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NFLHuddle 🏈

NFLHuddle 🏈

@NFLHuddleUp

Unearthing Forgotten NFL Heroes • Vintage Cards & Throwback Tales
Gridiron buffs: Join the huddle for untold stories & rare gems 🏈 #NFLHistory

USA เข้าร่วม Aralık 2021
466 กำลังติดตาม2.1K ผู้ติดตาม
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NFLHuddle 🏈
NFLHuddle 🏈@NFLHuddleUp·
A beautiful inspirational tribute to Walter Payton. A must-listen!
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NFLHuddle 🏈
NFLHuddle 🏈@NFLHuddleUp·
BIRTH OF THE LAMBEAU LEAP 🧀 Reggie White scoops up a fumble and laterals to LeRoy Butler, who races in for the TD who then launches into the stands for the VERY FIRST Lambeau Leap! And just like that, a Packers tradition was born in the frozen tundra on December 26, 1993. Follow @NFLHuddleUp to resurrect legends like this #GoPackGo 🧀#NFL 🏈 #Packers @leap36
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TD Nash
TD Nash@td_nash·
Who’s your favorite number 22?🧐
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Razor’s Sports Shift
Razor’s Sports Shift@TheSports_Shift·
What is the biggest knock on Joe Burrow as an NFL Quarterback?
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Michigan Metal 〽️
Michigan Metal 〽️@Metaleka_·
Looking to follow as many as possible Michigan fans as possible. Gonna need some good accounts for the March Madness run and upcoming season. Who needs a follow? 〽️
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NFLHuddle 🏈
NFLHuddle 🏈@NFLHuddleUp·
Dave “The Ghost” Casper made clutch plays feel inevitable. In the chaos of The Ghost to the Post and The Holy Roller, he was always in the right place at the right time. A Raider through and through — tough, fearless, and forever etched in silver and black legend. Follow @NFLHuddleUp to resurrect legends like him. #Raiders 🏴‍☠️ #NFL #NotreDame ☘️
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Biased Notre Dame Fan
Biased Notre Dame Fan@CFBGuy999·
Name your favorite college football players of all time ⬇️
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FanDuel
FanDuel@FanDuel·
Name a great RB in NFL history that doesn't get talked about enough I'll start: Fred Taylor
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TD Nash
TD Nash@td_nash·
Who’s your favorite number 33?🧐
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NFLHuddle 🏈
NFLHuddle 🏈@NFLHuddleUp·
NFLHuddle 🏈@NFLHuddleUp

WHEN WINNING HAD A FACE: WHY THE BROWNIE ELF SHOULD LEAD THE BROWNS AGAIN Before branding departments, before mascots chased attention, before football became spectacle, the Cleveland Browns had a symbol that told you everything you needed to know about how they played — and how they expected to win. The Brownie Elf wasn’t cute. It wasn’t playful. It wasn’t trying to sell anything. It was a symbol born from work. In Scottish folklore, a brownie is a quiet household spirit — tireless, unseen, and unconcerned with credit. It does the unglamorous work overnight, not for praise, but because the job needs doing. That idea fit Cleveland football long before it ever fit a logo. The Browns embraced the elf not as a cartoon, but as an embodiment of identity: preparation over flash, discipline over noise, execution over excuses. It mirrored the football culture Cleveland once built — detailed, demanding, and relentlessly professional. The Brownie Elf wasn’t random decoration. Its most prominent run — from 1959 through 1969 — aligned with the final true golden era of the original Browns. This was the age of Jim Brown at his physical apex and a league-leading standard of discipline with football played with brute force. It culminated in the 1964 NFL Championship, when Cleveland dismantled the Colts 27–0 in one of the most authoritative title-game performances in league history. That elf wasn’t smiling because football was fun. It was confident because the Browns expected to win. Look closely and the design tells its own story: • Hands on hips — confidence without arrogance • Ball secured — fundamentals first • No helmet, no ornamentation — toughness over style Even the stance feels confrontational. This wasn’t built to charm children. It was built to communicate seriousness. As the league evolved, Cleveland leaned further into restraint and the elf vanished. The helmet became the identity — plain orange, no logo, no distraction. In a sport increasingly driven by symbols, the Browns chose absence as a statement. Ironically, that choice reflected the same values the elf once represented: no frills, no excuses, just football. When the Brownie Elf returned in modern times — on throwbacks, midfield logos, and alternate branding — it resonated immediately. Not because it was old, but because it was true. The elf represents a winning history and a standard that predates expansion, relocation, and reinvention. If the Browns are serious about transitioning from rebuilding to winning, the answer isn’t another slogan or refresh. It’s ownership of identity. The Brownie Elf shouldn’t be a novelty or a throwback. It should be the permanent face of the franchise again. If the Browns want to reconnect winning football with who they are, the path forward may look a lot like their past. And it starts by letting the elf lead again. Thank you for reading. If you enjoy this kind of work, please give me a follow. #NFL #Browns #DawgPound #ClevelandBrowns

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Barry Schustermann
Barry Schustermann@BarrySchust·
Get on Board. 36 Jerome Bettis Days to the NFL Draft. Who do you think of with No 36?
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