Premium Only Content

👕 #Helping Out @ George Brancato Park & Train Track Talk In Ottawa 🚂
🍏Healthy4Life - July 20th 2024 long Hair Park #48 Cleaned 🧹 Giving Back Free Clothes 👕 May 18th 2024 Short Hair - I Change Everyday For The Greater Good.
Park Named After George Brancato (May 27, 1931 – October 22, 2019 was an American/Canadian gridiron football player and coach.
Both an offensive and defensive player in college, he played five games for the Chicago Cardinals during the 1954 NFL season. He rushed the ball twice for 26 yards and caught three passes for 28 yards. In 1955 he played in the Cardinals' defensive backfield. He joined the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League (CFL) a as halfback for the 1956 season. He played defensive back for the Ottawa Rough Riders for seven seasons, occasionally playing on offense.
After his retirement, he taught phys ed at Laval High and Montreal's Loyola High School before returning to Ottawa as an assistant coach. In 1974 he was promoted to head coach after Coach of the Year Jack Gotta left to become head coach and general manager of the World Football League's Birmingham Americans. In 1975 he won the Annis Stukus Trophy as CFL's Coach of the Year after a first place 10-5-1 finish. The following season, he defeated the Saskatchewan Roughriders, 23–20, in the 64th Grey Cup. In 1981, his 5–11 Rough Riders came close to causing a massive upset in that year's Grey Cup versus the Edmonton Eskimos. After a 4–12 1984 season he was relieved of his coaching duties and appointed director of player personnel.
In 1989, he was hired to coach the Chicago Bruisers of the Arena Football League. After the team folded he served as an assistant under Ernie Stautner with the expansion Dallas Texans.
He returned to Ottawa in 1993 as Ron Smeltzer's special teams and secondary coach. That same year, he was the head coach of the UCCB Capers gridiron football team, which lasted only one season.[2] The following season, he served as the offensive coordinator of the Shreveport Pirates. His next coaching job was as Defensive coordinator of the Anaheim Piranhas. In 1999, he returned to the AFL with the Florida Bobcats as the team's defensive coordinator. It was his final coaching job as he retired at the end of the season.
Have a Healthy Day Rumble Friends.
-
8:39
Faith Frontline
21 hours agoJoe Rogan’s Mind Was Blown by THIS Bible Secret
8.66K19 -
1:23:40
Squaring The Circle, A Randall Carlson Podcast
20 hours ago#054 The Land Lost To The Flame - Squaring the Circle: A Randall Carlson Podcast
4.22K5 -
34:39
Ohio State Football and Recruiting at Buckeye Huddle
21 hours agoOhio State Football: Who Will be the Surprise Stars for the Buckeyes in 2025?
5.76K3 -
59:00
Greg Hunter's USAWatchdog.com
17 hours agoOmniwar - Weaponization of Everything – Catherine Austin Fitts
31.1K21 -
16:30
Dr Disrespect
2 days agoI Take One Vacation… and the Industry COLLAPSES
85.2K20 -
LIVE
Lofi Girl
2 years agoSynthwave Radio 🌌 - beats to chill/game to
514 watching -
22:50
GritsGG
17 hours agoDiscussing Warzone S4 Patch! Rank 1 Player's Thoughts!
12.5K -
1:23:50
TruthStream with Joe and Scott
1 day agoCall to Podcasters! Dear Mr President Documentary with Mel Carmine and Carole Maureen Friesen live 7/5 #457
34K6 -
2:51:33
The Pascal Show
21 hours ago $3.64 earned27 DEAD, CHILDREN MISSING! Desperate Search Along Guadalupe River After Texas Floods
14.8K4 -
2:09:35
Badlands Media
22 hours agoDevolution Power Hour Ep. 369: Debt Theater, Fake Elections, and Elon’s New Party Psyop
89K65