1970 All-Pro Team - Offense

Offense

Position First Team Second Team
Quarterback John Brodie, San Francisco 49ers (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW) Fran Tarkenton, New York Giants (PFWA-2)
Bob Griese, Miami Dolphins (NEA-2)
Running back Larry Brown, Washington Redskins (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Ron Johnson, New York Giants (AP, PFWA, PFW)
MacArthur Lane, St. Louis Cardinals (NEA)
Mel Farr, Detroit Lions (NEA-2)
Floyd Little, Denver Broncos (PFWA-2)
Ron Johnson, New York Giants (NEA-2)
MacArthur Lane, St. Louis Cardinals (PFWA-2)
Wide receiver Gene Washington, San Francisco 49ers (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Dick Gordon, Chicago Bears (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Paul Warfield, Miami Dolphins (NEA-2)
Fred Biletnikoff, Oakland Raiders (PFWA-2)
Warren Wells, Oakland Raiders (NEA-2)
Marlin Briscoe, Buffalo Bills (PFWA-2)
Tight end Charlie Sanders, Detroit Lions (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW) Bob Trumpy, Cincinnati Bengals (NEA-2)
Raymond Chester, Oakland Raiders (PFWA-2)
Tackle Bob Brown, Los Angeles Rams (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Jim Tyrer, Kansas City Chiefs (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Winston Hill, New York Jets (NEA-2, PFWA-2)
Ron Yary, Minnesota Vikings (PFWA-2)
Ernie McMillan, St. Louis Cardinals (NEA-2)
Guard Gene Upshaw, Oakland Raiders (AP, PFWA, PFW)
Gale Gillingham, Green Bay Packers (AP, NEA)
Tom Mack, Los Angeles Rams (PFW)
Walt Sweeney, San Diego Chargers (NEA)
Gene Hickerson, Cleveland Browns (PFWA)
Irv Goode, St. Louis Cardinals (NEA-2)
Gale Gillingham, Green Bay Packers (PFWA-2)
Tom Mack, Los Angeles Rams (NEA-2, PFWA-2)
Center Jim Otto, Oakland Raiders (AP, NEA)
Mick Tingelhoff, Minnesota Vikings (PFWA, PFW)
Ed Flanagan, Detroit Lions (PFWA-2)
Mick Tingelhoff, Minnesota Vikings (NEA-2)

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Famous quotes containing the word offense:

    There is something in the breast of almost every man, which at bottom takes offense at the attentions of any other man offered to a woman, the hope of whose nuptial love he himself may have discarded. Fain would a man selfishly appropriate all the hearts which have ever in any way confessed themselves his.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)

    Comparatively, we can excuse any offense against the heart, but not against the imagination. The imagination knows—nothing escapes its glance from out its eyry—and it controls the breast.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Crude men who feel themselves insulted tend to assess the degree of insult as high as possible, and talk about the offense in greatly exaggerated language, only so they can revel to their heart’s content in the aroused feelings of hatred and revenge.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)