Electric Football Game Top 20 Countdown – No. 20

No. 20 in the Electric Football Top 20 Countdown – the 1976 Sears Tudor Super Bowl

Coming in at No. 20 on The Unforgettable Buzz Electric Football Game Top 20 Countdown is the 1976 Sears NFL Super Bowl featuring the Steelers and the Cowboys. While a “small” Sears Super Bowl may not seem like an ideal Top 20 candidate this game has some, shall we say, “extenuating” circumstances.

Super Bowl X was by far the most exciting Super Bowl game played up to that point in time. The Steelers’ 21-17 victory over the Cowboys had drama, scoring, hitting, as well as an epic individual performance by Steelers’ WR Lynn Swann. It was everything that football fans had hoped for since the Super Bowl was first played in 1967. And it still ranks as one of the best Super Bowls of all time.

<img alt="Opening spread to Chapter 32 of The Unforgettable Buzz Electric Football Book">

By 1976 Sears had reduced its Super Bowl models down to Tudor’s mid-size game design (31” x 18”). Still the field had the colorful Tudor No. 635 template, with a giant NFL shield at midfield and a red-white-and-blue diamond pattern in each end zone. It also came with Tudor’s standard size single-posted goal posts.

pit-dal-1But what really helped push this game into our Top 20 was the teams that came with the game — black shoe Haiti Steelers and Cowboys. The Haiti players are just so well painted (although they were molded in New Jersey). The metallic grey/blue of the Cowboys’ pants is one of our all-time favorite looks. We like this game so much we even used it on the back cover of The Unforgettable Buzz!

So there’s our No. 20 game – the 1976 Tudor Sears’ Super Bowl. See you next week for No. 19!

 

Earl, Roddy & Michael

PS – This game is in our new Electric Football Wishbook!!

 

Hawthorne Village Wooden NFL Stadiums – Fact or Fiction?

Being an Electric Football enthusiast, the contents of the envelope caught my attention. In fact, it stopped me in my tracks. While unfolding the large full-color flier I found inside, my brain spun like a vintage hand-pull Las Vegas slot machine trying to process exactly what I was seeing.

It took a second — and it took my breath away. Huge photos showed off an officially NFL-licensed Philadelphia Eagles Build For Fun Wooden Stadium. The makers were Hawthorne Village, who specialize in upscale collector’s items like train sets and Christmas villages. The stadium looked incredible, at least the finished product did. It was a FULL stadium with three tiers of grandstands, there were lights, concession stands, painted NFL players…it was totally amazing.

But of course the finished product wasn’t available in one swoop. You had to buy the Stadium Starter Set first for $199.95, and it came with perhaps 1/10 of the pieces needed to complete the stadium.  Then every other month Hawthorne Village would deliver an additional Play Piece kit for $59.95.

I quickly figured that to get the stadium configured like the photos – including lights and a scoreboard — would take a couple of years and probably $1000. That was way too much money, no matter how cool it looked. This was really supposed to be for kids?

Electric Football Book The Unforgettable Buzz Eagles NFL stadiumThe deadline for reserving my Starter Set was July 25, 2008, but I never returned the form. I was fascinated enough to keep all the paperwork, coming across it every so often while going through my files. I’d always wondered how I got on the mailing list because I never received any type of communication from Hawthorne Village ever again. And of course I always wondered about what I missed by not sending back my Reservation Form.

In checking with Google and eBay recently, its seems the answer is nothing. It would appear that Hawthorne Village received such an underwhelming response to the mailers that they decided not to make the sets. Which brings us to the question of how did Hawthorne Village tell NFL Properties that one of their highly ambitious projects for 2008 was not going into production? How did Hawthorne Village misjudge the marketplace so badly?

Like a lot “lost” toy items from the past, the Hawthorne Wooden Stadium was likely a case of bad timing. There were a lot of not-so positive things going on in the financial world in 2008. The economy was full of, to be kind, “uncertainty.” It wasn’t the optimal time to introduce a super luxury item like a kids’ triple-decked wooden NFL stadium —  that cost $1000.

We’d love to know if anyone else receive this mailer. And if you sent in the reservation form, please let us know what happened. Do any of the Starter Sets actually exist?

Anyway you look at it, these stadiums are still an awe-inspiring item — even if the field only has yard lines every ten yards. If this concept could have somehow merged with Electric Football…all we can do is wonder.

 

Earl

 

 

Electric Football Wishbook Is Available Now!

<img alt="Electric Football Wishbook Christmas catalog pages Sears Ward Penney">  We are proud and pleased to announce that our Electric Football Wishbook is for sale on Amazon!

The book is the first-ever compilation of Electric Football and sports game Christmas catalog pages. Packed with more than 70 full page and full color catalog images from the years 1955 to 1988, it’s a captivating chronicle of the toy industry’s “Golden Age.”

We’ve included all of the major retailers — Sears, Montgomery Ward, J.C. Penney, Alden’s, and more. That means it’s Christmas morning over, and over, and over.

More than 140 Electric Football games are in the Wishbook. In addition, there are dozens of hockey, baseball, and basketball games. So you’ll never tire of turning its pages because there’s always something new to discover.

So do yourself a favor and pick up a copy of the only book where it’s ALWAYS Christmas morning!  Or be sure and tell Santa to that you want The Electric Football Wishbook under the tree this Christmas!

Order Your Copy of The Electric Football Wishbook Today!

<alt img="buy the electric football wishbook at amazon">

 

Electric Football Toy Hall Of Fame Countdown

<img alt="Tudor Games NFL 620 70th Anniversary image">

What an exciting time it is to have Tudor Games Electric Football be one of the 12 finalists for the National Toy Hall of Fame. That means right at this very moment the 23 members of the National Selection Committee are analyzing and deciding which toys are worthy to be announced as Official Hall of Fame inductees on Thursday, November 8th, 2018.

As we’ve mentioned previously, this year’s class of nominees is stacked, with Chutes & Ladders, the Magic 8 Ball, Fisher-Price Corn Popper, Masters of the Universe figures, Tickle Me Elmo, Uno, and American Girl among the competitors. And that’s not to overlook pinball, sled, and chalk.

70 Years of Tudor Games Electric Football

Tudor Electric Football, currently celebrating its 70th anniversary, is certainly Hall of Fame worthy. Norman Sas’ 1948 invention is the most iconic and recognizable sports toy ever created. It has a more extensive history than most of the current nominees. And in fact, a more extensive history than most of the current Hall of Fame toys.

<img alt="1949 New York Time Tudor Electric Football 500 newspaper ad">

Tudor Electric Football has been around since the late 1940’s.

To offer a little perspective versus other Hall Of Fame toys…Tudor Electric Football had already been around 10 years by the time Barbie showed up in 1959; 15 years when GI Joe marched onto the scene in 1964; and 20 years by the time the first Hot Wheels blister pack was ever hung on a toy store pegboard.

The “Greatest Games” On Your Living Room Floor

One of things that makes Electric Football unique is that its reputation through the years has been simple and precise – the best Christmas present ever.

<img alt="Christmas morning Tudor NFL Electric Football 1968">

Christmas Morning 1968 – the Best Present Ever.

The games’ status and popularity was demonstrated in the the Sears’, Ward, and JC Penney Christmas catalogs, where year after year Electric Football was presented as a “Featured Toy,” complete with its own full-color pages. As our 2017 Electric Football Wishbook clearly proved, few toys ever got as much Christmas catalog real estate as Tudor Electric Football did during the “Golden Age” of toys.

<img alt="1971 Christmas Catalogs pages showing Tudor NFL Electric Football">

A spread from our Electric Football Wishbook. The 1971 Sears and Ward Christmas Catalog pages.

A Toy Legacy Unlike Any Other

Electric Football also has a legacy unlike any other in the toy world thanks to Tudor Games’ groundbreaking 1967 licensing agreement with the National Football League. In aligning themselves with “America’s Game,” Tudor created a line of NFL Electric Football games and teams that was so popular that Tudor Games was the NFL Properties’ top money-earner from 1967 to 1977. No other toy can make such a claim.

<img alt="Tudor NFL Super Bowl Electric Football Pete Rozelle and Norman Sas">

Electric Football inventor and Tudor Games President Norman Sas (far left) shows NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle (second from left) the Tudor NFL Super Bowl game in 1971.

Of course, these games and teams wouldn’t have been so popular if they didn’t appeal to young boys in ways that went beyond inert plastic and metal pieces. Having two miniature NFL teams lined up on an official NFL game with “N-F-L” in the end zones and an official NFL grandstand…it was unlike anything any kid had seen before. And the wonder and inspiration these games produced was unforgettable. It was your own personal miniature NFL stadium with your own personal NFL teams. And Tudor Games made sure all the details of a real football game were always in place.

<img alt="the 1970 Sears No. 633 Super Bowl IV with the Chiefs and Vikings">

Tudor made lifetime memories by sweating the details of real football, this 1970 Sears No. 633 Super Bowl IV with the Chiefs and Vikings being a prime example.

The Details Count

Tudor Games’ attention to detail didn’t go unnoticed by the millions of us who played the game. That’s because Tudor gave us credit for knowing the game of football. Even all the way down to what kind of goal posts (yellow single posted, of course) should be on the field. This is an underappreciated part of what made Tudor Electric Football so special. The company sweated the details – and kids knew it.

<img alt="Tudor 1971 Lineup of NFL teams">

Tudor NFL teams from 1971

The results of Tudor’s efforts were magic. Very powerful and intimate magic, producing a feeling that millions and millions of us have never forgotten – and never ever will forget.

Ultimate Legacy

Which leads to probably the greatest thing about Electric Football’s legacy. In 2018, Tudor NFL Electric Football games and teams will be prized Christmas morning gifts a full 70 years after the toy was created.

<img alt="Tudor Games Electric Football booth at the 2018 Toy Fair">

Tudor Games Electric Football going strong in 2018.

If that’s not a Hall of Fame worthy legacy, we don’t know what is. Here’s hoping for good news on November 8th. Keep those champagne glasses ready!

 

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK

 

Electric Football A 2018 Toy Hall of Fame Finalist

<img alt="Electric Football a 2018 Toy Hall of Fame Finalist">

Tudor Electric Football A Toy Hall of Fame Finalist!

It’s gratifying to hear that Tudor Electric Football is one of the Top 12 Finalists for the Toy Hall of Fame in 2018. This honor is well earned and well deserved — and we’ll even leave aside our feelings that the honor is long overdue.

The bottom line is, it’s a great day for Tudor Electric Football!! And one to be celebrated!!

http://www.museumofplay.org/press/releases/2018/09/4989-2018-national-toy-hall-of-fame-finalists-revealed

With that said, when you take a look at the other finalist…wow, what a stacked year this is. In addition to Tudor Electric Football there are a whole bunch of worthy items in 2018. Uno, Magic 8 Ball, Fischer-Price Corn Popper, Tickle Me Elmo, Masters of The Universe, Chutes and Ladders, pinball, sled, tic-tac-toe, chalk…that is a full-on line of heavy hitters. All Hall of Fame worthy picks, without a doubt.

So being a 2018 Finalist was really an accomplishment all of its own. And being in a tough field…we say “bring it.” We wouldn’t want it any other way. Because we all know that Tudor Electric Football was, and still is, the BEST CHRISTMAS PRESENT EVER!!

Will 2018 be THE year?? We think it just might!!

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK

 

 

Remembering Electric Football Inventor Norman Sas

Six Years Since The Passing Of Norman Sas

It’s hard to believe that it’s been six years since Electric Football inventor and former Tudor President Norman Sas passed away. The memory of the day is still incredibly fresh, even six years on.

This was the “before” time for us. We didn’t have a web page, or any social media presence at all. In addition, we didn’t have a book. The Unforgettable Buzz was just a “hope” for us. Something we hoped to accomplish. That we actually would get the book published in way that was accessible…it was just a dream.

But we knew that Norman believed in us, and in our vision for the project. Not only had he passed on to us a closet load of Tudor materials, he repeated his belief in our work when we finally had the opportunity to meet him in 2010 — a meeting that still seems like yesterday.

And we were blown away during our recent trip with the Sas family to Rochester to hear Norman’s daughters Wendy and Martha tell us they thought our project actually kept Norman going in his later years. We were completely floored and humbled to hear such a thing. We were just trying to write a book.

One thing we do know for sure — Norman’s spirit is present throughout the thousands of words that make up The Buzz. And it’s present in every one of us who love the game of Electric Football.

We hope you enjoy the video at the top of this page. And please remember to cast your Toy Hall of Fame vote for Electric Football!

http://www.toyhalloffame.org/nominate

All the way to the Hall of Fame in 2018!!

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK 

 

<img alt="Electric Football Inventor Norman Sas with Unforgettable Buzz authors Earl Shores and Roddy Garcia">

Earl Shores, Norman Sas, and Roddy Garcia, Florida 2010.

 

 

Happy 5th Anniversary For The Unforgettable Buzz!

Happy 5th Anniversary For The Unforgettable Buzz!

Five years ago today The Unforgettable Buzz was published!!

We’re so proud. The success of the first book ever written about Electric Football has succeeded beyond our wildest expectations. And we’re humbled that so many people still remember when “the greatest games” were played on their living room floors. Electric Football is truly the NFL’s Toy Story! And the most iconic sports toy ever created.

And don’t forget to nominate Electric Football for the National Toy Hall of Fame! Just click the link below and follow the instructions on the page. And vote as many times as you want!!

http://www.toyhalloffame.org/nominate

Thank you so much for all of your support over the last five years!!!

Earl, Roddy, & MK

 

<alt img="the unforgettable buzz electric football book">

Electric Football Rochester Toy Hall of Fame Roadtrip

Roddy and I were honored to be in Rochester, NY, this past the weekend to help the family of Norman Sas and Tudor Games lobby The Strong Museum to induct Electric Football into the Toy Hall of Fame. It was a fantastic trip, including a guided tour of The Strong Museum of Play, as well as a stop at John DiCarlo’s famous Subterranean Stadium. Many incredible moments, a trip we will long remember

Check out the video for more details of our trip. And use the link below to nominate Electric Football for the Toy Hall of Fame!

http://www.toyhalloffame.org/nominate

<img src="The evolution of Electric Football as displayed in The Subterranean Stadium">

The evolution of Electric Football as displayed in The Subterranean Stadium

 

Tudor – Where Did The Name Come From?

<img alt="Tudor City Sign on the upper East Side of New York City">

This sign is real and still visible in New York City near the United Nations. And it’s where the name “Tudor” came from.

Electric football games were first sold by Tudor in 1949. By that point the company had already been in business for over two decades, having been founded by Elmer Sas — Norman’s father — in 1928.  So where did the name “Tudor” come from?

<img alt="Tudor City building and sign in New York City">

Elmer founded the company as Tudor Mechanical Laboratories in 1928. The original Tudor address was 67 West 44th Street in Manhattan, a location that was just off of Sixth Avenue near Times Square. 

At the time, just four blocks to the East, something unique and inspiring was going on in a neighborhood that had previously been known for its tenements, stockyards, and breweries. Real estate developer Fred F. French was building a new high-rise residential complex of 12 apartment buildings. French envisioned his new development as an idyllic community where the average New York office worker could live close to their job without enduring substandard housing. 

<img alt="tudor metal products logo late 1930's">

An early Tudor Metal Products company logo.

With its distinctive neo-Gothic towers and utopian ideal, the new neighborhood tapped into the pre-Depression optimism of the time. Beyond affordable housing for the middle class, the new neighborhood was paving a road into something even bigger — the future.

And the name of Fred F. French’s development was…Tudor City

For Elmer and other New Yorkers of the time, “Tudor” embodied a grand and new vision for the future. And this is exactly what Elmer hoped his new venture would be. 

But he probably never dreamed that Tudor would still be around 90 years later.

 

Earl & Roddy

Read more about Tudor City in The New York Times.

<img alt="ink drawing of Tudor City from 1928">

A 1928 magazine depiction of Tudor City on the East side of Manhattan.

Toy Fair 2018 – Sas Family Visits Tudor Games

<img alt="Tudor NFL Electric Football Sas Family visits Tudor games Toy Fair 2018">

Norman Sas’ grandson Jamie Jones Jr. (2nd from left), and daughter Wendy Jones (3rd from left) with Tudor Games President Doug Strohm at Toy Fair 2018.

Sas Family 2018 Toy Fair Visit To Tudor Games

In life there are moments, and then there are Moments. And one of my all-time Electric Football moments took place several weeks ago at Toy Fair.

That’s when the Sas family came to New York City to visit the 2018 Tudor Games Toy Fair booth. Norman Sas, as most of you know, invented Electric Football. He was also president of Tudor from 1948-1988, overseeing the rise of the game from his Brooklyn office. He was responsible for Tudor’s groundbreaking licensing agreement with the NFL in 1967, a sports marketing landmark that put the NFL on our living room floors. Without Norman Sas, there is no Electric Football.

<img alt="Electric Football inventor and Tudor President Norman Sas in the 1957 Toy Fair Booth">

So to have his daughter Wendy, son-in-law Jamie, grandson Jamie Jr., and granddaughter Tori visit the Tudor Games booth…it’s a morning I’ll never forget. To be standing there talking about Electric Football with the people who are a direct lineage to Norman and Toy Fair’s past…my emotions took me completely by surprise.

Talking With The Toy Hall Of Fame

And the Sas family was there for a purpose, as current Tudor Games President Doug Strohm had arranged a meeting with Christopher Bensch of the Strong National Museum of Play, the organization that oversees the Toy Hall of Fame. With the help of Electric Football’s “first family,” Mr. Bensch was introduced to the game’s rich history and its very vibrant status in 2018. In return Mr. Bensh helped us understand what kind of things the Toy Hall of Fame looks for when considering a toy for Hall of Fame honors.

What we learned from Mr. Bensch was this – Electric Football does check off many of the boxes that Hall of Fame electors are looking for. Longevity, high profile (think NFL), cultural impact…these are all things that Electric Football has going for it. And it’s possible that Tudor Games’ upcoming 90th anniversary – yes, the company has been around 90 years – can team up with Electric Football’s upcoming 70th anniversary to get the electors to take notice of the game we all love.

<img alt="Tudor NFL Electric Football Wendy Jones (Sas) Doug Strohm Family visits Tudor games Toy Fair 2018">

Tudor Games President Doug Strohm talking with Wendy Jones (Sas) about the the 2018 Electric Football line.

There will much more about the Toy Hall of Fame in the coming weeks. In the meantime, watching Doug show Wendy the current Tudor Games Electric Football line – Tudor’s past and present converging before my eyes – was a moving experience. And to hear Wendy say she thought that Norman would be proud…talk about words getting caught in your throat.

It was a moment that I was grateful to witness. I think 2018 is shaping up to be quite the year for Electric Football!!

 

Earl

Toy Fair 2018 – Tudor Games NFL Electric Football

<alt img="Tudor Games 2018 Toy Fair Booth NFL Electric Football">

The fantastic looking Tudor Games 2018 Toy Fair booth!

Toy Fair 2018

Toy Fair is an amazing experience. Always overwhelming in its size, and in the number of people attending the event. How can there be so many toys? How can there be so many toy buyers? 

And a thought that does cross my mind while walking the Toy Fair aisles…does the world really need this many toys?

Maybe, maybe not.

But one of the “success stories” at Toy Fair over the last seven years is Tudor Games. To look at the photos from 2013, when Doug Strohm had a tiny booth stuffed in the claustrophobic back corridors of the Javitz Center with no NFL…to 2018, with a spacious booth (at least quadruple in size), that was located on a heavily-traveled main midway just steps from a main entrance, with great looking NFL games, a seven-foot tall rack of beautiful and beautifully packaged NFL teams, and some great looking new items (which I’m not allowed to talk about yet!)…it’s totally, totally amazing. 

<alt img="Tall rack of Tudor Games NFL Electric Football teams at 2018 Toy Fair">

A rack of “fantasy” teams for sure!

Not only that, it’s a fantastic development. For any and all fans of Electric Football 

This year’s booth was a testament to Doug Strohm’s tireless work since taking over Tudor Games. It’s a simple fact that no one has done more to keep Electric Football alive over the last six years than Doug has.

That’s why it was pleasure to be a guest in the Tudor Games Toy Fair booth this past weekend. This included, for the first time ever, being there on Friday for set-up day. I was happy to lend an extra set of hands when needed. I was also happy to stay out of the way when that was needed. 

<alt img="Toy Fair Badge 2018">

New York City Magic

But there was an epiphany as the sky drew dark outside the Javitz Center on Friday evening , a realization that I’ll never ever forget. Here I was in the Tudor Games booth – the ancestral home of Electric Football – setting up NFL Electric Football games for Toy Fair. Just like the toy legends we wrote about in The Unforgettable BuzzNorman Sas, Joe Tonole, Eddie Gluck, Lee Payne, Don Munro Jr, and Brian Clarke – had done decades earlier.

<img alt="1950 Toy Fair Tudor Showroom Joe Tonole Electric Football">

Tudor V.P. Joe Tonole in the 1950 Toy Fair Showroom at 200 Fifth Avenue. From the Toy Fair chapter of The Unforgettable Buzz.

It was a mind blowing “how did I get here” moment. 

From being a young boy with not just Tudor NFL Electric Football under my bed, but also through the years, Tudor basketball, baseball, bowling, track & field, hockey, and even Tudor Golf…from treasuring the colorful Tudor NFL teams in the rule book, to knowing the 176 Johnson Street address by heart, to experiencing the thrill of opening a plain brown box from Brooklyn with a Tudor Metal Products return address on it…I would have never dared to dream that I’d be doing what I was doing last Friday evening. 

 

Never in a million years.

So I’d like offer a heartfelt “Thank You!” to everyone who’s supported our work and our books. Friday would have never happened without you. And an immense thank you to Doug Strohm for inviting me to be part of the Tudor Games family each year at Toy Fair. It’s such a pleasure to hang out with Denise and Bill, and what a thrill this year to meet Wyatt.

Stay tuned for more Toy Fair and Electric Football news in our next post!

 

Earl

 

 

 

Buzz Authors Face Off In The 2018 NFC Championship

<img alt="The Unforgettable Buzz Book 2018 NFC Championship Eagles Vikings Tudor">

The Philadelphia Inquirer’s  preview of the upcoming Eagles-Vikings NFC Championship game would seem to have every angle totally covered. But actually it did miss one thing…

For Roddy and I, it’s the first time “our” teams have met for the NFC Championship. Roddy is the lifelong Vikings fan. I’m the lifelong Eagles fan, having grown up not far from Franklin Field. Adding to the drama is my adoption of the Bud Grant-era Vikings as a surrogate team in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

(A young boy had to do something to keep his sporting sanity while suffering with those wretched 1960’s Iggles. Yes, I was there for the 1968 Eagles-Vikings game when snowballs where thrown at Santa Claus. It wasn’t as evil as its been made out to be…fans were totally frustrated. They’d been yelling “Joe must go” — that is coach Joe Kuharich — for the entire first half, and during the previous games.)

Ghost of Hank Stram

<alt img="1970 Sears Tudor Super Bowl Electric Football game Vikings Chiefs">

The Vikings SB loss to the Chiefs is also immortalized in Electric Football history.

So after almost a quarter century of friendship, we understand each others frustration and fears. We also understand well the frustration and fears of each set of fans. The Vikings playoff history is like some type of tragic Norse Epic Poem. An 0-4 Super Bowl record (and not just losing, but getting demolished in the process), the Drew Pearson push-off (a Divisional game), the Gary Andersen miss, and the Brett Farve interception. It IS a painful list. Have to say that last Sunday’s Minneapolis Miracle was long overdue. And as an Eagles’ fan, I’m a bit worried that Karma has decided 2018 is pay back year for the Vikings.

Sorry Kansas City, “Big Red” Still Can’t Win The Big One

Of course, the Eagles are no slouches in inflicting pain on their fanbase. The last NFL Championship happened in 1960. Before a Vikings team even existed! Add in an 0-2 Super Bowl record, then stir in FIVE Andy Reid era NFC Championship Games appearances with only ONE win. Two of those losses came to teams that had Jake Delahome and Brad Johnson at quarterback. SI even ranked the 2003 Championship loss to the Bucs as the worst in Philadelphia sports history. (At least dating back to the 1983 Sixers NBA title). Oh yeah, let’s not forget a nauseated and vomiting Donovan McNabb under center in the 2005 Super Bowl.

What we understand is that this convergence of teams is unlikely to happen again in our lifetimes. And we’ll enjoy it and appreciate it whatever the outcome. All the while hoping that each other’s team can persevere for a franchise first Super Bowl victory.

 

Earl

54 Years And Counting For Electric Football’s “Fab Five”

Lee Payne’s 1964 Electric Football “Fab Five”

Electric Football history was changed 54 years this fall when Tudor unveiled their redesigned 3-D players in 1964. Tudor Director of Product Development Lee Payne created a new set players to replace Tudor’s two-year-old “Gorilla” 3-D players. The Gorilla players, which were groundbreaking in their own right, needed to be assembled and were prone to breakage, with the breakage often taking place while the players were being assembled.

1964 Tudor Rule Book

Payne’s new 1964 players became known as Tudor’s “Standard” players They were larger than the Gorilla players, more detailed, and were molded from a single piece of flexible polyethylene plastic. This unique design — player and base molded as one — made them virtually unbreakable. It was a trait that Tudor was eager to have after two years of disappointing performance from the Gorilla players.

Electric Football Book the unforgettable buzz

1964 Tudor No. 500 with Payne’s new players.

The single-piece molding, however, is not the reason that these players changed Electric Football history. It’s the poses that Payne came up with for the players. There were five (up one from the Gorilla versions), and they were named tackle, guard, end, offensive back, and defensive back.

The “Fab Five” of Electric Football were born. And what’s amazing is that 54 years later the Fab Five are still going strong with Tudor Games’ brand new NFL.

To learn more about Lee Payne’s influence on Electric Football check out our Full Color Electric Football book and The Unforgettable Buzz: The History of Electric Football and Tudor Games.

 

Earl & Roddy

<img alt="Tudor Electric Football 1967 NFL Fab Five figures designed by Lee Payne">

Electric Football Game Top 20 Countdown — No. 3

<img alt="1970 Sears-exclusive Tudor Super Bowl Electric Football game Vikings vs. Chiefs">

Game No. 3 on the Countdown: the 1970 Sears No. 633 Super Bowl IV with the Chiefs and Vikings.

The Electric Football Game Countdown moves down to game No. 3 – the 1970 Tudor No. 633 Super Bowl.

This game is a landmark in both toy and Electric Football history. In terms of visibility and economics, it may have been the highest heights ever reached by Electric Football. It’s also a game we devote an entire page to in our 2015 Full Color Electric Football book.

The No. 633 with the Vikings and Chiefs was sold only at Sears, who at the time, was the largest toy retailer in the world. Sears gave their exclusive Super Bowl an eye-catching full-color layout on page 488 of the Christmas Wish Book. They also gave the game a “Sears Best” designation, which served as an endorsement for hesitant parents. It was Sears saying that the game was worth its hefty $15.99 price tag. The Sears Best label also designated the Super Bowl as one of the “featured toys” in all of the 1970 Wish Book. Sears had clearly designed page 488 to make boys stop, gawk, and scribble down “Sears Super Bowl Electric Football game” on their list for Santa.

This was Tudor’s second Super Bowl, and Lee Payne went all out in designing the field, which is still one of the most colorful ever created. The Vikings’ end zone was purple with yellow lettering, and included a circular Vikings logo. The Chiefs end zone was bright yellow with red letters, and included a matching circular Chiefs logo. Framed in a light blue square at midfield was the Lombardi Trophy, with the square itself having a Vikings helmet and a Chiefs helmet serving as bookends.

electric football super bowl IV Tudor NFL AFL Vikings Chiefs

Page 488 of the 1970 Sears Christmas Wish Book.

All of these markings — including the odd yard lines being outlined in red, the even numbers outlined in blue, and the “50’” outlined in yellow — were like the real Super Bowl field in New Orleans. Only three things were different: the actual Vikings logo was shaped like a shield; there was no NFL logo in the Vikings end zone or, AFL logo in the Chiefs end zone.

But this took nothing away from overall “awe” the game inspired. Tudor’s field actually looked better than the real Super Bowl field, which the late NFL Films’ legend Steve Sabol described as “mud with green paint.”

Besides getting all the actual details right — the field, the teams, the goal posts, etc. — the frame design was perfect. Large white capital letters said it all: SUPER BOWL. That’s all that needed to be said.

Electric football Tudor Super Bowl Chiefs Vikings 1970

The Chiefs “huddle” up during Super Bowl IV.

Sears had no problem selling every single Super Bowl that came off the production line in Brooklyn. Only a Vikings’ fans could find anything negative about it…but even Vikings’ fans wanted to have the game. It was that beautiful — and it gave you a chance to replay the Super Bowl with a different outcome.

And then there’s the history that the game taps into. It recreated Super Bowl IV, a 23-7 Chiefs’ win that marked the last game ever played by an AFL team. This was the second straight victory for the AFL, giving “the other league” unquestioned parity with the NFL, as both leagues would take a 2-2 Super Bowl record into their long-planned 1970 merger.

<img alt="Super Bowl IV page from the book Full Color Electric Football">

The Super Bowl IV page in our 2015 Full Color Electric Football book.

Another piece of Super Bowl IV served to illustrate Electric Football’s status in American culture. Sitting in the stands watching the Vikings and the Chiefs that day was Tudor President Norman Sas. He was a guest of NFL Properties, his reward for having the top-earning item — Electric Football! — in the entire NFL Properties’ line.

Tudor’s 1970 Super Bowl was, and still is, a stunning game. A true work of art. Even the box, with Lee Payne’s silhouette motif, is a work of art. So it’s deservedly one of priciest games in Electric Football collecting.

Yet we still view the game as a bargain. That’s because nobody will ever make anything like it again. It’s just too expensive. If a game were made to same the design specs in 2015, it would cost well over $200…and might even cost what the current eBay price is for a 1970 Tudor Super Bowl. And really, how many other toys are still playable 45 years later? We’re very, very lucky that Tudor made their games to last.

At No. 3, one of the greatest Electric Football games EVER made — the Sears-exclusive 1970 Tudor No. 633 Super Bowl! We even put on the cover of our Electric Football Wishbook!

 

 

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK

P.S. Final fact…this is the only Tudor model with team names lithographed in the end zones.

1971 Munro Vibra-Action Electric Football Game – Canadian Version

Electric football Munro 1971 Canadian CFL Vibra Action

Munro’s 1971 Vibra-Action Electric Football Game

Electric football…in continuing with our Canadian theme of earlier this week, here is a 1971 Munro Vibra-Action Football Game. It has a metal field, and the Canadian configuration with dual 50-yard lines. This game was “store stock” – that is it had never been opened. The box was still sealed, all the accessories were sealed in their bags.

Munro Electric Football 1971 Canadian CFL Vibra Action Tudor

Munro’s Canadian accessories from 1971

The teams and accessories are still sealed in their bags. Munro did not have the CFL license, so the scoreboard nameplates featured city names, not team names.

 

Earl

 

Restoring Pages For The Electric Football Wishbook

<img alt="Electric Football Wishbook before and after page restoring comparison">

In creating our Electric Football Wishbook we did a lot more than just gather up a bunch of Christmas catalog pages. A lot of effort went into restoring these pages to make them look as good as possible.

Those catalogs, which we cherish as genuine historical documents, were not printed on the best quality of paper. In fact, they were printed on lightweight and low quality paper stock. The main reason Sears and Ward did this was so that they didn’t end up with a Christmas catalog the size of a Webster’s Dictionary.

Another reason was cost. Thin paper was cheap, and the companies viewed these catalogs as throwaway items. There was no point in investing a lot of money into something that would end up in the trash by Valentine’s Day.

So any Christmas catalog that survives into the 21st Century is guaranteed to have “issues.” The most obvious being seriously yellowing and discolored pages.

Restoring And Doing The Wishbook “Right” 

Once we got underway designing the Wishbook, one thing became obvious. To do the concept “right,” we needed to take the time and restore each individual page. Our goal was to make each page look like it did when it was first published. We didn’t always meet this goal. But the pages are much improved over what they look in their current natural states.

<img alt="Restoring of the 1968 Sears Electric Football page in the Wishbook">

In addition to this extensive restoration process, we went back into our catalog collections and re-scanned the pages. In doing this we strived to get to get the most complete scan we could . A time consuming and tricky feat to accomplish without damaging the spines of our catalogs. (Please be reassured that no catalogs were harmed in the making of our book!)

At the end of the day, we’re totally proud of the Electric Football Wishbook. Technology is amazing. It allowed us to do justice to the incredible Electric Football legacy that these catalog pages provide. We hope you enjoy looking at all the beautiful and amazing games that make up the colorful history of Electric Football. It’s a great way to celebrate 50 years of Tudor Games NFL games and teams.

There are Christmas Dreams on every page!

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK

Jets vs Browns in The Electric Football Wishbook

<img alt="Electric Football Wishbook Jets Browns NFL 1970 610 Electric Football Game">1970 is one of the all-time great years for Electric Football. And our Electric Football Wishbook shows that off with four different 1970 Christmas catalog pages, including this one from Alden, which features the New York Jets and Cleveland Browns on Tudor’s brand new AFC No. 610 model.

Tudor Weaves the Jets and Browns Into NFL and Electric Football History

The AFC No. 610 is a beautiful game that was released at a very important time in NFL history. But the event that etched this game into Electric Football lore took place on Monday, September 21, 1970.

On that night the Cleveland Browns hosted the New York Jets in Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium. Besides the 85,000 fans in attendance, there were ABC cameras, and an announcing crew of Keith Jackson, Don Meredith, and Howard Cosell. This trio would introduce Prime Time football to millions of television viewers around the country.

<img alt="ABC Monday Night Football Announcers Howard Cosell, Keith Jackson, and Don Meredith in 1970">

ABC Monday Night Football announcers Howard Cosell, Keith Jackson, and Don Meredith.

In coming up with teams for No. 610 — the Browns in white and the Jets in green — Tudor was simply lucky. The team pairing was decided in late 1969, and unveiled for toy buyers at Toy Fair in February of 1970. Retailers were already ordering No. 610’s with Browns and Jets long before the NFL schedule was announced in May of 1970.

But it’s the kind of luck that seemed to always be on Tudor’s side. Whether it was landing the NFL license on the cusp of the NFL-AFL merger, having the first Tudor Super Bowl model be the Jets historic victory in SB III, or creating the first Monday Night Football game, Tudor ended up being in the right place at the right time.

The 1970 American Conference No. 610 is one of the true treasures of Electric Football. And we’re proud to have the game on display in full color in The Electric Football Wishbook.

 

Earl, Roddy, & Michael

It’s Always Christmas Morning In The Electric Football Wishbook!

<img alt="Electric Football Wishbook cover and sample pages">We’re excited to announce that our Electric Football Wishbook  is scheduled for publication on Tuesday, October 17!

Here are five more fun facts to know about the first-ever compilation of Electric Football Christmas catalog pages!

Five Wishbook Facts

1) The Wishbook includes pages from all the major retailers who sold games during Electric Football’s “Golden Age.”

2) That means it’s packed with colorful Christmas images from Sears, Montgomery Ward, J.C. Penney, Alden’s, and more.

3) And all these different retailer images create a concise evolution of the game’s history.

4) Clearly showing the game’s rise to “Featured Toy”status.

5) As a result, the Wishbook lets you experience those long cherished Christmas morning memories with every turn of the page.

We think the Wishbook is the Ultimate Electric Football “Dream Catcher.” That’s because the variety of games and images captured on its pages surpass anything we’ve done before.

Even though none of these pages are new, the Wishbook offers a new and exciting way to “see” them. It’s like a brand new Electric Football History playbook!

We promise to keep you updated as out the publication date gets closer!

 

Earl, Roddy, & MK

 

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Rams vs 49ers in The Electric Football Wishbook

<img alt="Electric Football Wishbook 1968 Ward page with Rams vs 49ers">

The Rams vs 49ers is one of the oldest rivalries in the NFL. And thanks to the Rams move last season back to Los Angeles, the rivalry feels “right” again. Even if the two teams are struggling to find the winning formula that made this rivalry one of the most intense in the NFL.

1968 Wards-Exclusive Rams vs 49ers

The Rams vs 49ers was of one Tudor’s earliest team pairings, being featured on the Montgomery Ward-exclusive NFL Electric Football No. 619 model in the 1968. Ward sold this matchup again in 1969, although some No. 619 models appeared under Christmas trees with the Bears and 49ers on the field that year. A decent pairing for sure, unless you lived on the West Coast.

Our upcoming Electric Football Wishbook includes both the 1968 and the 1969 Montgomery Ward Christmas Catalog pages. In their entirety, and in full color. And they appear side-by-side with their Sears Christmas Catalog counterpart. It’s a killer look to have the pages side-by-side. The result is…it’s the kind of Christmas catalogs we always wished we had!

We’ll keep you posted on the Wishbook. It won’t be long now!!

Electric Football As A Christmas Catalog “Featured Toy”

<alt img="1969 Ward Christmas Electric Football page And the Electric Football Wishbook">

There are so many points in Electric Football history where a change occurred and the path of the game was forever altered. One of the truly momentous changes happened when Electric Football began appearing the in the Christmas catalogs of major mail order retailers in the mid-1950’s.

<alt img="Electric Football in the 1955 Montgomery Ward Christmas Catalog">

Electric Football in the 1955 Montgomery Ward Christms Catalog.

It was 1955 when Electric Football showed up in the Montgomery Ward Christmas Catalog (above), the Sears Christmas Catalog, and also the Spiegel Christmas Catalog. Sears and Ward were both featuring a Gotham Electric Football game.

This happened because of the extensive connections that Gotham Vice President Eddie Gluck had in the toy world. (One of his other connections was that he happened to be a former Tudor employee.)

Spiegel had the Tudor Tru-Action No. 500 in a tiny yet full color illustration. This was the first time Electric Football appeared in color.

<alt img="Tudor No. 500 in the 1955 Spiegel Christmas Catalog>

The Tudor No. 500 in the 1955 Spiegel Christmas Catalog

Looking at the Ward page from 1955, it really is hard on the eye. The Gotham G-880 game in the top right corner seems to blend right into the page. But it wouldn’t be long before Electric Football was promoted to “Featured Toy” status. By the early 1960’s major mail-order retailers like Sears, Ward, and JC Penney were all displaying Electric Football prominently on full-color pages (see main image).

Featured In Sears, Ward, Penney and More

Electric Football would remain a Featured Toy in Christmas catalogs for most of the next two decades. By that time, of course, the onslaught of electronic games relegated it — and most all other toys — to the category of “ordinary.”

Thankfully in 2017 we still have Electric Football, and it’s even still appearing in Christmas catalogs! For those of us who know it best, it has never ceased to be a Featured Toy. And it’s something you’re going to see throughout our Electric Football Wishbook.

Earl, Roddy, & MK