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SunDevil
11-17-2006, 04:16 PM
http://www.footballoutsiders.com/2006/11/17/ramblings/too-deep-zone/4554/

Too Deep Zone: Jerry Rice, Rookie Bust

11/17/2006

by Mike Tanier

Twenty-one years ago this week, Bill Walsh stood before the skeptical Bay Area media and defended a controversial decision. He told them that the 49ers’ troubled rookie wide receiver would remain a starter despite several bad performances.

The rookie’s name was Jerry Rice.

The 49ers, fresh off a victory in Super Bowl XIX, were 6-5 and fighting for their playoff lives. Joe Montana’s passing numbers were off. Rice, the team’s top draft pick, had 26 receptions in 11 games, but he also dropped 10 balls, some of them at the worst possible times. He was coming off a game in which he dropped two passes, fumbled once, and caught just one pass. Niners fans booed the rookie; local columnists made him the butt of jokes. Freddie Solomon, a respected veteran who caught touchdown passes in 10 straight games in 1984, had become the invisible man in the Niners offense while Montana and Rice played pitch ‘n’ drop.

But Walsh held his ground, supported Rice, and kept him in the weekly gameplan. “At some point, the boos will turn to cheers” Walsh predicted in a press conference on November 18th, 1985.

That point was only a few weeks away.
The Seductive Target

Legend has it that Walsh saw a television clip of Rice playing in a college game the day before a 1984 matchup between the 49ers and Oilers. Walsh was intrigued with what he saw. He began to scout the youngster from Mississippi Valley State, who was on his way to setting 18 NCAA records in Archie “Gunslinger” Cooley’s spread offense. The Niners coach spoke at length with Cooley and became convinced that Rice was more than just a small-school, gadget-offense product. When Rice won the MVP award of the Blue-Gray game, Walsh’s interest piqued. When the receiver was still on the board midway through the 1985 draft, Walsh traded three picks to move up and take him. A draftnik named Vinny DiTrani, writing for the Bergen Record at the time, gave the Niners a D+ for their draft efforts.

Rice was groomed as an immediate starter who would replace Solomon as soon as possible. He excelled in training camp. Facing perennial Pro Bowl corner Lester Hayes in a preseason game, Rice caught three passes for 49 yards, and he lost a 64-yard reception because he stepped out of bounds before the catch. Two weeks later, he caught five passes for 125 yards against the Chargers in another preseason game. In that game, the wise-beyond-his-years Rice noticed that cornerback Danny Walters was peeking into the backfield on the first two plays from scrimmage. Rice told quarterback Matt Cavanaugh to check off his primary receiver and look for him deep on the third play. The result was a 56-yard touchdown.

“When I was drafted out of Mississippi Valley State, the word was I had good hands, could get open and ran well when I got the ball,” Rice said after the Chargers game. “But they also said I wasn’t really a speed-burner. Today, though, I think I showed I can get down the field in a hurry.”

Rice’s scouting report appeared to be exactly wrong in the first weeks of the 1985 season. He averaged 18.2 yards per catch in his first three games, including a three-catch, 94-yard effort in a 34-10 win over the Raiders, demonstrating that he was a true deep threat despite his poor stopwatch speed. But against the Saints in Week 4, he dropped the only pass thrown to him. The Niners, 16-point favorites, lost to the lowly Saints 20-17 and fell to 2-2 (they also lost their season opener to the Vikings).

Rice was injured against the Saints; he separated his shoulder returning a kickoff. At the time, he was expected to miss two-to-four weeks. Some observers felt that the Niners would be able to return to their short-passing routes without the bomb-happy rookie in the lineup. Even assistant coach Paul Hackett felt that Montana was throwing too many long passes to his new receiver. “Rice is a seductive target for Joe,” Hackett said after the Saints loss, noting that Montana was taking sacks while waiting for long passes to develop. “The most important thing for us is to play our game. If number one isn’t open, and number two isn’t open, let’s hit number three, instead of thinking Jerry, Jerry, Jerry all the time.”

Rice didn’t miss any games. The next week, he caught three passes, including a 25-yard touchdown, in a win over the Falcons.

But Rice soon began to slump, dropping passes in losses to the Bears and Lions. He was often wide open when balls bounced off his hands. Walsh re-inserted Solomon as the starter, though Rice still played more snaps than the veteran. Rice’s confidence began to wane. Rice dropped two passes and fumbled against the Chiefs in a game that the Niners won 31-3. The team coasted to a victory, but the rookie had what Walsh called “a personal crisis” on the sidelines. “We all had a visit with him,” Walsh said, noting that veterans Dwight Clark and Solomon were doing their best to help Rice along. “He’s a 21-year old man going through a learning process.”

Rice was learning, but the Niners were falling off the playoff chase. There was plenty of blame to go around. The aging defense wasn’t mounting a pass rush. Halfback Wendell Tyler, who had beaten the fumbling habit in 1984, was back to his ball-dropping ways. Montana was at the center of unsubstantiated drug rumors. But the easiest guy to blame was the kid who cost the team several draft picks, the newcomer who replaced a productive veteran and dropped half the balls thrown to him.
The Judgment of History

Rice’s rookie year was just a few decades ago, but it’s hard to picture the main characters in the drama as they were then. You just can’t take those bronze busts off the wall and make them flesh-and-blood again.

Montana was a champion, and an All-Pro, but he was mortal, capable of bad games and slumps, vulnerable to newspaper speculation and talk-radio skepticism. Clark was just 28 and among the best receivers in the league. Roger Craig made his breakthrough that season, rushing and receiving for 1,000 yards each; for the first half of the season, though, he was the second option behind Tyler in the running game. Walsh was acknowledged as a top coach, but he still had to face the heat in press conferences after a loss, and his reputation as the NFL’s great offensive innovator was not yet established. In fact, the term “West Coast Offense” wasn’t used in San Francisco in 1985, though writers alluded to Walsh’s short-passing system many times. The 49ers roster is filled with names like Fred Dean and Russ Francis. When they faced the Saints, the Niners defense had to stop an aging Earl Campbell.

And then there was the 21-year old Rice. He spent so many years as the league’s distinguished veteran that it’s shocking to imagine him as a jittery rookie, one false move from the bench. It seems unfathomable that he was once Santonio Holmes or Chad Jackson. But in a San Francisco Chronicle article from late October of 1985, Tom FitzGerald compared Rice, unfavorably, to the other rookie wideouts from the class of 1985. Rice had 18 catches for 295 yards at that point. Eddie Brown of the Bengals had 29 catches for 469 yards. Gary Clark had 31 receptions, but he spent a year in the USFL. Rice only topped Al Toon, the first receiver taken in the draft, who had just eight catches at that point. “Rice may have to cook a little longer,” FitzGerald concluded.

But while Rice was on the front burner, Solomon stewed. Solomon was a playoff hero in 1984, catching two postseason touchdown passes after hauling in 40 regular season passes. Just 10 months later, he was relegated to mop-up duty. He was a nominal starter, but Walsh would put Rice in the lineup after the first snap, using Solomon as a third wideout for the rest of the game. Solomon caught 10 passes in the Niners’ first two games, then 10 more in their next nine. Columnists tittered that Rice’s drop total was approaching Solomon’s reception total.

There even seemed to be some dissension among the Niners coaches when Walsh stood before the media in that November press conference and defended his rookie wide receiver. Writer Charles Bricker quoted Hackett one day after the conference in the San Jose Mercury News: ‘’We thought initially that we could find the right balance between the use of Freddie and Jerry,” he said. “But after the Raiders game, where Jerry did so well, we just thought he really had arrived. Now, the pendulum has swung the other way.”

Hackett’s statement contradicted Walsh’s roundabout suggestion that Solomon was washed up. “I can only say so much about Freddie. It would be foolish if we weren’t throwing him a lot of passes if he were open and catching them and running … At some point, you don’t play quite as well. You don’t have quite the stamina you once had. You don’t have quite the quickness you once had. We all have to face that. So, you have to take a stand squad-wise on those kinds of things.”

Walsh saw the future; its name was Jerry Rice. But he also had the present to worry about, and his team was struggling to stay in playoff contention. “Walsh has made a lot of critical decisions in his seven years as coach of the 49ers — some brilliant, some not so brilliant,” Bricker wrote. “If the 49ers fail to make the playoffs this season after winning the Super Bowl, he might be severely judged by sports historians for his use of Solomon and Rice.”
Footsteps and Gloves

For every pass that Jerry Rice dropped, there was another theory about why he dropped it.

In late October of 1985, the San Francisco Chronicle asked Archie Cooley about Rice’s troubles. “The work habits in the pros have hurt him,” Rice’s college coach said. “He’s a workaholic but they’re not working him enough in practice … Now, they just toss a few balls to him in practice and go in and look at films.”

The same article quoted Walsh with a different theory: Rice was running for glory without securing the ball. “At Mississippi Valley, when he caught the ball, the next thing he’d be thinking of doing is spiking the ball (in the end zone), ” Walsh said. In another interview, Walsh suggested that Rice was hearing footsteps.

And then there were the gloves. Rice was a bare-handed receiver in college, but Clark and Solomon wore gloves. “It made them look really distinctive,” Rice said of his decision to emulate the successful veterans. Rice’s gloves became the most scrutinized clothing items in the Bay Area for weeks, as Rice hemmed and hawed about keeping them. Finally, after the Chiefs game, the gloves came off. “I had to get back to my hands. My hands got me here.”

The bare hands didn’t help immediately. Just days after his head coach defended him, Rice had his worst game as a pro. In front of 57,000 fans in a Monday night game at Candlestick, Rice dropped three more passes. The Niners won, 19-6, thanks in part to a 27-yard touchdown catch by Solomon.

But Walsh didn’t change his stance. Rice remained the starter. He took extra practice reps after the Seahawks game. Teammates stood by him. “Freddie Solomon helped me a lot,” Rice said. “My teammates kept their confidence in me.” Walsh and Hackett started looking for ways to get him the ball. Against the Redskins the next week, Rice took a reverse handoff and ran 77 yards for a touchdown. Unfortunately, the play was negated by a holding penalty. Rice didn’t have a spectacular game, but the Niners won 35-8 and found themselves back in the playoff race.
Better than Anyone Else

Week 14 found the Niners facing the Rams in a game that would decide the NFC West. It was a huge game between two of the best teams in the conference. There would even be halftime entertainment: the rock band Starship performed their hit “We Built This City.” Despite this, fan excitement was high.

Walsh and Hackett’s pre-game script called for a healthy dose of Jerry Rice. Hackett later said that the game plan included “three or four specific plays,” for Rice among the first 25. The first play couldn’t be any more specific: the Niners opened the game with the same reverse that Rice ran the week before. Rice gained 44 yards this time. And again the gain was wiped out by a penalty. But three short receptions netted five, three, and 15 yards, and the five-yarder should have been much longer: Rice broke a tackle, but a referee signaled that his forward progress was stopped.

“After that, he got a hot hand,” Hackett said after the game. “We kept using him because he was doing it better than everybody else.” The Niners led 7-3 at halftime, but the Rams started the third quarter with a 96-yard kickoff return touchdown. Later in the quarter, Montana, facing a heavy rush, rolled out of the pocket and saw Rice isolated against safety Nolan Cromwell. Cromwell was a Pro Bowl player, but it was still a mismatch. Rice hauled in a 66-yard touchdown to take the lead. Later in the game, Montana saw Rice singled-up on a cornerback and threw a 52-yard strike that led to a one-yard touchdown by Craig.

By the end of the game, Rice had 10 catches for 241 yards and a touchdown. The 241 yards broke a team record. Ironically, the Niners lost the game, but Rams defenders knew what Walsh knew: Rice was special. “I think the nickname that man’s got, ‘All-World’ or whatever, is deserved,” said Rams free safety Johnny Johnson after the game. “The man’s got unbelievable speed and a great burst.” Local writers who advocated for Rice’s benching suddenly changed their attitudes. “Somebody say ‘I told you so,’ and get it over with,” Kristin Huckshorn wrote in the Mercury News.

Rice had a big game, but could he repeat it? The rookie himself was sure he could. “I feel very comfortable and can go out there and just play my type of ball now,” he said. “Everything just seems to be falling into place.”

The following week, Rice gained 82 receiving yards against the Saints. In the season finale, he caught seven passes for 115 yards against the Cowboys. He even scored on a reverse that wasn’t called back for a holding penalty. The touchdown padded a Niners lead that allowed them to clinch a Wild Card berth. By Christmas, Rice the disappointment had become Rice the viable Rookie of the Year candidate. Fellow receiver Eddie Brown took the AP honors, but Rice was named the NFC Rookie of the Year by UPI.

The Niners were bounced out of the playoffs early; Rice caught four passes for 45 yards in a 17-3 loss to the Giants. But they wouldn’t be away from the Super Bowl for long.
A Forgotten Footnote

Twenty-one years and two days after Walsh stared down his critics and second-guessers and stuck with his troubled rookie, the 49ers will honor Jerry Rice, their greatest player ever, perhaps the greatest player ever.

The struggles of 1985 aren’t even a distant memory. They are a forgotten footnote for most fans. Rice’s season-ending numbers — 49 catches, 927 yards — obscure all evidence of a troubled rookie season. Only diehard fans, and perhaps Rice himself, truly remember that for a few months, his name was synonymous with dropped passes.

We can’t judge Rice’s critics too harshly. Most of the things that were said about Rice at the time were true. There were times when he hurt the team. The 49ers might even have won one or two more midseason games if Solomon had a larger role in the offense.

But no one was beating the Bears that year, and Walsh knew there was no reason to slow Rice’s development so he could rent Solomon for a few more weeks. Walsh was swapping out the Clark-Dean-Francis Niners for the Rice-Craig-Charles Haley-Tom Rathman-Brent Jones Niners, rebuilding around Montana. By 1986, they were division champs again, despite an injury to Montana. In 1987, they were 13-2, winning their final three games 124-7. They were Super Bowl champs after the 1988 season, with Rice catching 11 passes in the victory over the Bengals.

Now, Rice is retired, Walsh is battling leukemia, and the Niners are preparing to move to the suburbs. It’s a fitting time to remember the glory days. But we must always remember them as they really were. Rice didn’t start his career with one foot in Canton. He really had one foot on a banana peel for most of his rookie season. The next immortal, the player we’ll be writing about in 20 years, is probably battling for his job right now, dropping passes or fumbling and having personal crises on the bench. Jerry Rice remembers. And we remember.

dbd1963
11-17-2006, 05:25 PM
There would even be halftime entertainment: the rock band Starship performed their hit “We Built This City.” Despite this, fan excitement was high.

Ha!

JeffW
11-17-2006, 05:29 PM
Walsh is a ballsy son of a bitch and a great coach. I would have probably made Rice the #3 his rookie year--rookie WRs have struggled historically almost as much as rookie QBs and unlike QBs, they can contribute and develop in reserve and situational roles, so it makes even more sense to ease them in.

dbd1963
11-17-2006, 05:31 PM
The next immortal, the player we’ll be writing about in 20 years, is probably battling for his job right now, dropping passes or fumbling and having personal crises on the bench.

That would be Reggie Bush.

flere-imsaho
11-17-2006, 08:12 PM
I didn't realize Walsh is battling leukemia. :(

Dutch
11-18-2006, 02:18 AM
Ha!

Hey, I loved that song as a kid!

waltwal
11-18-2006, 03:18 AM
as a 49er guy i loved jerry. but i feel he was the first of the wr's who began to feel that winning was less important than his role in the game. i believe that moss, owens etc are products of the jerry rice syndrome. maybe this is harsh because those 2 are so much worse than jerry but as much as i like him i think he was the real first of that attitude. jerry rice will be a hall of famer but if it were up to me- i just don't know. if i walked into a winning super bowl locker room and saw a guy unhappy i would be extremely concerned tomorrow and in a perfect world might consider cutting him. you can win a state championship in high school getting rid of bad influences in the pros i am not quite sure.

Brillig
11-18-2006, 03:58 AM
as a 49er guy i loved jerry. but i feel he was the first of the wr's who began to feel that winning was less important than his role in the game. i believe that moss, owens etc are products of the jerry rice syndrome. maybe this is harsh because those 2 are so much worse than jerry but as much as i like him i think he was the real first of that attitude. jerry rice will be a hall of famer but if it were up to me- i just don't know. if i walked into a winning super bowl locker room and saw a guy unhappy i would be extremely concerned tomorrow and in a perfect world might consider cutting him. you can win a state championship in high school getting rid of bad influences in the pros i am not quite sure.

...and the second resident of jbmagic world has been identified.

Dutch
11-18-2006, 05:53 AM
For those of us who had the pleasure to watch Jerry Rice during his entire career, I can only say, that as a football fan who strongly disliked the San Francisco 49'ers, that Jerry Rice is quite possibly the most dominant football player (pound for pound) the NFL has ever seen. The guy was simply amazing.

Jerry Rice was a locomotive. Quite simply, he was one of those guys in the NFL that you could gameplan against, you could attack with everything you had, you could double him, you could spy on him, and at the end of the day, whether you played a part in it or not, Jerry Rice just moved you out of the way as he rolled on through.

Part of that success was his work ethic. Not a day in his life did he take his talent for granted. He trained year-round. Somewhere in there, the guy was probably obsessive compulsive about playing football. But it was for his benefit, and ours, in the end.

clintl
11-18-2006, 10:48 AM
as a 49er guy i loved jerry. but i feel he was the first of the wr's who began to feel that winning was less important than his role in the game. i believe that moss, owens etc are products of the jerry rice syndrome. maybe this is harsh because those 2 are so much worse than jerry but as much as i like him i think he was the real first of that attitude. jerry rice will be a hall of famer but if it were up to me- i just don't know. if i walked into a winning super bowl locker room and saw a guy unhappy i would be extremely concerned tomorrow and in a perfect world might consider cutting him. you can win a state championship in high school getting rid of bad influences in the pros i am not quite sure.

I'm a 49er fan who watched Jerry Rice play throughout his career. This is a bunch of crap. Rice was always a class act. He never showed up or complained about teammates or opponents, rarely if ever complained about coaches, and had a tremendous work ethic. If you're talking about that one Super Bowl where he thought he should have been the MVP instead of Montana - I think a guy like Rice deserves one mulligan in a 20-year career. I can't think of another incident when he acted like that. More typical of Rice's character and determination working hard enough at his rehabilitation to come back and play for the 49ers the year he had his serious knee injury, when everyone was expected him to be out for a year.

waltwal
11-18-2006, 10:59 AM
agreed but as a former coach i would have had a funny feeling if i had had the pleasure of winning a super bowl and then had to convince jerry that altho he only caught 1 or 2 passes it was a good experience. i would not spend 2 seconds trying to argue that jerry was not the greatest WR of all time and maybe the greatest football player of all time but i will always have that feeling that jerry just visibly cared a little too much about his personal performance. still maybe that attitude is what made him such a great player. bottom line is that i am glad he was a 49er.

waltwal
11-18-2006, 11:18 AM
Clintl i just have to respond. i have had season tickets for the Niners since 1946- their 1st year in sf. i watched every game that Jerry played in for the niners and most that he played for the Raiders. i think jerry set the standard for the hard work ethic of the modern pro athlete. but i still say that he set a dangerous precedent for WR's who were visibly upset when they were not the focal point of their team's success. jerry's displeasure in this area was not just one episode. i coached for many years, know and played for Bill Walsh and i guarantee you that jerry's attitude in this area was not appreciated- but again, in his case it was not enough to come close to outweighing his good points.

dime
11-18-2006, 12:21 PM
rice became a great player because he was terrified of failure, and so he had a work ethic that rivalled walter payton's. he just worked harder, and more often, than anyone he ever went up against.

he also benefitted from an offense that no one knew how to defend until the late 90s...how many times did we see rice catch a short crossing pattern in stride and run right by 2 or 3 defenders caught flat-footed in a zone defense? he was great after the catch, and a perfect fit for walsh's schemes.

I don't think he was the best nfl player of all time, and I don't think he was a "class act", but he wasn't a bad guy either -- his attitude was appropriate for a wide receiver in terms of the kind of jet fighter cockiness and insecurity that he showed. It goes along with playing a position where your success is completely dependent on so many other factors: the play called, the blocking and your quarterback.

waltwal
11-18-2006, 12:25 PM
dime i agree with your assessment. maybe one of the best of all-time. i do think his work ethic was unrivaled at the time and has had a good overall effect on the NFL.

Buccaneer
11-18-2006, 12:25 PM
i have had season tickets for the Niners since 1946- their 1st year in sf.

:eek: :eek: :eek:

waltwal
11-18-2006, 12:30 PM
well my father did and they did pass on to me. still in the family.

Dutch
11-18-2006, 12:34 PM
:eek: :eek: :eek:

He meant 1846 when they were prophetic.

clintl
11-18-2006, 12:56 PM
i coached for many years, know and played for Bill Walsh and i guarantee you that jerry's attitude in this area was not appreciated- but again, in his case it was not enough to come close to outweighing his good points.

If you have that kind of inside information, I have to defer to you on that.

waltwal
11-18-2006, 01:25 PM
we have all been a part of a team in some type of endeavor. when you are part of a team there is always a feeling that the team is above the individual. i think all coaches or bosses try to get this belief across and when you see someone pouting at the moment of triumph it is an area of concern and something that should not be overlooked. whether or not the 49er or raiders coaches approached rice on this subject i don't know. there may have been a feeling that, in rices's case, it was a temporary thing. i have always felt that rice was a reasonably intelligent person who did not carry on with the pouting act. you can see in the case of 2 intellectual midgets like TO and Moss what happens when the pouting continues. they have no problem ripping apart a team.

Brillig
11-18-2006, 01:33 PM
If you have that kind of inside information, I have to defer to you on that.

You're buying this? I got a bridge I need to unload. Cheap.:p

waltwal
11-18-2006, 01:39 PM
what's to buy. i played for Walsh (Marv Levy's staff) at Cal in 60. while i coached at a Catholic school power in San Jose i had quite a bit of contact with Walsh thru recruiting while he was at Stanford. am i off the hook?

JeeberD
11-18-2006, 06:33 PM
Come on...no one that old knows how to connect to the internet... ;)

waltwal
11-19-2006, 12:53 AM
i hire help