RIP Dr. Z

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The documentary on him was excellent. He has been missed.
 
Bought and read Thinking Man's Guide to Pro Football when I was in my 2os. Still have it. Still holds up.
 
He was probably one of the biggest reasons I got into writing. I remember reading his 1986 NFL Preview in SI and thinking he was a damn idiot. Everyone knew the bears would repeat and they would play the dolphins in the super bowl. His choices? Giants vs. the Broncos. Needless to say come January, i thought he must have been a genius. Read every article afterward and any book of his I could find. My favorite he did was “the last season of weeb ewbank.”

Also, back when he was with the Post, he and **** schaap co-wrote a great piece on the New York Mets in 1969. It was a breakdown of a day when the Mets beat the cubs in a big game. I assume schaap wrote the game stuff, while Zimmerman did the odd stuff that made it so interesting such as the retelling of a guy in queens killing his wife because she kept turning off the game to watch a soap opera. I spent a couple years trying to convince my editor to let us do the same.
 
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One of the first great internet sports columns. He was super smart, a curmudgeon for the ages and he loved good wine.
 
When I was in high school doing write-ups for my high school's football games for the local paper he was my hero. He provided a level of insight in a Thinking Man's Guide to Pro Football that I had never been exposed to by any other writer.
 
Didn't his wife have like a blog a few years back where she posted some of his old columns or some columns that didn't make print.
 
I am glad he has been relieved of his burden, but a hell of a lot of knowledge is gone in a wisp. That's not good for football or the enterprise.
We are in an era where we simply cannot afford the loss of expertise.
 
Loved his columns when I watched and read all the NFL I could get. He watched and wrote about football like nobody else. I loved his year-end wrapup of NFL announce teams.

RIP Dr Z
 
A true legend who has been missed since his retirement. He knew the league inside and out. RIP to a giant in his field.
 
Bought and read Thinking Man's Guide to Pro Football when I was in my 2os. Still have it. Still holds up.

I always loved his story of the Jets going to play in San Diego, and, on a night off, Weeb Ewbank and some assistants go to Tijuana.

They get confronted by a guy asking them if they want to buy filthy movies. Ewbank replies, "Christ no. I've been watching movies all day."

RIP to a sportswriting legend.
 
It's worth noting that two of the giants of the field who've recently passed, Z and Dave Anderson, both covered the Jets of the '60s.
 
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