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Bronkosaurus
Issue date: November 24, 1997 Big backs were a part of the NFL in its infancy, but when you talk about really big backs, you have to start with Bronko Nagurski. He came into the league in 1930, when a normal-sized lineman weighed about 210 pounds and it was not uncommon to find some at less than 200. Nagurski went 225, and later in his career he got up to 238. The NFL had never seen such size in a ballcarrier. Add to that Nagurski's remarkably quick takeoff speed and his desire to punish the people who tried to tackle him, and you had a truly formidable weapon.
Five years later I asked a former Chicago Bears teammate, quarterback Sid Luckman, about Nagurski. "A monster," Luckman said. "The neck, the hands. They measured him for a championship ring in 1943, when he made his comeback, and his ring size was 19 1/2." I watched film of Nagurski. He would get into rages. He would attack people, both offensively and defensively, where he played end or backed up the line. After I had read all those quotes about how he was impossible for one man to stop, one thing puzzled me. Where were the big numbers? He averaged less than 10 carries a game. The Bears' media guide credits him with only one 100-yard afternoon over a nine-year career. I asked him about that. "[George] Halas stockpiled backs," he said, "and he believed in spreading it around. Plus he wanted to keep me fresh for defense, where I'd put in a full afternoon. How many of today's 1,000-yard runners would like to spend half the game playing defense?" Dr. Z's Top 10 Big Backs | Phat Backs Photo Gallery
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