shaqz0590 posted:Another team to add to my Euro League Name: Nairobi Nationals Colors: Colors of the Kenyan Flag Captain: RB Kwazi Mbutabe Pro: Offensive Awareness Con: Time Management Team Bio: Africa was feeling left out when the Euro League was first introduced. Despite being one of the most poorest countries, Kenya didn't lose hope and created a football team. When the first year of the Euro league started, problems started arising, they were still building the stadium while the season started and were loosing money, then Kwazi showed up, and everything turned out great as they start Division 2 this year. Thats what im talking about give props to Kwazi Mbutabe baby wooo!!!!! Captain: Kwazi is still the African warrior, and he is still pounding the yards on the ground, beginning his 12th season this year, he hopes that he can get for the first time into Division 1. Team Intro: This week is tough since we have Nairobi, because Kwazi Mbutabe is here, back at his roots and proud of it. We have seen him in the American League. You know what he can do. Put him on the ground what more can i tell you.
zwaksman7985 posted:I've been looking at these for some time and decided that I'll bite, too. I'd like to note that the captain I will be describing is a copyrighted figure who is not my creation. The description below, however, is. Name: Tokyo Dragons Colors: Black, Red, and Gold Captain: Ranma Saotome, RB #21 History: The League spent many years trying to expand its global reach. One of its first efforts was to play a series of games in Japan each year, and this proved to be a successful endeavor. The contests drew tens of thousands of fans and pumped millions into both the Japanese and American economies. Soon, a Japanese football league had formed and it drew top athletes from within the country along with a handful of former American pros who loved the game too much to quit. In 1994, the annual League games in Tokyo were replaced with an annual contest, dubbed the World Bowl, between the League Champion and the champion of the Japanese league. These proved to be little more than glorified scrimmages for the League Champions, who routed their inferior opponents and hated traveling over 5,000 miles to play one match for free. To try and develop more competitive games for the League, it was agreed in 1999 that the first Japanese team to win this game would be granted admission to the League, beginning play the following season. Nobody in America believed this would ever happen. Fast-forward to 2007. The Japanese league champions, the Tokyo Dragons, led by running back Ranma Saotome, shocked the world by winning a shootout over the League Champion New England Regulars, by a score of 46-42. It's been three years since that historic upset, and the Dragons are knocking on the door of Division 1 thanks to Saotome and their electric offense. Only an occasionally porous defense can hold them back. Captain Bio: Immersed in the martial arts from childhood, Ranma Saotome had a rough, nomadic childhood, spending it on the road with his father. His training paid off, however, and by age 16, he was the top amateur fighter in Japan, having taken down foes four times his size with ease. Even before this time, Saotome's prowess in combat had become the stuff of legend, and the stories are all true. When he finally returned home to attend high school, he learned that he had three women engaged to him, and none of them were willing to let go of him. While pondering how to deal with the situation, he attended the annual World Bowl. Ranma was entranced by the sport's intrinsically combative nature and promptly signed up to join the school's fledgling football team. Thanks to his martial arts background, he was a natural, leading his school to two national titles. The Tokyo Dragons signed him five minutes after he graduated. Since then, they've been on a tear. He's the driving force behind their high-octane offense. He's rumored to be a cross-dresser off the field, but nothing has ever come of it. Ranma also hasn't done anything about his engagements, and two of them are now on the cheerleading squad to try and get closer to him. Team Bio: On paper, the Dragons' roster is loaded with physical freaks who should be able to easily win every game. Too bad athleticism doesn't go hand-in-hand with teamwork. Many players hold grudges against each other and it sometimes spills out onto the field. But Ranma Saotome and the rest of the offense, dubbed the Wrecking Crew by the press, have put their differences far enough aside to light up any scoreboard around. The defense is equally talented, but it often plays for the highlight reel rather than the win. Intro: This week, we visit the Land of the Rising Sun, home of the Tokyo Dragons. They're full of freaks, but their biggest freak is running back Ranma Saotome. He's just 5'8'', 177 pounds, but you try to overpower him, and he runs you over. You try to outmaneuver him, he spins you 'round like a tornado, and he's never been caught from behind. Thing is, he's not even trying. When this kid does hunker down, he's even more lethal, so give him everything you've got when you have a chance to knock him out. It might be the only shot you get.You call that a hit? I've had tougher fights with a pig!