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With his custom APBA Football sets and longtime card performance collaboration with APBA Hall of Famer Greg Barath, Mark Zarb has cemented his reputation as one of the zen masters of the game. Buckle in for this in-depth look at all phases of the game, from QB sack numbers and scramble refinements to calculating those 9-7 teams, acceptable variances among offensive and defensive squads, era-to-era play, and much more.
Part One
NEW JERSEY, Aug. 25, 2012 — The basic APBA football game engine is about 55 years old. Yet it still inspires — like all APBA games do — the passions of sports fans who not only want to recreate the exploits of their current heroes, but hanker for a taste of the eras before their time.
While it’s generally common knowledge even to the most casual APBA aficionado that the football game ranks a distant second in popularity to the company’s vaunted baseball offerings, there remains an impassioned contingent of gridiron gurus who put the game through its paces with awe-inspiring regularity.
Two of those pivotal figures are custom card maker Mark Zarb and expert replayer Greg Barath. The self-described Frick and Frack of the APBA football community have fueled interest in the game for years with their intensely detailed and disciplined approaches to creating and using the magical curve-cornered cards. For instance, the well-known Hamilton Football League http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMIRgso46kg&feature=relmfutarget= —_blank”>mentions the pair in the title of one of their YouTube videos.
Their names inspire consistent praise among the regulars of the Delphi Forums. More importantly, this tale of two men who share not only a devotion to the same hobby but also an abiding love for an often embattled NFL team as well as a common passion for nth-degree detail, is yet another testament to the enduring quality of friendships APBA has fostered for decades. ...
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With his custom APBA Football sets and longtime card performance collaboration with APBA Hall of Famer Greg Barath, Mark Zarb has cemented his reputation as one of the zen masters of the game. Buckle in for this in-depth look at all phases of the game, from QB sack numbers and scramble refinements to calculating those 9-7 teams, acceptable variances among offensive and defensive squads, era-to-era play, and much more.
Part One
NEW JERSEY, Aug. 25, 2012 — The basic APBA football game engine is about 55 years old. Yet it still inspires — like all APBA games do — the passions of sports fans who not only want to recreate the exploits of their current heroes, but hanker for a taste of the eras before their time.
While it’s generally common knowledge even to the most casual APBA aficionado that the football game ranks a distant second in popularity to the company’s vaunted baseball offerings, there remains an impassioned contingent of gridiron gurus who put the game through its paces with awe-inspiring regularity.
Two of those pivotal figures are custom card maker Mark Zarb and expert replayer Greg Barath. The self-described Frick and Frack of the APBA football community have fueled interest in the game for years with their intensely detailed and disciplined approaches to creating and using the magical curve-cornered cards. For instance, the well-known Hamilton Football League http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMIRgso46kg&feature=relmfutarget= —_blank”>mentions the pair in the title of one of their YouTube videos.
Their names inspire consistent praise among the regulars of the Delphi Forums. More importantly, this tale of two men who share not only a devotion to the same hobby but also an abiding love for an often embattled NFL team as well as a common passion for nth-degree detail, is yet another testament to the enduring quality of friendships APBA has fostered for decades. ...
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