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Roy Jefferson

American football player (born 1943) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roy Jefferson

Roy Lee Jefferson (born November 9, 1943) is an American former professional football player who was a wide receiver in the National Football League (NFL) for 12 seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers, Baltimore Colts, and Washington Redskins. He played college football for the Utah Utes. During 162 regular season games in the NFL, he had 451 receptions for 7,539 yards and 52 touchdowns.[1] He played in Super Bowls V and VII.

Quick Facts No. 87, 80, Position: ...
Roy Jefferson
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No. 87, 80
Position:Wide receiver
Personal information
Born: (1943-11-09) November 9, 1943 (age 81)
Texarkana, Arkansas, U.S.
Height:6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Weight:195 lb (88 kg)
Career information
High school:Compton (Compton, California)
College:Utah
NFL draft:1965: 2nd round, 18th pick
AFL draft:1965: 2nd round, 14
  (San Diego Chargers)th pick
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Receptions:451
Receiving yards:7,539
Receiving touchdowns:52
Stats at Pro Football Reference 
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Early life

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Roy Jefferson in 1964.

Jefferson was born on November 9, 1943, in Texarkana, Arkansas.[1] He grew up in southern California and graduated from Compton High School in 1961.[2] He played basketball and football at Compton. His Compton High football team jersey number 80 was retired in 2018, in the school's hall of fame jersey retirement celebration.[3]

In 2016, Jefferson was one of five Compton alumni honored in a "Golden Five" ceremony, celebrating those Compton alumni who played in the Super Bowl.[4]

College football

He played college football at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City,[5] where he played on the varsity from 1962-64.[6] In 1963, he led the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in pass receptions (29), receiving yards (435), and receiving touchdowns (4), and was third in average yards per reception.[7]

Jefferson received All-Western Athletic Conference honors,[8] and was named the Western Athletic Conference Player of the Year in his senior season in 1964 [citation needed]under head coach Ray Nagel, the 1964 WAC coach of the year.[9][10]

Jefferson played on both sides of the ball, playing receiver and running back, as well playing defense,[8] and also was the placekicker. He led the Utes to 32–6 victory in the Liberty Bowl over favored West Virginia, with key receptions, to finish with a 9–2 record.[11][8][9] The game was played indoors on natural grass at the convention center in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and featured shortened end zones.[12][13][14]

Professional career

Summarize
Perspective

Jefferson was a 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m), 195 lb (88 kg) receiver, who was nicknamed "Sweet Pea".[1][15]

Pittsburgh Steelers

Selected in the second round of the 1965 NFL draft, 18th overall,[16] Jefferson spent his first five NFL seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers (1965–1969).[1] In 1968, Jefferson led the NFL in receiving yards with 1,074, and tied for the league lead in punt returns (28). His 58 receptions and 11 touchdowns were both 2nd highest in the NFL that season. He was third in punt return average (9.8 yards/return) and scored one touchdown on a punt return.[17] Jefferson finished the 1969 season with a career-high 67 receptions for 1,079 yards and nine touchdowns, and became the first Steelers receiver to post back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons.[1][18] In his five Steelers' seasons, Jefferson started 56 of the 65 regular season games in which he played, with 199 receptions for 3,671 yards (18.4 average) and 29 touchdowns.[19]

He was selected to the Pro Bowl in 1968 and 1969.[1] In 1968, he was named second-team All Pro by the Associated Press (AP), Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and United Press International (UPI), and first-team All Conference by The Sporting News.[20] He was named 1st Team All-Pro by the AP, NEA, UPI, Pro Football Weekly, and the New York Daily News in 1969.[21]

Jefferson was named to the Pittsburgh Steelers Legends team in 2007, as one of the best 24 Steelers players prior to 1970.[citation needed]

Baltimore Colts

Despite being the Steelers' best offensive player, conflicts with head coach Chuck Noll as the team's player representative resulted in a trade to the Baltimore Colts for Willie Richardson and a 1971 fourth-round selection (104th overallDwight White) in an exchange of receivers who had fallen out of favor with their old teams on August 20, 1970.[22][23][24] With the Colts for only one season, Jefferson helped them reach and win Super Bowl V.[25] He finished the 1970 regular season with 44 receptions for 749 yards and seven touchdowns.[1] He caught a 45-yard touchdown pass from Johnny Unitas in the Colts 17–0 divisional playoff win over the Cincinnati Bengals,[26] and caught a 9-yard touchdown pass from Unitas while dragging a defender into the endzone.[27] Jefferson had three receptions for 52 yards in the Colts 16–13 victory over the Dallas Cowboys in the Super Bowl.[28]

After coming from the 1–13 Steelers in 1969,[29] and winning the Super Bowl with the Colts in 1970, his one year with the Colts was his favorite season in the NFL.[27] His Colts teammate and roommate John Mackey was his hero.[27] Mackey was the first president of the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA), and Jefferson was one of the NFL players most prominently involved with the NFLPA as a player representative, and in the 1974 players' strike.[30][31]

Washington Redskins

A contract dispute with the Colts ended with Jefferson being dealt along with ninth-round draft picks in 1973 (218th overallRick Galbos) and 1974 (213th overalltraded to Los Angeles Rams for Joe Sweet) to the Washington Redskins for Cotton Speyrer and a 1973 first-rounder (25th overalltraded to San Diego Chargers for Marty Domres) on July 31, 1971.[32][33][34] He spent six seasons with the Redskins under head coach George Allen, helping them reach Super Bowl VII in 1972, and retired after the 1976 season.[35]

In his first Washington season, he caught 47 passes (his high with the team), and was selected to play in the 1971 Pro Bowl.[1][36] The AP and Pro Football Weekly named Jefferson first team All-Conference.[1] Over the next three years, he caught 119 passes for nearly 1,800 yards.[1] The team reached the playoffs in five of his six years in Washington.[37]

In 2012, he was selected as one of the 80 greatest Washington players.[15]

After football

After his retirement from football, Jefferson has remained in the Washington, D.C. area, in Annandale, Virginia, with Candie, his wife of over 50 years. [27] He had a leading role in the 1976 blaxploitation feature film Brotherhood of Death.[38] The film, shot in Montgomery County, Maryland, was about three small-town African-American men who go to fight in the Vietnam War, then return to the U.S. to battle racial injustice in their hometown.[39] It is one of Quentin Tarantino's favorite films.[18]

In the ensuing years, his endeavors have included owning a chain of barbecue restaurants with the last closing in 1992 and owning a catering business.[40] As of 2006, he was working in the real estate business. He reported that he and his wife had three children and four grandchildren.[41]

NFL career statistics

More information Legend ...
Legend
Super Bowl champion
Led the league
Bold Career high
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Regular season

More information Year, Team ...
Year Team Games Receiving
GPGSRecYdsAvgLngTD
1965PIT 1041328722.1501
1966PIT 14143277224.1844
1967PIT 13112945915.8584
1968PIT 1413581,07418.56211
1969PIT 1414671,07916.1639
1970BAL 14144474917.0557
1971WAS 14144770114.9704
1972WAS 14143555015.7453
1973WAS 14144159514.5361
1974WAS 14134365415.2434
1975WAS 1351525517.0362
1976WAS 14142736413.5272
Career1621444517,53916.78452
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Personal life

Jefferson is the cousin of tight end Marv Fleming; they were teammates in high school and college, but were on opposing sides during Super Bowl VII.[2] Jefferson left Utah for the NFL in 1965, but returned to school in the off-seasons and completed his bachelor's degree in June 1970.[42]

References

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