Jim Brown vs. Walter Payton was the NFL's Jordan vs. LeBron
The roots began back in 1957. The Cleveland Browns drafted the running back out of Syracuse. Brown became an instant sensation. Teams and fans had never seen a physical specimen like him before. The mixture of power and speed was unprecedented. He was a 21st-century athlete playing in the mid-20th century. Think about that. In nine years as a pro, he went to nine Pro Bowls, won three MVP awards and captured a championship in 1964. He retired at age 30 with 12,312 rushing yard, 2,499 receiving and 126 touchdowns. Other running backs got close to those numbers but it took them four or five more seasons to do it. That's how dominant Brown was. [video ]Then Payton came around.
Like LeBron, he brought something different. He didn't have blazing speed. What he had was know-how. He could do everything on the football field and do it well. Despite playing on mostly less talented teams and never under a Hall of Fame head coach, he racked up 16,726 rushing yards, 4,538 receiving yards, and scored 133 touchdowns. Eight of those were as a passer. Payton was a nine-time Pro Bowler, MVP in 1977 and won a Super Bowl in 1985. [video ] Football fans of that era were ready to declare Payton the best ever. As with Jordan, the older generation simply refused to even entertain that possibility. Thus the raging arguments began. It's impossible to comprehend how it might've been had social media existed back in those days. Probably every bit as heated as Jordan vs. LeBron is now. What made it so funny is Brown made it clear he was a big Payton fan. While fans raged about which was better, the two men held a mutual respect and liking for one another. Maybe that, more than anything is the lesson to take from this. Rather than waste time debating who was better, sit back and enjoy what the two men accomplished. Both sides will always have their hardcore supporters. Don't sour the witnessing of great play taking place with such pointless things that will never get a definitive answer.Comments
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