If you were to write the history of offensive football -- and particularly, the passing game -- you wouldn't be able to do so without covering Don Coryell. The former Cardinals and Chargers head coach took Sid Gillman's offenses from the 1960s, simplified them and pushed them forward into a new era. His development of a numbering system for route trees -- and his knack for attacking defenses out of the one-back offense -- influenced both Joe Gibbs' Super Bowl teams with the Redskins and those '90s Cowboys outfits that won three out of four Super Bowls. But he was most known for his arcade game scoring attacks in the early '80s. Like, you know, when a team scores 50 and racks up 661 yards of offense, as the Bolts did in a Monday night beatdown of the Bengals back in 1982. Good grief.