1950 Rams added Reinhard, Art Statuto and Vic Vasicek as 'contributors'/'starters' that came from the AAFC.Bryan wrote:In general, the 1950 team had a lot of new players who were big contributors. To your point, I think Reinhard was the only AAFC refugee on the Rams, but I also think that the 1950 team was much different than the 1949 team. It would be like comparing the 1973 Steelers to the 1974 Steelers (speaking of "garbage" analogies).
And, of course, Crazy Legs had come from the AAFC the year prior.
And, as you alluded to, 4 rookies who were contributors/starters.
I posted something about this before.
It was 1950 so 'starters' isn't a straight shot, with players staying on the field, rotating players, injuries, etc.
But roughly, the 22 off/def starters/contributors for the five NFL teams that had a winning record in 1950 and what league they came from:
Browns: 20 AAFC, 0 NFL, 2 rookies
Giants: 6 AAFC, 13 NFL, 3 rookies
Rams: 3 AAFC, 15* NFL, 4 rookies (* - Hirsch was NFL in '49, but AAFC prior, listed as NFL here but could move to AAFC)
Bears: 2 AAFC, 17** NFL, 3 rookies (* - Rykovich similar to Hirsch in joining in '49, but '47 and '48 in AAFC / * - Bauman played a little in the AAFC in '47)
Yanks: 20* AAFC, 1 NFL, 1 rookie (counted Spec Sanders as AAFC but didn't play in '49)
Add up the 5 teams
AAFC: 51 (counting Spec)
NFL: 46 (counting 3 players who's careers started in the AAFC so could be 54 and 43)
Rook: 13
That's players. As an idea of teams, carrying over teams from their respective league in 1949 to what they did in the combined 1950 NFL largely shows teams were what they were (though one could argue AAFC teams didn't need NFL players to keep status quo and/or stay good while NFL teams did need the AAFC players they got to stay good and/or improve):
Teams that roughly carried over their W/L/T records from '49 to '50
-Team / 1949 / 1950-
Browns 9-1-2 to 10-2
Bears 9-3 to 9-3
Rams 8-2-2 to 9-3
Yankees/Yanks 8-4 to 7-5 (AAFC Yankees were essentially the NFL Yanks, minus some of their best players who went to NYG)
Steelers 6-5-1 to 6-6
Cardinals 6-5-1 to 5-7
Lions 4-8 to 6-6
Redskins 4-7-1 to 3-9
Packers 2-10 to 3-9
Colts 1-11 to 1-11
Outliers.
-Team / 1949 / 1950-
Eagles 11-1 to 6-6 (theories have been discussed here before)
49ers 9-3 to 3-9 (theories have been discussed here before)
Giants 6-6 to 10-2 (influx of AAFC talent a big part of why they improved in 1950)
10 of 13 teams had a similar record year-to-year, 2 good teams (one from each league) fell off (Eagles didn't immediately recover, 49ers got closer back to what they were more making '50 an 'off' year), and 1 team who wasn't good the 3 years prior and was good for the next 3 years after they benefit from adding great AAFC talent (along with rookie Eddie Price.)
Seems pretty equal, to me.