Isaac Bruce: Silent But Deadly

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  • #11794
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    http://www.si.com/vault/1996/08/01/216724/silent-but-deadly-rams-wideout-isaac-bruce-fakes-out-defenders-and-teammates-with-his-seemingly-solemn-nature

    Silent But Deadly
    August 1996
    by Sally Jenkins

    The thing about St. Louis receiver Isaac Bruce is that there are
    two of him. There is Isaac, a decorous, godly young man, and
    then there is Bruce, a jaw-happy revelation. Isaac is the
    well-mannered, reticent guy. Bruce is the strutting,
    chest-thumping scourge who broke four Rams receiving records in
    1995. Recently, as Isaac contemplated his duality over a plate
    of chicken wings in a St. Louis sports bar, he visibly struggled
    to contain his alter ego. His solemn expression wavered. He
    sighed. Isaac tries to be self-effacing, but sometimes Bruce
    gets the better of him. Finally, Isaac gave up. “It’s hard to be
    humble on the field,” he said hopelessly.

    Before last season few would have suspected that the Reverend
    Ike, as some of his St. Louis teammates call him, harbored such
    a divided nature. As far as they knew, Bruce was a deeply devout
    and painfully shy second-year receiver, the 13th of 15 children
    from a staunchly Pentecostal family. After all, Bruce, who
    aspires to be a minister, went through his entire rookie season
    without uttering a single complete sentence. He went to and from
    practice every day with a Bible tucked under his arm. Rams
    quarterback Chris Miller tried to engage him in conversation,
    but Bruce would just nod or shake his head, silently, and return
    to the Book.

    When running back Johnny Bailey moved into Bruce’s suburban
    apartment complex in Crevecoeur, Mo., last summer, he did the
    neighborly thing and invited his teammate out for a night on the
    town. “No,” Bruce replied, without elaboration. Bailey persisted
    and on another evening said enticingly, “I’m going to a club
    tonight.” Bruce stared at Bailey and answered in his monotone:
    “I’m not.”

    Bailey rolled his eyes. “I know,” he said. “I know you’re not. I
    don’t even know why I ask you.”

    Gradually, however, the Rams noticed there was something else
    lurking in Bruce’s habitually reverent expression. “He has a
    kind of a smirk,” says receivers coach Mike Martz. One of the
    first indications that Bruce was not all he outwardly seemed
    occurred during training camp last July when he booby-trapped a
    watercooler to erupt into a geyser as Martz tried to get a
    drink. Then, in a preseason game at Oakland on Aug. 12, Bruce
    spiked a ball against the end-zone wall after a 26-yard
    touchdown catch. The gesture drew the ire of a bunch of biker
    dudes in that section of the stadium. Bruce stayed in the end
    zone, threatening to take on the Raiders’ faithful, until his
    teammates pulled him away.

    St. Louis coach Rich Brooks likened Bruce’s transformation to
    something that ought to take place “in a phone booth.” Bruce
    played like the Rams’ own personal stealth bomber, a skinny
    projectile who rose out of nowhere to finish the season with
    1,781 yards on 119 catches, both team records. In one midseason
    stretch, he had six straight games of 100 or more yards
    receiving. “One thing I know now is that there’s no such thing
    as a sophomore jinx,” says Bruce, who made his first Pro Bowl
    appearance in February.

    The team’s fortunes rose as Bruce’s stock did. His number 80
    jersey became the hottest-selling sports item in town. Despite
    his seemingly frail six-foot, 178-pound build, Bruce was both
    unstoppable and durable, catching balls over the middle and
    playing on special teams. In the first start of his NFL career,
    the 1995 season opener against Green Bay, he blocked a
    first-quarter punt and then recovered the ball. Five seconds
    later he caught a 23-yard TD pass.

    On Oct. 12 Bruce schooled Atlanta with 10 catches for 191 yards
    and two touchdowns, and contributed a 51-yard punt return. The
    following Sunday he gouged San Francisco for 173 yards on nine
    receptions. “People have to start double-covering that guy,”
    49ers receiver Jerry Rice declared. Not that it mattered. When
    Philadelphia doubled up on Bruce the next week, he just stepped
    up the back talk. “Oh, I feel so special,” he said after
    catching nine passes for 105 yards.

    But once the uniform came off, Bruce receded and Isaac took over
    again. In street clothes and a cap he goes virtually
    unrecognized off the field, looking like an adolescent mall rat.
    “He’s the biggest star in town no one knows,” Rams assistant
    p.r. director Kirk Reynolds says.

    Even Bruce’s mother, Kairethatic, pokes fun at her son’s
    reticent public persona. “He has to show an I.D. card before
    anybody believes he plays pro football,” she says. Just 23,
    Bruce is wondrously inexperienced at celebrity. Once, as he was
    browsing through a local galleria at midseason, an autograph
    seeker approached. Bruce cowered under his cap. The fan quietly
    made him a deal. “If you sign this, I won’t tell anyone who you
    are,” the fan said. Bruce gratefully cooperated.

    The Rams have developed an obvious affection for Isaac and his
    evil twin. Although he still refused to go out on the town,
    Bruce did invite Bailey over for a Sunday dinner or two. In
    return, Bailey dragged Bruce to a riverboat casino for some
    blackjack. There Bailey discovered an extrovert trying to break
    loose: Bruce quickly won $600 and proceeded to gamble it all
    away. Last fall Bailey even dragged Bruce to a player bash,
    although Bruce hesitates to admit it. “Yeah, I went to a party
    once, just to see how it was,” he says. “It’s nothing I could
    get used to.”

    When some college teammates from Memphis State came to visit and
    talked Bruce into going to one of the city’s most popular
    nightspots, he had to ask for directions. When the group arrived
    at the club, Rams defensive end Robert Young crowed in
    amazement. “How’d y’all get Mr. St. Louis out of the house?” he
    said.

    Bruce will never be mistaken for a social butterfly. He claims
    the only reason he goes out is so he will stay awake past 7 p.m.
    He has a bad habit of dropping off on his couch and then rising
    at 3 a.m. ready to start the day. Sometimes he goes mall
    strolling just so he won’t fall asleep. He’s rarely looking to
    buy anything.

    Life without luxury is all he has ever known. The four-bedroom,
    two-bath home on 29th Avenue in Fort Lauderdale where he grew up
    with his eight sisters and six brothers was no palace. Bruce’s
    father, Jesse, worked long days as a roofer. His mother, a
    Pentecostal minister who calls herself K, ruled the household
    with nonnegotiable discipline and a Bible in her hand. “I never
    allowed defiance in my house,” she says. Every morning as the
    children got ready for school, K would sit in the hallway
    outside their rooms and read Bible verse aloud. On Sundays they
    went to church for six hours. “Church is all this family knows
    how to do,” says Bruce’s sister Charlotte.

    Isaac’s dual nature first showed itself in a peculiar episode of
    surreptitious disobedience. His siblings vividly remember a
    13-year-old Isaac stepping out of a crowd to deck a bully in a
    schoolyard fracas and then vanishing back into the mob. “My
    brother can put on that innocent face,” Charlotte says. “He
    learned how to sleep with his eyes open in church.”

    After leading Dillard High to the Florida State 4A championship
    his senior year, Bruce earned a scholarship offer from Purdue.
    When he failed to make the grade on the SAT, he landed at West
    Los Angeles College. Finding himself buried in the Oilers’
    option offense, Bruce soon transferred crosstown to Santa Monica
    Junior College. For two years he lived with two teammates in a
    dingy one-room apartment on the edge of Los Angeles
    International Airport, listening to jets roar overhead every
    night. Every morning he rode a city bus across the sprawling
    metro area to school.

    Bruce was recruited by a bunch of Division I-A schools: Cal,
    Colorado State, Fresno State, Memphis State, San Jose State,
    Virginia and Western Michigan. When Tigers receivers coach Randy
    Fichtner visited Bruce during a West Coast trip, he took one
    look around the apartment and wondered if his prospect could
    surmount the long odds he was fighting to graduate. “It wasn’t a
    question of whether he was talented enough to make it,” Fichtner
    says. “It was a question of whether the elements would let him.”
    At Memphis State, Bruce finally blossomed, becoming the school’s
    first 1,000-yard receiver, in 1993. During his two years in
    Memphis, the Tigers appeared just once on national television,
    against Miami in the last game of his college career. Bruce, of
    course, wanted to make the most of the exposure, but in the
    first half he got blindsided and bit partway through his tongue.
    He took three stitches at the half but did not miss a snap,
    finishing the game with two touchdown receptions. The Rams
    selected him in the second round of the 1994 draft.

    Bruce spent his rookie year utterly dumbstruck at being in an
    NFL locker room. In retrospect, his teammates have learned, he
    wasn’t standoffish so much as determined not to waste his
    chance. He slaved in the weight room and listened with rapt
    attention at meetings, two traits the veterans eventually took
    approving notice of. “Isaac has gotten here all by himself,”
    Bailey says. “He’s done it with his own discipline.”

    But he could use some more discipline. As the season wore on, he
    faced growing harassment from defen
    sive backs and didn’t always
    handle himself well. “I get a little shaky in the head,” he
    admits. When he got frustrated, the Bruce in him jumped out chin
    first. On Nov. 19 he had to be restrained from going after the
    Falcons’ Darnell Walker when, in a long day of jousting, the
    cornerback held him to 91 yards, breaking his 100-yard streak.
    “They’re going to slap you around and try to disrupt you,”
    11-year vet Jessie Hester counseled. “You have to wait for your
    opportunities, and your moment will come.”

    Bruce listened and obeyed. He closed the season with a
    career-high 15-reception performance ag
    ainst Miami. It was clear
    that if the defenders weren’t going away, neither was he. Bruce
    spent this off-season working on sprint drills, hoping to crank
    out another fraction of speed. “I’ll just keep catching passes
    until the defenders give up,” he says. “I think I’m a guy who
    can outrun them.”

    Bruce’s productivity in 1996 will depend in part on who is
    throwing him the ball. The Rams are in transition at
    quarterback: Miller was released in March after team doctors
    advised that he take a year off to recover from a series of
    concussions. Bruce will have to develop a relationship with
    journeyman signal-caller Steve Walsh, who signed with St. Louis
    in April. “I’m just going to be open-minded,” Bruce says.
    This much seems certain: Bruce, who is already being talked
    about in the same breath as Rams greats Elroy Hirsch and Henry
    Ellard, is a receiver of surpassing grace who runs routes like
    epigrams, his patterns serving as his chief mode of
    self-expression. “He’s a quiet man, but game day brings out
    whatever emotion he has tenfold,” says Hester. “He just explodes
    on every snap. It’s scary how good he can be.”

    #11795
    Avatar photowv
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    ========================================
    LOOK, MA, GREAT HANDS! L.A. receivers Flipper Anderson and Henry Ellard are mama’s boys

    by RICHARD HOFFER

    Originally Posted: September 10, 1990

    HENRY Ellard and Willie (Flipper) Anderson may produce more
    electricity than the Hoover Dam when it comes to catching a football.
    But off the field, these two Los Angeles Rams don’t generate enough
    juice to jump-start a toaster. Low voltage? Anderson, who at least
    has a nickname, is so far out of touch with his celebrity that on the
    rare occasions when he indulges in nightlife he sallies forth to
    sleepy San Bernardino, not Los Angeles. Mostly he hangs out in Chino
    Hills — a development so thoroughly suburban it could be from the
    Nick at Nite lineup — and trades Nintendo games with the
    neighborhood kids. Ellard, who once had a tag (he was known as
    Grasshopper at Fresno State), likes to cap a perfect day with a stop
    at a fast-food restaurant. Actually, a perfect day for Ellard would
    be making a fast-food pickup without stopping, as he speeds home to
    Fresno, Calif., in his fast car.

    Flipper and Grasshopper. Remember when players were known by their
    urban street names? Apparently, these are less flamboyant times in
    the NFL. Now our heroes are likened to helpful porpoises and athletic
    insects. But forgive these two guys for their astonishing
    ordinariness. They are, by their own admission, both mama’s boys;
    Anderson is as likely to check with ”Mom-Mom” on the relative
    merits of Bible translations (”Just stick with the King James,
    baby,” she tells him) as Ellard is to surprise his mother with an
    Eldorado. There is not much that can be done with mama’s boys. Nor,
    in this case, much that needs to be.

    ”Mama did good,” says Rams quarterback Jim Everett. ”Besides,
    they’ve got great hands.”

    They’ve got great hands, legs, feet, hearts — all the parts
    necessary for world-class pass catching. Last season, Anderson’s
    second and Ellard’s seventh with the team, they combined for 2,528
    yards receiving. The idea that two Ram wideouts could have topped
    1,000 yards in the same season, first time ever on this club, ought
    to alarm the rest of the league, which had its hands full when L.A.
    coach John Robinson was doing his Woody Hayes impression. But now,
    Ellard and Anderson give a team long known for Eric Dickerson running
    off tackle — about 38 times a game — a quick-strike offense.
    Anderson, who caught 44 passes for 1,146 yards, led the NFL with an
    average of 26 yards per catch in ’89. Ellard, with 70 receptions for
    1,382 yards, ranked second with a 19.7 average, a career high.
    These numbers do not suggest blandness to opposing cornerbacks.
    San Francisco 49er Ronnie Lott, one of the best at defending the
    likes of Anderson and Ellard, knows what he’s going to do if Anderson
    ever appears to be duplicating his performance against the New
    Orleans Saints last season, when he caught 15 passes for an
    NFL-record 336 yards. ”I’m going to call timeout, walk off the
    field, out of the stadium and into the parking lot,” says Lott.
    That Ellard and Anderson are causing such excitement in the league
    is not entirely their doing. Robinson, who was known as ”28-sweep”
    when he was producing tailbacks at Southern Cal, and as ”47-gap”
    when he was calling Dickerson’s number at Anaheim, had long ago
    decided the Rams needed to pass in order to win. He just didn’t have
    the passer.

    So Robinson landed Everett — he was the third player chosen in
    the ’86 draft but couldn’t come to terms with the Houston Oilers —
    in one of the biggest trades in club history. And in ’87 he hired
    offensive coordinator Ernie Zampese from San Diego to update the
    Rams’ passing game. Soon the 5 ft. 11 in., 182-pound Ellard, who made
    All-Pro in ’84 as a punt returner, began getting reminders from
    Zampese that he had entered the league as a wide receiver.
    ”This Coach Zampese came into the film room one day,” Ellard
    recalls, ”and said, ‘Henry, you’re an All-Pro receiver. You got a
    chance to catch 60, 70, 80 balls.’ ” In reply, Ellard did his Travis
    Bickle impersonation (”You talkin’ to me? You talkin’ to me? Cause
    there’s no one else in the room.”) and finally said, as gently as he
    could, ”I don’t know, Coach. I just don’t see how that can be
    done.”

    By the ’88 season — with Zampese’s system in place, with
    Everett’s beginning to flower and with Dickerson’s carrying the ball
    for the Indianapolis Colts — Ellard caught a team-record 86 passes.
    The Rams were forever changed, but Robinson is not without a
    lingering regret. ”Part of me still wants Henry returning punts,”
    he says.

    Ellard was 1988’s surprise. Anderson was 1989’s. Although he had
    caught Troy Aikman’s passes at UCLA, which should have qualified him
    for some extra attention in the ’88 draft, Anderson was not
    considered to be much of a pro prospect. One service that rated
    college players for the draft had him 16th among wide receivers,
    behind even Don McPherson, who was a quarterback at Syracuse.
    Robinson claims to have coveted Anderson all along, but the fact is,
    Anderson was the Rams’ fourth pick — and their second at wide
    receiver. ”We thought he’d slide,” Robinson says. ”We didn’t think
    Aaron Cox would.” All the same, Cox, a first-round pick out of
    Arizona State, started ahead of Anderson their rookie year.
    Anderson didn’t much care, though. ”I was in the NFL, just kind
    of amazed to be a professional,” he says. ”Practice every day, no
    school, money in your pocket.” Do you have the picture of a guy
    wandering around Anaheim with a goofy grin on his face? Everett
    remembers Anderson in his rookie year this way: ”A guy learning to
    talk and chew gum at the same time.”

    Last year Anderson worked so hard in the preseason that Zampese
    was using him as an example of team dedication. It was embarrassing,
    of course, but Anderson was well prepared when Cox hurt his hamstring
    in a preseason practice and Flipper became a starter opposite
    Ellard. Still, it was Ellard’s show and Anderson didn’t figure to
    catch too many more balls than the 11 he had pulled in the year
    before. ”Henry was having a great year,” Anderson says, ”and I was
    only catching two, three balls a game.” All the same, he allows,
    ”Most were for big yardage, leading to scoring drives.”

    Anderson certainly wasn’t as reliable as Ellard, whose precision
    routes, in a passing offense where timing is prized, remain a marvel.
    ”Every step has a purpose,” says Everett of Ellard. Anderson is six
    feet and 172 pounds, and his gift seemed to be speed, although it’s a
    speed nobody can agree on. Everett calls it ”a gangly speed.” Steve
    Axman, who was UCLA’s offensive coordinator, says, ”It’s a stiff
    kind of speed.” Lott says: ”Well, it’s speed, but not burner-burner
    speed.”

    Whatever kind of speed, it was not a speed particularly impressive
    to Anderson’s coaches or quarterbacks. And the fact that he was never
    exactly where he should be when he should be did not increase
    anybody’s confidence in him. Yet Everett discovered that Anderson
    somehow got to the ball before anyone else. ”He’s got a Charles
    Barkley attitude,” Everett says. ”Every ball belongs to him.”
    Robinson was impressed with ”the enormous number of catches he made
    with the guy right on him. He has the speed to threaten the defensive
    back but more than that, he can time the ball and go up and get it.”

    The rest of the league got a good example of Anderson’s timing
    last November, when the Rams played the Saints at the Superdome. The
    Friday before, Ellard had injured his hamstring, and the entire
    offense was plunged into doubt. ”I mean, I’d been having some big
    games with Henry,” Everett says. Ellard was, in fact, on a 100-catch
    pace. ”So I’m wondering, Who’s going to pick up the slack. But then
    we got into this rhythm.”

    There hasn’t been so much syncopation in New Orleans since the
    arrival of Dixieland. Anderson, who had caught only 19 passes in the
    first 12 games of the season, says, ”I felt like Michael Jordan
    scoring 60 points out there.”

    Late in the game, Ellard, an interested bystander, came by to tell
    Anderson he was approaching the NFL record for yardage in a game,
    which happened to be held by Henry’s best friend and Fresno neighbor,
    Stephone Paige of the Kansas City Chiefs. ”Some best friend,”
    sniffs Paige, managing a laugh now.

    ”It’s funny,” says Everett, ”but on the final play before the
    winning field goal, Aaron Cox and Flipper are running the exact
    same pattern. I throw to Flipper, he catches. Yet when I looked back
    at film of that game, I see that Aaron was 10 steps ahead of his man
    and Flipper was double-covered. Sometimes you feel like you’re
    throwing a football through the tire of a Hyundai, but that day, with
    Flipper, it felt like throwing a ball through the tire of a John
    Deere tractor.”

    This is no longer the surprising development it once was. Both
    Ellard and Anderson are now, according to the hard-to-please Zampese,
    ”legitimate,” high praise indeed from Zampese. Everett, if he was
    skeptical at first, can now imagine himself throwing the ball into
    the Grand Canyon. Neither Ellard nor Anderson doubted their
    particular destinies. Both were raised to believe they were special,
    although Ellard has fallen somewhat short of the U.S. presidency his
    mother had predicted back in Fresno.

    ”Well, that’s what she says she wanted,” Ellard says, ”but she
    always sensed something about me, always knew I’d end up doing
    something different. She picked up on that and kept me in line, kept
    me levelheaded, as if for a purpose.”

    Perhaps his mother, Margaret, didn’t truly believe Henry would be
    president, but she was positive he wasn’t going to play football.
    None of her boys — there were five (and three sisters) before Henry
    came along — were allowed to play any sports. Sam Lane, Henry’s half
    brother, says his mother’s involvement in The Church of God and
    Christ, ”a holiness church, very strict,” prohibited fun and games.
    ”But when Henry was seven, I saw him do a gainer off this truck
    inner tube we used for a trampoline. I figured he had some athletic
    talent.”

    Lane, 15 years older, began working out with Henry, throwing a
    football to him in the street. Henry definitely had talent. Lane
    talked their mother into letting Henry play a little Pop Warner.
    Margaret, who had divorced Henry’s father, Jeremiah, years before,
    worked a late-night shift as a registered nurse to hold the family
    together, and because she could not rule her kids the way she liked,
    it was successfully argued that Henry’s reckless energy might be more
    safely harnessed at football practice. ”She began to see the sense
    of it,” Lane says.

    Still, it was slow going. Henry remained so small that when the
    neighborhood kids saw him come home from practice, they assumed he
    was the equipment manager. He cried to his mother every day, certain
    he was going to be ”a shrimp” all his life. In fact, though he
    did grow, he wasn’t a starter on a team until his junior year in high
    school.

    Track seemed the more likely sport for him. By the eighth grade he
    could jump his height (5 ft. 6 in.) and long-jump 17 ft. 2 in.. At
    Fresno State, where he specialized in the triple jump, he bounded to
    a world record of 56 ft. 5 1/2 in. into the wind — now do you know
    why he was called Grasshopper? — only to be topped a few days later
    by Willie Banks. Ellard still wonders what he could have achieved if
    he had devoted himself to the event. On the other hand, ever since he
    watched Bob Hayes fly down a sideline, he knew which sport was more
    important to him.

    At the time, hardly anyone who dreamed of playing for the Dallas
    Cowboys thought of going to Fresno State. But it was important to
    Ellard to stay close to his mother. ”Just hooked on my mama,” he
    says. He lived at home, though he tried dormitory life for one
    semester. ”Too crazy,” he says. Fresno State was a wide receiver’s
    delight, and Ellard got all the balls and attention and home cooking
    he needed to ensure his being drafted in 1983 by the pros.

    And once he collected on his first NFL contract, Ellard tried to
    buy his mother a new house. She resisted, so he refurbished the old
    one. (He later talked his mother into moving into the first house he
    bought in Fresno.) Then he bought a new Eldorado and put it into her
    garage. ”Her eyes lit up,” he says happily. (Of course, he owed her
    a car; as a junior at Fresno State he had pointed out a 1972 Gran
    Torino and she had quickly produced the financing for his first
    automobile.) And all the while, he and the rest of Margaret’s
    children conspired to marry their mother off to — guess who? —
    Jeremiah. ”Storybook ending,” Ellard says of the recent remarriage.

    Henry and his wife, Lenora, have a five-year-old son, Henry Jr.,
    and a three-year-old daughter, Whitney, but he has never really left
    his mother. He built a 5,000-square-foot house near his mother’s
    house in Fresno, and during the season he travels the 250 miles
    between there and Anaheim in his customized Mercedes as if it were a
    local commute. He likes fast food and fast cars, his only weaknesses.
    ”Three and a half hours,” he says, of a drive that should take
    longer. ”But I know where the patrol cars hide.” When he’s running
    his routes, nobody can touch him.

    Anderson at least has moved away from home in Paulsboro, N.J. But
    he is no more removed from the influence of ”Mom-Mom” — Helen
    Hamilton, the maternal grandmother who, with her husband, Robert,
    raised him — than Ellard is from his mother. ”She worries about me
    out here,” says Anderson, almost embarrassed. ”She tells me to
    watch out for the women, and when I’m in a bar, to watch my drink.
    It’s still funny when she talks to me about drinking. And Saturday
    nights it’s always, ‘You’re going to be in church tomorrow?’ ”
    Hamilton might well worry about any environment less holy than her
    household, or her Faith Tabernacle Church, where she is pastor to
    ”100 faithfuls.” Imagine her anxiety with Flipper in L.A. ”You do
    hear so much of what goes on out there,” she says.

    But Anderson can adjust to any environment; just check out his
    childhood. Anderson’s mother, Verna, was just 15 when he was born,
    and she had ambitions of going to college. As she pursued them, the
    family settled into an unusual arrangement: Flipper and Verna were
    closer to being brother and sister, while Helen, even then a pastor,
    assumed the role of mother. (Verna is now a devoted fan, who, through
    her job at an airline, has been able to travel to most of Flipper’s
    games.) Anderson’s father, Willie Anderson Sr., who is now a minister
    in nearby Camden, N.J., remains in close contact with the family. And
    Flipper, raised by grandparents in a stew of seven uncles, considers
    it all to be as ordinary as Ozzie and Harriet. For the record, none
    of these people nicknamed him Flipper. That was done by Aunt Pearl, a
    distant cousin of Flipper’s, who thought his crying sounded just like
    the critter then popular on TV.

    Church was less a problem for Anderson than it was for Ellard. His
    grandmother’s charismatic faith allowed sports, providing they could
    be played in the few hours when Sunday school, church services or
    revival meetings weren’t going on. At Paulsboro High, Anderson
    somehow fitted in wrestling, sprinting, basketball and, of course,
    football.

    Anderson has tried to recreate this environment in a subdivision
    of starter homes well beyond the L.A. glamour that his grandmother
    worries about. There isn’t so much church, and only his
    three-year-old daughter, Shardae, by a former girlfriend, visits
    regularly. Otherwise, his life is as wholesome as his grandmother
    could hope for. After workouts, Anderson blocks out the hours from
    noon to two for All My Children and One Life to Live (”Got to see my
    stories,” he says), naps and then plays golf, a sport he has become
    addicted to in just three months. He returns home to cook, using
    recipes he learned in his grandmother’s kitchen.

    Reports of this modest life, relayed back to Paulsboro, reassure
    his grandmother, who can’t help worrying whenever the kids are out of
    sight. And there are so many to keep track of. Hamilton is the
    natural mother of 13 and has raised nine other children who were
    family or somehow wandered into her care. A boy with a ”bad break”
    had dropped by that morning. He may or may not stay; it’s up to him.
    ”I wish I had a house with 20 rooms,” she says. One ”bad boy” she
    took in is now a youth minister. Others, from broken homes, ”kids
    nobody cared about,” have come and gone on to college or become
    successes in one way or another.

    For example, Flipper. ”All my children made me proud,” she says.
    Mama’s boys always do.
    http://www.si.com/vault/1990/09/10/122612/look-ma-great-hands-la-receivers-flipper-anderson-and-henry-ellard-are-mamas-boys

    #11800
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    Silent but deadly?!

    You compare the greatest WR in Rams history to a particularly nasty type of fart?!

    You really do hate the Rams, don’t you.

    #11801
    Avatar photojoemad
    Participant

    ========================================
    LOOK, MA, GREAT HANDS! L.A. receivers Flipper Anderson and Henry Ellard are mama’s boys

    by RICHARD HOFFER

    Originally Posted: September 10, 1990

    HENRY Ellard and Willie (Flipper) Anderson may produce more
    electricity than the Hoover Dam when it comes to catching a football.
    But off the field, these two Los Angeles Rams don’t generate enough
    juice to jump-start a toaster. Low voltage? Anderson, who at least
    has a nickname, is so far out of touch with his celebrity that on the
    rare occasions when he indulges in nightlife he sallies forth to
    sleepy San Bernardino, not Los Angeles. Mostly he hangs out in Chino
    Hills — a development so thoroughly suburban it could be from the
    Nick at Nite lineup — and trades Nintendo games with the
    neighborhood kids. Ellard, who once had a tag (he was known as
    Grasshopper at Fresno State), likes to cap a perfect day with a stop
    at a fast-food restaurant. Actually, a perfect day for Ellard would
    be making a fast-food pickup without stopping, as he speeds home to
    Fresno, Calif., in his fast car.

    Flipper and Grasshopper. Remember when players were known by their
    urban street names? Apparently, these are less flamboyant times in
    the NFL. Now our heroes are likened to helpful porpoises and athletic
    insects. But forgive these two guys for their astonishing
    ordinariness. They are, by their own admission, both mama’s boys;
    Anderson is as likely to check with ”Mom-Mom” on the relative
    merits of Bible translations (”Just stick with the King James,
    baby,” she tells him) as Ellard is to surprise his mother with an
    Eldorado. There is not much that can be done with mama’s boys. Nor,
    in this case, much that needs to be.

    ”Mama did good,” says Rams quarterback Jim Everett. ”Besides,
    they’ve got great hands.”

    They’ve got great hands, legs, feet, hearts — all the parts
    necessary for world-class pass catching. Last season, Anderson’s
    second and Ellard’s seventh with the team, they combined for 2,528
    yards receiving. The idea that two Ram wideouts could have topped
    1,000 yards in the same season, first time ever on this club, ought
    to alarm the rest of the league, which had its hands full when L.A.
    coach John Robinson was doing his Woody Hayes impression. But now,
    Ellard and Anderson give a team long known for Eric Dickerson running
    off tackle — about 38 times a game — a quick-strike offense.
    Anderson, who caught 44 passes for 1,146 yards, led the NFL with an
    average of 26 yards per catch in ’89. Ellard, with 70 receptions for
    1,382 yards, ranked second with a 19.7 average, a career high.
    These numbers do not suggest blandness to opposing cornerbacks.
    San Francisco 49er Ronnie Lott, one of the best at defending the
    likes of Anderson and Ellard, knows what he’s going to do if Anderson
    ever appears to be duplicating his performance against the New
    Orleans Saints last season, when he caught 15 passes for an
    NFL-record 336 yards. ”I’m going to call timeout, walk off the
    field, out of the stadium and into the parking lot,” says Lott.
    That Ellard and Anderson are causing such excitement in the league
    is not entirely their doing. Robinson, who was known as ”28-sweep”
    when he was producing tailbacks at Southern Cal, and as ”47-gap”
    when he was calling Dickerson’s number at Anaheim, had long ago
    decided the Rams needed to pass in order to win. He just didn’t have
    the passer.

    So Robinson landed Everett — he was the third player chosen in
    the ’86 draft but couldn’t come to terms with the Houston Oilers —
    in one of the biggest trades in club history. And in ’87 he hired
    offensive coordinator Ernie Zampese from San Diego to update the
    Rams’ passing game. Soon the 5 ft. 11 in., 182-pound Ellard, who made
    All-Pro in ’84 as a punt returner, began getting reminders from
    Zampese that he had entered the league as a wide receiver.
    ”This Coach Zampese came into the film room one day,” Ellard
    recalls, ”and said, ‘Henry, you’re an All-Pro receiver. You got a
    chance to catch 60, 70, 80 balls.’ ” In reply, Ellard did his Travis
    Bickle impersonation (”You talkin’ to me? You talkin’ to me? Cause
    there’s no one else in the room.”) and finally said, as gently as he
    could, ”I don’t know, Coach. I just don’t see how that can be
    done.”

    By the ’88 season — with Zampese’s system in place, with
    Everett’s beginning to flower and with Dickerson’s carrying the ball
    for the Indianapolis Colts — Ellard caught a team-record 86 passes.
    The Rams were forever changed, but Robinson is not without a
    lingering regret. ”Part of me still wants Henry returning punts,”
    he says.

    Ellard was 1988’s surprise. Anderson was 1989’s. Although he had
    caught Troy Aikman’s passes at UCLA, which should have qualified him
    for some extra attention in the ’88 draft, Anderson was not
    considered to be much of a pro prospect. One service that rated
    college players for the draft had him 16th among wide receivers,
    behind even Don McPherson, who was a quarterback at Syracuse.
    Robinson claims to have coveted Anderson all along, but the fact is,
    Anderson was the Rams’ fourth pick — and their second at wide
    receiver. ”We thought he’d slide,” Robinson says. ”We didn’t think
    Aaron Cox would.” All the same, Cox, a first-round pick out of
    Arizona State, started ahead of Anderson their rookie year.
    Anderson didn’t much care, though. ”I was in the NFL, just kind
    of amazed to be a professional,” he says. ”Practice every day, no
    school, money in your pocket.” Do you have the picture of a guy
    wandering around Anaheim with a goofy grin on his face? Everett
    remembers Anderson in his rookie year this way: ”A guy learning to
    talk and chew gum at the same time.”

    Last year Anderson worked so hard in the preseason that Zampese
    was using him as an example of team dedication. It was embarrassing,
    of course, but Anderson was well prepared when Cox hurt his hamstring
    in a preseason practice and Flipper became a starter opposite
    Ellard. Still, it was Ellard’s show and Anderson didn’t figure to
    catch too many more balls than the 11 he had pulled in the year
    before. ”Henry was having a great year,” Anderson says, ”and I was
    only catching two, three balls a game.” All the same, he allows,
    ”Most were for big yardage, leading to scoring drives.”

    Anderson certainly wasn’t as reliable as Ellard, whose precision
    routes, in a passing offense where timing is prized, remain a marvel.
    ”Every step has a purpose,” says Everett of Ellard. Anderson is six
    feet and 172 pounds, and his gift seemed to be speed, although it’s a
    speed nobody can agree on. Everett calls it ”a gangly speed.” Steve
    Axman, who was UCLA’s offensive coordinator, says, ”It’s a stiff
    kind of speed.” Lott says: ”Well, it’s speed, but not burner-burner
    speed.”

    Whatever kind of speed, it was not a speed particularly impressive
    to Anderson’s coaches or quarterbacks. And the fact that he was never
    exactly where he should be when he should be did not increase
    anybody’s confidence in him. Yet Everett discovered that Anderson
    somehow got to the ball before anyone else. ”He’s got a Charles
    Barkley attitude,” Everett says. ”Every ball belongs to him.”
    Robinson was impressed with ”the enormous number of catches he made
    with the guy right on him. He has the speed to threaten the defensive
    back but more than that, he can time the ball and go up and get it.”

    The rest of the league got a good example of Anderson’s timing
    last November, when the Rams played the Saints at the Superdome. The
    Friday before, Ellard had injured his hamstring, and the entire
    offense was plunged into doubt. ”I mean, I’d been having some big
    games with Henry,” Everett says. Ellard was, in fact, on a 100-catch
    pace. ”So I’m wondering, Who’s going to pick up the slack. But then
    we got into this rhythm.”

    There hasn’t been so much syncopation in New Orleans since the
    arrival of Dixieland. Anderson, who had caught only 19 passes in the
    first 12 games of the season, says, ”I felt like Michael Jordan
    scoring 60 points out there.”

    Late in the game, Ellard, an interested bystander, came by to tell
    Anderson he was approaching the NFL record for yardage in a game,
    which happened to be held by Henry’s best friend and Fresno neighbor,
    Stephone Paige of the Kansas City Chiefs. ”Some best friend,”
    sniffs Paige, managing a laugh now.

    ”It’s funny,” says Everett, ”but on the final play before the
    winning field goal, Aaron Cox and Flipper are running the exact
    same pattern. I throw to Flipper, he catches. Yet when I looked back
    at film of that game, I see that Aaron was 10 steps ahead of his man
    and Flipper was double-covered. Sometimes you feel like you’re
    throwing a football through the tire of a Hyundai, but that day, with
    Flipper, it felt like throwing a ball through the tire of a John
    Deere tractor.”

    This is no longer the surprising development it once was. Both
    Ellard and Anderson are now, according to the hard-to-please Zampese,
    ”legitimate,” high praise indeed from Zampese. Everett, if he was
    skeptical at first, can now imagine himself throwing the ball into
    the Grand Canyon. Neither Ellard nor Anderson doubted their
    particular destinies. Both were raised to believe they were special,
    although Ellard has fallen somewhat short of the U.S. presidency his
    mother had predicted back in Fresno.

    ”Well, that’s what she says she wanted,” Ellard says, ”but she
    always sensed something about me, always knew I’d end up doing
    something different. She picked up on that and kept me in line, kept
    me levelheaded, as if for a purpose.”

    Perhaps his mother, Margaret, didn’t truly believe Henry would be
    president, but she was positive he wasn’t going to play football.
    None of her boys — there were five (and three sisters) before Henry
    came along — were allowed to play any sports. Sam Lane, Henry’s half
    brother, says his mother’s involvement in The Church of God and
    Christ, ”a holiness church, very strict,” prohibited fun and games.
    ”But when Henry was seven, I saw him do a gainer off this truck
    inner tube we used for a trampoline. I figured he had some athletic
    talent.”

    Lane, 15 years older, began working out with Henry, throwing a
    football to him in the street. Henry definitely had talent. Lane
    talked their mother into letting Henry play a little Pop Warner.
    Margaret, who had divorced Henry’s father, Jeremiah, years before,
    worked a late-night shift as a registered nurse to hold the family
    together, and because she could not rule her kids the way she liked,
    it was successfully argued that Henry’s reckless energy might be more
    safely harnessed at football practice. ”She began to see the sense
    of it,” Lane says.

    Still, it was slow going. Henry remained so small that when the
    neighborhood kids saw him come home from practice, they assumed he
    was the equipment manager. He cried to his mother every day, certain
    he was going to be ”a shrimp” all his life. In fact, though he
    did grow, he wasn’t a starter on a team until his junior year in high
    school.

    Track seemed the more likely sport for him. By the eighth grade he
    could jump his height (5 ft. 6 in.) and long-jump 17 ft. 2 in.. At
    Fresno State, where he specialized in the triple jump, he bounded to
    a world record of 56 ft. 5 1/2 in. into the wind — now do you know
    why he was called Grasshopper? — only to be topped a few days later
    by Willie Banks. Ellard still wonders what he could have achieved if
    he had devoted himself to the event. On the other hand, ever since he
    watched Bob Hayes fly down a sideline, he knew which sport was more
    important to him.

    At the time, hardly anyone who dreamed of playing for the Dallas
    Cowboys thought of going to Fresno State. But it was important to
    Ellard to stay close to his mother. ”Just hooked on my mama,” he
    says. He lived at home, though he tried dormitory life for one
    semester. ”Too crazy,” he says. Fresno State was a wide receiver’s
    delight, and Ellard got all the balls and attention and home cooking
    he needed to ensure his being drafted in 1983 by the pros.

    And once he collected on his first NFL contract, Ellard tried to
    buy his mother a new house. She resisted, so he refurbished the old
    one. (He later talked his mother into moving into the first house he
    bought in Fresno.) Then he bought a new Eldorado and put it into her
    garage. ”Her eyes lit up,” he says happily. (Of course, he owed her
    a car; as a junior at Fresno State he had pointed out a 1972 Gran
    Torino and she had quickly produced the financing for his first
    automobile.) And all the while, he and the rest of Margaret’s
    children conspired to marry their mother off to — guess who? —
    Jeremiah. ”Storybook ending,” Ellard says of the recent remarriage.

    Henry and his wife, Lenora, have a five-year-old son, Henry Jr.,
    and a three-year-old daughter, Whitney, but he has never really left
    his mother. He built a 5,000-square-foot house near his mother’s
    house in Fresno, and during the season he travels the 250 miles
    between there and Anaheim in his customized Mercedes as if it were a
    local commute. He likes fast food and fast cars, his only weaknesses.
    ”Three and a half hours,” he says, of a drive that should take
    longer. ”But I know where the patrol cars hide.” When he’s running
    his routes, nobody can touch him.

    Anderson at least has moved away from home in Paulsboro, N.J. But
    he is no more removed from the influence of ”Mom-Mom” — Helen
    Hamilton, the maternal grandmother who, with her husband, Robert,
    raised him — than Ellard is from his mother. ”She worries about me
    out here,” says Anderson, almost embarrassed. ”She tells me to
    watch out for the women, and when I’m in a bar, to watch my drink.
    It’s still funny when she talks to me about drinking. And Saturday
    nights it’s always, ‘You’re going to be in church tomorrow?’ ”
    Hamilton might well worry about any environment less holy than her
    household, or her Faith Tabernacle Church, where she is pastor to
    ”100 faithfuls.” Imagine her anxiety with Flipper in L.A. ”You do
    hear so much of what goes on out there,” she says.

    But Anderson can adjust to any environment; just check out his
    childhood. Anderson’s mother, Verna, was just 15 when he was born,
    and she had ambitions of going to college. As she pursued them, the
    family settled into an unusual arrangement: Flipper and Verna were
    closer to being brother and sister, while Helen, even then a pastor,
    assumed the role of mother. (Verna is now a devoted fan, who, through
    her job at an airline, has been able to travel to most of Flipper’s
    games.) Anderson’s father, Willie Anderson Sr., who is now a minister
    in nearby Camden, N.J., remains in close contact with the family. And
    Flipper, raised by grandparents in a stew of seven uncles, considers
    it all to be as ordinary as Ozzie and Harriet. For the record, none
    of these people nicknamed him Flipper. That was done by Aunt Pearl, a
    distant cousin of Flipper’s, who thought his crying sounded just like
    the critter then popular on TV.

    Church was less a problem for Anderson than it was for Ellard. His
    grandmother’s charismatic faith allowed sports, providing they could
    be played in the few hours when Sunday school, church services or
    revival meetings weren’t going on. At Paulsboro High, Anderson
    somehow fitted in wrestling, sprinting, basketball and, of course,
    football.

    Anderson has tried to recreate this environment in a subdivision
    of starter homes well beyond the L.A. glamour that his grandmother
    worries about. There isn’t so much church, and only his
    three-year-old daughter, Shardae, by a former girlfriend, visits
    regularly. Otherwise, his life is as wholesome as his grandmother
    could hope for. After workouts, Anderson blocks out the hours from
    noon to two for All My Children and One Life to Live (”Got to see my
    stories,” he says), naps and then plays golf, a sport he has become
    addicted to in just three months. He returns home to cook, using
    recipes he learned in his grandmother’s kitchen.

    Reports of this modest life, relayed back to Paulsboro, reassure
    his grandmother, who can’t help worrying whenever the kids are out of
    sight. And there are so many to keep track of. Hamilton is the
    natural mother of 13 and has raised nine other children who were
    family or somehow wandered into her care. A boy with a ”bad break”
    had dropped by that morning. He may or may not stay; it’s up to him.
    ”I wish I had a house with 20 rooms,” she says. One ”bad boy” she
    took in is now a youth minister. Others, from broken homes, ”kids
    nobody cared about,” have come and gone on to college or become
    successes in one way or another.

    For example, Flipper. ”All my children made me proud,” she says.
    Mama’s boys always do.

    http://www.si.com/vault/1990/09/10/122612/look-ma-great-hands-la-receivers-flipper-anderson-and-henry-ellard-are-mamas-boys

    Of all the Rams teams I’ve followed since I was kid, the mid to late 1980’s Rams were my favorite, specifically, the brief Dickerson era with Jim Everett. It’s too bad that Jerry Rice and Joe Montana where in the same division.

    Underrated teams, underrated defenses, and underrated coaching staff. Like Chuck Knox’s teams, the Robinson teams deserved a trip to the Super Bowl.

    #11839
    NERam
    Participant

    ”It’s funny,” says Everett, ”but on the final play before the
    winning field goal, Aaron Cox and Flipper are running the exact
    same pattern. I throw to Flipper, he catches. Yet when I looked back
    at film of that game, I see that Aaron was 10 steps ahead of his man
    and Flipper was double-covered. Sometimes you feel like you’re
    throwing a football through the tire of a Hyundai
    , but that day, with
    Flipper, it felt like throwing a ball through the tire of a John
    Deere tractor.”

    About sums up 2014 Rams…

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