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My favorite teams
McDLT
I still remember the day I got the Atari as one my the happiest days of my lifeThe Atari 2600 was the shit!
I was 12.
For the old timers.......
I watched the game on a TV with a cathode ray tube.
We didn't use the phone during a game, because the cord wouldn't reach the TV
No way to look up stats until the newspaper published them the next day
If you didn't record the game with a VCR, there was no way to replay it. DVDs weren't invented yet
I recorded the Super Bowl Shuffle on cassette from the radio to play on my boom box
Big hair was in, and the mall was full
Gas and cigs were under a buck, and a kid like me could buy them from a machine
Computers were expensive as ****, and couldn't do shit
Chevy Camaro. Pontiac Firebird, and Mustang GT were the coolest cars
You could get a big ass pizza for under $10
What else ya got?
dominant is the perfect adjective to describe the O-line back then......sorry to say that probably half the posters have never seen that on a Bears team.Sad to say, this was also the last time we had such a dominant offensive line.
It truly is amazing how that part of the city has been cleaned up. I hadn't been in that part of the city for a couple decades, and in '94 I went to a Bulls game. I was astonished at what I saw! I could not believe I was in the same neighborhood! I had no idea it was cleaned up. Of course, that's a good thing. People and fans who don't remember that neighborhood, 'back in the day', probably can never believe what it used to be, no matter how many times one explains it. It had to have been the ugliest & most dangerous part of the city. Life's journey is so unpredictable in what will occur.It's wild when I'm around there now and see how much it's changed. I was hanging with friend in West Garfield Park walking around at night like it's nothing. I'd at least have to carry a shank back in the day to do that.
The improvement of the city is pretty amazing, IMO. You'll see drunk coeds walking alone on streets where you'd once find dead hookers. There's now coffee shops in neighborhoods that were once overrun by gangs.
A quarter in machines in a few public places. Mainly in not so good restaurants. Probably to bring in customers.......lol.......Put in the quarter and turn the handle one full turn, and it dropped down. In a wrapping of course.....lol..how much were condoms back then?!
I was sorry to see him leave, but Rivera was a great replacement. So da Bears didn't lose much. If anything.And free agency was in it's infancy. I remember Wilbur Marshall leaving for Washington and thinking....Hey you can't do that. You belong to the Bears
Indeed. Everything around there has changed. The Circle campus and the area around it is very much improved.It truly is amazing how that part of the city has been cleaned up. I hadn't been in that part of the city for a couple decades, and in '94 I went to a Bulls game. I was astonished at what I saw! I could not believe I was in the same neighborhood! I had no idea it was cleaned up. Of course, that's a good thing. People and fans who don't remember that neighborhood, 'back in the day', probably can never believe what it used to be, no matter how many times one explains it. It had to have been the ugliest & most dangerous part of the city. Life's journey is so unpredictable in what will occur.
Could you imagine Fuller, Tomczack, or Flutie playing behind this line?dominant is the perfect adjective to describe the O-line back then......sorry to say that probably half the posters have never seen that on a Bears team.
And the Bears played in the NFC Central with Tampa Bay in the division. There was only 28 teams and Seattle played in the AFC.Just to keep it football related
Back then it was a 16 game season, no bye weeks
The draft was 12 rounds
No 2 point conversions
Play clock was 30 seconds
The good old days when there were 3 trash teams in the divisionAnd the Bears played in the NFC Central with Tampa Bay in the division. There was only 28 teams and Seattle played in the AFC.
Fuller....lol.....forgot all about him...for good reason......literally a statue AND he wasn't any good by any stretch of the imagination.....he was a 1st Rd pick by KC, believe it or not.Could you imagine Fuller, Tomczack, or Flutie playing behind this line?
McMahon would be in a wheelchair by mid season.
Tampa Bay also played in the AFC for 1 year...I believe. They switched Seattle and TB for some reason. Twice I believe. Very strange.And the Bears played in the NFC Central with Tampa Bay in the division. There was only 28 teams and Seattle played in the AFC.
We won 4 games with him throwing 1 TD and 5 INTs.Fuller....lol.....forgot all about him...for good reason......literally a statue AND he wasn't any good by any stretch of the imagination.....he was a 1st Rd pick by KC, believe it or not.
No way? but I believe you. I must have been drunk as a skunk during those games.....lol....We won 4 games with him throwing 1 TD and 5 INTs.
And all of it cost less than $12I could literally eat 4 whoppers, 2 large McDonald's fries, and super big gulp from 7/11.
The salesman at the Tandy store told me I could add a20 MB external hard drive to my Radio Shack computer that would be sufficient to “run a small business “!For the old timers.......
I watched the game on a TV with a cathode ray tube.
We didn't use the phone during a game, because the cord wouldn't reach the TV
No way to look up stats until the newspaper published them the next day
If you didn't record the game with a VCR, there was no way to replay it. DVDs weren't invented yet
I recorded the Super Bowl Shuffle on cassette from the radio to play on my boom box
Big hair was in, and the mall was full
Gas and cigs were under a buck, and a kid like me could buy them from a machine
Computers were expensive as ****, and couldn't do shit
Chevy Camaro. Pontiac Firebird, and Mustang GT were the coolest cars
You could get a big ass pizza for under $10
What else ya got?