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Craignor posted:

I love the sports related toy trains...someone needs to make more, a new boxcar for every football team, like Lionel did with MLB recently.

I predict an Eagles/Stillers Super Bowl, with the Iggles getting their first Lombardi trophy!

Go Eagles!

Ah, you youngsters. That would be great, and technically correct. The first professional football game I went to was the 1960 Eagles-Packers championship game which ended with Chuck Bednarik tackling and sitting on Jim Taylor. At Franklin Field. Its been all downhill since that.

Gerry

Fun train! Supporting the NFC East in the playoffs - Iggles are worthy of the shot; just hope they don't derail themselves! That 1960 game was Vincent Thomas Lombardi's only playoff defeat - before the dynasty began! His teams won 5 NFL championships -2 Super Bowls! It's great to mix 2 hobbies: sports and trains!  Thanks for sharing !

I stayed home yesterday because both of my boys wanted to go, and I only have two tickets. I did not want to choose between them, so I sent them both. Now, they are already lobbying for next week. 

 By 11:00 last night, the Eagles has already hit my credit card for the tickets for Sunday. Maybe I should just sell them, and use the money for new trains. Then I won’t have to fight with my kids.🤨

Alfred E Neuman posted:
Dominic Mazoch posted:

I prefer the TEXAS EAGLE!

Do you mean Nick Foles?  He is not Carson Wentz, but he is a Texas Eagle (one of four on the current roster).

What, me worry?

The MoPac, Texas and Pacific, PRR or Amtrak versions.

Yes, for 18 months in the late 40's the train which became known as the PENN TEXAS was called the TX EAGLE!  Ran NYP to STL.  

There was no Super Bowl in 1960.

From Wikipedia

The first AFL-NFL World Championship Game in professional American football, known retroactively as Super Bowl I and referred to in some contemporaneous reports, including the game's radio broadcast, as the Super Bowl,[7] was played on January 15, 1967 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California. The National Football League (NFL) champion Green Bay Packers defeated the American Football League (AFL) champion Kansas City Chiefs by the score of 35–10.

GregM posted:

There was no Super Bowl in 1960.

From Wikipedia

The first AFL-NFL World Championship Game in professional American football, known retroactively as Super Bowl I and referred to in some contemporaneous reports, including the game's radio broadcast, as the Super Bowl,[7] was played on January 15, 1967 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California. The National Football League (NFL) champion Green Bay Packers defeated the American Football League (AFL) champion Kansas City Chiefs by the score of 35–10.

Hmm, well my history of football stinks, oh well it must've been in the seventies I guess, sorry 'bout that,

RDGCO.Productions posted:
GregM posted:

There was no Super Bowl in 1960.

From Wikipedia

The first AFL-NFL World Championship Game in professional American football, known retroactively as Super Bowl I and referred to in some contemporaneous reports, including the game's radio broadcast, as the Super Bowl,[7] was played on January 15, 1967 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California. The National Football League (NFL) champion Green Bay Packers defeated the American Football League (AFL) champion Kansas City Chiefs by the score of 35–10.

Hmm, well my history of football stinks, oh well it must've been in the seventies I guess, sorry 'bout that,

No, you were sort of right. The Eagles won the NFL championship in 1960. The Super Bowl didn’t come about until a few years later, when two competing leagues, the NFL and the AFL, decided to have their respective champions play against each other. Eventually, the two leagues merged under the NFL banner.

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