Interesting reads:
"I've thought about that throw over and over the years. Could I have changed anything or done anything differently?"
Steve Grogan, the Patriots quarterback who threw the pass, said Thursday. "That hit probably was not necessary in a game with no meaning."
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Gene Upshaw, who played for the Raiders in that game, got to know Stingley well after the injury. Now executive director of the NFL Players Association, he helped push owners to provide benefits for disabled players: US$48,000 in Stingley's time; $225,000 now.
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"After the game, when we found out that Darryl was paralyzed, John told him that from now on he was a Raider and we should treat him as one," Upshaw said.
During his induction last summer to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Madden's thoughts weren't far from Stingley when he said, "We all like to see hard, aggressive play, but you always want the guy to get up."
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/football/070405/f040513A.html
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Often obscured by images of his wild rantings on the sidelines during games was Madden's concern for players. One of the prime examples of this attitude came in the weeks following a Raiders' preseason game against the New England Patriots on August 13, 1978. New England receiver Darryl Stingley was permanently paralyzed by a hit from the Raiders' Jack Tatum, with Madden offering his family's home to Stingley's wife, who stayed there while waiting to be transferred to Chicago to begin rehabilitation..
http://en.allexperts.com/e/j/jo/john_madden_(football).htm
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There is a soft side to Madden, too. When New England wide receiver Darryl Stingley was paralyzed by a hit in a 1978 exhibition game at Oakland, Madden spent a lot of time visiting Stingley in the hospital.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/01/29/SPGO9GVE7I1.DTL
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