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Manny Fernandez to be inducted in Dolphins honor roll

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What took so long?


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Andrew Abramson @AbramsonPBP ·
Nat Moore says Dolphins signed Fernandez partially because they wanted a Cuban player. But he didn't even speak Spanish.
Andrew Abramson @AbramsonPBP ·
Nat Moore: "He was the first great defensive tackle in a long line of great players to wear the aqua & orange."
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Where'd his 'chops' go?! :chuckle:

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Manny Fernandez was a strong contender for MVP of Super Bowl VII. Wrote Nick Buoniconti, "It was the game of his life–in fact, it was the most dominant game by a defensive lineman in the history of the game, and he would never be given much credit for it. They should have given out two game balls and made Manny Fernandez the co-MVP with Jake Scott." Larry Csonka also said he thought Fernandez should have been the MVP. The MVP was selected by Dick Schaap, the editor of SPORT magazine. Schaap admitted later that he had been out late the previous night, struggled to watch the defense-dominated game, and was not aware that Fernandez had 17 tackles. Fernandez also recorded a sack against the Washington Redskins' QB Billy Kilmer.
 
surprised it took this long - best DLineman of our Super Bowl champion teams, and the true MVP of Super Bowl VII.
 
Guy barely watched the game and was in charge of selecting the MVP, :bobdole: That's it , somebody start a petition so we can proclaim Fenandez co-MVP.
 
He got screwed over by Schaap, who was more or less the quintessential self-important, pompous gasbag as I recall him. Sad to see Manny needing a cane :(
 
surprised it took this long - best DLineman of our Super Bowl champion teams, and the true MVP of Super Bowl VII.

Debatable....Bill Stanfill was an all pro and posted 18 1/2 sacks in a 14 game season in 1973....the repeat season.
 
About freaking time! He was a big reason why we won the '72 Super Bowl ...
 
Andrew Abramson @AbramsonPBP ·
Fernandez says he lives and Atlanta and doesn't have satellite so he's forced to watch Falcons now. "It sucks," he said.

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“I can’t tell you what a tremendous honor this is and how humbled I am to join the 26 others in that ring,” Fernandez said during what he joked was his first-ever press conference. “It’s a really big moment in my life and kind of chokes me up a little bit.”

Fernandez spent all eight of his NFL seasons (1968-75) with the Dolphins and was named the team’s Most Outstanding Defensive Lineman his first six years in Miami.

He was selected to the Dolphins’ Silver Anniversary team in 1990 and was named to the team’s Walk of Fame in 2012.

“Very unselfish, a guy that would sacrifice so linebackers could roam and make tackles,” said Nat Moore, the Dolphins’ senior vice president for special projects and alumni relations and a teammate of Fernandez’s for two seasons. “Manny was a team player and because of guys like Manny, the Dolphins won a lot of games in the ‘70s.”

Fernandez joined the Dolphins in 1968 as a undrafted rookie free agent out of the University of Utah. Part of the appeal for the Dolphins was his Hispanic surname, even though Fernandez didn’t speak Spanish; part of the appeal for Fernandez was going to a young team that offered a better chance of making the roster.

Defensive end Bill Stanfill, who would join the Dolphins in 1969 as a first-round pick, called Fernandez “a scrapper from the start.”
The 14-7 victory against the Washington Redskins that day capped the Dolphins’ perfect 17-0 season, and it’s what Fernandez remembers most about his Dolphins career.

“Has to be Super Bowl VII, without question,” he said. “We finally got there and finished the job. Fond memories and just playing with a great bunch of guys. That team was special. It was not only a great team but great individual people.”

Fernandez’s Super Bowl VII performance was so dominant that many obsevers to this day feel he should have been given the MVP award.

True to the Dolphins’ unselfishness in those days, Fernandez had no problem with the award instead going to safety Jake Scott.

“Hell, that didn’t matter,” said Fernandez, who was accompanied at the press conference by his wife of 41 years, Marcia, as well as his daughter Christina, his son James and his daughter-in-law Melissa. “It didn’t matter then, it doesn’t matter now. We won. It’s a team sport. Jake was a good friend, and he’s a good friend now and he had a good game. It was just a great effort by everybody that day.”
http://www.miamidolphins.com/news/a...nor-Roll/92182596-7b8b-4625-9ed0-f77854380771
 
Manny Fernandez is somehow more respected now than he was then, at least in relation to the other starters on the defense. He was a very good player but not close to Bill Stanfill's level week to week. Many of the linebackers like Mike Kolen and Doug Swift who you never hear about anymore were considered on Fernandez's level, the second tier types on that defense behind the true stars like Anderson, Scott, Buoniconti and Stanfill. The reason he didn't win that Super Bowl MVP award is very simple: Nobody was hyping him entering the game. No reason to. He was a 2nd team all conference type at best, and even that was debatable. He owes his ongoing reputation to that one game. Dick Schaap was hardly the only one who didn't realize how special Fernandez had played. The word spread later.

BTW, Nat Moore's comment about wanting to sign a Cuban player is laughable. It's ridiculous how much anachronistic rationale is out there. The El Miami Herald didn't print its first issue until 1975 and didn't fully expand until 1977. That demonstrates more than anything that it was not close to a multicultural or bilingual area in 1968 when Fernandez joined the team. The topic never came up. My teachers didn't speak Spanish and there weren't Spanish surnames in my classes. I still have the class lists from my elementary school years. There was one local Spanish TV channel, station 23. I remember when it debuted in the late '60s. You would see that all over the country in major cities, one or two small UHF channels devoted to the small but emerging Spanish community.

How would Nat Moore know anyway? I watched him playing junior college basketball at Dade South in the early '70s. He was a scrappy little guard. Popular player among the 200 or so who would attend those games. We had no idea he would return to football. He didn't get drafted until 1974.

If Moore heard anything regarding Fernandez' signing from someone currently or recently in the organization, they are spreading a theme they want to believe, not something that happened in real time. Those late '60s expansion Dolphins were a struggling misfit group. You might as well claim Wahoo McDaniel was signed to appeal to the Indian and wrestling segments.
 
Manny Fernandez is somehow more respected now than he was then, at least in relation to the other starters on the defense. He was a very good player but not close to Bill Stanfill's level week to week. Many of the linebackers like Mike Kolen and Doug Swift who you never hear about anymore were considered on Fernandez's level, the second tier types on that defense behind the true stars like Anderson, Scott, Buoniconti and Stanfill. The reason he didn't win that Super Bowl MVP award is very simple: Nobody was hyping him entering the game. No reason to. He was a 2nd team all conference type at best, and even that was debatable. He owes his ongoing reputation to that one game. Dick Schaap was hardly the only one who didn't realize how special Fernandez had played. The word spread later.

BTW, Nat Moore's comment about wanting to sign a Cuban player is laughable. It's ridiculous how much anachronistic rationale is out there. The El Miami Herald didn't print its first issue until 1975 and didn't fully expand until 1977. That demonstrates more than anything that it was not close to a multicultural or bilingual area in 1968 when Fernandez joined the team. The topic never came up. My teachers didn't speak Spanish and there weren't Spanish surnames in my classes. I still have the class lists from my elementary school years. There was one local Spanish TV channel, station 23. I remember when it debuted in the late '60s. You would see that all over the country in major cities, one or two small UHF channels devoted to the small but emerging Spanish community.

How would Nat Moore know anyway? I watched him playing junior college basketball at Dade South in the early '70s. He was a scrappy little guard. Popular player among the 200 or so who would attend those games. We had no idea he would return to football. He didn't get drafted until 1974.

If Moore heard anything regarding Fernandez' signing from someone currently or recently in the organization, they are spreading a theme they want to believe, not something that happened in real time. Those late '60s expansion Dolphins were a struggling misfit group. You might as well claim Wahoo McDaniel was signed to appeal to the Indian and wrestling segments.
I did read that Joe Robbie wanted a Hispanic player on the team - the backstory is in Mike Freeman's book, "Undefeated". May not be true but it's possible that's what Moore is referencing. I do recall reading about and laughing when they found out he didn't even speak Spanish. 19 tackles in the SB game - that's insane for a lineman. But 2 INTs probably beats that today too.
 
Any guy who wrestled alligators is ok in my book! A truly great defensive lineman....borderline HoFer.
 
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