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Ken Stabler's Immortal Presence in All-Pro Football 2K8

To the generation of sports fans currently in their teens, 20s, and 30s, Ken Stabler was never a Super Bowl champion, an NFL MVP, or a quarterback who once took orders from coaching legends like John Madden and Bear Bryant. To football fans under the age of 40, Stabler was just another gray-haired gentleman sitting among Alabama's alumni, whom CBS' cameras loved to show between downs on SEC Saturdays. But for the few thousand young people who played All-Pro Football 2K8 on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, the quarterback called “Snake” might be remembered a bit differently.

On Visual Concepts' virtual gridiron, Stabler's schizophrenic performances often left players thinking that he was one of the weakest signal-callers in the game's “silver” tier. Stabler would start out most matches as a wild, unreliable thrower, encumbered by subpar arm strength and an awkward running posture. For those reasons, The Snake rarely appeared in people's lineups online, especially since silver colleague Randall Cunningham would immediately impress most gamers with his ability to scramble like a running back and throw like a JUGS machine. Athletically, Cunningham was the clear choice if you were shopping for a silver gunslinger. Philadelphia's “Rocket Man,” however, lacked two powerful intangibles that would help make Stabler a late-game assassin in All-Pro Football 2K8: the mysterious “clutch” and “leadership” signature skills. To this day, no one outside of Visual Concepts' development team has ever discovered how these two abilities actually impact the on-field gameplay. But any time that you needed to make a crucial conversion to protect a lead, or were trying to mount a desperate comeback, it just seemed like Stabler would always come through with a big play whenever the pressure was highest. Cunningham, conversely, was the quarterback who'd be sailing balls over receivers' heads or surrendering a costly fumble whenever contests were within one score.

Stabler's unorthodox left-handed delivery –- as opposed to Cunningham's traditional right-armed rifle -- also worked well against online opponents with one (or less) legend on their defensive line, as in that scenario, Snake's blind side would typically be occupied by a harmless, generic-tier pass rusher. The rascally Raiders' scruffy beard and disorderly bangs even scored some extra style points, given that the game's other lefty superstar, Steve Young, sported a boring crew cut and an unintimidating baby face.

People's memories of sports icons -- even those as great as Jordan and Gretzky -- gradually regress, starting with a few spectacular seasons, then dwindling down to a few famous games, and finally settling on a few unforgettable shots. By recreating dozens of deceased and retired hall of famers, videogames like All-Pro Football 2K8 allow younger sports fans to record their own stories about athletes from earlier eras, filling in the missing chapters that SportsCenter conveniently neglects, and fathers have mostly forgotten.

 


Member Comments
# 1 pittaholic @ 07/21/15 11:14 AM
Ken Stabler was never a Super Bowl champion. Unless your counting Super Bowl XI then he was totally a Super Bowl champion.
 
# 2 elgreazy1 @ 07/21/15 11:58 AM
I never understood people sleeping on The Snake in APF. The dude was exceptional - he could scramble, he had decent arm strength and most importantly, he'd rarely get rattled even after taking a lot of hits. Really loved his Pump Fake ability which would freeze defenders and help me buy some time for crucial passes. The dude still holds a permanent roster spot as the captain to my APF Las Vegas Rattlers.
 
# 3 Turbojugend @ 07/21/15 12:07 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by pittaholic
Ken Stabler was never a Super Bowl champion. Unless your counting Super Bowl XI then he was totally a Super Bowl champion.
I think the author was referring to the way Stabler is viewed by the younger generation who aren't familiar with his accomplishments.

"Snake" was the first sports biography I ever read. And although it's fairly commonplace in this era of heavy media coverage, getting that kind of behind-the-scenes insight was amazing at the time. It was a different era, back when the worst offense a football player usually committed was sleeping off hangovers during team meetings.
 
# 4 Culture Rot @ 07/21/15 01:04 PM
Well, it HAS been discovered what effect ALL skills had on ratings, long ago. It's quite simple really. Clutch boosted his ratings in the 4th. Leadership boosted his generics ratings. Carry on.
 
# 5 yardz23 @ 07/21/15 02:06 PM
What a great write up! I hope 2K allows this to be backwards compatible on xb1, its the only 360 game i've held on to.

I always used him on my teams. My friend and i nicknamed him "Steady" Stabler, for his consistent game play and reliable clutch moments. I wish APF continued beyond 2k8, could have been something really special.
 
# 6 Branchurian @ 07/21/15 02:42 PM
Stabler was so overpowered and it seemed that he showed up on every roster in the PS3 community, I don't know about Xbox and the Randall Cunningham experiment, but he was everywhere in the PS3. He was so good and smooth I swore off using him and made a team (The bison: Deacon Jones and Reggie White off the edge) that was devised with his defeat in mind. May he rest in peace and I'm glad I got to play All pro so I got to know his career a bit more intimately.
 
# 7 RoyceDa59 @ 07/22/15 12:02 AM
This was the last football game I bought and I loved it.
 
# 8 tommycoa @ 07/22/15 05:25 AM
You guys should check out his autobiography, "Snake." It's pretty amazing. May be hard to find. came out a few years ago. It's kind of a tell-all. it will give you an insiders look at the NFL in the 70s. The book has the feel that you are sitting in a bar listening to stories from The Snake. He talks about dynamite fishing, playing drunk, chasing women. Like I said, its awesome. I wish their was an audio book with him reading it.
 

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