feelosofer
#ninergang
Brock does look like the most generic white man I've ever seen he's like a Sims character
He looks like one of the generic faces in NFL2K5
Brock does look like the most generic white man I've ever seen he's like a Sims character
You know what. I think it's weird also because Zach and Purdy don't see to have face hair. Doesn't look like they can grow it either. Guess why I think they look like dykes. That or like a kid in a grown man's body. Weird either wayHe looks like one of the generic faces in NFL2K5
JOE MONTANA WAS in the York family suite for the NFC Championship Game. When the 49ers trailed Detroit 24-7 at halftime, it was tense and dispirited. Lynch left his suite and went to the locker room, which he never had done, just wanting to be closer to the team. The Yorks had given Montana a special game ball for being an honorary captain, and then everyone looked at Joe to say something. Montana is not only accustomed to everyone looking at him at in tense situations, but he's accustomed to thriving in them. What would Montana say? He decided to reference two games, neither of which were among his four Super Bowl wins: The Cotton Bowl in 1979 and The Catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game, the two comebacks that etched his legend.
"Two of my worst games," he said.
People laughed, but Montana wasn't trying to be funny. He was trying to explain something bigger than all of them. He reminded everyone that most people don't remember those games that way. They remember them as two of his best performances, prime examples of why he retired as the greatest ever. He had a gift: He knew how to believe. He knew how to engineer those remarkable moments in sports when we watch a team and a coach and a quarterback transform in real time, shedding both myth and truth, and entering a new realm. Montana told the room that the NFC Championship Game wasn't over, that sometimes the worst games end up with the best finishes.
"That's what Brock is gonna do today," Montana said.
Nobody knew it at the time, but down in the 49ers' locker room, Shanahan was saying something similar, speaking in the language of grit and resilience. That was new. Usually 49ers halftimes are more intellectual: adjustments and strategy, appealing to the mind more than the heart. This time, Shanahan wasn't standing before his players talking design or scheme. He was straight Lombardi: "It's only 17 points. We're not going out like this." Coaches say stuff like that all the time, of course. But the 49ers bought it. They could see the earnestness in his eyes, the belief, something visceral, not only because Shanahan believed and not only because he has no poker face. He wanted this, and maybe for the first time, he hoped the wanting was enough.
yo @Bryan Danielson you read this from ESPN's piece on Kyle? Joe Cool still has it
Kyle Shanahan will not be denied
Laser focused on finally winning a Super Bowl, the 49ers coach is ready to prove his doubters wrong.www.espn.com
Brock Perry
I was reading how Mike Shanahan would storm into unit meetings when a coach would fukk something upI thought dudes were clowning about Kyle being big brother listening in on everyone at the facilities, but it's actually true
That article in the athletic really puts shyt in perspective.