Check out the Official JaguarGator9 YouTube videos page.
Welcome to my YouTube spotlight series. As an avid follower of about 50 channels, I’m going to praise some of my favorite content creators. This includes people who have subscriber totals ranging from the tens of thousands to millions. I like to follow channels that cover sports, horror, mystery, debate, wrestling, otters, and charismatic content creators who have a cheerful demeanor.
Who Is JaguarGator9
JaguarGator9 is an NFL historian who publishes daily YouTube videos on events dating back to the early 1970s. His uploads focus on games, players, coaches, broadcasting, marketing, and ad campaigns.
Why You Should Subscribe to JaguarGator9
According to his Patreon, JaguarGator9 is a graduate student whose passion is to create NFL history videos. He became a football fan in 2005. What this means is that he isn’t just recalling information from watching the product during his younger years. He has had to take time to study everything that has affected the product.
The JaguarGator9 channel fascinates me because of how much time is required to create these history videos. Most of his videos are around 15 minutes long. Then you have to consider how much time it takes to edit everything with dozens of random clips from games that aren’t readily available. He has to learn the context that led to the situations. Imagine doing all this while getting a graduate degree.
How does he make a video everyday? I suppose that he has become a master at streamlining the process. He still has enough time to do trivia contests and a couple backup channels that I’ll mention later.
This is a highly recommended channel for anyone who wants to learn about random history involving their teams or the league itself. Every now and then someone in the comments will call him out for making an error. This rarely happens and for free content I can’t hold that against him.
What I’d Like To See From JaguarGator9
I’ve got nothing. For the price of admission, this channel offers far more than I’d expect.
Maybe he can ditch his Jacksonville Jaguars fandom and cheer for a real team like the Tennessee Titans or Green Bay Packers? Nah I won’t hold that against him. Going 3-14 every year is probably better than going 14-3 then losing early in the playoffs.
JaguarGator9 Profile
Join Date: July 1, 2017
Subscribers: 39.3K
Channel Views: 14M views
Publishing Frequency: Daily
Most Popular Video
The DUMBEST Moment in Monday Night Football HISTORY | Steelers @ Dolphins (1973) (873K Views, Published December 14, 2020)
This video references the situation when the Miami Dolphins were leading 30-24 with one minute remaining. Pinned deep in their own territory, the Dolphins chose to take an intentional safety. Announcers Howard Cosell, Frank Gifford and Don Meredith had never seen that before. Much to their credit they understood why the Dolphins did it after it had happened. It was just something that hadn’t been seen before. Dolphins head coach Don Shula was a Super Bowl champion with an innovative mind.
My Favorite Videos
The DUMBEST NFL Announcer Moment in NBC HISTORY | Reggie Rucker
This is the fourth highest viewed video. Reggie Rucker was a color commentator who was a rising star in the industry. He ruined his career when he made up comments that he claimed happened while having dinner with Cincinnati Bengals head coach Sam Wyche. Wyche and Rucker never had dinner.
The Time The Raiders STOLE Peyton Manning’s Signs
This was the first time that JaguarGator9 had a video exceed 100,000 views. He tells a short story of Oakland Raiders (now Las Vegas) linebacker Greg Biekert deciphering the signs of Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning. After the Colts built a 24-7 lead in the first half, the Raiders came back for a 38-31 win. Biekert was able to figure out the following:
In the locker room at halftime, Biekert wrote on a marker board what he believed were a series of indicators in Manning’s audibles. The numbers 52, 53 or 54 meant a draw play, 18 or 19 an outside run, 50 and 58 were counter plays, and any other numbers were pass plays.
South Florida Sun Sentinel.
The WORST BROADCAST in NFL on FOX HISTORY
An NFL broadcast with no play-by-play person and two color commentators? This video included audio with Terry Bradshaw and Jimmy Johnson giving long gaps of silences and getting player names wrong.
What was supposed to be a revolutionary idea ended up as a major failure.
How To Support JaguarGator9
You can support him through his Twitter that’s posted below, Discord, Twitch, Tik Tok, Reddit, Patreon and his store. His store includes apparel, household goods, water bottles, mugs, hats, phone cases, and much more.
You can also contact him through the email on his YouTube about page.
JaguarGator9 Twitter
JaguarGator8, JG9 Highlights
Want more content? JaguarGator9 has two more channels. JaguarGator8 has college football history videos that he publishes once or twice per week. JG9 Highlights is a player highlights channel that he hasn’t posted on in 10 months.
Hi Gator! I like your video’s from yesteryear! Got one for you to investigate! Dec 8th 1979! In Richmond,Va. Both WTVR(CBS) and WWBT(NBC) could not air 2 NFL Saturday games because of a federal law No8731 that prohibits NFL games fron being televised Fridays or Saturdays when high school game is being played within 75 miles of a local stations transmitter! It was A and AA high school games being played in Charlottesville,Va at UVA’s Scott Stadium! The Dallas Philadelphia and Denver Seattle games were both blackout in Richmond but could be seen in Norfolk, Va! There was a AAA playoff game in Richmond being played at Richmond city stadium that did not cause the blackout! It was the A and AA games in Charlottesville that created this problem for Richmond, Va and other that were under this law all over U.S! Were you aware of this federal law 8731? Something you may want to dive into! Saw your video of the 1981 week 6 game btwn Redskins Bears that WTVR took off in Richmond Va! Take care and thank you for sharing these video’s!