JoeSportsFan

Any 20 or 30 something man worth his salt knows who the best video game athletes of all time are.  We’ve all told and been told tales of running around and through people with Tecmo Bowl Bo Jackson or getting knocked unconscious by Mike Tyson in Super Punchout.   In telling these fables, we sometimes tend to ignore some of the true greats in the world of video game athletics.  Every team needs its role players right? 

We’ve decided to bypass the icons and focus on the lesser known video game legends.  These are the guys who fly under the radar, but have had equally distinguished cyber careers.   

Paste – Bases Loaded
paste_01While other baseball video games may have called on Jose Canseco, Mark McGwire, Dwight Gooden and Tito Landrum to serve as their heroes, Bases Loaded was forced to turn to the star of Jersey who had nibbled at the heels of Roger Maris with his 60 HR’s in one season.  Paste was the fictional baseball equivalent of Pele, a star who could be recognized with only one word.  

And in true superstar fashion, if you drilled him in the game, he always charged the mound.  Fun for all ages.    

The Beast – Evander Holyfield’s “Real Deal” Boxing 
In the early stages, “cheat codes” on video games gave you 30 extra men.  By the time Evander Holyfield’s “Real Deal” Boxing came out for Sega, cheat codes turned a normal fighter into a green monster with orange hair that looked like a deranged Lou Ferrigno in boxing trunks.  Real Deal was one of the first games where you could create your own character.  And with that came the revelation that if you typed in “The Beast” as the boxer’s name, you created the ultimate fighting machine.  The Beast walks away with the title of “Best Mutant Boxer in a Video Game”.  

fatsicehockeyThe Fats – Nintendo Ice Hockey 
Picture Tony Siragusa in a hockey get-up and on skates and you have the “Fat Guy” on Nintendo Hockey.  The Fats weren’t chasing down many loose pucks, but if they got control, they had a devastating slapper and frankly, were perfectly capable of dipping the skinny guys in Honey Mustard and eating them between shifts.  

Tony Armas – RBI Baseball
So, let me get this straight, arguably the greatest sports video game of all time, features players from the all the playoff teams in 1986 and 1987, names like Kirby Puckett, Kirk Gibson, Dwight Gooden and Daryl Strawberry were included, and the player that comes out of it all as the most feared hitter? 

Tony Armas.  

The guy wasn’t even a starter in the game for the love of God, yet when you put him in and slotted him in that lineup near Dwight Evans or Bill Buckner, he teed off on every pitcher in the game as if his mustache and afro depended on it.   Bye bye, Spike Owen.  Your services are no longer required.

doubledribble_01Anyone from the corner – Double Dribble
When it came to Double Dribble, there was no one particular cyber athlete that rose above the rest.  They didn’t distinguish one player from another on the Boston Frogs, or the Chicago Crabs or whatever the hell they were called.  

As it turned out, Double Dribble was the ultimate team game.  Any player who set up camp in the top corner and launched threes became Larry Bird, Robert Horry and Jimmy Chitwood all wrapped into one.  He was utterly unstoppable.  

Jeremy Roenick and Mike Gartner – NHLPA Hockey
By the time NHLPA came around for Sega, the days of chunky, slow center iceman were long gone.  In their place were the lightning fast wingers like Roenick and Gartner who were completely uncheckable.  

If Marty McSorley would have skated up behind cyber Gartner and clocked him in the temple with his stick like he did Donald Brashear, Gartner would have smiled and continued up the ice to pull a fake one way shoot the other routine on the goalie.  It’s at that point when it becomes totally reasonable to smash your Sega controller on the ground in frustrations.  

Tyrone Wheatley – Bill Walsh College Football
Unlike Tecmo Bowl Bo Jackson, Tyrone Wheatley was a duel threat on Bill Walsh College Football.  Not only was his ‘Sweep Right’ a devastating move, but he also could drop back and throw pinpoint 50 yard bombs with the ‘Half Back Toss & Pass’,  a play that nearly drove me to commit homicide in college.  Unfortunately, at this point, EA Sports hadn’t yet developed a defense with enough AI to figure out that Tyrone was going to throw the ball over and over and over.  He was unstoppable.  

Starman – Nintendo Wrestling
If you’ve got to go toe-to-toe in the wrestling ring with guys like King Slender, Giant Panther and The Amazon you’d better be a pretty damn solid athlete, video game or not.

sodapopinskiSoda Popinksi – Mike Tyson’s Punch Out
Whether it was the vicious uppercuts, a basic communist bias or the fact that he sat and pounded vodka (aka “soda”) in the corner in between rounds, somehow Soda managed to emerge from the large shadow of cyber Mike Tyson.   

Thomas the Karate Guy – Kung Fu
Sure, it may not be a sport, but I don't know any other karate fighter who has the grapefuits to go head on with knife throwers, back flipping midgets, snakes, dragons, bee hives, orange giants, killer moths and an evil hunchback magician.  

Tom Chambers – Lakers vs. Celtics 
Nothing is quite as shocking as the sight of a 1980’s white basketball star, complete with standard issue mullet taking off from behind the three point line and throwing down a thunderous triple pump dunk.  As those who played Lakers vs. Celtics found out, in a game named after teams led by Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, it was Tom Chambers who was the most memorable.

Paperboy – Paperboy 
You probably don’t think of a paper route as a very athletic venture.  However, consider that, in addition to the general complexities of the paper route, this kid had to deal with rabid dogs chasing him down, streets lined with cars and mailboxes strategically patterned to take his head off, weak window panes that couldn’t withstand the impact of a ½ lb of rolled up paper and if that wasn’t enough, an obstacle course at the end.  

paperboy


All things considered, I’d rather be delivering pizza. 

Underappreciated Video Game Athletes was written by Josh Bacott.  He got fired from his paper route after he tried to bike-flilp over his neighbor's mailbox.  Email him, at josh@joesportsfan.com
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ryan, February 15, 2009 10:02 PM
glenn milburn(dont remember how to spell it) on madden 97 or 98. barry sanders got hurt one game and milburn went in for me me and from then on i benched sanders to get milburn in. he was unstoppable. i had 300 yard games regularly
Adam, July 28, 2008 08:07 AM
The original LT (that's Lawrence Taylor for all you youngins) in the original Tecmo Bowl. He was the only player that could block a field goal from anywhere. And honorable mention to Todd Christensen for running that one crossing route that always worked.
GZ, June 23, 2008 03:06 PM
Tim Legler in NBA Live 98, the guy never missed. Burks gets more "street cred" in RBI than most, IMHO Ruppert Jones of California is the more underrated bench player. Armas got the bench because the AL teams could not use their DH due to all pitchers batting...
Mike H., April 25, 2008 10:04 AM
The fats...definitely not underrated. Everyone knows that if you stock a whole team with fats, you can't lose. This defiance of logic was probably why we never saw Nintendo Ice Hockey II
OB, April 22, 2008 02:04 AM
It was just you...Beebe was not fast in that game (coming from a Bills fan)
Krenn, April 22, 2008 01:04 AM
Might be just me, but what I remember from Tecmo Super Bowl was Don Beebe running the WR End Around. No player could catch him (especially Leon Lett), so he'd run for 90 yards every time.
Larry Brown, April 21, 2008 09:04 PM
Leeland McElroy for Texas A
matt h, April 21, 2008 07:04 PM
Larkin from oklahoma state, ncaa basketball on snes was awesome, dude was a center and hit half court at a 75% clip, and bald bull from tyson punch out was great, any man that accepts baldness like that is a bad ass
Danny B., April 21, 2008 02:04 PM
i thought Garrison Hearst was better than Wheatley in Bill Walsh Football
son, April 21, 2008 02:04 PM
pete chilcut on tecmo super basketball *snes*
wayne, April 21, 2008 01:04 PM
Shane mosley from the original knockout kings for the n64
Chaddylove, April 21, 2008 11:04 AM
For the record, Oko was from Philly, and he was awesome. Fendy and Bay were also close in Bases Loaded.
MrPO, April 21, 2008 10:04 AM
Double Dribble!!!!! That was an awesome game! Walter Payton was also great in the first tecmo bowl.
Jon, April 21, 2008 10:04 AM
How could you not include Oh and Kagenu? They formed the heart of the order on the well-rounded Japan Robins in Baseball Stars on Nintendo.
JS, April 21, 2008 10:04 AM
"Magic Hair" from NBA Jam
kc, April 21, 2008 10:04 AM
Bases Loaded: Oko from Chicago was the best.
Bearded Mike, April 21, 2008 09:04 AM
Andrei Kirilenko in NBA Live 04 is amazing. He blocks everything. Albert Belle in MLB '95 (on Sega Gamegear) would seriously bat like .900 when you played as him and would homer just about every other at bat.
Mr. Irrelevant, April 21, 2008 09:04 AM
Oh and Glen Rice on NBA Showtime for the dreamcast or arcade him and kobe on the lakers were unstopable
Mark D, April 21, 2008 09:04 AM
Don't forget the center and nose-guard in Intellivision's NFL Football. After the ball was "snapped" they both just stayed there in their 4-point stances. You had to play around them!
Clooney, April 21, 2008 08:04 AM
Vlade Divac in NBA Live '95 was "en fuego" - you couldn't stop him. You could only hope to contain him! Dennis Rodman wasn't half bad, either.
Mr. Irrelevant, April 21, 2008 08:04 AM
God damn this has to be record for comments. What about Mark Meenahan on the Diamondbacks in MLB 98 or 97 that guy hit a home run at excatly 606 feet every single at bat. there was a guy on the Devil Rays that did the same thing. I'm pretty sure it was the year they were expansion teams.
The DRB, April 21, 2008 08:04 AM
Derrik Thomas and LT in Tecmo football. At outside LB the were unblockable!
Rob, April 21, 2008 08:04 AM
The best video game basketballer was "Air Allnight" from David Robinson's Supreme Court basketball on the Sega Genesis. When you started a game there were four teams and you would do a fantasy draft. If you were lucky enough to land the No. 1 pick then you got "Air Allnight." It sounds like an homage to Jordan but it was a blond haired white guy that hit 95% of resonable shots (any shot taken from five feet beyond the three-point line and in) and hit about 50% shot around half-court. I was able to score over 100 points in a game on more than one occasion with him.
George, April 21, 2008 07:04 AM
Someone help me out with this one! In 1995/1996 Sega came out with an NFL game. Members of our dorm each had a team to play with and a season was established. Somebody had the Giants and went to their reserve players to pick a running back. The running back was unstoppable! He was by far the fastest player in the game and almost every time the guy chose a running play, he ran for a TD! In addition to his speed, he couldn't be tackled! I can't remember the name of the RB in question, but people whined and cursed him the entire season. It was almost as if it was some sort of "cheat player". Once people saw him do this regularly, everybody tried picking crappy players from their bench with the hopes that he would be just as good. All they got was crap.
8====D, April 21, 2008 07:04 AM
John Dowd, we used to call him "Larry Ponds"
Steelermaniac, April 21, 2008 07:04 AM
How about "John Dowd" aka Barry Bonds the white version, from MVP Baseball 2005. I used to hit 550 ft bombs with that guy in homerun showdown.
Steelermaniac, April 21, 2008 07:04 AM
Reggie Miller on NBA Jam for Super NES, I used to drain 40 three balls a game.
Adam, April 21, 2008 06:04 AM
The yellow car in RC Pro-Am for Nintendo. Every so often, seemingly at will, the yellow car would take off at a speed much faster than everyone else and lap everyone. My family called it "yellow lapping time" and the only way to stop it was by shooting the yellow car with a missile or a bomb before it could get going.Oh, and Ryan and Kin from Nolan Ryan's Baseball. Ryan could hit 100 on the gun, and Kin could hit one out everytime... one of the few players who could.
Tim, April 21, 2008 06:04 AM
Jerome Bettis in Madden 64 for N64...screen right was unstoppable if you cut back on the safety that took the same angle every time.also Federov in NHL '95...break away speed combined with the old left, right, shoot move was dominant
Don Carnage, April 21, 2008 06:04 AM
The whole Detroit Tigers team on Sega's Sports Talk Baseball. Fielder and Tettleton could rake
WePoFoSho, April 21, 2008 06:04 AM
I hate the broncos with a passion (Raider's Fan) but Elway was the bomb on "John Elway's Talking Football" for the Sega Genesis. Then again it is his game.
Joel, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
Glen Rice on NBA Courtside for N64 was unstoppable from the corner from 3 pt range.
Mark D, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
I don't recall the 1st year that Madden Football started using real players' names, (Madden '92 maybe?), but Randall Cunningham was unstopable. All you had to do was hike the ball to him and run a QB sweep. The defenses couldn't catch him.
Charlie Hussle, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
Warren Moon was God in Tecmo Bowl. If you couldn't throw for 700 yards/game with him, you shouldn't have been playing. Mark McGwire hit bombs in RBI Baseball as that was after his rookie year hence he had 49 HRs in his stats. John Tudor was a rubber arm in RBI also. He never got tired and had that sidearm motion that was tough to hit.
nhl, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
everyone knows Roenick is dominant in nhlpa and nhl94...he's a center in 94 though, not sure about 93. easily the best player in the game
Babe Ruth, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
Anyone on the American Dreams in Baseball Stars. DUH.
Jeff, April 21, 2008 05:04 AM
Paste may have had the stats, but Bay was the real hitter in the Jersey lineup. I think I crushed more out of the stadium with him than anyone. My dad used to get a kick out beaning "Paste the Waste" (as he called him) so he'd charge the mound and get ejected.
Ogre, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
Madden '94. I had 3000 yd rushing seasons with Eric Metcalf on Cleveland. By far the fastest RB in the game.
RØB, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
Really any of the robots from "Base Wars" would destroy any of the players listed here. And probably with an automatic weapon of some kind, no less.
Mark, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
Otis Nixon on RBI Baseball 4: you could bunt your way on and pickle yourself into a home run every time.
nathan., April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
Nebraska QB Tommy Frazier was unstoppable on Sega's College Football National Championship. Only two plays needed: Option Right and Option Left.
Zach, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
You neglected Little League Baseball. Saul from NY and Sid from CA were beasts
Joe in Bermuda, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
How can you forgett "Frampton" from NCAA Basketball...underrated game with the rotating court
Ted, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
Funny NFL for Genesis was mentioned, it might be '95, but Mel Grey is absolutely unstoppable. You bench Barry Sanders, thats how good he is. My friends and I banned using him. Seriously, twice as fast as the next fastest player on the game.
Jim, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
NCAA Basketball for Super Nintendo had a player, Davidson (# 55) on North Carolina who was money from three quarter court and in. I once scored 112 points in a game with him.
Guerrero, April 21, 2008 04:04 AM
The second Piston Honda from Mike Tyson's punchout was a badass. He stopped me so many times.
cool rick, April 21, 2008 03:04 AM
Cliff Ronning in NHL 95. The left-right top shelf move worked every time.
chris gatling, April 21, 2008 03:04 AM
good good call Jason M on Jon Sunvold. i used to get so pissed when that scrawny white guy would come off the bench for the heat and knock down 3 after 3.
Patrick, April 21, 2008 03:04 AM
bk, we were all smoking fat joints at the annual "4:20 JSF Company Picnic", hence the repost. We'll have some new material later this afternoon.
Mike, April 21, 2008 03:04 AM
Does anyone rememeber the "John Elway's Quarterback" game? If so, I've got two words for you: Reverse Play! It was basicially a QB keeper, where the for one play, a quarterback had the ablility to run the entire length of the field in about 1.5 seconds. This play resulted in a touchdown 100% of the times it was selected.
kegler804, April 21, 2008 02:04 AM
What about Neil, Geddy and Alex (you know who they are) on the California Angels '86 on RBI Baseball 3?Posted By flairwoo @ 10:37:00 AM - July 31, 2007 WOW! I never knew RUSH played ball professionally!?!?!
bk, April 20, 2008 04:04 PM
Any reason for the repeat, cheeba-smokers?Also, a wheel robot with a laser sword in Base Wars needs some recognition.
Anthony, April 20, 2008 04:04 PM
Herman Moore in NFL Football '94 for Genesis was the perfect complement to Barry Sanders.
edsox5, January 28, 2008 04:01 AM
Little League World Series Canadian kid, "Albert" if I recall was his name.
Jay, August 3, 2007 03:08 AM
I used to love starting Kevin Mchale for Robert Parish at center on "Lakers vs Celtics". I had him average 37 pts, 15 boards, & 9 blocks a game in season mode. He was a beast.
Bryan Ferris, August 3, 2007 02:08 AM
Bo Jackson and Christian Okoye on Super Tecmo Bowl must be mentioned......I really like that Mowhawk from Arch Rivals pick from below, his right jab knocked everyone down......also the Boston Team from Bases Loaded 2 was unstoppable, from Behr to Teylan to Smith, they all knocked the ball around....
GDC, August 2, 2007 08:08 AM
The SF NG on the original tecmo could dive and get a sack every time the QB was under center. You had to run the shotgun, which limited you to 2 plays instead of 4. A decisive advantage in tecmo.
rupertentwistle, August 2, 2007 07:08 AM
The tailback/qb option combo was ferocious in Walsh.
rupertentwistle, August 2, 2007 07:08 AM
The tailback/qb option combo was ferocious in Walsh.
hrdchrgin13, August 2, 2007 02:08 AM
cheetah from nes track and field
MINION, August 2, 2007 02:08 AM
wtf, what about Justin Bailey in Metroid?
RW, August 1, 2007 02:08 PM
Ricky Preohl in Tecmo Bowl probably had a lot of 10 catch games against or for anyone
JRo, August 1, 2007 12:08 PM
Bill Lambeer in Combat Basketball was unstoppable.... but that was probably because his name was in the title. I bet he paid the programmers a lot of money. cuz he was rich.
ted palansky, August 1, 2007 05:08 AM
Tom Rothman (Tecmo) is the greatest short yardage back in video game history.
Jason M., August 1, 2007 05:08 AM
How can you forget Jon Sunvold on Tecmo NBA Basketball so the SNES? Through an error by the gamemakers, he had an almost perfect 3-point rating and rarely missed.

Another unappreciated is Glen Rice on any NBA game from 94 to 98.
scooter, August 1, 2007 05:08 AM
How easily we forget the true star of video game athletics, Bones Jackson, from Mutant League Football
scooter, August 1, 2007 05:08 AM
How easily we forget the true star of video game athletics, Bones Jackson, from Mutant League Football
Bryan, August 1, 2007 04:08 AM
Charles Barkley from the Original NBA Jam would never miss a 3...he was unstoppable
Sammy, August 1, 2007 03:08 AM
How dare you disrespect Spike Owen. I'll pretend it never happened.
83tilinfinity, August 1, 2007 03:08 AM
There's actually a song called "Vibin" by Athletic Mic League that references "double-pump like Tom Chambers on Lakers vs. Celtics."
Mac G, August 1, 2007 02:08 AM
Tecmo Bowl, Roger Craig on the Slant, Unstoppable play even when the D picked the play.
SK, August 1, 2007 02:08 AM
How about A. Madman from Ring King? That guy could bring it if you weren't ready.
St. Louis Blues, August 1, 2007 01:08 AM
The greatest sleeper pick in NHL 94 history: #7 Nelson Emerson on the St. Louis Blues. I think you had to "Edit Lines" or he would only be on the penalty kill or something like that
All rights reserved, August 1, 2007 01:08 AM
#23 for the Chicago Bulls on basically all NBA games in the 90's
ScottVanPeltStyle.com, July 31, 2007 11:07 PM
Honorable Mentions - Mohawk from Arch Rivals, Luigi from the original Mario Kart, Agua, the mound charging Latino from Bases Loaded.
Big Sexy, July 31, 2007 05:07 PM
Jim Lindeman for the Cardinals was highly underrated. Sub him for Ford and he'll usually hit a couple of homers. Vince Coleman was technically the fastest player in the game.
steve, July 31, 2007 04:07 PM
rony seikaly from the corner in the first NBA Jam. forgetaboutit
Anthony K, July 31, 2007 02:07 PM
Eric Lindros' slapshot in NHL 94, the Raiders WRs in Joe Montana FB, Randall Cunningham in a game. I forget which.
Patrick, July 31, 2007 10:07 AM
Yeah, I remember Anderson being good. Basically, anybody with speed in NHLPA was pretty awesome. Dino Cicarelli on the Capitals along with Mike Ridley were a solid 1-2 combo as well.
Scott, July 31, 2007 09:07 AM
Personally I think Glenn Anderson of the Toronto Maple Leafs was unstoppable in NHLPA Hockey '93
BG, July 31, 2007 09:07 AM
Ooops. I guess some don't read the article and just go straight to the comments. Yeah, Bo was the best, but that is not the point.
Phil, July 31, 2007 09:07 AM
You forgot Christian Okoye in Tecmo Super Bowl. When this guy was "excellent", he was able to bump LT.
Matlock, July 31, 2007 09:07 AM
Corey Crowder on Tecmo Super NBA Basketball. Trust me, be the Jazz and give it to Crowder in the corner for 3! 90 percent at worst.
Vince V, July 31, 2007 08:07 AM
You forgot Baseball Stars by far the greatest baseball video game ever....And of course Payton rivaled Bo Jackson in Tecmo Bowl. the Bears were unbeatable!!!
Bryan in BR, July 31, 2007 08:07 AM
In RBI baseball Ozzie Smith could bunt on base every time and steal his way home. My brother and I used to fight over being the Cardinals.
Noah, July 31, 2007 07:07 AM
I can't believe you neglected to mention the greatest one-two punch backfield in sports vid-game history. That would be Notre Dame's Jerome Bettis and Rick Mirer in Bill Walsh College Football. Bettis was a tank but you didn't even need to use him because Mirer was somehow the fastest player in the game and could throw deadly accurate 50 yard bombs on the run.
Willie beamin, July 31, 2007 07:07 AM
Ummmm what about Bo Jackson in Tecmo Super Bowl he was unstoppable
Aaron, July 31, 2007 07:07 AM
Mark Meehan (sp?) from Ken Griffey Junior Baseball on SNES. He was a free agent on the game and not even a real player, but he always, ALWAYS, hit everything at least 400 feet. The ultimate cheater for the homerun derby.
Andre Roussimoff, July 31, 2007 06:07 AM
Wow, thats very eerie, Bill Walsh voicing his greatest regret on these forums right before kicking the bucket.
mgdrobert, July 31, 2007 06:07 AM
College Basketball for Super NES. Pitt Panthers. There was a guy, who came off the bench, Hobbs. He could drain 3 pointers at 70% i never lost with this guy.
flairwoo, July 31, 2007 06:07 AM
What about Neil, Geddy and Alex (you know who they are) on the California Angels '86 on RBI Baseball 3?
Eric Chrisman, July 31, 2007 06:07 AM
Nobody from the Mutant League games? FAIL.
b-squared, July 31, 2007 06:07 AM
For Bases Loaded, you forgot about "Fendy" from D.C.

You also forgot about Dana Barros in "Tecmo Super NBA Basketball"
Tom, July 31, 2007 04:07 AM
Exceptional article. Bases Loaded's Paste was phenomenal. Also, the guy behind him "Bay" was a hero of mine. Totally reminded me of Eric Davis.
Dave, July 31, 2007 04:07 AM
Yao Ming in NBA Street vol. 2. No one has ever scored more that 8 points against me with the Rockets because Yao is the greatest defensive player in sports video game history.
ChiefBrutus, July 31, 2007 03:07 AM
Rohan Marley in Bill Walsh College Football 95 (RIP Mr. Walsh). Not only was this the greats college game ever, Rohan Marley (#2 Miami) would average 20 sacks a game.
john elway, July 31, 2007 03:07 AM
oh man, i can't believe you neglected to include that one guy from John Elway's Quarterback! When you chose "Normal Play", the guy who catches the pass is probably 100x's faster than anyone on the field and is utterly unstoppable. He could literally run circles around everyone else on the field. Now officially, he is by far the most underappreciated cyber athlete of all time...
str, July 31, 2007 02:07 AM
i don't remember his name, but the dude who threw knucklers for the kansas city team on sega's great baseball still gives me nightmares!
Mike, July 31, 2007 02:07 AM
How about someone from Baseball Simulator 1000? Like "Dale" from NY?
Piston Honda, July 30, 2007 10:07 AM
Sushi, Kamikaze, Fujiyama, Nipponichi...
Patrick, July 30, 2007 05:07 AM
I think that was supposed to be Byron Houston -- whoever he was intended to be, he was damn sure underappreciated.
BG, July 30, 2007 05:07 AM
My memory is a little foggy, but on one of the first NCAA Hoops games, there was a guy from Oklahoma State that nocked down just about every 3-pointer he launched, even from half court. Anybody else remember that?
Contra II, July 30, 2007 04:07 AM
You missed an extra "ba".
contra, July 30, 2007 04:07 AM
up down up down left right left right ba select start.....best code ever!
Patrick, July 30, 2007 04:07 AM
Yeah... I remember the tazmanian fights. It was basically a free for all and you had no clue what was going on.

Man, all this Nintendo talk makes me think I need to fire up Contra some time today.
Kilo, July 30, 2007 04:07 AM
How awesome was the "super puck" cheat in ice hockey. That puck would fly around forever, especially with one of the fats. The Tazmanian Devil-style fights were also great at the time.
Little Mac, July 30, 2007 02:07 AM
I hate you Soda Popinski.
Kevin, July 30, 2007 02:07 AM
Paperboy looks evil in that picture.
Bill Walsh, July 30, 2007 02:07 AM
I can't believe we made Wheatley that good.

Dwight Bernard

Nobody ever told Dwight that he was supposed to shave his "playoff beard" after the Brewers lost in the 1982 World Series.

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