The DUMBEST MOMENT of Bart Starr's CAREER

  Рет қаралды 7,845

Official JaguarGator9

Official JaguarGator9

Жыл бұрын

During week 8 of the 1969 NFL season, Bart Starr started a game for the Green Bay Packers against the Baltimore Colts. You won't believe what head coach Phil Bengtson did next, in a move that puzzled everyone, including none other than Bart Starr himself
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Bart Starr Coach: • The WORST MOMENT of Ba...
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Пікірлер: 58
@toddbiesel4288
@toddbiesel4288 Жыл бұрын
Bart Starr didn't even get the chance to spike the ball into the ground on ANY single play.
@farmasyst
@farmasyst Жыл бұрын
He didn't need to...his passer rating was always above 80. i should know. My passer rating in high school was 65...I was always concentrating on the cheerleaders.
@kevinmadden1645
@kevinmadden1645 11 ай бұрын
Starr was hurt on the first play from scrimmage. He suffered bruised ribs trying to tackle Steve Stone breaker who was returning Bill Anderson's fumble for a touchdown.
@jefferyreed4073
@jefferyreed4073 11 ай бұрын
​@@farmasystlol my passer rating in high school was around 60 I would try to impress the cheerleaders I could scramble I was fast in high school an I knew the QBs job is but I couldnt throw a spiral actually I still can't throw a spiral I threw a lot of bad passes
@dondajulah4168
@dondajulah4168 Жыл бұрын
"He didnt have him throw a pass...." Bart Starr called his own plays. Perhaps not throwing a pass on the first series was the reason behind his being pulled. The coach could have sensed that Starr was not physically able to play or that Starr was imposing restrictions on the plays he called due to physical limitations.
@robertbuck1874
@robertbuck1874 Жыл бұрын
Bart Starr was the ultimate gentleman
@DolFan316
@DolFan316 Жыл бұрын
7:18 A cheap shot even by '60s standards, which is REALLY saying something 😳
@teen_laqueefa
@teen_laqueefa Жыл бұрын
Knee caps were part of the ball lol
@anthonyjkenn6319
@anthonyjkenn6319 Жыл бұрын
Dick Butkus playing that hardnosed physical football....lol
@jacobo9611
@jacobo9611 5 ай бұрын
Ha and did the referee whip someone with his penalty flag? Lol
@andrewpadaetz5549
@andrewpadaetz5549 Жыл бұрын
1969 was not good to Baltimore either. Both teams that played in Memorial Stadium lost their championships during that calendar year (yes, the Super Bowl was from the '68 season but was played on 1/12/69)...and to the teams that also called the same stadium home (Shea Stadium in Queens, NY).
@DolFan316
@DolFan316 Жыл бұрын
The '69 Colts were a dead team walking after Super Bowl III. Carroll Rosenbloom seriously thought about firing Shula and only hung on to him out of sheer spite because he wanted Shula to suffer as much as he was. Even Shula wanted out badly enough to willingly participate in tampering by the Dolphins.
@royveteto4134
@royveteto4134 Жыл бұрын
i can't think of colts and packers of the 1960's without thinking of a game from the 1965 season in which unitas isn't playing due to injury and on the packers' first series starr leaves the game due to an injury
@kevinmadden1645
@kevinmadden1645 Жыл бұрын
This was the overtime playoff game(12-26-65) won by the Packers 13-10. Tom Matte played quarterback for Baltimore with the plays taped to his wrist.
@CTubeMan
@CTubeMan Жыл бұрын
Your phrase at 5:06 ranks up there with Cris Collinsworth’s “Now here’s a guy,” and should be added to your merch line.
@MichaelPiz
@MichaelPiz Жыл бұрын
Roscoe really blew it with the Starr clips.
@macmedic892
@macmedic892 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations on winning the jersey! #GrossiPosse
@Fireyninjadog
@Fireyninjadog Жыл бұрын
The irony: less than 10 years later, starr would be the idiot coach
@jonathonhass4178
@jonathonhass4178 11 ай бұрын
Except that he wasn’t the idiot coach…he was the inexperienced coach. Near the end of his coaching tenure, he was definitely starting to figure it out and if they’d kept him on I believe he would’ve at bare minimum gotten them into a regular playoff contender
@Fireyninjadog
@Fireyninjadog 11 ай бұрын
@jonathonhass4178 you ever heard the phrase "too little, too late" that was bart starr's coaching tenure. He should've been fired after 1980 but somehow kept his job. If he had a defense in 1983, maybe he wouldn't be speared for his teammate, forest gregg
@marcomcdowell8861
@marcomcdowell8861 Жыл бұрын
Thoroughly surprised that they threw flags at that 7:17 mark. That was a real deal forearm to the chops, and the refs called it even in '69. Wow.
@DolFan316
@DolFan316 Жыл бұрын
I am and forever will be convinced (yes, even in future lifetimes) that Lombardi "retired" because he knew the Packers' core had become so old a collapse after the '67 season was inevitable and would ruin his legacy. Sure is strange how he suddenly wanted to coach again just 2 years later.
@DolFan316
@DolFan316 Жыл бұрын
@@user-hs7qf5vv2n Facing a George Allen-coached team in the playoffs didn't hurt either. Aside from the one Super Bowl Allen went one and done in his other six playoff appearances.
@barbaracaroll
@barbaracaroll Жыл бұрын
The Rams defeated the Packers in 1967 and they were winning the playoff game too before the roof fell in mostly because of the Packers experience and the Rams being a young team
@kevinmadden1645
@kevinmadden1645 Жыл бұрын
Fortunately they started to determine playoff sites based on won-lost records and head-ro-head competition in 1975.
@johnpoole3871
@johnpoole3871 Жыл бұрын
Coach Lombardi was always having to work miracles to overcome the mediocrity of general manager Lombardi.
@kevinmadden1645
@kevinmadden1645 Жыл бұрын
@@barbaracaroll The Rams were younger but not necessarily a young team . Remember that George Allen had no use for rookies and younger players . In 1972 he was caught trading away draft choices he no longer had.
@DolFan316
@DolFan316 Жыл бұрын
Today the cool kids would describe that exact same situation as, "Tell me I'm not starting without telling me I'm not starting."
@CTubeMan
@CTubeMan Жыл бұрын
You thought his passer rating at 7:55 was well above average, but it seems normal to me.
@praetorian9823
@praetorian9823 Жыл бұрын
Context… literally 10 seconds before that point. In the context of that era, he was *way* above the average passer’s QBR. But it’s not surprising it falls short compared to now where almost if not every offense is mainly reliant on passing instead of running.
@stantheman9072
@stantheman9072 Жыл бұрын
@@praetorian9823Exactly. Defenses today are not allowed to do anywhere near as much to disrupt or demolish the receivers as they did in Starr’s era. It’s a VERY different game now.
@CTubeMan
@CTubeMan Жыл бұрын
@@praetorian9823Watch that portion again and you’ll see why I said his rating was “normal”.
@flyinelvis69
@flyinelvis69 Жыл бұрын
I feel honoured to be the 229th oerson to watch this video. It's better than spiking the ball on every single play
@Jason_Maier
@Jason_Maier Жыл бұрын
1. That shot at 7:19 .... even by 1969 standards, that would be an obvious Unnecessary Roughness penalty. 2. Ah, the post Lombardi/Pre Favre era; when the Packers were (to borrow a Urinating Tree expression) a Lolcow franchise: 2a. Going through five head coaches with diminishing winning % each time (listed below with their regular season records): Phil Bengtson (1968-1970) [20-21-1] Dan Devine (1971-1974) [25-27-4] Bart Starr (1975-1983) [53-76-3] Forrest Gregg (1984-1987) [25-37-1] Lindy Infante (1988-1991) [24-40] 2b. Only one division title (1972); one other playoff appearance (1982; but had division standings been counted, the Packers would have won the NFC Central with a 5-3-1 record) and only three other seasons with winning records (1969, 1978 and 1989) 2c. Bad personnel decisions like trading five draft picks to the LA Rams in 1974 for an over the hill John Hadl (one of the Rams draft picks ended up being Hall of Fame offensive tackle Jackie Slater). And of course, taking Tony Mandarich in 1989 over future Hall of Famers Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas, Deion Sanders and Steve Atwater. 2d. In 1983, the Packers set an NFL record that still stands by playing five overtime games that year 3. But some bright spots were in said Lolcow era: 3a. The 1972 NFC Central Champs had the dual running attack of John Brockington & MacArthur Lane; and rookie kicker Chester Marcol lead the NFL in scoring. 3b. In 1983, they won a shootout on Monday Night Football against the Redskins 48-47. 3c. The 1989 "Cardiac Pack" won four games by one point.
@marcus813
@marcus813 Жыл бұрын
I'm now wondering what the point of having Starr dress out in Baltimore was. Bengston really botched this.
@CTubeMan
@CTubeMan Жыл бұрын
This unofficial Official Jaguar Gator 9 historian will remind everyone you made the following videos about Phil Bengtson: 1. How he alienated Herb Adderley so badly Adderley threatened to retire than play for the Packers again. 2. Two videos about his bizarre stint as interim coach of the Patriots, and how he suspended Carl Garrett. You also made a video about Don Horn and his disastrous game against the Packers after they traded him to the Broncos. And since I see someone mentioned Frank Gansz, you made a video about why he continued to play an injured Bill Kenney at quarterback instead of Frank Seurer when the Chiefs hosted the Steelers in 1987. Gansz’s logic in that video resembled that of Bengtson in this video.
@Fireyninjadog
@Fireyninjadog Жыл бұрын
It's just richie Pettibone replacing joe gibbs in 1993. From 1969-1992, the skins had only 3 lossing seasons, and 3 super bowl wins. Pettibone went 4-12, Washington's worst season since 1963
@docnoc66
@docnoc66 Жыл бұрын
And Bengston briefly was the coach of the patriots in the 1970s
@adamzielinski2001
@adamzielinski2001 Жыл бұрын
I think that the greatest coach ever is Frank Ganz 😂 or maybe the ghost 👻 of Joe Walton!
@nathanjm000
@nathanjm000 Жыл бұрын
That 105 rating would have been just 0.5 off leading the league in 2022
@CTubeMan
@CTubeMan Жыл бұрын
Do we know who the 396th person was to watch this video?
@TheCollierjr
@TheCollierjr Жыл бұрын
Paul Brown Is the greatest Coach in NFL History.
@yeildo1492
@yeildo1492 11 ай бұрын
7:18 Dick, that is cheap! Starr was indeed the best QB of the 60s. Not Unitas. Keith Dunnavant, backed up with stats from Kerry Byrne, makes a great case for Starr being the GOAT of the NFL.
@robd2721
@robd2721 Жыл бұрын
Who was Vince P.O.'d at in the beginning? Doesnt look like a player, as they can be seen walking off in the BG.
@jacobo9611
@jacobo9611 5 ай бұрын
Someone is still angry the Packers won the first two Super Bowls (OP)
@AnimalClans
@AnimalClans Жыл бұрын
I feel honored to be the first one to view this video!
@adambonesaw3689
@adambonesaw3689 Жыл бұрын
Damn I wish that was me
@runrafarunthebestintheworld
@runrafarunthebestintheworld Жыл бұрын
@@adambonesaw3689 😅
@michaelhankes7587
@michaelhankes7587 5 ай бұрын
So Starr never actually said "My coach is an idiot"? If true putting words into someone's mouth is not good journalism.
@orbyfan
@orbyfan Жыл бұрын
The name was Bengtson, not Bengston. Lombardi didn't retire from the game after the second Super Bowl win; he continued for another year as the Packers' general manager, and named Bengtson as his coaching successor. There's no such word as "reaggravate."
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