#77 GARY LARSEN
Joined the Vikings in 1965
a
Legendary NFL
Vikings Defensive Tackle
of THE PURPLE PEOPLE EATERS Fearsome Foursome
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GaryLarsen77@hotmail.com
aka "The Norse Nightmare" » Gary Larsen NFL Vikings
#77 Left DT
grandfather of 13 year old Tanner Curtis #8

The Purple People Eaters
Fearsome NFL Viking Warriors Dominated the 1970's
Gary Larsen (#77), Alan Page, Jim Marshall, Carl Eller





For nearly a decade in the 1970's ...
The Purple People Eaters
were as dominant as ANY defense in NFL history!
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| NFL Vikings » The Purple
People-Eaters (left to right): Carl Eller, Gary Larsen, Alan Page, Jim Marshall |


Gary Larsen, Roy Winston, Carl Eller

Gary Larsen

You could have fooled running backs and quarterbacks because to them:
Page, Carl Eller, Gary Larsen #77 (joined Vikings in 1965) and Jim Marshall most certainly were
purple, and they most certainly ate people, at least on Sunday afternoons.![]() "The Purple People-Eaters" they were called, and for nearly a decade, they were as dominant as any defense in NFL history, their records overlooked somewhat, however, because they lost 4 times in the Super Bowl during that period. In 1969, the brawling, charismatic Kapp led a free-wheeling Viking offense that posted an NFL-high 379 points and 3 times scored more than 50 points in a game. While the Minnesota defense of Jim Marshall, Alan Page, Carl Eller, and Gary Larsen gained recognition as the "Purple People Eaters." |

Gary Larsen, Alan Page, Jim Marshall,
Carl Eller
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At right DE was Jim Marshall and he played the position for so long that he
could probably do it in his sleep. By the end of the 1979 season, Marshall had
played in 282 consecutive games in a row, more than any other player in NFL
history. Though small for his position, Marshall had breakneck speed and was
keen for getting into the backfield. His passion for speed often carried over
off the field as well.
Marshall always took back roads because Bud Grant would have had a fit if Marshall would have been caught. Another player, according to Brown, had purchased a Jaguar just to outrun Marshall. The player was picked up one night returning to the Twin Cities, the Jag alongside the road, both rear tires blown out, trying to keep up with Marshall, the unnamed player muttering to himself. He loved everything about the game itself. Marshall's sheer joy in working with people and playing his favorite game rubbed off on his teammates. Players, coaches, and even the team owners marveled at how good it felt just to be around him.
From
1968 and well into the 1970s, The Purple People Eaters humbled the best offenses
in pro football. After completing only 8 of 22 passes in a game, quarterback
Johnny Unitas of the then Baltimore Colts called the Vikings the best pass
rushers he had ever seen. In a 1969 game, quarterback Bart Starr found
himself again in serious trouble. During the game, Starr was upended eight
times and the longest play of the day was only 13 yards. The Purple People
Eaters so rattled the Detroit Lions one-day that the Lions
Nothing can match the Vikings' 1971 season however. That year, Eller won the Most Valuable Defensive Player award and Alan Page was voted the Most Valuable Player in the League, making him the first defensive player to have ever earned the honor. A series of plays in a game against Detroit showed what kind of game Page had that year. Incensed at himself for making two mistakes in a row, Page simply took charge of the game. On first down, he sacked the quarterback for huge loss. On second down, he dove over a blocker and caught the runner for another loss. On third down, he sacked the quarterback again for another loss despite the man blocking him being flagged for holding. On fourth down, he blocked the punt. The Purple People Eaters earned a record 4 trips to the Super Bowl with Eller, Page, and Marshall starting in every one of them.
But The Purple People Eaters didn't just participate in football, they had other
interests as well.
In 1969, the brawling, charismatic Kapp led a free-wheeling Viking offense that posted an NFL-high 379 points and three times scored more than 50 points in a game. While the Minnesota defense of Jim Marshall, Alan Page, Carl Eller, and Gary Larsen gained infamous recognition as the "Purple People Eaters," it was "Injun" Joe who remained the fiery ring-leader of the Purple Gang. |


Purple People Eaters
Autographed Football
(Eller, Page, Gary Larsen #77, Marshall)
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