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re: Alltime Saints Jersey # Countdown to First Preseason Game

Posted on 5/30/12 at 3:32 pm to
Posted by goatmilker
Castle Anthrax
Member since Feb 2009
64196 posts
Posted on 5/30/12 at 3:32 pm to
CST down? WTF
Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 5/30/12 at 4:49 pm to
quote:

CST down? WTF


CST said they aren't doing sports anymore because they don't want to compete with ESPN and FoxSports.
Posted by goatmilker
Castle Anthrax
Member since Feb 2009
64196 posts
Posted on 5/30/12 at 5:00 pm to
Thanks and...
Crap.
Hope someone carries pre season in NW fl.
Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 5/31/12 at 6:01 am to
A 2nd round pick (44th overall) out of Ohio State, #65 LaCharles Bentley. Played and started 57 games for the Saints before leaving in free agency to go home to the Browns. He hurt his knee during training camp that year and had 4 surgeries and then got a staph infection and never played again. He made two pro bowls while playing in NOLA. Once in 2003 as a guard and once in 2005 as a center.



This post was edited on 5/31/12 at 7:15 am
Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 6/2/12 at 8:22 am to
Brad M. Edelman

A 2nd round draft pick (30th overall) out of Missouri. Played all 8 years of his career with the Saints. Played in 90 games and started 87 of them. Made the Pro Bowl in 1987.





From Wiki:
quote:

His current occupation is photographer, and he currently resides in New Orleans' French Quarter.
After retiring from a pro-bowl career with the New Orleans Saints, Brad returned to his roots: the art of photography. He now owns and operates Brad Edelman Photography LINK /. He specializes in commercial and fine arts photography.
He also does sports analysis for WDSU-TV in New Orleans. In that capacity, Edelman was part of the team that told the story of the Super Bowl Champion New Orleans Saints.
He’s also a multi-talented performer working in films, radio and theater. He’s performed with such artists as Aaron Neville and The Radiators. He’s sung the national anthem for NFL and Tulane football games.
Posted by blueslover
deeper than deep south
Member since Sep 2007
22792 posts
Posted on 6/2/12 at 10:42 am to
https://www.bradedelman.com/index.php

some good work



nice video piece




2005-
His craft was once trading jabs with 300-pound defenders, protecting the quarterbacks behind him from 1982-1990 as a top-notch offensive lineman for the New Orleans Saints. And while football aficionados often cite the creative genius of an essentially brutish game, even in his playing days Brad Edelman had the heart and vision of an artist, despite it being covered in a mountain of protective gear.

No longer the hulking subject of the long-lensed cameramen who roam NFL sidelines,
Edelman has developed into one of the area’s most admired photographers since his retirement from the gridiron. He now employs those same over-sized hands and the keen attention to detail that served him so well as a Pro Bowl guard for the Saints in an irrefutable artistic endeavor: Creating lasting images with fine photography.

Edelman is now a fixture in the fine-arts scene in New Orleans, with two high-end gallery shows in as many years. His latest effort, Tableau d’un Histoire, lovingly captures the lifestyle and Barracks Street residence of George Valentine Dureau, the noted artist, photographer and Crescent City aristocrat. That Portfolio is currently hanging in the ultra-chic Aldridge-Leatherman Galerie des Arts in Exchange Alley.

“I wasn’t interested in shooting George as a baggy pants comedian” said Edelman. “I wanted to shoot the George that no one sees.”

Dureau and his fashionable nest have been photographed before, but it was always with contrived poses or simple images of the artist’s famous canvasses. Edelman took a more inspired approach to the opportunity and came away with another admirer.

“Brad caught me and the place undressed, so to speak, said Dureau. “And he shot it from way up in the air that no one else, including me, would ever conceive. Brad is a physical, poetic genius with that camera.”

Physical indeed, Edelman stands well over 6-feet tall. Admired not only for his artistic talent, but also for his sheer size, he played the Giant in a Contemporary Arts Center production of “Jack and the Beanstalk.”

---------------------
nice life after football story
Posted by blueslover
deeper than deep south
Member since Sep 2007
22792 posts
Posted on 6/3/12 at 10:25 am to
tough one, Hill on merit



John S. Hill was an All-American center on Lehigh's football team in 1971. The following spring he graduated with his bachelors in engineering and was selected by the New York Giants in the sixth round of the 1972 NFL draft. In 1975, he joined the New Orleans Saints organization where he played starting center and tackle until 1984. Hill finished his career with the San Francisco 49ers in 1985. He was honored for his impressive career with the Saints in 1992 when he was inducted into the organization's Hall of Fame. He spent nine seasons as starting center and four seasons as co-captain with the Saints.

In 2006, Hill was inducted into the Saints' All-40th Anniversary Team.


2010 where are they now story
He considers himself one of the lucky ones, being able to literally walk away from the game with no lingering injuries or other long-term health issues.

Hill, who runs an insurance agency in Raleigh, N.C., has little desire to see his squad win in person. He'll stay home to watch, thank you.

''I get asked [about going] a lot,'' he admitted. ''I was a player and now I'm a fan, but not a go-to-the-game fan. It's nice to watch it on TV and have the commentary and instant replay and enjoy it that way.''


today->

The Green Bay Packers named Jerry Fontenot tight ends coach on February 13, 2012.

Fontenot will be entering his seventh season on Green Bay’s coaching staff in 2012, having tutored the team’s running backs this past season. He served as assistant offensive line coach from 2007-10 and as offensive assistant in 2006. In 2011, Fontenot tutored second-year RB James Starks (578 yards) and veteran RB Ryan Grant (559) as they became the first Packers tandem to each rush for 550-plus yards in a season since Edgar Bennett and Dorsey Levens did so in 1996. Also under Fontenot’s direction in 2011, John Kuhn became the first Green Bay fullback to be selected to the Pro Bowl since William Henderson in 2004. Fontenot played center in the NFL for 16 seasons with three different teams (Chicago, 1989-96; New Orleans, 1997-2003; Cincinnati, 2004).

2011 SEASON BIO:

Began his tenure in Green Bay as a coaching intern in the summer of 2006 and remained with the team throughout the season to assist with the offensive line; elevated to full-time status as assistant offensive line coach, Jan. 15, 2007, and then promoted again to running backs coach on Feb. 25, 2011.
Enters his 22nd year in the National Football League.
A longtime center, played 239 NFL games with the Bears, Saints and Bengals from 1989-2004, proving to be extremely durable as a player. Originally a third-round draft choice by Chicago in 1989, began a starting streak of 106 games in 1991, then authored a streak of 80 straight starts from 1999-2003.
Started at center during Mike McCarthy’s five years as New Orleans offensive coordinator (2000-04).
Played every position on the offensive line at Texas A&M, twice earning honorable mention All-American.
Born in Lafayette, La., Fontenot was a four-sport star at Lafayette High School, earning all-state honors twice in football, finishing as state runner-up twice in the discus, and winning a state championship in baseball.
Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 6/4/12 at 10:17 am to




Joel 'check out that 'stache' Hildenberg. Drafted in the 4th round by the Saints in 84, played until 93, started 97 games at center and had one pro bowl apperance in 92.

Interestingly enough, he's also coaching with the packers.



Joined the Packers on Feb. 25, 2011.
Enters his first season as an NFL coach after working with the Packers last year during the spring and training camp as a coaching intern.
Played in 142 games as an offensive lineman with New Orleans (1984-93) and was inducted into the Saints Hall of Fame in 2006.
Was a two-time All-Big Ten choice at the University of Iowa (1982-83) and earned second-team All-America honors in ’83.
Father, Jerry, earned first-team All-America honors at Iowa in 1953, and brother, Jay, was a seven-time Pro Bowler with the Chicago Bears and Cleveland Browns.
Joel Hilgenberg enters his first season with the Packers in 2011 as offensive quality control coach, his first full-time coaching job after 10 seasons as an NFL offensive lineman.

Named to his position by Head Coach Mike McCarthy on Feb. 25, 2011, Hilgenberg worked as a coaching intern for the Packers during training camp, mini-camp and a portion of OTAs in 2010, primarily assisting offensive line coach James Campen and (then) assistant offensive line coach Jerry Fontenot. 

Hilgenberg spent his entire 10-year playing career with the New Orleans Saints (1984-93), appearing in 142 games as a center/guard. In 1992, he started all 16 contests and was part of a line that allowed an NFL-low 15 sacks on the season on his way to earning Pro Bowl recognition at center.

Hilgenberg played in all 16 games with 14 starts at center in 1991 and yielded just one sack all season, including a streak of 10 consecutive games without allowing one. In addition to playing on the offensive line, he also handled long-snapping duties for the Saints throughout his career. In 2006, he was inducted into the Saints Hall of Fame.

Hilgenberg was selected by New Orleans in the fourth round (94th overall) of the 1984 NFL Draft out of the University of Iowa, where he earned second-team All-America honors in 1983. He was a first-team All-Big Ten selection as a junior and senior as he started every game in 1982-83 for a Hawkeyes team that went 17-7 and played in two bowl games over that span. Hilgenberg earned his degree from Iowa in interdepartmental studies.

Hilgenberg comes from a long line of Iowa centers. His father, Jerry, earned first-team All-America honors at Iowa as a center in 1953 and was drafted in the fourth round by the Cleveland Browns in 1954. His brothers, Jim and Jay, also played center at Iowa. Jay went on to play 13 seasons (1981-93) in the NFL with Chicago (1981-91), Cleveland (1992) and New Orleans (1993), earning Pro Bowl recognition seven times. Hilgenberg’s late uncle, Wally, played linebacker in the NFL for 16 seasons with Detroit (1964-66) and Minnesota (1967-79).

Hilgenberg was born in Iowa City, Iowa, He and his wife, Jeanie, have a daughter, Anna, 11. Hilgenberg enjoys upland field hunting and golfing.
Posted by MikeTIGER83
Lake Charles Area
Member since Feb 2012
382 posts
Posted on 6/5/12 at 2:16 pm to
Steve Korte



Korte played guard and center for the New Orleans Saints for eight seasons (1983-1990), was a second-round draft choice of the Saints out of Arkansas in 1983 NFL Draft. Longest tenured #60 and he was drafted the year I was born...
This post was edited on 6/5/12 at 2:19 pm
Posted by Bayou
CenLA
Member since Feb 2005
36775 posts
Posted on 6/5/12 at 6:25 pm to
Brian de la Puente

Posted by blueslover
deeper than deep south
Member since Sep 2007
22792 posts
Posted on 6/5/12 at 8:21 pm to
Korte, regular WVUE contributor

Son was LSU FB and in GB camp 2008, UFL 2009
Posted by LooseCannon22282
Mobile
Member since May 2008
33704 posts
Posted on 6/6/12 at 12:24 am to


Keith Mitchell 1997-2001 as a Saint.

373 tackles
18.5 sacks
9 forced fumbles
4 interceptions

had a Pro Bowl appearance in 2000

Remember his interception return for a TD against the Cardinals that year? I think the Cardinals were running a quick out to one of their WR's. The QB fired a bullet that Mitchell batted into the air and intercepted and ran 40-50 yards or so for the TD

That was during the six game winning streak. At the time, the Saints improved to 5-3 and came back home to demolish the hapless 49ers the following week and would improve to 6-3.
Posted by blueslover
deeper than deep south
Member since Sep 2007
22792 posts
Posted on 6/6/12 at 3:17 pm to


apparently he is now a yoga guru

Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 6/6/12 at 4:43 pm to
quote:

apparently he is now a yoga guru


Interesting.

I always thought he was underrated. Not a "Great" player. But solid.
Posted by Mr Breeze
The Lunatic Fringe
Member since Dec 2010
5933 posts
Posted on 6/6/12 at 8:22 pm to
quote:

2005-
His craft was once trading jabs with 300-pound defenders, protecting the quarterbacks behind him from 1982-1990 as a top-notch offensive lineman for the New Orleans Saints. And while football aficionados often cite the creative genius of an essentially brutish game, even in his playing days Brad Edelman had the heart and vision of an artist, despite it being covered in a mountain of protective gear.


Nice story didn't know this about Edelman.

Saw him a few times in restaurants during his playing days a real gent one of my all time favorite Saints.
Posted by Zipfer2022
Member since Nov 2011
3736 posts
Posted on 6/6/12 at 11:33 pm to
This next man needs no introduction. A six year starter at WLB and a man that will seemingly be entrenched as the starter for at least the next 10 years. Owner of the sickest barbed wire/tribal tat that ever existed.





Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 6/8/12 at 9:26 am to















Who? You know who!
This post was edited on 6/8/12 at 2:31 pm
Posted by Suntiger
BR or somewhere else
Member since Feb 2007
32882 posts
Posted on 6/9/12 at 5:14 pm to
Two Dome Patrolers back to back. Nice!!!











3rd round pick for the Saints in 1986 from Georgia Tech. Played 7 years before going to Detroit and then Oakland. Started 89 games for the Saints and had 76.5 sacks, 354 tackles, 3 interceptions and 1 touchdown for us.
He made the Pro Bowl from 1989-1993, was all pro in 1991 & 1992 and was the AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1991.
This post was edited on 6/9/12 at 5:23 pm
Posted by LooseCannon22282
Mobile
Member since May 2008
33704 posts
Posted on 6/9/12 at 5:44 pm to
quote:

AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1991.


He had 17 sacks that year. Here is an old video from NFL Films on Swilling.

1991 Defensive Player of the Year
Posted by goatmilker
Castle Anthrax
Member since Feb 2009
64196 posts
Posted on 6/9/12 at 7:08 pm to


Many say R Jackson made his career and a bit of that is true.

But loved to watch this guys motor. I wish alot of you guys could have seen him!

SWILL!!!!
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