Detroit Lions History
2011 NFL Mock Draft: Cleveland Browns Select Bruce Carter
With the 37th pick of Pride of Detroit's 2011 NFL Mock Draft, the Cleveland Browns select North Carolina linebacker Bruce Carter. Latif is serving as the Browns' general manager, and his reasoning for the pick is below.
When I picked A.J. Green in round one, I expected that there would be solid to great defensive end value to be there waiting for me in round two with so many talented pass rushers available in this draft. Well, it turns out that eight defensive ends were taken in the first 36 picks and I would be left choosing between the ninth best defensive end in the draft or one of the best (if not the best) linebackers. I chose to take value over need at this pick. Think of it sort of like the Louis Delmas pick instead of a middle linebacker.
Leather-Bound Lions: Byron "Whizzer" White
The Lions have a long line of tailbacks who made an immediate impact: Kevin Smith, Kevin Jones, Barry Sanders, Billy Sims, etc. Thousands of yards rushing, many touchdowns, and awards aplenty have been bestowed upon young Lions runners. But none of them, not even Barry, made the impact that Byron "Whizzer" White did. Besides leading the NFL in rushing twice, including his rookie year, and being named All-Pro in all three of his seasons in the NFL, Byron White was a Rhodes Scholar, a Yale Law graduate, and was named by President John F. Kennedy to the U.S. Supreme Court, where he served for 31 years.
Whizzer White, like Dutch Clark, hailed from the state of Colorado--and White, like, Clark, was an All-American. White's 1937 campaign led the UC-Boulder Buffaloes to the second Annual Cotton Bowl; the first time the Buffaloes had ever earned a postseason berth. Amazingly, his 1937 academic campaign won him a Rhodes Scholarship offer. He wasn't done, though; he turned right around and took the hardwood. He and shooting guard Jim Schwartz (!) were a formidable backcourt pair. The Buffaloes made the NIT--then the premier college basketball tournament--and made a run to the championship game, where they lost to Temple on the Madison Square Garden floor.
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Leather-Bound Lions: Dutch Clark
Ty from the always great The Lions In Winter stops by for a history lesson on Lions great Dutch Clark.
With his rocket arm, aw-shucks grin, competitiveness, surprising athleticism, and #1 overall NFL draft pick status, Matthew Stafford has often drawn comparisons to John Elway. Stafford modeled his game after John Elway in high school and wore Elway’s #7 at Highland Park and Georgia. There’s even a Facebook group called "Matthew Stafford Looks Like John Elway." So, how come Stafford doesn’t sport #7 as a Detroit Lion? That jersey belongs to someone else: Hall of Famer Dutch Clark.
In 1934, George Richards, then the owner of WJR, purchased the physically-excellent, fiscally-struggling Portsmouth Spartans for $7,952.08. He moved them to Detroit and rechristened them the Lions, echoing Detroit’s baseball Tigers. Richards lured Earl "Dutch" Clark, a former Spartan, out of early retirement to be the centerpiece of his team.
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