Tag Archives: tecmo superbowl

Fenney, Rick

to90 fenneyCards: Topps 1990, Topps 1990 Team Card, GameDay 1992
Acquired: TTM 2014, C/o Home
Sent:  3/4   Received: 4/21   (47 days)

The unqualified workhorses of the NFL who got no respect, – the Fullback, is one of my favorite positions to collect from the 80s to early 90s, so when I saw Rick Fenney pop up, I had to write him. After helping the Huskies win the Orange Bowl as a Sophmore against Oklahoma, Fenney was on the radar of NFL scouts. The Vikings selected Rick during the 8th round of the 1987 draft. With a pretty crowded backfield, including Alfred Anderson, DJ Dozier, and Darrin Nelson already established as lead backs, Fenney was able to make the squad on the merit of his special teams work. Fans embraced Rick as a sort of Great White Hope. GWH appear every few years, and they represent this lost era of white runningbacks, and are usually perceived as making it up ‘athletic talent’ with grit, determination, and intelligence.

to90 vikingsTCAnyway, Rick had a pretty quiet rookie season. He scored his first NFL touchdown in 1988 and was ranked first among NFC backs in yards per carry (4.9) -with a minimum of 50 attempts that year. In 1989, the team relied on him more heavily, and he led the team in rushing over 5 contests, and ranked second on the team (behind Herschel Walker) with 588 yards. Rick’s stats declined on 1990 due to a strained knee, and he missed time in the lineup starting only 5 games and running for 376 yards and 2 touchdowns.  By 1991, Rick was hobbled by a hip condition, and was only active for 11 games. He’d retire after the season, but not before GameDay made one last card of Rick.

gday92 fenneyRick had become interested in financial planning, – something he had picked up during the off seasons from the Vikings. He landed on his feet and went right into banking. Things got bigger and bigger for Fenney, and the long of the short is, they got too big, for him to handle. Rick set up a hedge fund in 2001, and watched all his investors’ money go down the drain. He was convicted of wire fraud and went to prison, admitting that he stole up to $2.5 million dollars. After spending 3 years in prison, Fenney has been trying to better himself everyday. Surely he feels such a nauseating amount of guilt about what happened. -A lot of that money was from friends and family.  He dreams of how he can make some of that money back so that he can try to pay back all his friends, neighbors, and family that he wronged, but I completely understand if he has insulated himself from the situation. It’s tough. I probably feel something similar about my student loans, and how my parents are cosigned on something I may never be able to afford to pay back.

G/Gs 63/16    Rush 358   Yds 1508    Avg   4.2    Td 11   Lg 28   |
Rec  71    Yds 628     Avg 8.8    Td 2    Lg 42

Anderson, Ottis ‘OJ’ (2)

flr99si andersonCard: Fleer 1999 Sports Illustrated
Acquired: Target Autograph Memorabilia, 2013
See Also: Ottis Anderson

Probably one of the worst autographs I ever received TTM from a player was from Ottis Anderson, so it came as quite a surprise when I pulled an autograph from him out of one of the Target Autograph Memorabilia packs, but also because it had his full autograph. – Not just his first name. A very nice pull.

I actually had this Sports Illustrated at some point, and while it’s not a bad looking card, I partially understand why Fleer went the way of the do do, with sets like these. Previously I had received one of these Fleer Sports Illustrated cards from Roger Craig, but the design and look is so stale, that I thought these were thrown together promotionals. They didn’t even bother to remove the bar code or price from the original magazine.

The University of Miami’s, (FL) all time leading rusher at the time of his graduation, Ottis racked up 3331 yards, -including 1,266 his Senior season. He went on to have a prestigious career with the St. Louis Cardinals and earn NFL RotY Honors in 1979. In 1986 the Cardinals cut Anderson, thanks to the abuse of heavy running all those years. He’d make a comeback, and help the Giants win Super Bowl XXV against the Bills.

Gibson, Dennis

Card: Topps 1988
Acquired: Canton Acquisition 2012

Dennis Gibson is best remembered by Charger fans as being the savior of the team in the 1994 AFC Championship Game, when he blocked a TD pass from Steelers’ QB Neil O’Donnell in the endzone to win the game. The play propelled the Cinderella Chargers of 1994 into the SuperBowl- their only SuperBowl appearance to date.

A home grown Iowa product who went to school at none other than Iowa, Gibson went to the bright lights of the city of cars and industry, as Detroit took him in the 8th round of the 1987 draft. Considered a budget find, Gibson stepped right in and contributed almost immediately, and later went on to play beside both Michael Cofer and Chris Spielman at right inside linebacker for the Lions 3-4 alignment. Gibson also appears alongside his teammates in the classic football game Tecmo Super Bowl. He saw some of the better glory days of the reborn Lions under Wayne Fontes and started 7 seasons for the Lions defense. In 1988 Gibson had a career high 116 tackles, and in an injury shortened 6 games in 1989 he recovered 3 fumbles. He’d sign with the Chargers in 1994 and play there through the 1995 season before retiring. At last glance in 2013, Gibson runs Encore Pizza in near obscurity outside of Des Moines, Iowa.

G/Gs 121/120    Tac 582    Sac 2.5   Fum 6     Int 3     Yds  15   Avg 5.0   Td 0    Lg 10