NFL QB Earl Morrall dies at 79

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Longtime NFL quarterback Earl Morrall dies at 79
Posted by Michael David Smith on April 25, 2014

earlmorrall-e1398451113287.jpg
Getty Images

Earl Morrall, a quarterback who played for six different teams over 21 NFL seasons and helped get two different teams to the Super Bowl, has died at the age of 79.

Morrall is best remembered for his years under coach Don Shula, whom he played for on Super Bowl teams both in Baltimore and in Miami.

With the Baltimore Colts in 1968, Morrall was the NFL’s regular season Most Valuable Player, leading the league with 26 touchdown passes and leading his team to a 13-1 record. That season is, however, remembered mostly for the Colts’ upset loss to the Jets in Super Bowl III, a game in which Shula benched Morrall for Johnny Unitas.

But Shula thought highly of Morrall, and in 1972, after Shula had left Baltimore to coach the Dolphins, he brought Morrall with him. That year Morrall started most of the season after Bob Griese went down with an injury, and Morrall helped the Dolphins go 17-0, the only perfect season in NFL history.

He was an unbelievable guy,” Shula told the Miami Herald today. “There were no negatives with him. He was the best guy in the locker room. Great in practice. And on the field he made big plays in big games. He was just a fine human being and that transcended everything else. It wasn’t just about his career. In everything he tried, people recognized what a fine individual he was.”

After a stellar career at Michigan State in which Morrall led the Spartans to a victory in the Rose Bowl (and also played for their baseball team in the College World Series), Morrall was selected by the 49ers with the second overall pick in the 1956 NFL draft. But Morrall lasted just one season in San Francisco, and played more punter than quarterback, before he was traded to Pittsburgh. A year later he was traded again, this time to Detroit in exchange for Hall of Fame quarterback Bobby Layne, and he lasted seven seasons with the Lions. In 1965 he was traded again, this time to the Giants, and although he played well in his first season in New York, the team phased him out as it began a rebuilding effort in 1966.

But once he finally found himself traded to a good team with a coach who knew how to use him, Morrall thrived with the Colts in 1968, and he thrived again with the Dolphins in 1972. During the 1975 season the 41-year-old Morrall became the oldest player ever to start and win a game, and he stuck around as a backup in Miami through the 1976 season before retiring just weeks short of his 43rd birthday. Although he spent much of his time in Baltimore and Miami as a backup to future Hall of Famers in Unitas and Griese, he’s remembered fondly by longtime fans of both teams as a player who exuded greatness when his team needed it.

 

CGI_Ram

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Thanks for putting this up, PT.

Good story. Big part of football history was that man.

And... Watching that video; that's a football player right there.
 

RamsAndEwe

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Earl was one of my Dad's favorite players ever. It's a sad day for me. I remember watching Earl's magic act in Super Bowl 5, and that miracle Miami Dolphin perfect season. Greatest backup quarterback of all time.
 

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I was a big Earl fan. Talking about Mr Clutch off the bench, he was it.
 

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  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #5
From Peter King's MMQB -

Ten things you need to know about Earl Morrall.

  1. Morrall, who died Friday at 79 in Florida of Parkinson’s Disease, got picked in the 1956 draft second overall by the 49ers. Number 200 overall that year: Bart Starr.
  2. Morrall quarterbacked Michigan State to the 1956 Rose Bowl title, and he played infield during the Spartans’ only trip to the College World Series.
  3. In his second year in the NFL, the Steelers traded two first-round picks to obtain him from San Francisco. In his third year in the NFL, the Steelers traded him to Detroit for Bobby Layne.
  4. Two weeks before the regular season started in 1968, Morrall, in his 12th pro season, was traded to the Baltimore Colts to serve as Johnny Unitas’ backup for the season. A week later, Unitas went down with an elbow injury. Morrall stepped in and led the Colts to a 13-1 season, won the NFL MVP award and led the Colts into Super Bowl III against Joe Namath and the Jets. The rest is unpleasant history in the Morrall family. He threw three interceptions in that game before being replaced by the still-recuperating Unitas, and the Colts lost in one of the great upsets in NFL history.
  5. Two years later, with Unitas hurt again, Morrall stepped into Super Bowl V and orchestrated a 16-13 Baltimore victory over Dallas.
  6. A year a later, on his 38th birthday, the Dolphins claimed him on waivers from Baltimore for $100.
  7. In 1972,filling in after Bob Griese broke his ankle in Week 5, Morrall went 9-0 as a starting quarterback in the Dolphins’ perfect season—the only NFL team ever to win every game, regular and postseason, that it played—and was named First Team All-Pro for the second time. But he was replaced by Griese as the starter for the Super Bowl after struggling in the AFC title game at Pittsburgh.
  8. The Dolphins’ practice facility is in Davie, Fla., near Fort Lauderdale. Morrall was the mayor of Davie in 1992.
  9. He wore a crew cut for all of his adult life.
  10. He leaves five children: Matt, Mitch, Mardi, Mindi, Meghan.

STAT OF THE WEEK
Regarding the passing of Earl Morrall on Friday:

Morrall should go down in history as one of the best handful (three, four?) of backup quarterbacks in the 94-season history of the NFL. This stat should prove that: Morrall started 35 regular-season games due to injuries to Johnny Unitas and Bob Griese in Baltimore and Miami between 1968 and 1972. His record in those 35 games: 31-3-1.
 

LesBaker

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His record in those 35 games: 31-3-1.

Holy crap I would have never taken him off the field!!!
 

ramsrams

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Back in the day, I loved watching him play. Come off the bench and light it up (well as much as you could light it up back then)

Loved those Dolphin teams. You just draw up a trap, and dare the other team to stop you. That's football!
 

den-the-coach

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Great Guy the irony was that Shula went with him against the Jets (1969 Super Bowl) and lost after he filled in so well for Johnny Unitas then Shula opted for Bob Griese instead of Earl Morrall against the Redskins and George Allen in the 1973 Super Bowl after Morrall led them for the most part to an undefeated season

The reason we learn about history is not to repeat the same mistakes and Don Shula learned well, but Earl Morrell was truly special in so many ways, so RIP Earl.
 

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RIP Earl. That 72 season was something else.