Don't give up Mack. Tech football history did not begin when these young twerps were born. They don't understand how great Dodd's teams were. Dodd recruited guy who were fast and could carry a ball. It was not all pass as it is today. Even the Bear did not like the pass, he said only three things could happen when you pass the ball and two of em are bad.
Listen, nobody said it did start when we were born (1972 for me). Most of us are as students of the history and tradition at GT as some of you old timers. I've read a lot of books and stories on Heisman and Dodd and like you embrace that tradition and history. Guys like Injun Joe Guyon, Clint Castleberry, George Morris, Bill Curry, Randy Rhino, Jeff Ford, Billy Lothridge, etc. etc. on down the line were all part of that fabric we are so proud of.
But the bottom line is those players then would have a really hard time making a dent on the starting lineup today. Eric Wilcox has the record for most tackles in one game in 1967 with 38 and he was a 6-0" 225 lb DE. And listing him at 6-0" is generous as I've met the man and I'm 6-1".
If you honestly believe that by and large most of those players would have been able to do the same thing in this day and age, well, you're just not being honest about the improvements in athleticism in the players over the last 40 years. Very few if ANY would be able to break in the starting lineup.
The fact that Joe Hamilton all 5-7" 175 lbs could come in and do what he did because he was a special athlete both physically and mentally and NOT be considered your top QB, totally strips you of any credibility and displays a bias that is predicated on stubborness about "your era". You take a kid like Dwyer and place him on one of Dodd's squads in the 50's and he would be considered as legendary to the college game as Jim Brown.
That's not saying those guys were not good. Its all relative. They were greats during their time. However, their results were based on playing on average a lower quality of athlete. So when a guy like Hamilton has more than 5 TIMES the stats of a Lothridge AND played against a higher quality of athlete, well, Im sorry, but he's better.
The only argument I've heard is "Well, I saw both of them play and Lothridge was better". That's completely subjective because you were watching one guy go up against a lesser quality athletic opponent, and if you CANNOT admit that to be the absolute truth, you have no business rendering an opinion on this in the first place because you know nothing about the game of football.
The ONLY credit I will give the older football athletes is they were far more tougher than todays players as they had to endure injuries and a scrappier form of football. But that doesn't mean they were better athletically, they weren't.