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April 21, 2020 at 5:52 pm #113891
znModeratorJackie Slater says ‘it means a great deal’ spending entire career with Rams
The former NFL wide receiver Brandon Marshall teams up with ‘House of Athlete’ to provide the resources our health care workers need to fight the virus on the frontlines.
The former NFL wide receiver teams up with ‘House of Athlete’ to provide the resources our health care workers need to fight the virus on the frontlines; Brandon Marshall and ICU nurse Jaye Rose join ‘Fox and Friends.’When Hall of Famer Jackie Slater was taken in the 1976 NFL Draft, things were different.
Slater was one of three players who went to Jackson State University — which probably had a total enrollment of fewer than 4,000 people at the time — who made it to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In the 1975 draft, the other two players — Walter Payton, drafted with the fourth overall pick, and recently selected Hall of Famer Robert Brazile, the sixth pick — were selected.
“Things are totally different now,” Slater, who spent his entire career with the Los Angeles Rams, told Fox News on Thursday. “As I recall, there was no NFL Combine. There were very, very few pro days, and as I watched men leave Jackson State University, the things that I noticed is that during the spring was when scouts would converge to our university and watch the spring practices, and whatever footage I’m assuming that they got our team to send them, that’s the footage that I watched.”
“I found out when I got to the Los Angeles Rams, they only had one representative to see me play a live game, and that was when we came out to Nevada to play a football game,” Slater explained. “That was the only time they saw me live. The film was available to them, but I think a lot of the recruiting when I came out was done in the spring with scouts showing up if they heard there were some black guys at these universities that had an opportunity. And I say that because you have to remember that years ago, many of the guys that are going to the SEC and PAC-12 and all of these big football conferences around the country, they weren’t going there because they weren’t being recruited there. So, we just weren’t being recruited. We went where we could, and the HBCUs [Historically Black Colleges and Universties] were providing those opportunities. It was a totally different world, and I’m amazed at how far things have come, and how many changes there are now, relative to getting drafted.”
Slater recalled scouts going to their practices, and there were very few times in four years at Jackson State that he didn’t go out and practice football without pads on. Slater said they had tons of hitting and conditioning drills, and he said it was a really “barbaric environment.”
“It was very, very tough,” he said. “I don’t know if that went on everywhere else, but I saw more white faces, if you will, and most of them were scouts, during the time we were practicing in the spring than I ever did when I was living on campus at Jackson State. Spring practices were huge, as well as the spring game.”
Slater didn’t think he would get drafted by the team that he called home for 20 years.
“I never even thought about the Rams,” Slater said. “Being in Jackson, Mississippi, going to the Dallas Cowboys would have been marvelous, going to the New Orleans Saints or Atlanta Falcons would have been good. That’s what I was thinking. If anybody was watching me, it’s probably these teams down south here.”
“And I got drafted by the Rams, and I was absolutely shocked and quite disappointed, to be honest,” Slater said. “Because the day that I landed after playing the college All-Star Game in Illinois, when the college all-stars played against the defending Super Bowl champions, well I played in that last game. After playing in that game, the very next day, I flew to Los Angeles, and I was in a car on my way to Cal-State Fulton for my first reporting to camp, and that was two weeks after everyone else had reported. A janitor took a high-powered rifle, and he went into the basement and he murdered seven people, and it came across the radio as I was on my way out there. And I remember thinking, ‘Lord, why are you bringing me out here to California with all this stuff going on?’ And it was quite frankly a little disappointing.”
“It took me some time to grow into enjoying myself in California,” Slater added. “And the biggest thing that helped me was the fact that I found out at that all-star game, that the Rams were interested in the content of my character, and the way that my football personality spoke on the field. I came from an environment where a big, physical guy was expected to be that way, and I knew how to do that better than anybody else in the country.”
Slater, a third-round pick of the Los Angeles Rams, was selected to seven Pro Bowls and broke a record for most seasons with one team. His No. 78 jersey was retired, and he was inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001.
“It means a great deal,” Slater said on spending his entire career with the Rams. “But it also speaks volumes to the partnership that I had with the organization. I was never a guy who had a whole lot to say. I was a guy who would rather show you what I was all about, as opposed to telling you. The way that I practiced, the way that I conducted myself in meetings, the way that I conducted myself with younger football players, with older football players, and when I came I was very respectful of the people for what they accomplished. And I treated everybody in the organization as if they were the most important person. I was always willing to be second.”
“So, when you have the type of work ethic that I had, and you treat people like they are valuable, I found out in my case that it was inevitable that I just continued to play,” Slater added. “I was playing at a high level, I was training well, and I didn’t have the injuries that slowed me down or hurt me that bad. It was a unique partnership, the quality of the individuals that were interacting with me were top-notch, and I felt they made me important. And I appreciated that. I was allowed to stay in Los Angeles, and I was appreciated as I did it because of our unique relationship.”
April 21, 2020 at 6:41 pm #113897
znModerator“…the day that I landed after playing the college All-Star Game in Illinois, when the college all-stars played against the defending Super Bowl champions, well I played in that last game.”
Here’s the game Slater is talking about.
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[in 1976] the College All-Star Game came to a rainy end
If someone proposed it today, they’d get laughed out of the room. But there was a time when one of the major events of the American sports year was a game between the reigning NFL champions and a team of college all-stars. And it all came to an end 42 years ago today.
Known as the Chicago Charities College All-Star Game, the contest was played every year from 1934 until 1976, with the exception of 1974, when it was canceled by an NFL players’ strike. Soldier Field hosted every game except the 1943 and 1944 games, which were played at Northwestern’s Dyche Stadium.
Could a ragtag group of 22-year-olds who had barely had time to practice together really compete with the best team in the NFL? Amazingly, in those days, they could. In the 1930s and 1940s, the best college players didn’t always choose to play pro football, and pro players weren’t necessarily better than college players. The first five College All-Star Games featured two wins by the college players, two ties, and only one win by the NFL team. (That one, in 1935, was the only year when the NFL’s runner-up, rather than the reigning champion, represented pro football.)
By the 1960s and 1970s, however, pro football had become America’s most popular sport, and the money that came with playing pro ball meant all the best college players wanted to turn pro, and many of the top pro players were training year round, rather than finding offseason jobs. As a result, in the last couple decades of the College All-Star Game, the pro teams were beating the college teams consistently, and often easily: The pro teams won 16 of the last 17 College All-Star Games, and few of those games were even close.
The last game the College All-Stars won came in 1963, when the Green Bay Packers fell to the College All-Stars 20-17. Packers coach Vince Lombardi felt humiliated.
“We used to have a social get-together after a night game,” former Packer Boyd Dowler recalled in 2013. “Lombardi came in, and he looked visibly upset — like death warmed over. He wasn’t real kind when we got together for training camp again.”
Packers great Willie Davis added that Lombardi “would always bring it up to us when we weren’t playing well. Believe me, we never would forget it.”
On July 23, 1976, the Super Bowl champion Steelers played what would become the last College All-Star Game. A horrific thunderstorm broke out in the third quarter, and video of the game has to be seen to be believed: Not only was the storm like something out of a disaster movie, but when the college team’s coach, Ara Parseghian called a timeout to try to get his players organized in the monsoon, the fans took the opportunity to storm the field. Eventually the game was called off in the third quarter, both because of lightning and because those fans on the field had torn down the goal posts and showed no signs of being willing to vacate. The Steelers led 24-0 at the time the game was called.
And that was the end of the College All-Star Game, for that year and forever. The game had come to seem pointless, as the college players really couldn’t compete with the NFL players anymore, fans were losing interest, and players were more concerned about avoiding injuries than winning the game. The plug was pulled, and what had once been a major part of the American sports year came to an end.
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