Wow I love this! Bob Stein at 3:00 became the President of the Minnesota Timberwolves, was a lawyer and in 2009 heconceived and began the first class action lawsuit on behalf of retired NFL players against the NFL. His case, Dryer v. NFL, fought for fair payment for the NFL's use of player identities, including in NFL Films. He represents many past NFL players in concussion-related cases.
To this day, out of these All Americans, I've got Ron Yary, Ted Hendricks, and Larry Csonka on my Alltime Greatest NFL team, and they have a combined 10 Superbowl appearances between them. Cheers for the upload!
@@matthewbrotman2907 OJ is a tough one for me. Best REGULAR season RB I ever saw. But I don't think OJ or the Bills even won just one playoff game. And OJ had the ability to take a game over all by himself If he wanted to. Plus that double murder thing kinda wants me to look elsewhere for one of my all-time favorites.
Wish there were more of these to watch. Most of these guys only had a cup of coffee in the NFL. Johnson, Yary, O.J. & the Mad Stork were the stars of this group. Would like to know why Csonka was not there in person? Ted Hendricks looks so thin. Ted was a mathematical genius with trigonometry at Miami. A true Hall of Famer Colts, Packers & Raiders. 4 Super Bowl rings
Yary was undoubtedly the best offensive lineman in college football that year. He also played extremely well for the Minnesota Vikings. I remember watching him stop a pick six against the Rams during a Monday Night game. It turned out the Vikings made a goal line stand after that play that kept the Rams from scoring what should have been an easy touchdown. Yary was a true beast on the field.
It is interesting to see these old Bob Hope specials to see if the college football players or the young Hollywood debutants would go on and have noted carrers.
You'd run funny too in those pencil legged slacks. There was an illustrated cartoon in Playboy back then about how the "Ivy League" styled suit wasn't practical, especially for athletically built men. I had a couple of pairs of those pants in '67-'68 made of hard wearing materials, rust colored corduroy and the other one in off white denim and I couldn't run very good in them. Can't imagine trying to run in them made out of 120's wool or cotton... RRRIIIPPP!!! They're probably trying not to split the seam out of the rear running down that incline.
Go to Bing Crosby introducing the 1963 Look All-America team, and see that two of Bob’s jokes here were recycled from that show. The lines about “enemy huddle” and “shaving commercials” were, well, shared among friends Bing and Bob.
"The Mad Stork" Ted Hendricks, Four-time NFL All-Pro and member of FOUR Super Bowl-winning teams(Colts '70; Raiders '76, '80, '83), and 1990 inductee to The Pro Football Hall of Fame.
I know there’s some future famous NFL stars in this group. I’d like pay homage to Granville Liggind who went on to star with my hometown Calgary Stampeders of the CFL “Granny” played a huge role in helping the Stamps capture the 1971 Grey Cup.
One of many good undersized US college players that came north to play in Canada. Jim Stillwagon (Toronto Argonauts), Tom Clements and Condredge Holloway were among others.
@@jamesanthony5681 Don't forget Mr. Sonny Wade of Emory and Henry College of Glade Spring, Virginia. He played QB for the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL from 1969-1977 and the Alouettes won three Great Cup championships while he played there. The Als' won in 1970, 1974, and 1977. A fine accomplishment for a "small no big name college" player.
Jason Maas went to the same high school I did. Yuma Union, the Criminals. He went to Canada and won 3 Grey Cups with Edmonton, in 2003, 2005, and 2012. He coached them too. He is a head coach with the Montreal Alouettes. Jason's father was a police officer, that was killed in the line of duty when Jason was 10 years old.
OJ Simpson may have won the Heisman in 1967 except for Gary Beban who shared the stage . Leroy Keyes who was mentioned but not in sttendance was Simpson 's main competitor for the Heisman the following year , 1968 . I agree with the previous commentor that Ted Hendricks was the least likely looking football player in this group , but he was vicious !
4:02 Tragically, Frank Loria had only two more Christmases after this one. After finishing his playing career in Blacksburg, he became an assistant coach at Marshall. He was on the ill-fated Southern Airways Flight 932 which crashed in West Virginia that fateful evening in November 1970, killing Loria and 74 others. Frank left behind his wife, Phyllis, and two very young children.
What's interesting here is that OJ is a First team All-American, and he hasn't even taken a snap at USC, His first two years playing, college football, were in junior college.
How ironic would it have been if Bob Hope's joke for O.J.'s speed was something like, "He runs so fast, the police have been seen chasing him on the expressway."
Only three black players named to the team. This was back when most of the best black players still played for HBCU's. Claude Humphrey, Elvin Bethea, and Art Shell were all HBCU players who would go on to become NFL HOF'ers, not to mention HOF'ers Curly Culp and Charlie Sanders from power 5 conferences.
Yeah, I did think about that. I didn't want to play the race card 1967. I think most schools were predominantly white still. It's crazy seeing OJ & now we know what happened in 94
I loved these all American segments as a kid. But I never realized that these were actually young guys not much older than 22 . They look much older than they are like most people back then.
If youall notice it was very few African Americans just oj and leroy keyes the reason why was it was until the early 70s that schools(especially southeastern conference started recruited african americans)i think it took usc to beat the crap out of Alabama for bear bryant to reluctantly start recruiting black players then Tennessee then other sec schools followed suit,but it wasnt just the sec but alot of other schools also.
The had none. Weight training was frowned upon in those days. The U. Of Nebraska was the first to institute weight training and to hire a weight training coach. Previously it was believed that weight training would leave the players too stout to move their arms and too stoved up to run as they should.@@mikeforney354
@@hermanator74301 Yes two different players with the same name . The NC State Dennis Byrd in this 1967 Bob Hope presentation with OJ Simpson et al died in 2010 age 63 .
@@lakemichigan6598 If I recall, he sustained a rather severe knee injury late in the Orange Bowl after his senior season (vs. Bob Johnson's U of Tennessee) and that put an end to any chances he had of a meaningful NFL career. He's the poster child for these players today who sit out their bowl game prior to entering the NFL Draft.
@@marjorieanderson8626 Thx. Didn't know that. I only knew that he was drafted by Detroit and it didn't appear he even made the team. I assumed that was because he hadn't recovered from his injury by training camp.
One of the best specials ever-loved the football intros and his comments
Every Christmas I looked forward to Bob Hope with the college football All-Americans.
Yep, it was the only reason we watched the Bob Hope Xmas special.
@floridapmi same here. As soon as the segment was over, the channel was changed
SAME HERE
Keyes, Yary, Csonka and Hendricks.. ....Nice group !!
Ted Hendricks...The Mad Stork!
Bob Hope did this for years and I really looked forward to watching this as a kid.I was a big USC fan back then.
This is one of the things that made me fall in love with College Football!!
"How does it feal to be an all American?"
"I gotta pee."
Did you hear that?? I believe the young man said he had to go pee!!
*feel
Gary Beban is still UCLA's only Heisman winner.
Frank Loria, the defensive back from VATech, was killed in the Marshall football airplane crash. RIP...
I had no idea.... 😞
My mom went to HS with him at Notre Dame HS in Clarksburg WV.
My wife was a student at Marshall at that time.
I remember Loria. I thought he was a RB. RIP never knew
From college straight to coaching?
Bob Johnson was there first ever draft pick of the Cincinnati Bengals. 🏈
Wow I love this!
Bob Stein at 3:00 became the President of the Minnesota Timberwolves, was a lawyer and in 2009 heconceived and began the first class action lawsuit on behalf of retired NFL players against the NFL. His case, Dryer v. NFL, fought for fair payment for the NFL's use of player identities, including in NFL Films. He represents many past NFL players in concussion-related cases.
Fred "Hunter" Dwyer?
Most of these men looked and spoke like they were 43 years old at birth.
Some guys are just born with more testosterone than others.
They look like men though.
That's called RESPECT, ever hear of it!
“If any of you call me ‘Orenthal,’ I’ll kill you.”
Lighten up, Orenthal
that is what happened to Nicole Simpson...
"Don't ever call me Norman" (Boomer Esaison)
I just absolutely LOVE Bob Hope😃!!! May God continue to rest and bless his soul 🙏...
Whoa! Who knew Bob Hope was the worlds first crowd surfer!
It's refreshing to hear how players used to pronounce their full college names correctly
And without gimmicks like "THEEEE"
@@stephaniegormley9982 Exactly...
Yeah...
Not there high-school...
@@tbone1574 *their
LOOK was a great magazine!
Bob Johnson, the ORIGINAL Cincinnati Bengal. And still the greatest center in franchise history.
Largely forgotten in Bengals history thanks to Anthony Muñoz. Johnson was a #2 pick Munoz a #3 pick.
And a Tennessee Volunteer
@@drbonesshow1Mike Reid went from the Bengals to a being a country singer/songwriter
Tom DeLeone wasn't bad, either!
yes he was great and I remember him well!
To this day, out of these All Americans, I've got Ron Yary, Ted Hendricks, and Larry Csonka on my Alltime Greatest NFL team, and they have a combined 10 Superbowl appearances between them. Cheers for the upload!
Those three and OJ are the Pro Football Hall of Famers in thIs group.
@@matthewbrotman2907 OJ is a tough one for me. Best REGULAR season RB I ever saw. But I don't think OJ or the Bills even won just one playoff game. And OJ had the ability to take a game over all by himself If he wanted to. Plus that double murder thing kinda wants me to look elsewhere for one of my all-time favorites.
Hendricks, not Hendrix.
@@SamWesting Yeah. He's there too
@@radar0412 plus nothing
Wish there were more of these to watch. Most of these guys only had a cup of coffee in the NFL. Johnson, Yary, O.J. & the Mad Stork were the stars of this group. Would like to know why Csonka was not there in person? Ted Hendricks looks so thin. Ted was a mathematical genius with trigonometry at Miami. A true Hall of Famer Colts, Packers & Raiders. 4 Super Bowl rings
Yary was undoubtedly the best offensive lineman in college football that year. He also played extremely well for the Minnesota Vikings. I remember watching him stop a pick six against the Rams during a Monday Night game. It turned out the Vikings made a goal line stand after that play that kept the Rams from scoring what should have been an easy touchdown. Yary was a true beast on the field.
Where is Butkus
@@Jjstier Playing for the Bears.
@@Jjstier@Jjstier If you want to see Butkus, look at the Bob Hope All-american football team 1964.
@@courylanders4142 1963
Thank you for posting!!!
Wonderful glimpse of a bygone era. Seeing the great Frank Loria is truly poignant.
Nice to see ted Hendricks
It is interesting to see these old Bob Hope specials to see if the college football players or the young Hollywood debutants would go on and have noted carrers.
People would freak out these days over that ND joke 😂
That is so true 🍀🍀
There’s some Hall Of Famers in that group.
I love the awkward runs with
suits. Probably why they went to them wearing their uniforms doesn’t look bad with them running.
You'd run funny too in those pencil legged slacks.
There was an illustrated cartoon in Playboy back then about how the "Ivy League" styled suit wasn't practical, especially for athletically built men.
I had a couple of pairs of those pants in '67-'68 made of hard wearing materials, rust colored corduroy and the other one in off white denim and I couldn't run very good in them. Can't imagine trying to run in them made out of 120's wool or cotton...
RRRIIIPPP!!!
They're probably trying not to split the seam out of the rear running down that incline.
@@kidmack3556I hope you understood the most important thing about white denim jeans....getting them as dirty as possible
@@kidmack3556As long as you understood the most important thing about white denim jeans...getting them as dirty as possible
Go to Bing Crosby introducing the 1963 Look All-America team, and see that two of Bob’s jokes here were recycled from that show. The lines about “enemy huddle” and “shaving commercials” were, well, shared among friends Bing and Bob.
I just saw the 1963 film from the college coach's organization.narrated by Gene Kelly (no, not THAT one) It also had Woody Hayes, in a mellow mood
"The Mad Stork" Ted Hendricks, Four-time NFL All-Pro and member of FOUR Super Bowl-winning teams(Colts '70; Raiders '76, '80, '83), and 1990 inductee to The Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Ted Hendricks "The mad dork" 😂
He was actually very bright, and wanted to go on to study physics.
The Mad Stork was an amazing talent but I suspected he was highly regarded by the way he dominated on the football field at multiple positions!
I know there’s some future famous NFL stars in this group. I’d like pay homage to Granville Liggind who went on to star with my hometown Calgary Stampeders of the CFL “Granny” played a huge role in helping the Stamps capture the 1971 Grey Cup.
Hey I remember that name. I'm in Edmonton...
One of many good undersized US college players that came north to play in Canada. Jim Stillwagon (Toronto Argonauts), Tom Clements and Condredge Holloway were among others.
@@jamesanthony5681 Don't forget Mr. Sonny Wade of Emory and Henry College of Glade Spring, Virginia. He played QB for the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL from 1969-1977 and the Alouettes won three Great Cup championships while he played there. The Als' won in 1970, 1974, and 1977. A fine accomplishment for a "small no big name college" player.
@@brittonbanks646 Yes, there were a bunch of good players.
Jason Maas went to the same high school I did. Yuma Union, the Criminals. He went to Canada and won 3 Grey Cups with Edmonton, in 2003, 2005, and 2012. He coached them too. He is a head coach with the Montreal Alouettes. Jason's father was a police officer, that was killed in the line of duty when Jason was 10 years old.
Seeing OJ was chilling.
OJ Simpson may have won the Heisman in 1967 except for Gary Beban who shared the stage . Leroy Keyes who was mentioned but not in sttendance was Simpson 's main competitor for the Heisman the following year , 1968 . I agree with the previous commentor that Ted Hendricks was the least likely looking football player in this group , but he was vicious !
Killer Simpson won the Heisman in 1968, not 1967. Gary Beban won the Heisman in 1967.
That’s what he stated.
Not surprising Ted was the tallest in the group.
Read it!
@@EBLLC
Not to mention, Alabama had an electric kick returner and 5-time All-American in Forrest Gump.
The Stork
6,10” all America OLB
4:02 Tragically, Frank Loria had only two more Christmases after this one. After finishing his playing career in Blacksburg, he became an assistant coach at Marshall. He was on the ill-fated Southern Airways Flight 932 which crashed in West Virginia that fateful evening in November 1970, killing Loria and 74 others. Frank left behind his wife, Phyllis, and two very young children.
My high school classmate,Kevin Gilmore,is one of the 6 players buried in the mass grave at Huntington.
Granville Liggins had a distinguished career in the CFL with Calgary and Toronto.
For those of us raised in California, these were some of the most illustrious players of the 60s.
What's interesting here is that OJ is a First team All-American, and he hasn't even taken a snap at USC, His first two years playing, college football, were in junior college.
Not true
I remember Right Guard was a heavily advertised deodorant brand in those days.
Don Draper took a crack at that campaign earlier...
OJ was really killing it here!
I see what you did there.
That didn't make sense AT ALL
Granny Liggins from the University of Oklahoma. One of the best noseguards every to play college football.
Couldn't wait every year 4 Bob to do this and 4 him to go to a war zone to entertain are troops every year
Granville Liggins..Toronto Argonauts..CFL..wow
"Orental"? And OJ mananged to restrain himself from stabbing Bob.
Watch for O.J.'s eye roll as he was introduced.
@@orangehoof I guess he wouldn't get *that* mad--Bob's not his ex-wife.
@@orangehoof I know. I saw it.
Bob presaged the whole thing when he said "With a name like Orenthal you have to run fast"
Precisely.
How ironic would it have been if Bob Hope's joke for O.J.'s speed was something like, "He runs so fast, the police have been seen chasing him on the expressway."
Bob Hope has his Bruno Magli shoes on I see.
I get your reference... O J was wearing Brunos when he did the murders.😮😮
Only three black players named to the team. This was back when most of the best black players still played for HBCU's.
Claude Humphrey, Elvin Bethea, and Art Shell were all HBCU players who would go on to become NFL HOF'ers, not to mention HOF'ers Curly Culp and Charlie Sanders from power 5 conferences.
Yeah, I did think about that. I didn't want to play the race card 1967. I think most schools were predominantly white still. It's crazy seeing OJ & now we know what happened in 94
When Bob pronounced O.J.’s first name Or-RENTH-al, I freaked.
Yuk! Yuk! Yuk!
@@erickthefantabulous1there were few blacks named until the late 70s
Can’t be named if you’re not allowed to be on the team SEC, some ACC, Miami and others.
My father played at Clemson on the other side of the o line from Harry Olzewski
Even though he was the head coach, I believe Coach Frank Howard spent much of his time coaching the O line in that era.
The guy here who least looks like a football player (a tall, skinny, geeky looking Ted Hendricks) ended up in the Hall of Fame.
The Mad Stork, indeed.
What a golden time to be alive………..
Good stuff!!!
Now this was class.
I loved these all American segments as a kid. But I never realized that these were actually young guys not much older than 22 . They look much older than they are like most people back then.
Note how small the linemen look by today's standards.
Bird out of North Carolina State was huge.
The guy who preceded OJ (4:12) looked like he was 40.
All of them were scared to death that they would fall on the run.
Yary, Simpson and Hendricks looked like they were from the future, could have played today no doubt!
Where’s Tim Rossovich from USC?? He was All American in 1967.
This was the Look All American team. They had a bunch of different All American teams back them, like they have now.
5:37 why they did that?
OJ didn't run out with his knife, much to Bob Hope's relief.
Hard to believe most wouldn't last in the NFL.
The Mad Stork!!!
No tats, fresh haircuts, suit and ties….miss the good old days
Why they running?🤷🏾♂️
Awesome 👌
OJ Simpson should've been college football's first two time Heisman Trophy winner
@@timcollins3794 He sure could slash up a defense.
Had the jury at his trial voted for the Heisman, he'd have four of them.
@@miltonsmith974 Y'all's comments 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Tim Rossovich and Adrian Young as well as Leroy Keyes all went to the Eagles, and busted, mostly.
By the way they ran some of them appear to be a little light in the loafers. Not that there is anything wrong with that.
If youall notice it was very few African Americans just oj and leroy keyes the reason why was it was until the early 70s that schools(especially southeastern conference started recruited african americans)i think it took usc to beat the crap out of Alabama for bear bryant to reluctantly start recruiting black players then Tennessee then other sec schools followed suit,but it wasnt just the sec but alot of other schools also.
Bob Hope was great
wow Ill bet, OJ wishes he could go back and start all over.
Most will never be heard from again
Geez, back then ever the jocks were dorky... except OJ, he has the confidence of someone who got away with murder.
🤮
Today they would all be into hip-hop , rap music and have HUGE beards.
" ever the jokes " ???
O J, Nicole and Ron didn't outrun him.O J now running with the devil.
OJ SIMPSON'S VOICE NEVER CHANGED A BIT
Yes it did. His voice is deeper now.
@@courylanders4142 About six feet deeper
Not deep enough !
I Google these guys to see what happened to some of them - Dennis Byrd was killed in an auto crash and was only 50 yoa. 😢😢
OJ looked smug, even then!
Seems that very few of these guys weight trained.
It's true. Many athletes did not weight train. They were also much lighter than today's NFL players.
I don't believe colleges even had strength coaches in 67
Not into STERIODS back then.
The had none. Weight training was frowned upon in those days. The U. Of Nebraska was the first to institute weight training and to hire a weight training coach. Previously it was believed that weight training would leave the players too stout to move their arms and too stoved up to run as they should.@@mikeforney354
There were steroids back then. Most collage athletes would not use such a thing. Professional athletes Used them a lot.@@LannieLord
Classic.
a lot of the guys looked older than college age, maybe the close cropped hair.
Wow Hendricks looks so gawky and awkward.
you look at Yary come out...you knew right then and there...Hall of Fame
Had OJ Simpson and Larry Csonka two Hall of Fame players by OJ is known more for his infamous trial than football .
Yeah, widely known for his double-murder now!
No Larry Csonka on the set?
One of the hallmarks of a great football player was to look uncomfortable in a dress suit.
OJ - 4:22
You're welcome
The Juice !
Ted Hendrick the Mad Stork
The young dirty playing Ted Hendricks, per Len Dawson
At least OJ didn't stab Bob
No Zonk. :(
Did you even watch this? He and LeRoy Keyes were pictured and mentioned as they were unable to attend. Wake up.
@@hermanator74301 They were pictured but they weren't there.
He uses the same jokes on the 1975 team presentation.
Good thing Don Rickles wasn't hosting this. He'd be insulting every one of these guys.
At 1:35 the late Dennis Byrd of NC State .
The Dennis Byrd whom was paralyzed playing for the Jets and later died in a car accident was from the U. Of Tulsa. Different guy from a different era.
@@hermanator74301 Yes two different players with the same name . The NC State Dennis Byrd in this 1967 Bob Hope presentation with OJ Simpson et al died in 2010 age 63 .
OJ looked a little pissed off!
Bob mispronounced his name, putting the accent on the second syllable instead of the first.
@@duketoofor3098 He seemed to me to have a good sense of humor about it.
Good thing he didn't have a knife-
Ron Yary h o famer vikes
ND Tom Shane appears to be none other than your friend in the Diamond business.
Really? That’s the same Tom Shane? Didn’t know that. Being from Denver, I remember those commercials.
The third guy looks like he's forty. ,forgot his name ,hope he doin well
Same jokes every year lol
Oh Rent thall...hilarious
Linville giggins was a dam noseguard. Look how small he was?
10th round draft pick, I believe, of the Detroit Lions the year he came out. Considered too small to play linebacker & didn't make the team.
Granville Liggins
@@lakemichigan6598
If I recall, he sustained a rather severe knee injury late in the Orange Bowl after his senior season (vs. Bob Johnson's U of Tennessee) and that put an end to any chances he had of a meaningful NFL career.
He's the poster child for these players today who sit out their bowl game prior to entering the NFL Draft.
@@TheMrSuge Liggins did get hurt against Tennessee but he did play 14 years in the CFL and was All CFL at some level in most of those years.
@@marjorieanderson8626
Thx. Didn't know that. I only knew that he was drafted by Detroit and it didn't appear he even made the team. I assumed that was because he hadn't recovered from his injury by training camp.
I had watched the 1963 Look All-Americans immediately prior to this. They recycled some of the same jokes, word for word.