Purify, Maurice

tntafl11 purifyCard: TNT AFL 2011 Promo
Acquired: IP 6/15/2014, San Antonio Talons vs. The Arizona Rattlers

Maurice earned Second Team All-Big 12 Hounrs as a senior after catching 57 passes for 814 yards and 9 touchdowns with the Nebraska Cornhuskers in 2007.  Going undrafted, Purify signed with the Cincinnati Bengals in 2008 where he’d see time on special teams, recording 5 tackles in 2009.  He joined the Georgia Force in 2010 and was named Rookie of the Year and Breakout Player of the Year. Maurice also earned Second-Team All-Arena honors after leading the Georgia Force with 130 receptions and 46 TDs, while finishing second on the team with 1,653 yards receiving.  In 2011, Maurice decided to play for the UFL, but an injury landed him on injured reserve for the majority of the league season, so Maurice returned to the Arena leagues, this time signing with the powerful Arizona Rattlers. He’d go on to catch 126 balls for 1,932 yards and 46 touchdowns that season and earn First-Team All-Arena Honors. He’d be a key component in the Rattlers ArenaBowl XXV victory, as he’d be named Offensive Player of the Game for his seven touchdown performance. Maurice resigned with Arizona for the 2013 season, but was injured for much of the year. Still he’d post up  51 receptions for 740 yards and nine touchdowns in nine games, and two touchdowns in the team’s return to ArenaBowl XXVI.  Maurice was the last of the ‘big 3’ that I was after from the Rattlers that evening. He went over to sign autographs before the game, so I had to dart across the stands with pen in hand to get him. Still I ended up with his autograph on this sweet looking card of him from his days with the Force.

 

Mandarich, Tony

udldg11 mandarich
Cards: Stadium Club 1991, Upper Deck 1990
Acquired:  Canton Acquisition 2012, TTM 2014, C/o Home
Sent:   4/9   Received: 4/21   (12 days)

Tony Mandarich is a true story about the rise, fall, and return, of an incredible offensive lineman from one of the best drafts during the ‘golden era’ of football. The 1989 draft is considered by many, (myself included,) to be one of the greatest professional football drafts of the modern age of football. The draft included some huge names. Troy Aikman, Derrick Thomas, Barry Sanders, Deion Sanders,Eric Metcalf, Steve Atwater, and Andre Rison were all some of the big names taken- and that was during the first round. Of these names mentioned, Aikman, Thomas, and both Sanders are in the Hall of Fame. They went number one overall, number three, number four, and number five. So wait a minute, who went number two? Enter “The Incredible Bulk”, Tony Mandarich.

Tony Mandarich had an impressive career at Michigan State after coming to the states from Canada during High School. A veritable man-mountain, Tony measured in at 6’6″, 304 and ran sc91 mandarichthe 40 in a mouth watering 4.65. For an offensive lineman of his size and power, the numbers were not only off the chart, – they were unheard of. He even popularized the term ‘knockdown block’ for offensive linemen, averaging 10 or more a game. Mandarich’s stock skyrocketed prior to the NFL draft. I remember one of the first Sports Illustrated’s that I got in the mail featured Tony on the cover, (in a not so flattering photo, but showcasing his frame,)  touting him as “The Incredible Bulk” on the cover of the magazine. It was a lot to live up to for Mandarich, so he embraced the hype machine.
Tony went #2 to the Green Bay Packers, after the Cowboys selected Troy Aikman #1 overall. Most draft pundits at the time believed the old wives tale that: “Offensive line was the safest position to pick high in the draft,” and showered Coach Lindy Infante and the Pack with praise for their conservative and solid pick. Mel Kiper was so high on Tony, I thought he was going to name his first born after him. Mandarich came into Green Bay with a head of steam and proceeded to spiral out of control due to drugs and alcohol abuse. He also went from ‘bad boy’ in the media darling spotlight, to just ‘bad’ in the media spotlight. It was a quick and public fall for Tony who was lambasted for not even cracking the starting lineup in 1989. In 1990 he started all 16 games at right tackle, (but was penalized more often than any other lineman on the team,) and quietly started 15 more in 1991. Things only got worse for Tony however, as he sat out all of the 1992 season due to a thyroid condition and post-concussive syndrome symptoms.  After shopping him privately throughout the year to multiple teams, the Packers decided to cut Mandarich citing a non-football injury. “Sports Illustrated” basically said, “Don’t let the door hit you on the way out,” with their cover follow up article “The NFL’s Incredible Bust”.  It was a hard, hard fall for Tony and he remained out of football for the next 4 seasons, fighting his inner demons and getting treatment for drugs and alcohol, but in 1996 there he was again, reborn- in Indianapolis.

The Colts needed help in 1996 going through another ‘rebuilding phase’ before the ‘Age of Manning’, and the place they needed it most was o-line, where they were thin at the position and wet behind the ears. Everybody loves a comeback story, but nobodypset89 mandarich really likes to be proven wrong, especially after they’ve dead and buried a guy, so there were very few people who gave Mandarich a chance at redemption, but the Colts and his former Coach Lindy Infante did, and he’d reward them by putting in a solid, humble, workmanlike job. Tony was an experiment to the Colts that paid off, listed at a right tackle, but also spending a lot of time inside at guard. (He lost out on the NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award to Jerome Bettis.)  Tony, in fact started all 16 games in 1997, and was on his way to starting all 16 in 1998, but a shoulder injury in week 10 ended his season.  Mandarich finally decided that he was done, and opted to retire after the season.

Since then, Tony has come all clean about his time in football. It was revealed that he did indeed use steroids while at Michigan State. He also abused painkillers and alcohol readily, which combined with a lack of commitment to football really ended his career in Green Bay. The silver lining is that he returned to play the sport with renewed vigor and focus on the Colts, and there he was clean of all impediments and focused on the game. He wrote a
gday92 mandarich book titled, “My Dirty Little Secrets: Steroids, Alcohol, & God”, and also did a ‘Behind the Lines’ story for ESPN, but really he hopes to just be able to show other people that there is indeed redemption and a way out and back at the end of the day.  Tony currently runs a photo studio that specializes in nature photography and a full service web media business specializing in website development and optimization.  He also does motivational public speaking about his life and struggles.

Tony has been really good to fans over the years and is an avid TTM signer. While I had gotten the Upper Deck and Stadium Cards previously through the Canton Acquisition, but I really wanted to get Tony on cards that were important to me. I  was happy to get him on the GameDay, ProSet, Action Packed, and Upper Deck Legends cards in under half a month.

Rice, Tony ‘Antonio Arroz’

psetwlaf91 riceCards: Pro Set World League 1991, Ultimate WLAF 1991
Acquired: TTM 2013, C/o Work
Sent: 9/10/13   Received:   5/17/14   (250 days)
Failure: TTM 2011, C/o Blue & Gold Magazine

An amazing quarterback at Notre Dame, Tony Rice finished with an incredible 28-3 record for the Irish. When the nation was in full bloom love the Notre Dame football during the late 80’s, if Rocket Ismail gracing the cover of Sports Illustrated, they were talking about Rice’s ability to come alive and win games with his will and sheer athleticism. During that period, Tony led the Irish to the National Championship in 1988 and narrowly missed one in 1989.

The college ranks were a completely different animal back then. Players weren’t scouted and groomed for NFL success like they are today.  Rice was looked down on by scouts because he was an option quarterback with great rushing stats, but not so amazing passing stats. He did not get drafted in 1990, so Tony played in the CFL for the Saskatchewan Roughriders. Unable to crack the lineup ult92 ricebehind starter Kent Austin, Rice elected to join the WLAF in 1991. Drafted by the Barcelona Dragons, the league attemped to lean on the Dragons to trade Rice to the Knights, because he was still popular in the states, but Barcelona refused. In the meantime, he’d split time with Scott Erney as the team rolled to World Bowl I against the London Monarchs.  During the season the Spanish translation of his name became quite popular and he was referred to in the media as ‘Antonio Arroz’.  Again, much like his time at Notre Dame,  Rice would demonstrate his ability to wreck opposing defensive gameplans with oppritune scrambling. He’d rush for 210 yards and 2 TDs in 33 carries. The Dragons finished as European Division Champs in 1992, but lose to the eventual World Bowl Champion Sacramento Surge. While the WLAF would reorganize after the season, Rice decided to hang around in Europe for an additional season, playing for the Munich Thunder of the Football League of Europe.  At the time of the league’s suspension, Tony was the leading rusher in WLAF history, at the quarterback position.

He worked for the Notre Dame “Blue and Gold” magazine publication for a few years, and I had heard rumors through the grapevine as to where he was at. Currently he’s with HUB International. Cross referencing with other sources I was able to peg down his actual location and shot these cards out to him last year. After failing previously in 2011, I was gunshy about giving him another shot, but when it comes to TTM autographs, -with no risk, there is no reward. I was pretty happy to get this one back with a small note inside “Apologizing for the wait, Your Friend, Tony Rice”, and the two autographed cards.

WLAF    Att 186     Comp 91     Yds 1228      Pct 48.9%        Td 1     Int 5      Rat  61.0  |
Rush 44      Yds 312    Avg 7.1     Lg 24     Td 3

 

Celebrating the game, the players, the cards, and the autographs for over 25 years.