As the felt footballs would deteriorate or get lost, we changed the passing in electric football to using the passing play process from one of the board games, and if the pass was complete, the defender could change the direction of his defensive players to pursue the receiver, it worked real well and removed any argument about whether the felt ball hit the receiver or not.
GG Oilers / GDB. Your dominating squad is likely title bound. This Bengals squad I acquired at mid-season is truly lacking in several key areas. Lots of work ahead making it competitive.
I gotta fix my offense, so many games where we couldn't sustain drives at all.
There goes the neighborhood! Now that I've squeaked through you, I'll be dangerous to everyone else. I'm getting players healthy while everybody else is getting hurt. Watch me promptly get clobbered now.
GG OOG/Jets, grats on your season. What a great shot of Namath vs the Oilers below. he had some hops! Next pic, Namath gets up close and personal with Oiler DE Bethea.
Last edited 3/20/2026 3:19 pm
Re: GG shout outs for 2025
by
GrandadB
@
3/20/2026 11:08 am
One last thing about electric football, I got to wondering about who painted all those players and teams?? The detail was amazing and we're talking a huge amount of them. So I googled it........
Kyle Nutt has painted many teams and figures for Tudor Games, as he is the son of owner Bryan Nutt. Other noted painters for Tudor electric football teams include Todd Stroud, with many figures used in modern games, such as the “Haiti” figures, having been historically hand-painted in Haiti. (Wow, one guy could not have painted that many, Nutt is right)
Millions of Tudor electric football figures have been produced since 1949, with significant production runs featuring hand-painted details, particularly in the 1960s and 1970s. Notable sets include the detailed 1967 "Big Men" series, which featured painted AFL and NFL teams. Modern sets now use detailed, pre-painted "Standard" figures.