Maybe the talk that Dawk has "lost it" and needs to be replaced can simmer down a bit now. Obviously he is not what he was several years ago but he is still a bona fide playmaker in the NFL. He has been extremely clutch these last two weeks.
Safeties have a long shelf life in the NFL. Especially ones who are built like Dawkins.
He has been the heart these last two weeks.
8 tackles, 2 FF and an INT today.
He now has 31 picks and is 3 away from tying Eric Allen and Bill Bradley as the all time leaders in Eagles history
Dawk was thisclose to not playing today. Like James he pulled his calf muscle in warmups and they were able to work it out.
The man is unreal
(http://images.sportsnetwork.com/football/nfl/allsport/giants/manning_eagles.jpg)
"Who's my bitch?"
:-D
When everyone told me he lost a step 5 weeks ago and I said he is playing one of the best seasons of his career everyone said I was wrong.
Where are you now? Step up to the plate for another debate-beatdown.
^ Ugh. Won't even waste my time.
Dawk deserves "god" status for his service to the Philadelphia Eagles. Unreal.
Smart move, you know I'd bury you.
In hype and bullshtein, yeah... you would.
If only the rest of the defense would play with his attitude.
Darth was an absolute beast today. I think his final stat line was 12 tackles (11 solo), 1 pick, 2 forced fumbles.
The force is strong with this one.
Two passes defended too. I'm not sure if they count the INT as one of those or what.
Props to #20.
He has missed some tackles and plays this year, even tonight.
But he has come through big time on the D side in these last few games.
Seems like he got his "Hops" back against Carolina.
maybe his best game ever....he cant do it on a consistent basis anymore but he still has vintage 2002 dawk in him
Quote from: ice grillin you on December 18, 2006, 08:12:34 AM
maybe his best game ever
Nah, that would be the game vs Houston a few years back. But the Eagles would have won that game without him anyway. No way the Eagles win yesterday without his effort. Quite possibly the most impact he's ever had in a game.
even after hurting his leg late in the 4th he made an open field tackle and drug tim carter back 3 yards by his leg. Dawk was unbelieveable yesterday.
(http://img141.imageshack.us/img141/3568/phinyg020827dheq4.jpg)
Gawd.
Quote from: ice grillin you on December 18, 2006, 08:12:34 AM
maybe his best game ever....he cant do it on a consistent basis anymore but he still has vintage 2002 dawk in him
It is hard to tell since the guys around him have been playing like hot garbage.
another big farg you to everyone who says Dawkins isn't the player he used to be. farg he's been our best, most consistent player on D for the past how many years?
Getting an early start on the drinking binge this morning, mussa?
No I'm the only one who's sippin reality son. Belie dat!
Um, holla?
Dawkins reminds me of a really good player.
Reno Mahe, obviously.
I won't shtein on Mahe this week. But if that was Westy back there that KO he had would have been taken to the house!
http://www.concretefield.com/forum/index.php?topic=17446.0
Quote from: MURP on December 18, 2006, 01:22:47 PM
http://www.concretefield.com/forum/index.php?topic=17446.0
ha! Nice find Murp.
That crackhead.....
Quote from: MURP on December 18, 2006, 01:22:47 PM
http://www.concretefield.com/forum/index.php?topic=17446.0
:-D
I don't see why yesterday's game is proof that Dawkins hasn't lost a step.
The fact remains that the guy has a killer instinct and is capable of making big plays. I'm sure that wouldn't change if he's in the NFL past age 40. However, he used to also have the speed and quickness of a cornerback to go along with it. It's really no big deal as long as he's used properly, and he's still the MVP of this defense 9 games out of 10.
The point is the idiots who were calling to cut him, not resign him, etc. Saying that he's worthless and old now.
i actually think for next season, Dawkins should be moved over the SS spot, where a slight lack of speed is ok. ditch lewis and constidine. And find your next FS, maybe in the draft. (or maybe go after Ken Hamlin from seattle, although i dont know for certian what safety spot he plays).
A plan like this would keep Dawkins effective, and we'd have the added bonus of ice grillin you having another few years of saying Reid built his defense around Ray Rhodes players.
andre waters died and brian dawkins came back to life
Quote from: FFatPatt on December 18, 2006, 01:57:19 PM
I don't see why yesterday's game is proof that Dawkins hasn't lost a step.
The fact remains that the guy has a killer instinct and is capable of making big plays. I'm sure that wouldn't change if he's in the NFL past age 40. However, he used to also have the speed and quickness of a cornerback to go along with it. It's really no big deal as long as he's used properly, and he's still the MVP of this defense 9 games out of 10.
There was a time when someone would break a big play against the Eagles, you could see them all alone sprinting down the field, and you would know exactly who was going to take them down before they reached the endzone.
Reading GF's quote i think of Dawk running down LT and punching the ball out in 2001?
Sounds like something he used to do, yes.
Since Giants fans love to post that pic of Shockey grabbing a TD over Dawkins, here's one for them:
(http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/sp/getty/86/full.getty-71465474jm018_philadelphia__9_02_25_pm.jpg)
Here's my favorite Shockey pic:
(http://images.sportsline.com/u/photos/football/nfl/img9877108.jpg)
I loved that hit. Give Shockey a little credit though, he jumped right up after getting jacked up!!
Dawk is the best player on this D right now. If anyone looks old and like he has lost a step, it's Trotter.
QuoteDawk of the town
With no A.I., Dawkins becomes longest-tenured athlete in city
By DANA PENNETT O'NEIL
oneild@phillynews.com
PRESUMABLY SOMETIME soon the Denver airport will reopen and Allen Iverson will officially leave Philadelphia. He will follow the same flight pattern - due west - that took Mike Lieberthal to Los Angeles last month and become another onetime Philly hero plying his trade in another city.
Brian Dawkins, in the meantime, will hop in his car today and make the same commute he has been making for 11 years. He will drive across the bridge from his New Jersey home for another day of work in South Philadelphia.
In a city that embraces its reputation as a place that chews up its stars and spits them out, Dawkins is, with Iverson's trade, the longest-tenured athlete in the city. He is gliding through his 11th season with a contract that extends another two.
Far from Teflon, he has endured his share of the faithful's wrath, written off as washed-up and a step slow in the last two seasons.
That Dawkins never took the bait explains perhaps more than anything why the Eagles' safety is still here.
He gets it. The kid from Jacksonville, Fla., by way of Clemson might be more Philly than Rocky. He understands what makes the city tick and more, respects what it takes to survive here.
"Everybody can't play in Philadelphia and I think Allen kind of mentioned that, too," Dawkins said. "You have to have tough skin. You have to be able to deal with criticism. You have to be able to ignore and push through, ignore the booing because you're going to get booed, I don't care who you are.
"Coming in here, people tell you what to expect but you never can prepare yourself for what you're going to deal with once things go bad or you start making bad plays. The criticism you're going to get, not just from the media, but from fans, people in the grocery stores, they're not going to hold back their opinions. Those are things you have to deal with as a pro athlete in Philadelphia. Some people understand it and some people don't. I understand it."
Iverson understood it to a degree, too, but unlike him, Dawkins managed to simultaneously play in the limelight without inviting the glare. He redirected his life not long after joining the Eagles, committing himself to living a Christian life and enveloping himself in the safe cocoon of his family.
That, coupled with his intentional avoidance of all things sports after a loss (no television, radio, magazine, newspapers), has helped Dawkins develop that rhinoceros skin.
Dawkins also knows that he has gotten off a lot easier than Iverson. He may be a leader in his franchise, but he has never had to carry the burden of being the face of the franchise. That job goes to Donovan McNabb.
"Especially Allen and Donovan, they're on a different level," Dawkins said. "I'm not on that level as far as the scrutiny they go through but I can definitely understand how you can get frustrated and slip up sometimes, say things out of frustration that you don't want to say."
If ever Dawkins were going to crack it likely would have been in the last two seasons. Outsiders began to question whether the 33-year-old, though playing with the same passion, was playing with the same abilities.
Instead of defending himself with words or bristling, Dawkins simply kept playing and last week was named to an All-Pro for the sixth time, putting him among the most elite of Eagles' company, alongside Chuck Bednarik (8), Reggie White (7) and Pete Pihos (6) as the only Eagles named to six Pro Bowls.
Asked to reflect about Dawkins' legacy, Andy Reid, a man who will never be accused of being effusive with his praise, didn't pause.
"He should be a Hall of Famer when it's all said and done," Reid said. "As far as his value, he'll go down as, if not the greatest safety to play here, at least one of the best."
Dawkins' legacy, unlike the player who just left here, isn't muddied by anything. He is liked. He is admired.
Most important, he is respected.
"I don't know how he's perceived outside of the locker room but in here, there's not a guy who's more highly thought of than Brian, the way he goes about his business and the way he plays football," Sean Considine said. "Brian is one of those guys, he doesn't look his age. He looks better than me and he's 10 years older. I don't think age comes into play when you talk about Brian."
Nice piece. And even though he may not be the face of this franchise, he's been the heart and sole of it for the better part of the last decade. He's a true Philadelphia sports icon.
True story: about two years ago, sitting in a restaurant:
Wife: So, what are we going to name the baby?
Me: I don't know...what do you think?
Wife: How about "Donovan Terrell"
Me: Uh, no...I don't think so.
Wife: Who is your favorite Eagle?
Me: That's funny - my two favorite players both have the same first name - Brian Dawkins and Brian Westbrook
Wife: Well, I guess that decides that...
Brian E. (http://shim1.shutterfly.com/procgserv/47b6ce10b3127cce98548bb2bce100000017103IYtnDRwxI), August 13 2005.
:bow Dawk
The creepy thing about it is that he looks just like 'em.
True story: about two years ago, sitting in a restaurant:
Wife: So, what are we going to name the baby?
Me: I don't know...what do you think?
Wife: How about "Donovan Terrell"
Me: Uh, no...I don't think so.
Wife: Who is your favorite Eagle?
Me: That's funny - my two favorite players both have the same first name - Brian Dawkins and Brian Westbrook
Wife: Well, I guess that decides that...
for your kids sake hopefully he doesnt look like brian dawkins cause he is one ugly motherfarger
Well, the link is a pic - I don't think he looks like either of them and people always tell us he is cute....but people say that about all babies.
Dawkins is the man. As I said before, he and Keith Byars are probably my two favorite Eagles of all time.
from NYT
QuoteDecember 23, 2006
Dawkins Leading by Example and Experience
By CLIFTON BROWN
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 21 — Before games, Brian Dawkins transforms from a mild-mannered, Bible-quoting man into a frenzied warrior, running through the tunnel, screaming and posturing as if his body is possessed. Teammates say they are amazed at how someone so mellow off the field becomes so tenacious once he steps into his role as a starting safety for the Eagles.
"He's like Clark Kent," place-kicker David Akers said. "You're talking about a guy with two different personalities. He's very low-key, very spiritual. But when game day comes, he looks like he's coming out of a cage. He plays nonstop, every single play. As a fan of the game, you almost have to enjoy watching Brian Dawkins."
When the Eagles need leadership, Dawkins provides it. He leads them in worship, often as the main speaker during their pregame prayer. He leads their defense as a six-time Pro Bowler, a tenacious tackler who lives by faith but plays with fury. And he leads all current Philadelphia professional athletes in staying power, a fixture with the Eagles for 11 consecutive seasons, outlasting so many others who have come and gone.
In a city known for being tough on athletes, Dawkins appears destined to start and finish his career here, something that Wilt Chamberlain, Charles Barkley, Reggie White and, now, Allen Iverson failed to do. While Dawkins does not compare himself with those Philadelphia sports icons, he is proud of a career that has Hall of Fame potential and proud that he has endeared himself to fans.
"Everybody can't play in Philadelphia," Dawkins said Thursday as he looked forward to a National Football Conference East showdown Monday between the Eagles (8-6) and the Dallas Cowboys (9-5).
"You have to have tough skin," Dawkins said. "You have to be able to deal with criticism. You have to ignore booing, because you're going to get booed — I don't care who you are. You have to look past those things and continue to play your game. Also, you have to go out and put a certain brand of ball on the court, floor, diamond or ice. You have to play a certain way. I think I've done that."
Dawkins is still doing it, showing no sign of losing anything at age 33. On the top shelf of his locker is a figurine collection of his favorite comic-book character, Wolverine of "X-Men." Wolverine is known for his keen senses, allowing him to track adversaries with ease, a trait that describes Dawkins.
His ability to create turnovers makes him one of the N.F.L.'s biggest impact players on defense. Watch any Eagles game, and Dawkins is hard to miss: No. 20, with a visor attached to his face mask, pursuing receivers and ball carriers like a lion chasing his prey. He punishes with his hitting, pressures quarterbacks with his blitzing and frustrates receivers with his coverage.
In 2002 against the Houston Texans, Dawkins became the first player in league history to record a sack, an interception, a fumble recovery and a touchdown reception in the same game. Because of his versatility, Dawkins creates headaches for opposing offenses, often showing up in places they do not expect.
Last Sunday against the Giants, he forced two fumbles and intercepted a pass. The week before against Washington, Dawkins sacked Jason Campbell to snuff out a fourth-quarter drive, helping to preserve a 2-point Philadelphia victory. The week before that against Carolina, he intercepted a pass and returned it 38 yards to set up the winning field goal.
The Eagles, after unexpectedly asserting themselves into the thick of playoff contention, will take a three-game winning streak to Dallas. When the team's starting quarterback, Donovan McNabb, went down with a season-ending knee injury last month, many considered the Eagles doomed. But the backup Jeff Garcia has stepped in to lead the offense.
Dawkins, meanwhile, has fueled the defense and solidified his place as one of the best players in franchise history. He has won more games as an Eagle (91) than anyone in team history, and he ranks fourth on the team's career interception list with 31.
"When Donovan went down, he took it up a notch," Philadelphia Coach Andy Reid said of Dawkins. "He should be a Hall of Famer when it's all said and done. He'll go down as, if not the greatest safety to play here, as one of them."
Asked how it felt to hear that Reid had said that, Dawkins said: "It's a humbling thing, but I'll take it. Hopefully, that will happen one day. It lets me know I'm doing pretty good for this team."
Dawkins's immediate concern is helping the Eagles make the playoffs; his quest to win a Super Bowl remains unfulfilled.
Philadelphia and Dallas already share a heated rivalry. On Monday, the Eagles can clinch a playoff spot by defeating the Cowboys, and Dallas can clinch a division title with a victory. There is also plenty of friction between Dallas receiver Terrell Owens and several Eagles. A feud between Owens and McNabb divided Philadelphia's locker room last season, when Owens was still with the Eagles. Owens also sparred with Garcia when they were teammates in San Francisco.
Some of Philadelphia's locker-room leaders, like Dawkins, were criticized last season for not confronting Owens when he publicly knocked McNabb. But Akers said he believed that those who questioned the strength of the Eagles' locker room were either uninformed or unrealistic.
"You shouldn't see fights among employees," Akers said. "If it's not working out, it's up to management to make a decision. When you look at Brian Dawkins, you're looking at how a true professional is supposed to perform. If that's not enough, if that didn't rub off, than what is?"
Dawkins says he has grown tired of talking about Owens, but if they cross paths Monday, it is not farfetched to think that a ferocious collision could ensue. That is how Dawkins frequently greets opponents.
He says he feels no conflict being a religious man in a violent sport, although he would rather spend Christmas with his wife, Connie, and their children, Brian Jr., 10, and Brionni, 7.
But Dawkins has a game in Dallas, so he will make the transformation from mild-mannered soul to soul of the Eagles' defense.
"I don't shy away from who I am and the ability I've been given," he said. "I've had to work to maintain my physique and to get my body in physical shape to play this game. But I've been blessed with some talents. Sometimes I look back at the film and wonder how in the world I got from Point A to Point B that fast. I know that's not me. I've been given a God-given ability. And I try to do it with excellence."
I just hate inferences like the one Dawk makes here:
"...and wonder how in the world I got from point A to Point B that fast. I know that's not me."
Yeah moron, it was Jesus who got you there.
farg.
Yeah. There's plenty of evidence that any gods that might exist aren't Eagles fans.
Dawkins is having a great run of games. He has picked up his game and is dominating on his side of the ball.
He still isn't as good as he was four years ago.
That is all.
QuoteEagles S Dawkins among NFL Players of Month for DecemberSportsTicker
National Football League News Wire
NEW YORK -- Brian Dawkins helped transform the
Philadelphia Eagles from a postseason afterthought to a division
winner in a matter of weeks. The NFL rewarded the hard-hitting
safety for his outstanding play.
After leading the Eagles to a 5-0 record in the month of
December, Dawkins on Thursday was named the NFC Defensive Player
of the Month.
New England Patriots defensive tackle Ty Warren earned defensive
honors in the AFC, while St. Louis Rams running back Steven
Jackson and Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Marvin Harrison
were the Offensive Players of the Month.
Chicago Bears returner Devin Hester and New York Jets kicker
Mike Nugent took Special Teams honors.
The Eagles (10-6) appeared finished when superstar quarterback
Donovan McNabb suffered a season-ending knee injury in a loss to
Tennessee in Week 11.
But thanks to the inspired play of Dawkins and the resurgence of
backup quarterback Jeff Garcia, Philadelphia won its last five
games en route to the NFC East Division title.
Dawkins, who was named to his sixth Pro Bowl, was the driving
force behind an Eagles which yielded an average of just 17.8
points during the five-game winning streak. He recorded 48
tackles, three interceptions, one sack, two forced fumbles and
six passes defensed during the month.
It was the first career Player of the Month Award for Dawkins,
who recorded a career-high 93 tackles and four interceptions
this season.
Quote from: Diomedes on December 24, 2006, 07:31:02 AM
from NYT
QuoteDecember 23, 2006
Dawkins Leading by Example and Experience
By CLIFTON BROWN
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 21 — Before games, Brian Dawkins transforms from a mild-mannered, Bible-quoting man into a frenzied warrior, running through the tunnel, screaming and posturing as if his body is possessed. Teammates say they are amazed at how someone so mellow off the field becomes so tenacious once he steps into his role as a starting safety for the Eagles.
"He's like Clark Kent," place-kicker David Akers said. "You're talking about a guy with two different personalities. He's very low-key, very spiritual. But when game day comes, he looks like he's coming out of a cage. He plays nonstop, every single play. As a fan of the game, you almost have to enjoy watching Brian Dawkins."
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I can't help but be struck by some of the similarities between Dawk and Andre Waters.
A kind, respectful, and spiritually devout man off the field, Andre was a violent and intimidating force on the Vet turf. But taking it much further than Dawkins, he would ritualistically transform step by step into his Dirty Waters alter ego. Sometimes chanting or writing biblical slogans on his forehead or arm, always wearing his lucky white and blue undershirt, he would by gametime have whipped himself into a maniacal state - leaving little of the former self behind. As I remember the story, he attacked a Saints player walking to the tunnel after a playoff game. Inquirer reporter Mark Bowden, who knew Andre well, wrote that Waters genuinely seemed puzzled by the questions about his actions, and after the game truely appeared to remember nothing at all of the attack.
Dawk of course has his feet much more firmly on the ground. But, their similarites do bring to mind how fortunate we've been to have a couple of generations of safteys that epitomize what we Philly fans live for on Sundays. RIP Andre
Quote from: Geowhizzer on December 22, 2006, 12:45:30 PM
Dawkins is the man. As I said before, he and Keith Byars are probably my two favorite Eagles of all time.
Two of my all time favorite eagle plays were dawk laying out Vick in the 2002 playoff game and Byars sending Pepper Johnson for a helicopter ride in that 1990 game at the Vet. Better yet was Buddy Ryan calling a timeout so the crowd could see the play on the jumbotron.
Quote from: Cerevant on December 22, 2006, 10:49:56 AM
True story: about two years ago, sitting in a restaurant:
Wife: So, what are we going to name the baby?
Me: I don't know...what do you think?
Wife: How about "Donovan Terrell"
Me: Uh, no...I don't think so.
Wife: Who is your favorite Eagle?
Me: That's funny - my two favorite players both have the same first name - Brian Dawkins and Brian Westbrook
Wife: Well, I guess that decides that...
Brian E. (http://shim1.shutterfly.com/procgserv/47b6ce10b3127cce98548bb2bce100000017103IYtnDRwxI), August 13 2005.
:bow Dawk
The amazing part is how much he looks like a cross between them. Truly astonishing.
Quote from: Sgt PSN on December 22, 2006, 10:59:15 AM
The creepy thing about it is that he looks just like 'em.
Quote from: Zanshin on January 05, 2007, 08:26:56 AM
The amazing part is how much he looks like a cross between them. Truly astonishing.
Alright - you guys are creeping me out. I thought Sarge was just busting my balls...are you guys serious? I just don't see it...
How can you NOT see that? That's the real question.
ESPN just had a great short on Dawkins, highlighted by his hit on crumpler. You'd have to be dead to not have that fire you up!
Quote from: Cerevant on January 05, 2007, 08:42:16 AM
Quote from: Sgt PSN on December 22, 2006, 10:59:15 AM
The creepy thing about it is that he looks just like 'em.
Quote from: Zanshin on January 05, 2007, 08:26:56 AM
The amazing part is how much he looks like a cross between them. Truly astonishing.
Alright - you guys are creeping me out. I thought Sarge was just busting my balls...are you guys serious? I just don't see it...
A simple DNA test will show that your child is miraculously the offspring of both Westbrook and Dawkins. Expect to hear from their attorneys during the offseason to coordinate visitation priviledges
Quote from: Sgt PSN on January 07, 2007, 01:20:16 PM
A simple DNA test will show that your child is miraculously the offspring of both Westbrook and Dawkins. Expect to hear from their attorneys during the offseason to coordinate visitation priviledges
Hmmm...think I could hit them up for tickets?
(http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/7620/dawkinsmj6.png)
Dawk thinks he's in a comic book.
That play made no sense, but it proved Dawkins goes clinically insane on gameday and was fun to watch.
He crawled out of the tunnel too. Dawk> Life
It was bizarre.
He's coked up.
Quote from: General_Failure on January 08, 2007, 04:03:54 PM
He's coked up.
Ha! When my Giants fan buddy was bragging about Shockey fighting for yards with no helmet, I told him it's amazing what you get the confidence to do with an 8 ball and some cortisone shots.
Whatever it was, it was far weirder than Shockey fighting for a first down without a helmet.
Quote from: Diomedes on January 08, 2007, 04:06:30 PM
Whatever it was, it was far weirder than Shockey fighting for a first down without a helmet.
Go have sex with your boy Jeremy then, Shockey lover. This is a message board for Eagles fans.
He really does think he's wolverine when he steps on the field. Its friggin great :evil
Coked up bigtime.
My rationalization was that he was trying to cause a fumble, but when you look at it more closely, it really does look like he's trying to make the claws come out...
It was hella athletic, that's for sure. And it's clear that Dawk was just amped out of his mind. Still...farging weird. Like he was on a movie set, not a football field.
Quote from: PhillyPhreak54 on January 08, 2007, 04:02:48 PM
He crawled out of the tunnel too. Dawk> Life
he's done that before big games at home before.LOL....classic.
Dawk looked like a spider doing that yesterday :-D
Yeah, I was thinking more spider-esque.
It was a very weird tackle. I remember Aikman making a comment that he was surprised about the leap.
Gotta love the intensity.
Quote from: PhillyPhreak54 on January 08, 2007, 04:02:48 PM
He crawled out of the tunnel too. Dawk> Life
I missed it. My wife told me about it. Something to the effect of "Dawkins was doing some creepy-ass crawling around when he entered the field." Ok, so maybe it wasn't quite phrased like that, but she did compare it to a spider crawl.
(http://freeshare.us/127fs269845.jpg)
Quote from: SD_Eagle on January 08, 2007, 06:43:33 PM
(http://freeshare.us/127fs269845.jpg)
:-D
I just went through that thread on the emb, there are a lot of good ones:
http://freeshare.us/127fs269845.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs272670.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs272990.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs27408.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs275456.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs278568.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs279639.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs28073.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs282121.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs282724.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs271079.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs283919.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs284396.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs286184.jpg
http://m1.freeshare.us/127fs287185.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs291345.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/weaponx3.gif
Not dawkins, but funny nonetheless
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v730/jlarama/maherace.jpg
there are a few good ones in there, to be sure. the parade one made me smile most
I think this one's my favorite:
(http://freeshare.us/127fs282121.jpg)
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/weaponx5.gif)
:-D :-D
Awesome
Brian Dawkins, office safety.
Quote from: BigEd76 on January 08, 2007, 09:13:44 PM
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/weaponx5.gif)
lmfao
Too funny. :-D
Those were excellent. I might have some fun with that myself.
those are great! love the Macy's Parade one.
Here are some more from the thread in TATE. A bunch of the new ones are just dawk sneaking up on someone, so I didnt include them. These are some of the better new editions:
http://freeshare.us/127fs301843.jpg
http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y135/jjackson02/dawkins.jpg
http://img143.imageshack.us/img143/195/matrixni1.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs30799.jpg
http://img237.imageshack.us/img237/5602/dawkniagarakc3.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs310896.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs30464.jpg
http://img154.imageshack.us/img154/9332/dawkskybt3.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs312397.jpg
http://img67.imageshack.us/img67/1217/superdawk12kw3.jpg
http://img89.imageshack.us/img89/3576/superdawk13th7.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/DSCN4378.jpg
http://img68.imageshack.us/img68/4592/superdawk15nf1.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs315786.jpg
http://freeshare.us/127fs316575.jpg
http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r204/janueswski/JackinaBox.jpg
http://i134.photobucket.com/albums/q100/rikaxsuave13/jord2.jpg
Finally, it looks like Die Hard had some help
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/weaponx7.jpg
salmon...ha ha ha
Tiny salmon swimming in a stream
Tiny salmon chasing that impossible dream
The mynah bird says, "Caw. Ca-Caw"
The chimpanzee says, "EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE"
The friendly owl says, "Hoo, hoo-hoo"
But the salmon can only say, "Bloobloobloobloo. Blooboloobloobloo. Blooboloobolooooo-Blooblooo-Bloobloobloo."
And it's sad.
My 2 favorites:
http://www.weaverco.com/stuff/hunter.jpg (http://www.weaverco.com/stuff/hunter.jpg)
http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r204/janueswski/popupbook.jpg (http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r204/janueswski/popupbook.jpg)
Quote from: Beermonkey on January 09, 2007, 11:46:59 AM
My 2 favorites:
http://www.weaverco.com/stuff/hunter.jpg (http://www.weaverco.com/stuff/hunter.jpg)
Wolverine X-ing?
HAHA. After the game sunday me and two other of my buddies were so amped up, we decided to go out to a few bars and piss people off. The one bar we went to, we got out of the truck and I took off running cause it was pouring rain, all asudden i hear my buddies behind me. they yelled for me to stop i look back and both of them are doing the Dawkins crawl in the parking lot, pouring rain. I just about lost it. :-D
ya gotta love that guy. that tackle he really did look like an eagle. :evil
anyone have the original photo?
(http://enrico.blogs.com/photos/uncategorized/flyingbriandawkins.jpg)
u da man :yay
is there a pic of the crawl?
Here's one of my favorites... :-D
(http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y135/jjackson02/dawkins.jpg)
... and honorable mention for Koy.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v730/jlarama/koyd.jpg)
Haha oh man that Koy pictured cracked me up. :)
(http://i106.photobucket.com/albums/m267/jeepwrang1994/XMan.gif)
i watched the game last night off of the DVR and Troy Aikman was really bothered by that tackle. it was funny.
"I dont know what that was all about?"
He just couldn't fathom why someone would fly thru the air to tackle someone :-D
Dawkins would look like the biggest jackass had he missed.
Quote from: Sgt PSN on December 22, 2006, 10:59:15 AM
The creepy thing about it is that he looks just like 'em.
That kid looks half-leprechaun.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v502/ibsamantha/Photoshop/dawkhop.gif)
So, I'm going through some of my old football and baseball cards and look what I came across:
(http://img179.imageshack.us/img179/4003/1021102sz7.jpg)
(http://img300.imageshack.us/img300/6168/1021103qq7.jpg)
A Brian Dawkins rookie card and look at the number he's wearing.
Wow, I don't ever remember him wearing 24. Much like Reggie White wearing 91 his rookie year, I wouldn't even know it if it wasn't on a football card.
Nice find Rome.
4.34 in 40 :o
Didn't see these in here, but I haven't clicked on every link that was posted either....
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v73/hgto8g/weaponx5.gif)
(http://members.shaw.ca/jnault123/dawkbaby.gif)
And here's one of Mahe just because.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v485/milkbar/reno8.gif)
that Reno one is awsome :-D