NFL on Television.
40:11 The AFL-NFL Merger.
Best of the Rest Game-Changers:
5:26 The Great, Lawrence Taylor.
12:45 Fantasy Football.
30:03 The Legendary, Red Grange.
34:23 The Historical, Pete Rozelle.
Thanks!
Not all superheroes wear capes 🤝🏾
Paul Brown was a visionary, who kept inventing and innovating, and look at how many coaches and players who were with him became championship winners
Blanton Collier got a championship with his players in 1964, and kept the Browns a perennial playoff team the rest of the decade (including another two conference championship game appearances in 1968 and 1969) and Weeb Ewbank, Bill Walsh, Don Shula, and Chuck Noll each won championships in the league as well.
He’s had quite the coaching tree.
But near the end of his life he had to face them pleasant truth that one of his best innovators, Bill Walsh, was someone he refused to promote to head coach and refused to give a positive recommendation for to people elsewhere in the league forcing Bill Walsh to go to Stanford. He would forever have to think that had not made this huge mistake the 49ers success of the 80s could have been his.
It seems a bit odd that NFL Films should name itself to such an honor, but it's undeniable that their films have enriched the fan experience a lot. At least they have for this old geezer. I agree TV should be #1. Thanks for the post.
If anything, I applaud the humility of only calling themselves the eighth-most-influential thing on the sport.
@Fries Granted, there are a lot less games per season than other sports. but fair point
Rest in peace Don Shula. You will be missed...
Yes indeed
aroperdope the only coach in nfl history to win it all in a perfect season
Man went to the Super Bowl with 4 different quarterbacks in 3 different decades. My dad is a Dolphin fan and whenever I went to his house, he had the team photo of the 72 Dolphins next to his bed. RIP Mr. Shula and f 2020.
Salvatore Sultana indeed. Don Shula will always he remembered
It's a shame he won't be here to see Belichick break is all time wins record
The Betting Line changed the game but the NFL does not want to acknowledge that it's benefited by gambling.
The betting line increased interest in EVERY game each week and led to eyeballs on tv's and televised advertisements till the very end of each game.
The nfl acknowledged gambling they always say please gamble responsible every game
The fact that they report injuries & who’s not playing, etc is all about the betting line in LV
Love these episodes. Keep them up. 1978 rule changes changed the landscape.
Yes, I agree. It needed to be rated far higher, like number 4. Until then, my hometown Steelers could dominate alone, just by Mel Blount man handling the other team's best wide out within 5 yards. In defiance, we still won two more Superbowls back to back after that. The wimpy Don Shula was the right man to explain this on the video. He's the one who pissed and moaned about Blount's man handling so much, that the league changed the rule to shut him up. It DID make the game more exciting since there was more long passes. But we in the Burgh were all about DEFENSE. And we HATED the rule change.
I’ve been explaining how huge the 1978 rule changes for years. THEY WERE HUGE.
NFL films should be higher. Without the Sabals, many wondrous memories would have faded to black. Because of their vision and creativity, I'm still watching player who were before my time. Thanks to them and RIP both father and son Sabal.
Yep, just look at basketball. There is no video of Wilt Chamberlain's 100pt game. So many of the old legends of basketball are like mythical figures because of how behind the NBA and ABA were when it came to documenting and broadcasting the game
What I remember when Bill Walsh took over the 49ers was the quarterback taking a few steps back and throwing to a wide open receiver. Timing. That was different than the passing game at the time.
The NFL draft changed the game and that should be on the list.
Andrew Warren Agree.
Andrew Warren nfl is the game
Could you imagine all Vicks as QB and Bo Jackson and all RB
Could Anyone Imagine An Idea For The NFL Draft Lottery? It Would Be Crazy Enough For Anything Or Everything To Happen For The NFL To Make Not Just The Worst Teams But For The Best Teams To Secure And Draft To Top Picks In The Draft Just On The Bounce Of A Few Lottery Balls... Maybe.
@@miguelsandoval1985 Your not alone on this, I also want to see a draft lottery because I am so sick of teams tanking on purpose for the first pick in the draft which can backfire so easily because there is no guarantee on some things here: 1. more then one team can be godawful and they will be fighting to lose on purpose just to get the number one overall pick 2. Any number one first draft pick can be a bust Jamarcus Russell is the best example as well as Ryan Leaf
How is “The forward pass” not on this list?!
Stephen Hill - I hate to be a hater here. But these shows have gotten dated and corny. Now when these Top 10 shows were new - they were revolutionary. Time has just moved on. Best to just keep these shows in 2006.
Because the forward pass was made legal before the NFL was inaugurated.
You're thinking of college football
L
Because the forward pass was legalized in 1906, long before the NFL. Not, however, before pro football started. That was in the 1890s. The NFL started in 1920.
Overall , this film is right on . So many things that I did in my playing days have changed .I was a straight on kicker with a school record of 41 Yd FG !!! Played D end , never recorded sacks back then , but on Offense , you couldn't extend your arms . Being from the late 50s , thru the 60s , into the 70s .even 80s , 90s players were not " nomads " as free agency , salary cap changed NFL football .
Yes , this documentary is one that all generations should watch . It clearly shows how the NFL as we know has truly evolved and has really become the national pastime
It would be sweet if you could put the top ten shortest players on. Miss these old top tens. Thanks for bringing back the memories.
You're welcome.
It’s on TH-cam
Gogolak changed the game twice. First by demonstrating the effectiveness of soccer-style kicking, then when the Giants poached him from the Bills, which led to the bidding wars that ultimately caused the AFL-NFL merger.
Let's See How Well The NFL Has Changed Over The Years On The List
10. Soccer Style Kickers 1:41
9. West Coast Offense 6:13
8. NFL Films 9:34
7. 1978 NFL Rules Changes 13:44
6. Astro Turf 17:24
5. Instant Replay 22:00
4. Paul Brown 25:57
3. Free Agency 30:49
2. Television 34:52
1. AFL/NFL Merger 40:10
I''M I MISSING SOMETHING... AGAIN?!!!!!!!
Salary cap.
The rule changes since 1978 have really impacted the game more than ever before.
7. Mel Blount rule*
What this list forgot to mention how the NFL does rules to help out offenses while at the same time hurt defenses.
Great choice for number one
Instant replay would NOT have overturned the Immaculate Reception
So sick of hearing raiders players whine about it, even after it was proven the Fuqua didn't touch the ball.
Great seeing the great Gale Sayers @44:05.....😌 Reast Easy, legend.
✊🏽🐻⬇️
#8 NFL films should be higher. They had the voice of God the late great John Facenda!!!!!
How is changing the shape/size of the football not on this list? It used to be like a rugby ball and impossible to throw.
Quality profile picture
VERY appropriate to include NFL Films. God Bless the Sabols.
“Hey... I’m Troy Polamalu”
Hahaha awesome
and today, im gonna line up in the c gap.
@AVERY HUEBEL Satan: I told them it was 100% and their Special Teams are on my fantasy team. Finally, I shall avenge that "Book of Job" incident and... wait why the ME is Polamalu lining up in the c gap?
@@SuperSaiyanGuyver God: 😎
Fantasy Football has to be in the top 10. It’s a Billion dollar business that has brought so much publicity
I would say that the creation of the AFL had more of an impact than the merger. The AFL decided to play wide open offensive minded football while the NFL remained straight forward run oriented football. Once the AFL did that the NFL became boring. It's like the WHA and recruiting and signing European hockey players making it a faster game forcing the NHL to do the same. Amazing what rebel leagues can accomplish.
Roger Craig gaining over 1000 yards rushing and 1000 yards receiving in the same season.
And he’s still not in the Hall of Fame.
During Rozelle's reign, the NFL's marketing was ingenious, as the league partnered with other industries to expand its footprint. It hooked me as a kid in the early 70s. I remember the International House of Pancakes had a big, good-looking insulated mug - red on one side with images of all the AFC helmets, blue on the other side with the NFC helmets. Coca-cola, back when soda came in glass bottles, had bottle caps with a black-and-white image of each of the then 26 teams' helmets on the underside, and there was a prize if you managed to collect each one, I think $500 or something (which was big money back then.) I had an NFL Venus color-by-number set that I sent away for when I saw it advertised in a comic book. Texaco gave away with every fill up glassware with the NFL shield on one side and a regionally determined team helmet on the other. Not to be outdone, Sunoco had player stamps and an album to stick'em in. That album is still one of my most prized possessions. Wanna buy it? It'll cost you $10,000- - -Nah, forget it. I won't sell it (!)
These NFL Top 10 videos were literally the only reason i watched TV years ago. These videos are my favorite
Rest in ☮️ Paul Brown.
If Uber stud QB Greg Cook hadn't got hurt his rookie year in 69, and Walsh had stayed in Cincy the 70s Bengals v Steelers would've been spectacular
True Value used to have NFL Films VHS tapes as promo items in the early 90s. Got 1 or 2 from my dad every Christmas for a few years. I wore those bad boys out.
The West Coast offense invented in Cincinnati. And ended up costing the Bangels TWO Super Bowls, because Paul Brown didn't think Bill Walsh had what it took to be a head coach. As a 49ers fan, I would like to thank Coach Brown for one of the biggest instances of mental flatulence in the history of professional sports. *points at Paul Brown* "HAW HAW!!!" *Nelson Munce voice*
When Bill Walsh was an offensive assistant with the Bengals under Paul Brown in the 70's, they ran what became known as the "West Coast Offense" . For some unknown reason, Brown did not name Walsh the new Head Coach of the Bengals when Brown retired from coaching after the 1975 season. 6 years later, Walsh got his revenge in Super Bowl XVI before Brown passed away, and again in Super Bowl XXIII.
It wasn't unknown. Walsh wanted to be a head coach..he even had an offer from GB but Paul Brown called them and sabotaged Walsh's chance at an interview..in other words fuck paul brown and his legacy
The Vikings were running it in the 70s
@@ericwitham9576 Just in the NFC
True
That ending with Sayers talking about hashmarks though!!! I was like WHAT *video ends*
I thought the rule changes of 1978 was atleast going to be in the top 5.
@Harry Engel you meant the Tom Brady rule
@@benhub3932 You mean the Manning-Brady rule. After the Patriot rape of Colt's receivers in '02 followed by Brady's knee injury a few years later both teams pushed hard for enforcement of the Mel Blount rule.
@@indy_go_blue6048 BY JOVE, I THINK, YOU'VE GOT IT!!!
NFL Films should be way higher. Could argue even number 1
Thank you for uploading these.
I'm not always sure about Mark Madden, but I see his point about Fantasy Football, rooting for guys on teams that aren't your favorite(s) so one can win their league. I mean, I'm cool with Fantasy Football, (especially the video game kind:-), but yeah, things can get awkward.
1. The forward pass after rhe 1951 rule change, and
2. The niickel ldefense (and variants thereof).
Top 10 Things we miss about football
#1) football
#2) 700 commercial breaks
Unflagged big hits!
Rest in peace ✌️ both Steve Sabol & Don Shula .
What about Billy "White Shoes" Johnson and the flamboyant touchdown "celebrations"??
28:07 Anybody else see Kevin Kolb threw for 300 yards against the Panthers? Wtf? That has got to be a typo. If you're even old enough to know who Kolb was then u would know why that's so baffling
The 8 weeks ago we stood in this same spot speech in the intro was made by Jonathan Vilma before the Jets road wildcard playoff game at New England in 2006 season. The 8 weeks ago he was referring to was the game at New England Jets had won obviously 8 weeks before. Jets would however lose that playoff game to the Patriots
This Episode according to the Ticker aired just Five Years later in 2011.
I wish the Vince Lombardi way of speaking and the voices of those day were still around today
Top 10 things that changed the game. Number 6: Astro Turf
Next on NFL Network: Top 10 things we miss about football
Number 7: Grass
"You know what I miss about football? Grass! Remember when teams played on grass?!"
I think Pittsburgh still does--although I also think they mixed some of that FieldTurf in along with it three or four years back.
Still though, your point holds.
@@DRTY3RD no, the Steelers have Kentucky bluegrass. The Steelers would never go back to turf nor the Eagles because both got real sick of playing on turf at home after experiences at the Vet and Three Rivers.
Paul Brown? I did not know he did all this. Now I see why Bengals and Browns have the same colors
I might have thought that the forward pass, legalized in 1906, would have been included here.
Rest in ☮️ Steve Sabol.
You gotta love the enthusiasm of Phil Villapiano. Always love how it shows through.
Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders should be on the list.
The two things that has changed the game the most in the past 20 years. Is being able to see the 1st down line on TV and Fantasy Football.
Paul Brown made the Browns, then the Bengals, and the Ravens wouldn't exist without the original Browns... this man is responsible for most of the AFC north's existence.
NFL Sunday Ticket changed everything in football when it was introduced in 1994 on Primestar/Direct TV . In 1994, if you had the Ticket every Any Given Sunday was a doubleheader day on NBC & FOX then later CBS & FOX in 1998.😊
I think "Sudden-death" overtime should be on the list.
It reduced ties dramatically - you had 11 of them in 1966, and there were four other seasons with 10 or more prior to 1974.
The fact is, the average fan doesn't pay $140 of their hard earned to watch a game end in a tie.
I know this came out in 2008, but the rule changes which came out the following season changed the game forever. Not allowed to hit QBs or make big time hits anymore
"Certain qbs" *cough cough* (Brady)
"Certain qbs" *cough cough* (Brady)
Monday🏈Night🏈Football
ABC-- 🙋♂️ ESPN-- 🤦♂️
After Jon Gruden left it went down hill
Nfl comes to the UK in 1982, love this game, thanks
Not too High , but maybe #7 should be ... when all WR’s completed full programming , in which they would get up and exaggeratedly gesture for a PI flag after ALL incomplete passes no matter circumstances involved.
It took a few years to really saturate the WR DNA , but sometime in the early 2010’s this was accomplished at an acceptable rate of 98.4%.
Instant replay also created one of the greatest John Madden lines ever: "I miss the days when, a fumble is a fumble, and if it's a fumble, it's a fumble."
Lawrence Taylor should be in this list, not just mentioned.
Thing I miss most about football is Al Davis, even if things started to go south for him at the end he was a character as much as anything else and I loved him
He was a Good Natured Villain. You didnt like him, but you still enjoyed him.
Thanks for posting these Top 10s. I feel forced on this one however, to mention THE biggest change that they just glossed over. The advent of the face mask.
Kinda included under Paul Brown
@@EmmaBonn96 "Kinda included" doesn't fit when considering the impact of the face mask. NOTHING was a bigger change or had a larger impact on the game of football.
I miss the top 10s bring ‘em back
He said to nobody in particular
12:39 “hey I’m Troy Palumalu”😂
NFL Top 10: Things That Changed The Game (Updated Version). (10) The 1995 Carolina Panthers And 1995 Jacksonville Jaguars (9) The 1920 Akron Pros (8) The 1970 Debut Of Monday Night Football (7) West Coast Offense (6) The 1978 NFL Rule Changes (5) NFL Films (4) NFL Free Agency (3) Instant Replay In The NFL (2) Television And (1) The AFL-NFL Merger Of 1966 And The Birth Of Super Bowl 1 In 1967.
Best Of The Rest: Other Things That Changed The Game In NFL History. (1) Fantasy Football (2) Tom Landry (3) Benny Friedman (4) NFL Records And Milestones (5) Fritz Pollard And (6) Vince Lombardi.
🤡
24:44 Oh my God that's adorable.
Of course, since we're from the future we can say this:
How on EARTH are you expected to watch the replay on THAT screen and come up with a call in 15 seconds???
I hope they had an optician on standby for these guys.
Tom Landry Inventing the 4-3 Defense... should be on the list can you imagine 7 guys on the line no linebackers.
The 4-3 Defense.
It should be on the list .
Kickers are the most important part of the game, think about it seriously, how many times has it come down to a fg
It honestly boggles my mind that no one thought to try kicking sidewinder before to Pete Gogolak. Kicking straight on just looks and feels so unnatural - did no one think "There's gotta be a better way"?
television and instant replay are basically the same thing what I remember is like somewhere between 74 and 76 they brought in the fair catch imagine being a punt returner without the option for a fair catch
I am really surprised, and somewhat disappointed, that the introduction of the "platoon system" was not included. Before Red Blair (if memory serves), players went both ways. If a player came out of the game, he could not return during that half. So a player coming out in the first half could return in the second. When football went to platoons with special teams and free substitution, the players could then be bigger and would hit harder. I haven't tracked injuries, but suspect that this contributed greatly to the physical damage incurred by players. If platoons had not come in, football would be a different game.
"IF YOU WERE GOOD ENOUGH TO BE A GM, YOU'D BE A GM" hallelujah!! Thank you!!!
I'm all for safe play, but they have taken hard hitting out of football. They have officiated defense into touch football. I don't watch as much as I used to. Every reciever walking across the middle of the field.
No hitting receivers across the middle is why receivers are making 100+ catches and QBs completing 60+ percent of their passes. Madness.
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I love this show been watching since late eighties early 90s.
15:42 what a savage moment lol. Dude really said "Harold come back"! 😂😂😂
To hell with Vinatieri kicking a field goal in a blizzard, Rich Karlis kicked a field goal BAREFOOTED!!! IN A BLIZZARD!!
Putting an NFL team in Las Vegas is going to change the game for the worse. Mark my words.
Moron
Moron
Moron
“I keek a touchdown I keek a touchdown”
sam wyche and the bengals should be on this list. they changed the game how u run the 2 min drill all game. calling game at line of scrimmage
The yellow first down line and the fox box I think has changed the game in making it much more accessible
Everyone mentions the 78 rule changes as the Mel Blount rule, but how did I just realize that the offensive line blocking change was to mitigate the steel curtain.
Top 10 NFL traditions please
Love that music after a commercial break.
Rest in ☮️ Pete Rozelle.
“If you were good enough to be a GM you’d be a GM.”
Sounds like someone’s been drinking that hateraid
He’s speaking truth
NFL Top ten worst Teams please from 2007. I would like to see the original list before the 2008 lions.
I'll try to find it.
76 bucs were originally number 1 if you were wondering
Lions still be on it
Let's see - 1996 Jets, at least one of these
Thank u for them gems my guy
You're welcome.
@@isaacgreen3273do the top 10 innovations
NFL films and music should be top 3, I didn't become a huge fan until I started watching This week in Pro Football and The NFL game of the week.
If they redid this topic in 2022, number 1 would be the discovery of CTE
An interesting video but it only goes back so far. There are other items which were big changes to the game which they didn't mention.
How about when they changed the shape of the ball and the change in the passing rules in the 1930s which put passing on the map?
How about the 1932 indoor game between the Bears and the Portsmouth Spartans? This was essentially a playoff game because the two teams were tied at the end of the season. This led to east and west divisions and a playoff system starting in 1933.
If either of these items didn't happen, the game would be a lot different today.
There's also the Bears popularizing the T formation.
The book The Best Game Ever was about the 1958 NFL Championship. It mentions that Johnny Unitas and Ray Berry perfected how they practiced passing routes so each knew what the other would do. This is commonplace today but according to the book, wasn't then.
13:31 the best most concise argument against fantasy football, and why I quit it.
25:31 “seven of ya didn’t see it? SEVEN OF YA!” 😆😆😆
The 1978 rule changes should've been #1
Nope