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Are the NFL's Celebration Rules Racist?
Touchdown celebrations go back for decades. Frank Gifford and Paul Hornung threw balls into the stands when they scored. In 1965, Homer Jones gave us the spike. In 1974, the Houston Oilers drafted Billy "White Shoes" Johnson. He was 5'9" from D-III Widner University, and when he scored, he liked to dance. After returning a punt for a touchdown, he did an odd version of the "funky chicken" to the delight of fans. Dancing wasn't done at that time in the NFL. "White Shoes" thought he was going to get a tongue lashing when he want to the sideline, but head coach Bum Phillips was OK with it. "You keep scoring and you can dance all you want," Phillips reportedly said when Billy returned to the sideline. Players started coming up with more entertaining ways to celebrate a score. In 1982, the "Fun Bunch" of the Washington Redskins would get together in a circle and high-five each other. Mark Gastineau made the "Sack Dance" famous.
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