When I was a kid my
first favourite pro football player was Ray Berry, the end who was
Johnny Unitas' favourite target on the Colts. In fact, that may have
gone right back to the 1958 championship game, which I watched with
the men at my uncle's house, while the kids played elsewhere. Perhaps
I knew then I was fated to be an end. It lasted long enough so that,
when I was elevated to the varsity in high school, I somehow managed
to get Berry's number, 82, to wear.
But by that time,
1965, my favourite receiver was someone from the AFL, Lance Alworth.We didn't see many
AFL games, especially not from San Diego, but it didn't take many
views to make you a fan of Bambi. We did, however, get the Giants'
games out of New York, and in that interregnum between Berry and
Alworth, I became a huge fan of the Giants' Del Shofner, who died a
couple of weeks ago. His death didn't receive as much attention, not
even in New York, as I would have expected, but that reflects a
strange phenomenon: Shofner, who was one of the two starting
receivers on the NFL's official all-decade team for the Sixties, has
been consistently passed over by Hall of Fame voters, just as he was
by obituary writers almost everywhere except the New York Times. And
this is something I find hard to understand, as I think he is the
most compelling candidate at end from the pre-passing era.
Delbert Shofner was
a quiet star, and perhaps that's part of why he didn't attract more
attention. Listed at 6-3 185 he was what you would call lanky (his
teammates called him 'Slim' or 'Blade'), and he was handsome in a
very Texas way; he came from Center, Texas and you could have cast
him as a bit player in Hud, or Junior Bonner, and he would have fit
right in. He looked a bit like the country singer Jimmy Dean. In fact, as the NFL moved to the forefront of the TV sports
world, the New York ad men who were fixated on players in New York
(or do you think it a coincidence that stars Frank Gifford and Kyle
Rote and kicker Pat Summerall were early entries into broadcasting,
with the networks centered in New York?) chose Shofner to be one of
the models for the Marlboro Man cigarette ads, although his teammate
Charley Conerly got more of them in the end. But though high-profile
helps your HoF chances, there's more to it than that.
Shofner played
halfback at Baylor, like many other future NFL receivers. As the
rules dictated in the Fifties, he played both ways. He also played
basketball, baseball and ran track, where he was a conference
champion sprinter. In the 1957 Sugar Bowl, Baylor, 8-2 and ranked
11th in the country, upset second-ranked and undefeated
Tennessee 13-7, in the final New Year's Day game. Shofner's 54 yard
run set up Baylor's first score; he was named the game's MVP of the
biggest upset of the year.
The Rams drafted him
with the 11th pick of the first round, and as a rookie he
played cornerback, starting most of the season. In 1958, he was moved
to flanker (listed as a halfback, but generally playing what we now call the Z spot),
and in 12 games, with Billy Wade the primary quarterback in Sid
Gillman's offense, he caught 51 passes for 1,097 yards, 21.5 per
catch, and 8 TDs. This was a Big Thing; Don Hutson had registered
the NFL's first 1,000 yard receiving season in 1942, and only 12
others had done it before Shofner. He was voted first team All-Pro
and went to the Pro Bowl.
The Rams' big star
in 1958 was halfback 'Jaguar' Jon Arnett, from USC,another of my early
favourites, who ran for 683 yards and had 494 more receiving, as well
as 554 more on kick returns. BTW Shofner also did the punting, averaging
41.2 yards. The Rams went 8-4, their best year under Gillman (who
would go on to coach Alworth and the Chargers in the AFL), and you
might argue that Shofner's success was as important to Sid's ideas
as anything that went on with the Clark Shaugnessy Rams in the
early Fifties. It may also have had something to do with Shofner's
style. He rank with a jerky sort of sprinter's motion, a little like
Crazy Legs Hirsch, which made it look like he was always going to go
into a cut. He could catch over the middle, but once he'd got a step
on a defender deep, he turned into an elegant catcher of the long
ball, extending arms and making over the shoulder catches which,
watching on tape now, remind me of Randy Moss.
In 1959 Shofner fell
64 yards short of recording a second 1,000 yard season, but he again
was first-team All-Pro. In 1960 he was held back by leg injuries and
ulcers. He played only a couple of games at receiver and corner, but
continued as the punter. Something about the nature of the injuries
put off the Rams, or maybe it was the switch to Bob Waterfield as
head coach (with ex Rams' coach Hamp Pool and end Tom Fears as his
offensive assistants) but they basically gave up on him.
Interestingly, in 1960, Waterfield's former co-QB on the Rams, Norm
Van Brocklin, led the Eagles to the NFL title.
That title's
signature moment came against the New York Giants, in the game where
Chuck Bednarik put Frank Gifford out of the game with a crunching
tackle. You've seen the photo, I'm sure. Gifford was forced to miss
the 1961, and the Giants, under new head coach Allie Sherman, were
looking to upgrade their offense. They had already traded tackle Lou
Cordileone to the 49ers for QB Y.A. Tittle, and Tittle recommended
they pick up Shofner. They sent two draft picks to the Rams, and
Shofner and Tittle clicked immediately.
In 1961, with the
season expanded to 14 games, Shofner caught 68 passes for 1,125 yards
and 11 TDs. In 1962, with Gifford back at flanker and Shofner as
split end (the X position) he caught fewer passes (53) for more yards
(1,133) and 12 scores. And in 1963 it was 64/1181/9. The Giants went
to the championship game each year, losing to the Packers in 61 and
62 and the Bears in 63—all in games with less than ideal passing
conditions. It's interesting to note here than Shofner became the
first player to register 1,000 yard seasons three years in a row; but
many of his obits said 1961's 1,125 made him the first tO ever have
two 1,000 yard seasons. Which is odd, because I believe Fears did it in
'49 and '50 with the Rams, and Harlon Hill in '54 and '55 with the
Bears. Art Powell with Oakland and Alworth would do three in a row
in the AFL (Alworth would crack the barrier seven times in the
Sixties) but not until Charlie Joiner in the late 70s and James
Lofton in the 80s would anyone else do three in a row in the NFL.
In 1964 it all fell
apart for the Giants and Shofner. The team was aging; Tittle was 38,
Gifford 34, Alex Webster 33; on defense Andy Robustelli was 39 and
they'd traded away star MLB Sam Huff. Shofner's ulcers and leg
problems returned. He played four more seasons, but managed only 21
starts and 54 catches. Homer Jones became the Giants' designated deep
threat, but after Tittle's retirement, Gary Wood, Earl Morrall, Tom
Kennedy and finally Fran Tarkenton couldn't make the most of what
they had. Shofner retired after the 1967 season.
As I said, he was
voted to the All-Decade team, but although the other first-team
receiver, Charlie Taylor is in the Hall, he's barely had a look. I
think a few things are to blame for that. He was always a quiet star,
even in the high-profile atmosphere of New York. His three great
years with the Giants resulted in no titles. And as time went on the
AFL tended to provide the idea of glamour receivers from that decade,
and the second-team all-decade choices from the NFL were Gary Collins
and Boyd Dowler. Both were tall flankers, typical of the run-first
decade, and I get the sense Shofner is lumped in with them (not that
either was a slouch). But you have Alworth and another typical Texan
Don Maynard (oddly, apart from being Joe Namath's favourite) in the
Hall and I'd take Shofner over Maynard in a Texas minute.
But two factors apply. One was Shofner's best years straddling the decades, and coming with different teams. I believe Hall of Fame voters don't even remember his years in LA. The more crucial
factor may be the shortness of Shofner's peak. One year as a DB, a
full season lost to, and his last four year curtailed greatly by,
injuries. That leaves him with only five quality years. But what
quality! Four 1,000 yard seasons and one over 900, at a time when
that was still rare. In his three great years with the Giants he had
32 TD catches to go with 1,100 plus yards per season. And most
important, he was a Pro Bowler and first-team All-Pro all five
seasons. It is first team All-Pro that stands out. Yes there were
fewer teams, yes some receivers were in the AFL, but compare with
some of the guys we talk about all the time today, some who were never first-team All Pro.
In the last round of
Hall of Fame voting, Issac Bruce was elected. Bruce had really two
big years. Was never a first-team all-pro, was voted to four Pro
Bowls (which nowadays means a lot less than it did). His running mate
Torry Holt didn't get in: Holt has 1 All Pro and seven pro bowls,
which indicates a longer run of effectiveness. In the veterans
Hallaganza last season Mac Speedie was voted in (3 all pros in the
AAFC and five pro bowls, two of those in the first three years the
NFL had an all-star game). I like Speedie because he stood up to Paul
Brown, went to Canada and had two fine years with Saskatchewan in the
WIFU (think CFL). Harold Carmichael never was All-Pro, went to only
four Pro Bowls. Drew Pearson (3/3) didn't get in.
I understand that
Shofner's effective career was relatively short, but a 5/5 mark in
All-Pro/Pro Bowl matches up pretty damn well with receivers who had
longer careers, and as we've seen with guys like Terrell Davis, a
short career with a very high peak no longer is a detriment like it
had been. A good comparison might be Tony Boselli (3/5), Le Roy
Butler (4/4), Reggie Wayne (1/6), or Bryant Young (1/4) from the
latest Hall finalists. I don't have a vote, but I do have the
advantage of having seen Shofner play when he did play, which I think
helps me put him into context, but may also make me a little biased
in his favour.
The estimable Pro
Football reference site does a Hall of Fame Monitor. It's based on
Bill James' work in his landmark book on baseball's Hall of Fame,
originally titled The Politics Of Glory (now Whatever Happened to The
Hall Of Fame). The Monitor does not measure performance per se, but
rather how closely performance tallies with the things Hall voters
have traditionally looked for, which means things like championships
and leading the league in stat categories get extra importance. It's
starting point is PFR's Approximate Value, which attempts to put a
value on each player's every season.
Shofner's career AV
is low at 49, less than half of Michael Irvin's 106. Yet Shofner
ranks 20th in Hall of Fame monitor points with 92.25, just
behind Berry (94.89), Irvin (93.31) and Andre Johnson (92.26). The
good news is Shofner is ahead of Maynard, Art Monk, Andre Reed,
Joiner, Fred Biletnikoff, Lynn Swann and John Stallworth (69.96), and
way ahead of his contemporaries Bobby Mitchell, Bob Hayes and Tommy
MacDonald, who are all in.
The bad news is the
cut off (the average of those in the hall) is 107. Charlie Taylor has
102.83, Paul Warfield 100.56, and Bruce 99.81. Holt, by the way,
stands at 104.27 and Wayne at 107.21, the highest totals for
non-active players not in the Hall. Now I think the average is
weighted a little high by Jerry Rice's 311.81 (Moss is second at
149.69), maybe we ought to use the median? BTW, Alworth is seventh
at 124.84.
To me twentieth on
the list ought to be good enough for the Hall, considering all those
members who rank below him. I'm not so much disappointed Shofner's
not in as I am by the fact that he never seemed to even enter the
discussion, which seems very much short-sighted and unfair. And now
he is gone. He died the day before my birthday, though it didn't
become public until the next week. And when it did it transported me
back to those Giants' teams, to people traveling up to Connecticut on
Sundays to beat the NFL's TV blackout, and the Tittle to Shofner
magic that to me bridges the gap between those early Fifties Rams and
the birth of the modern passing game. He was a joy to watch, and he
was a great football player. RIP.
I went to one Jints game each year 61-63 and saw him catch a TD in each game. A very graceful man in the roughest of sports
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