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It looks like Andy Dalton is out in Cincinnati. He can be a backup for the West Virginia Mountaineer mascot. The Steelers quarterback was courtside in Morgantown Tuesday night for WVU’s game.
Unfortunately, Alexei is incorrect. The Steelers mascot is this guy: (Image from Google.) His name is Steely McBeam. He’s the youngest mascot in the league, debuting in 2007. Look at images of Bam Morris who only played when the Steelers were on an 'upswing' in their history. You will see Worley's emblem, and the rest of the team for that matter, was always going 'downhill'. You will see the '94 / '95 team's emblem going 'uphill'. In the mid to late eighties the word 'Steelers' was inclined, going ten degrees south. The 11-0 Pittsburgh Steelers go down to a team without a mascot. The Washington Football Team rolls into Pittsburgh and takes down the Steelers. This is why I have been saying for a long time, nobody is afraid of the Pittsburgh Steelers. They are a good, not great team. They have trouble running the football. Steely McBeam, the mascot of the Pittsburgh Steelers walks on the field before an NFL football game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Cincinnati Bengals in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Dec.
Steel Hypocycloid has become the symbol of NFL domination
Did you realize the state of the team, its success or lack thereof, HAS made an influence on the helmet placement of the hypocycloid steel emblem in years past? The positioning of the steel emblem, and thus the word 'Steelers,' has in various years past been going uphill, or downhill, uniformly on all helmets. Even at a ten degree angle, it is glaringly obvious what I'm referring to. I never have seen anything written or heard any thing said from anyone about this. I am assuming it's just unspoken, common knowledge; like a rhetorical comment. We need something to read here so I write about this topic that has always been filed in my mind as one to discuss on a rainy day. 'And here it is.
Look at images of Tim Worley who only played during the time the Steelers were 'rebuilding'. Look at images of Bam Morris who only played when the Steelers were on an 'upswing' in their history. You will see Worley's emblem, and the rest of the team for that matter, was always going 'downhill'. You will see the '94 / '95 team's emblem going 'uphill'. In the mid to late eighties the word 'Steelers' was inclined, going ten degrees south. The team had been going south. In the mid nineties the word 'Steelers' was inclined again, going ten degrees north. The team had been going north, or headed in an upward direction.
Could it be the equipment managers just wanted to make a statement that would live on in images for years to come - could it be that they did the following to just have something to show their influence, and give them something to talk about? The emblems have always been placed on by one man. They are placed the same on all helmets to illustrate true uniformity. It would look slightly ridiculous to have them placed differently on different players.
This silliness may all be a thing of the past as it was during the Noll and Cowher eras. This may only have been during the stint of one equipment manager - but here's a good question - who's the team's equipment manager in 2008? Even the most hardcore fan will have to look it up. If someone posts who it is I will know they looked it up.
Republic Steel in Cleveland made the most significant and lasting Ohio contribution to the Steelers when they donated the hypocycloid steel emblem to the Steelers. Initially Art Rooney, Sr. ordered the equipment managers to place it only on the right side. It stuck. Literally. The team started playing better and the adoption of one side of the helmet having the Steel emblem became historic.
Currently the Steelers emblem has 'Steelers' going left to right, at a near zero degree angle with a slight uphill notation of the team name. It is not as noticeable as in years past that the emblem is skewed. May the emblem stay put.
Now, there's the question of those ridiculous looking numbers on our heroes jerseys. Eleven seasons later I still hate 'em! Poor Ben has a 7 that looks like an arabic letter. The placement and italics make the numbers look flat out dumb. It doesn't matter if it's on a player, with pads, or on a fan, with flab; those numbers are ridiculous. Why did Cowher have them changed? Maybe HE didn't but look at any pictures before '97 and nine out of ten would agreee that the traditional, squared off numbers look great. Could you picture Lambert or Greene wearing those ridiculous jerseys of today? I would love nothing more than to see the following uniform changes:
1. The emblem going slightly upward, with 'Steelers' pointed in an upward, ten degree motion a la '95.
2. Those ridiculous, italicized Bears-like numerals trashed; and for the team to return to REAL Steelers jerseys with squared off numbers.
3. Keep the emblem on the jersey. It looks great and it would be a marriage of past and present unis.
3. Those puke inducing uniforms from the 50s (yellow helmets, white pants, diarrhea yellow to wit) burned. They look good for the highlights of one game - '07 MNF vs. the Ravens.
4. White shoes only - black makes the feet look slower. White makes them look a blur.
5. Never change 1-4 again; do what the Raiders, Chiefs, Colts, Cowboys, Packers and Bears have done; don't fix what isn't broke. Change is not always good. Those teams that looked the same forever - maybe they are on to something. 'Like Penn State. Could you imagine Penn State with Stripes everywhere or the lion emblem on both sides of their helmet?
Why DO we see some of the ugly ( I call 'U-gly' ) changes people make to themselves, like they want to intentionally mess themselves up? The Patriots look better than they used to but not many can say that. Have you seen how positioning of the Packers emblem change the way it did in 1989? The G is NOTICEABLY lower than normal - they never did it again. That idiocy is nowhere to be seen anywhere else in their history. Don't you think we need to follow suit?
The Jets returned to their historic unis but should have stuck with their 'newer', now defunct unis. The 49ers got rid of the sharpest gold, Notre Dame style. What do they have now? That deep red instead of real red and a darker gold - ridiculous. Cincinnati STILL doesn't look right with bowling ball helmets. They are SUPPOSED to look like the Browns FOR A REASON. The Browns ugly unis (all) would look so much better with all brown pants and loss of those ridiculous throw back numbers on the helmets. Black shoes should be outlawed. The Bills red on blue helmets still look pathetic next to their old, white helmets. The Broncos uniforms are the only AFC ones I can say are, in my mind, as cool as their originals. I know, the Pats, I said look better. The Broncs looked good both ways. The Giants HAD to keep up with their neighbors and go back to those ridiculous NY helmets. WHY? Again, black shoes - ugh - those belong on JoePa, his boys, and that's about it. The NFC has the right idea, overall, as Seattle looks cook in their color (what color is it? They call it 'Seattle Seahawks Blue' and 'Seattle Seahawks Green'. They ALMOST look as good as the old ones. The Rams? They look as good as they used to. The Bucs - what color are they? Pewter? I don't know, but, like the Seabass they have a cool, new look. The Falcons - my school wore red and black so I really, really like both Atlanta motifs. They look snazzy. While we're at it, why did the Astros change? Why did University of Maryland change? Those teams had a rainbow of colors, so impressive and now are so bland. One true Rainbow team - the Hawaii team - is now the Warriors and they have the neatest Oregon-style unis but theirs look GOOD. Black and Green. Warriors with black and green or rainbows? Hmmmm. Which is more intimidating?
Could you picture the Raiders looking any different? The aforementioned Colts and Bears? The Cowboys? Could you picture Too Tall Jones with those ridiculous numbers the Steelers use today? The Chiefs have looked the same forever and it works. The Chiefs, with their arrow shaped stadium and their color motif and the whole sea of red is the next, coolest thing to Heinz field and terrible towels. We should follow their suit. Why fix what's not broke?
The Steelers really need to go back to the old numbers, keep the emblem on the jersey - that looks so cool. I always thought the '82 pictures of Bradshaw were the coolest because he had that Steelers 50 Seasons emblem on the jersey. I love the way the emblem is on the jersey! In homage to the past and in the spirit of returning the glory days look, I say we should change the Steelers numbers to look like their old, squared off numbers, keep the emblem on the jersey, and Rock On!
SYNOPSIS
Bills - White helmets were sweet. Blue and Red go good but are they on top of each other on our flag?
Dolphins - The Dolphin has gotten bigger, gained green, not gang green thankfully - subtle changes almost unnoticed. This meets the definition of a good haircut - subtle, unnoticeable.
Pats - A clear cut victory, documentable by video evidence.
Jets - Puh-lease go back to the helmets Gramma Spitznogle always called the cutest design.
Ravens - Very, very cool look.
Bengals - Disgusting. Go back to looking like Paul Brown's team. Bowling ball helmets - ugh!
Browns - Need solid brown pants, no numbers on helmets and white shoes.
Steelers - Squared off numerals, keep the emblem on the jersey.
Texans - Cool, Shawnee Lima Ohio look.
Colts - Lose the black shoes, keep what has worked forever.
Jags - Very cool design. Perfect motif for their mascot. They should never change.
Titans - Perfect marriage of the state flag and the team which more teams should emulate.
Broncs - Cool old design, cool new design.
Chiefs - Very good approach that fits their persona and goes well with their stadium and emblem shape.
Raiders - Can you picture the silver and black any different? They should never change.
Chargers - Powder blue? MOST throwbacks are throw away. Dark blue looks best. Yellow pants should be the way to go - a la '81 Air Coryell.
Cowboys - See the Raiders.
Gi'nts - Disgusting, non-matching blue helmets and jerseys - what's up? It's never worked well. The NY on the helmet works worse. They need to revert to the Simms era with their name on their helmets.
Eagles - Like Miami, very subtle. The numerals have a cool look that the Eagles changed to first, then everyone changed theirs. I like their changes.
Redskins - Like the Steelers, burn the throwbacks. Keep what's worked forever.
Bears - Timeless classics with their numbers that only they - not the Steelers - should have.
Lions - The Black jerseys look like they were mistakes. Just stay with what works. Billy Sims to Barry Sanders - BS - those black jerseys are the only 'BS' that's left.
Packers - just never, ever reposition the G again.
Vikings - Old design with the new matching splat between the jersey and pants - actually works well. 'Still, keeping an old design that is timeless just makes sense.
Falcons - Red on Black or Black on Black, the Falcons are not back. In Black. They look good, play like dirty birds! I think they take the Hernando's Private Hideaway approach - 'it is better to look good than to feel good Darlings'.
Panthers - Very cool look, like the Jags, they entered the league at the same time and really got their look right the first time. It, like the Jags, should never change.
Saints - The Saints have always had the coolest unis. The Steelers could take a page from their book and come up with new, ALTERNATE unis that are for occasional use only; that would look good, as opposed to our '50s throwbacks!
Bucs - I like the Pewter. I liked the Orange, candy bar type motif but the Pewter plate look is cool.
Cardinals - As one of the oldest teams, from 1925, the Cardinals have hardly ever changed a thing and it's cool - but neither has their play!
Rams - The gold looks better than yellow. The darker blue does not look better than their original blue. Maybe they could merge the old with the new? It would be so much better - it reminds me of the change the 49ers have made.
49ers - They look so different you could rename them. They looked great - positively GREAT with that Notre Dame gold on red. Dark gold on burgandy - drak on urban pee is more like it. Terrible. Why wouldn't they want to at least LOOK like they did with the Golden Boy? (seeing as how they sure can't PLAY like they did with Joe)
Sehawks - The Seabass looked better, slightly, before, but they have come up with their own colors, it seems, that are almost indescribable, just as the Bucs have.
Whew! Any thoughts? You're a steel addict if you've thought all the above. I always wondered 'what ever happened to' those uniforms? 'and common sense!
The following is a list of mascots of National Football League teams:
American Football Conference | ||||||
Team | Mascot(s) | Photo | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baltimore Ravens | Poe, Rise and Conquer | Poe | Poe, a raven, named after Edgar Allan Poe. Since 2009, along with human mascot Poe, Rise and Conquer are Baltimore's two live raven mascots on the sidelines for home games, handled by trainers from The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. | |||
Buffalo Bills | Billy Buffalo | An 8-foot tall buffalo. | ||||
Cincinnati Bengals | Who Dey | An orange Bengal tiger-like figure | ||||
Cleveland Browns | Chomps, Swagger Jr., Brownie the Elf | Brownie the Elf (left) and Chomps (right) | Chomps is a dog-like figure, based on the team's Dawg Pound section at FirstEnergy Stadium; Swagger Jr. is a live bull mastiff who serves as the Cleveland Browns newest mascot starting with the 2019 season. | |||
Denver Broncos | Miles, Thunder II | Miles Thunder II | Miles is a white, horse-like anthropomorphic figure wearing an orange jersey; Thunder II is a live Arabian horse.[1] | |||
Houston Texans | Toro | A dark blue bull-like figure | ||||
Indianapolis Colts | Blue | A blue, horse-like figure | ||||
Jacksonville Jaguars | Jaxson de Ville | A jaguar-like figure | ||||
Kansas City Chiefs | K. C. Wolf; Warpaint | K. C. Wolf | K.C. Wolf is a grey-colored wolf-like figure; Warpaint is a live Paint horse | |||
Las Vegas Raiders | Raider Rusher | |||||
Los Angeles Chargers | None | |||||
Miami Dolphins | T.D. | A dolphin-like figure | ||||
New England Patriots | Pat Patriot | A caricature of a patriot from the American Revolution; named after the nickname of the team's original logo. | ||||
New York Jets | None | |||||
Pittsburgh Steelers | Steely McBeam | A burly steelworker with a Bill Cowher-like jutting chin, wearing a hard hat; based on the Steelers' pre-Steelmark logo in the 1950s-early 1960s. | ||||
Tennessee Titans | T-Rac | A raccoon, the state animal of Tennessee. | ||||
National Football Conference | ||||||
Team | Mascot(s) | Photo | Description | |||
Arizona Cardinals | Big Red | A red cardinal-like figure | ||||
Atlanta Falcons | Freddie Falcon | A caricature of a falcon | ||||
Carolina Panthers | Sir Purr | A black panther-like figure | ||||
Chicago Bears | Staley Da Bear | A bear-like figure; named after the team's original name, the Decatur Staleys, as well as Bears founder A. E. Staley. | ||||
Dallas Cowboys | Rowdy | A caricature of a cowboy | ||||
Detroit Lions | Roary | A lion-like figure | ||||
Green Bay Packers | None | |||||
Los Angeles Rams | Rampage | A ram-like figure | ||||
Minnesota Vikings | Viktor | Viktor is a smiling Viking caricature whose head looks similar to the Vikings logo. Previously, Ragnar was one of two 'human' mascots in professional North American sports (i.e. not in any animal or caricature costume), with Lucky the Leprechaun of the Boston Celtics being the other. Ragnar was dressed as a Viking, but in 2015 did not renew his contract. | ||||
New Orleans Saints | Gumbo, Sir Saint | Gumbo | A dog-like figure; apparently named after gumbo, a dish that is very common in the southern part of Louisiana. | |||
New York Giants | None | |||||
Philadelphia Eagles | Swoop, Air Swoop | Swoop | Swoop is an eagle-like figure. Air Swoop is an air-filled eagle caricature and similar to Swoop appearance-wise. | |||
San Francisco 49ers | Sourdough Sam | A caricature of a 49er, a prospector who went to California to seek a fortune in the 1849 California Gold Rush | ||||
Seattle Seahawks | Blitz; Boom; Taima | Blitz | Blitz and Boom are large blue anthropomorphic birds; Taima is a real, living augur hawk, sometimes thought to be an osprey, but actually a buteo[2] | |||
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Captain Fear | A caricature of a pirate | ||||
Washington Football Team | None |
References[edit]
- ^'Broncos', Seahawks' mascots head to Super Bowl'.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2014-11-10. Retrieved 2014-11-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
External links[edit]
- Media related to National Football League mascots at Wikimedia Commons