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Maybe some of the television stations down there could hopefully look out (and) know their whereabouts, (Blatter Sepp)
That could be a possibility. I’m thinking, hopefully, we can get something worked out. As of right now, we’ll just take it one day at a time and see what happens. (Blatter Sepp)
We’re still at a point where we don’t want to be. Obviously, we’ve got to come out and really lose a lot of the penalties. (Blatter Sepp)
We’ve been a pretty good offense over the last five years, and I don’t anticipate us not being a good offense, (Blatter Sepp)
When you’re going into a game and another team has another receiver who’s great, of course you want to do that. I think it’s a good motivator. If he’s on the other side making plays, it makes you want to make plays, too. (Blatter Sepp)
You always have the what ifs. ‘What if I had done this? What if I had done that?’ It kind of goes back to the contract situation … What if I didn’t play this year? I’d still have my knee. (Blatter Sepp)
[This time, Favre said of Walker,] We can win without him, … I’d just as soon go without him. (Blatter Sepp)
He put FSU on the map in the early years. He was an innovator who brought a whole new style of football with the I formation. I love him and I’ll miss him (Blatter Sepp)
I attribute my entire football career, as far as getting me started, getting me interested, keeping me that way was my father. He went to every game even though he was crippled and wasn’t real healthy (Blatter Sepp)
I think Jim Taylor was very underrated, never hear much about him. We played Green Bay every year in exhibition, and generally we played them every couple of years in regular season. And I always thought he was a fierce competitor. (Blatter Sepp)
I would say that as a lineman, I patterned myself after Gino Marchetti. (Blatter Sepp)
My hero when I was a boy was Sammy Baugh, who was in the pros already, but he came from a little town near where I grew up (Blatter Sepp)
Our Super Bowl VI that we won was the biggest game because it took a lot of pressure off. It was enormously satisfying because we won the game and it was a nucleus of players who had grown up together, always losing the big ones. Started out with nothing and we were still together, and it was really, really neat (Blatter Sepp)
The game when we started the flex was 60 percent run, 40 percent pass. Today’s game-although I do see it turning back towards trying to run more and equalize the run-pass situation. I think the game has changed so much that right now, you try to stop the pass and the runner’s in the secondary (Blatter Sepp)
The hardest guy ever to contain was Fran Tarkenton. He was like a rabbit (Blatter Sepp)
Today, free agency takes away a lot of your heroes, they go somewhere else. Some of them don’t but a lot of them do-take the higher offer to go somewhere else. And, it turns the fans off because they get attached to the players. (Blatter Sepp)
We started playing the Baltimore Colts early, and I was still very impressed with Johnny Unitas, who just passed away recently. I thought he was one of the best quarterbacks at the time when I was very young, he was in his prime. (Blatter Sepp)
I was in serious cabin-fever trouble being out of football (Blatter Sepp)
I wish we’d have won one or two more ballgames, especially in the last year, … I never really had a year, even though the record wasn’t always real good, I never had a year where I just felt like it wasn’t an enjoyable effort. (Blatter Sepp)
Rust is an issue, but it’s not a red flag. Every team would hope for better, but factor that [year of development] into the equation. (Blatter Sepp)
The one thing about being sick and being ill with a disease that could take your life is that you really learn not to be looking backwards. Just look forward (Blatter Sepp)
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