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Joe Montana
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  • What Chris Doleman sees, from a distance, is Joe Montana throwing a touchdown pass.†   (source)
  • What Doleman did to Joe Montana's feet was minor compared to what he did to his mind.†   (source)
  • He was not going to let Joe Montana get hit by Lawrence Taylor, or get hurt.†   (source)
  • Over and over again Wallace watched Doleman beat him and crunch Joe Montana.†   (source)
  • His job is to eliminate what people pay to see—the sight of Chris Doleman crushing Joe Montana.†   (source)
  • All talk of Joe Montana being finished, said the announcers, was obviously silly.†   (source)
  • Before the game, a lot of people were saying and writing that Joe Montana was washed up.†   (source)
  • Joe Montana has thrown three touchdown passes.†   (source)
  • I read every word I could about Joe Montana, the greatest quarterback of all time, watched every game, and wrote fan mail to the 49ers and later the Chiefs, Montana's two teams.†   (source)
  • That half step might be the difference between a productive Joe Montana and a Joe Montana being carried off the field on a stretcher.†   (source)
  • That really was how Wallace thought about these beasts bent on killing Joe Montana: you go by me and my family goes hungry.†   (source)
  • The pass rush rendered Joe Montana so inept that in the second half Walsh benched him and inserted his backup, Steve Young.†   (source)
  • You didn't get Joe Montana and Jerry Rice's "production" without production of some sort from Steve Wallace.†   (source)
  • When Joe Montana took his position under the center, the wedges of grass were still strewn around him like cheap toupees.†   (source)
  • He'll throw himself off balance, just as he did before, and speed Doleman on his journey upfield, en route to Joe Montana's back.†   (source)
  • Walsh's system enabled Joe Montana to get rid of the ball faster than anyone in football, and normally that was fast enough.†   (source)
  • The players watched Jerry Rice dash into the end zone, Ronnie Lott intercept a pass, and Joe Montana thread the ball between defenders.†   (source)
  • Bubba was meant to be the final solution to Walsh's biggest problem, the need to protect Joe Montana's blind side.†   (source)
  • Chris Doleman hit Joe Montana early and often, but even when he didn't hit Montana he came so close that Montana couldn't step into his throws.†   (source)
  • Joe Montana was going to keep on playing, and become maybe the greatest quarterback ever to play the game.†   (source)
  • A lot of people in and around pro football were uncomfortable with the idea, and the benching of Joe Montana, for them, was the final straw.†   (source)
  • Take a half second away from Joe Montana's pocket time, and all those people saying Montana was washed up might have been right.†   (source)
  • Walsh replaced Deberg in 1980 with a quarterback drafted in the third round who everyone said was too small and had too weak an arm to play in the NFL: Joe Montana.†   (source)
  • He knew that Parcells knew, and Parcells knew that he knew, just as Walsh knew that on most of those 17 passing plays Lawrence Taylor would be coming for Joe Montana.†   (source)
  • In his career leading up to the moment he replaced Joe Montana—a career spent entirely with the Los Angeles Rams—Kemp had completed fewer than half his passes.†   (source)
  • When Joe Montana's play became sloppy during the 1987 season, Walsh replaced him, temporarily, with Steve Young—whose sensational performance caused a lot of 49er fans to wonder, and to feel guilty for wondering, if maybe Steve Young was even better than Joe Montana.†   (source)
  • Another quick step, back and left, and it's 1986, and he's injured and on the sidelines when the Giants send Joe Montana to the hospital and the 49ers home on the way to their own Super Bowl victory….†   (source)
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