ALL-TIME FRANCHISE FOOTBALL
Strat-O-Matic’s Special 40th
Anniversary Offer
By Glenn Guzzo
Forty years ago Strat-O-Matic brought such superstars as Joe Namath and Gale Sayers to our tabletops for the first time. Soon, those greats – and nearly 1,500 more – return to our homes in the form of the game company’s new All-Time Franchise Football sets.
These one-of-a-kind rosters capture the entirety of National Football League history by rating every Hall of Fame player and hundreds of other stars from 28 NFL franchises, plus assorted others – 30 teams in all.
The players rated on cards and for the computer include 390 carded skill players, 13 per team, akin to other Strat-O-Matic Pro Football card sets.
The carded players will be published on heavier, more colorful stock, similar to the recent Hockey Hall of Fame set, Strat-O-Matic creator Hal Richman said.
The teams will be sold in six, five-team sets (three AFC sets and three NFC sets), permitting gamers to match their purchases to their pocketbooks. A discount will be offered to those who want all the teams, Richman added.
Based on
career statistics normalized for era, the sets will include only players who
retired before the 2007 season.
Historic-season researcher Mike Kane, who is assembling the rosters and rating the players, reports that each player will be assigned to the team for whom he played the most games.
That means
the Chicago Bears will have to choose between Walter Payton and Gale Sayers at
running back, and between Dick Butkus and Mike
Singletary at linebacker.
“The 28
franchises are all of the current franchises except the
Texans, Ravens, Panthers and Jaguars, who would not have had enough players,”
Kane explained. “The other two teams will be comprised of players from defunct
teams, Hall of Famers who couldn’t make their
original team roster (such as George McAfee of the Bears nosed out by Payton
and Sayers) and other players from the early eras who might not be otherwise
included in a Strat-O-Matic football set.”
Kane
filled in the blanks with these details:
n
These will not be teams
full of 6-rated blockers and defenders. Only Hall-of-Famers
will receive 6s (there are only about 225 HOFers and
only 50-60 defensive HOFers). The remaining players
will be evaluated in comparison to other players at the same position (a player
who has received
n
SOM will recommend using
the draft defenses in the computer game but team defensive cards will be
created.
n
Player stats will be
normalized to their specific era and then against NFL history to account for
the changes in style of play throughout the years. This will help players from
the ‘30s and ‘40s compete with those from the ‘90s and later.
“There
will be some interesting coaching decisions,” Kane disclosed, citing the
Chicago and Dallas examples above. Others include
The
anticipation builds thinking of some “interesting combinations,” as Kane calls
them:
Dan
Marino will have a running game with Larry Csonka and
Mercury Morris in
Dan
Fouts will throw to three Chargers Hall of Fame
receivers – Lance Alworth, Charlie Joiner and Kellen Winslow.
The
Browns can field an entire unit of
Payton
and Sayers will run behind one of the all-time blockers, Bronco Nagurski.
Although
the number of Hall of Fame defenders means an average of about two 6-rated
players per team, Pittsburgh has at least five (maybe six) – DLs Joe Greene and Ernie Stautner,
LBs Jack Ham and Jack Lambert and DBs
Mel Blount and two-way HB Bill Dudley.