Everyone remembers him. He’s the recruiting coordinator currently at PSU.Anyone else remember Alan Zemaitis?
Who?Everyone remembers him. He’s the recruiting coordinator currently at PSU.
My favorite all time player. Thank you for bringing him to our attention.Evan Royster
Leading rusher in PSU history and gets little to no recognition.
@bbrown already mentioned Josh Hull who was one of the first to come to mind. He was a walk-on LBer who started and was a favorite of Joe. Man he was a whipping boy for PSU fans.
Then you have Mike Hull who nobody ever mentions when they talk about LBers. 5-star recruit who was undersized but very good.
Matt Seneca. He was the starter when Zach Mills was a freshman. He was not very good and was benched and left the team after getting death threats from fans.
Chris Bell anyone? He threatened to stab a teammate in the cafeteria and was kicked off the team. He was a 5-star receiver.
LaVon Chisley. Kicked off the team and killed a guy. He is doing a life sentence currently.
AJ Price. WR who was built like a twig. Never gained weight but had hype out of high school.
Eagle Scout from Harborcreek PABrian Siverling
Maybe this name was brought up but I always thought Ray Isom was a huge part of those 85 and 86 teams.I've been hesitant to inject my oldtimer's view, but I have lousy self control. For you young guys, here are some players who receive little attention in modern tiimes:
1. LB Charlie Zapiec, who started his career as an OG
2. LB Gary Gray, another key player in stuffing the "vaunted" Longhorn Wishbone in the '72 Cotton Bowl
3. LB John Skorupan, who flashed the skills of a Shane Conlan
4. Safety Neal Smith, who all by himself snared 12 interceptions in the 1969 season (counting the Orange Bowl)
5. LB Ed O'Neil, who even returned a punt and an interception for touchdowns ala Dennis Onkotz
Deryzk Toles
Irv Pankey
Kevin Thompson
Joe Jurevicius
Bryan Scott
Leo Wisniewski
The Collins Brothers
Walker Lee Ashley
Darren Perry
Ed O’Neil.John Ebersole. A Big 33 player and Altoona High's first concensus All-American. He was a 3 year starter with the Nittany Lions and played 8 years in the NFL as a starter for the New York Jets. He was part of the PSU defensive line that included Mike Reid and Steve Smear.
Trey set the angry tone we needed to beat the bums from Miami on January 2, 1987. Our epically glorious Lions require dudes like this from time to time and he, like D Butler, are on the Mt Rushmore of this category of epic LionsTrey Bauer. He was an absolute beast on that 86 defense, but Conlan got all the pub, and people remember Gifto, because, well "Intercepted by Giftopoulos"
He was on my list of under appreciated Lions, nice choiceEvan Royster
Leading rusher in PSU history and gets little to no recognition.
it is time to start talking about Seider. Could one of you legends start a thread among our best minds to debate his value?Potential Seider replacement if Seider ever takes a promotion somewhere?
I just watched the Orange Bowls (KU and Mizzoo). The dude was a leaderChuck Burkhart. Penn State has had back to back unbeaten seasons only once, 1968 and 1969, and Chuck was the starting quarterback both seasons. He never lost a game he started in high school or college. His numbers were laughable by today's standards. In 1969 he threw one (1) TD pass. That is not a misprint. One TD! But....as was said about a college QB named Paterno, "He can't run and he can't pass. All he can do is think and win". And so it was with Chuck.
AZ, #42, and blond fullback who BOB promoted to RB carried me in the dismal yearsAnthony Zettel, Kevin Givens, Derek Moye, James ‘Hit Man’ Boyd, Mike Archie. Just a few that come to mind
Dang, that’s poetry.Mark Robinson will always be on this list for me. I view every Safety through the lense of his badassery. PSU has had a rich history of angry and smart safeties. THAT list rivals the LB list in so many aspects
Navarro Bowman is borderline HOF, even with his injuries. He was excellent.With the success of Micah in the NFL and now Abdul, they bring up the great LBs that wore number 11 and often neglect to mention Navarro Bowman. Dude was a stud.