Aircrew
Well-known member
This is awesome.
This is awesome.
Don’t recall the exact details but it had something to do with the NFL assigning specific #s to positions.Fun watch but how did he have two different numbers? #44 and #55 with
the Hawks?
He was allowed to wear 44 in the preseason but was forced to wear a league appropriate number such as 55 in the regular season. Ken Behring brought up the issue in a meeting with the owners and the word was he was laughed at. It’s funny that in the end he was right as players now can wear any number they want pretty much.Boz wore #44 in college and wanted to wear it in the NFL. They were pretty strict back then about jersey numbers. LBs had to be in the 50's or 90's. Boz whined about it for a while and even made those stupid looking "Monster DB #44" shirts, like the league would accept that he was a "big safety" or something.
So Boz went with 55 for his career, even though he said it made him feel fat.![]()
I never even heard that!Boz wore #44 in college and wanted to wear it in the NFL. They were pretty strict back then about jersey numbers. LBs had to be in the 50's or 90's. Boz whined about it for a while and even made those stupid looking "Monster DB #44" shirts, like the league would accept that he was a "big safety" or something.
So Boz went with 55 for his career, even though he said it made him feel fat.![]()
This is what I saw then because you could see in clips that he was wearingHe was allowed to wear 44 in the preseason but was forced to wear a league appropriate number such as 55 in the regular season. Ken Behring brought up the issue in a meeting with the owners and the word was he was laughed at. It’s funny that in the end he was right as players now can wear any number they want pretty much.
What I remember most about him was how he was the guy who was able to chase down Elway.The national narrative about Bosworth was/is that he was a bust. The end.
Not exactly.
In his rookie season, prior to his shoulder injury, Bosworth was very good. It would have been one thing if he had pulled a Jamarcus Russell or a Ryan Leaf, but he didn't. He balled out year 1 and then injured his shoulder at the end of the season and didn't have it medically addressed like he should have. When healthy, The Boz was a stud. I remember it very well.
It's kind of interesting that he crafted this "bad guy" persona so well that everyone believed it and as a result genuinely hated him. And when he was forced to retire early the mob was all too eager to label him a bust and conveniently ignore his solid play prior to injury. All because of a bad boy character he built to market himself and build a brand. In today's world, that's celebrated and rewarded. Interesting.