Tommy McDonald dies at 84; receiver was smallest player in Pro Football Hall of Fame
He is number 192 on the list.
Tommy McDonald, a small, speedy and sure-handed receiver who
teamed with quarterback Norm Van Brocklin to help the Philadelphia Eagles win
the 1960 NFL championship, died Sept. 24. He was 84.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame announced his death but did
not provide additional details.
Mr. McDonald was a two-time all-American from Oklahoma who
played 12 NFL seasons for five teams and was a six-time Pro Bowl selection.
When he retired in 1968, he ranked second in league history in touchdown
catches, fourth in yards receiving and sixth in receptions.
But the 5-foot-7, 175-pound Mr. McDonald had to wait 30
years before becoming the smallest player inducted into the Pro Football Hall
of Fame.
“Oh, baby!” Mr. McDonald shouted in Canton, Ohio, during his
induction ceremony in 1998. “Do I look excited, like I just won the lottery or
the jackpot? Yes! I’m in the Hall of Fame!” In an induction speech that was
equal parts hysterics and histrionics, Mr. McDonald told jokes and tossed his
25-pound bronze bust in the air, pulled out a radio and danced to disco music.
In seven seasons with Philadelphia, the durable Mr. McDonald
had 287 receptions for 5,499 yards, with a per-catch average of 19.2 yards. He
had 66 touchdowns in 88 games and went to the Pro Bowl five straight seasons,
from 1959 to 1963.
Mr. McDonald in 2008, after welcoming a new class of Hall of
Famers to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He was joined onstage by fellow
inductees Art Monk and Fred Dean.
Mr. McDonald was traded to Dallas in 1964 and dealt the next
season to the Los Angeles Rams. Determined to show that he could still be a
force in the league, he had a solid season with a career-best 67 receptions for
1,036 yards and nine TDs, and he earned another trip to the Pro Bowl.
“Tommy McDonald played the game with a passion and energy
that was second to none,” said Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie. “He will be
remembered as one of the most exciting players ever to play his position, but
what really separated him and made him so unique was the infectious personality
and charisma that he brought to his everyday life.”
Thomas Franklin McDonald was born in Roy, N.M., on July 26,
1934. He graduated from high school in Albuquerque, where he developed into a
three-sport athlete in football, basketball and track.
At the University of Oklahoma, where he played under Hall of
Fame coach Bud Wilkinson, Mr. McDonald was an all-American in 1955 and 1956. He
never experienced a loss with the Sooners, winning 31 straight games as part of
Oklahoma’s record-setting 47-game run.
In 1956, Mr. McDonald finished third in the Heisman Trophy
voting behind Paul Hornung of Notre Dame and Johnny Majors of Tennessee. He
also won the Maxwell Award, given to the best player in college football.
Amid rumblings he was too small to play in the NFL, the
Eagles drafted Mr. McDonald in the third round in 1957.
He was used primarily on punts and kick returns early in his
rookie season before being inserted as a flanker against the Washington
Redskins midway through the year. Mr. McDonald scored two touchdowns, including
a 61-yarder that onetime NFL commissioner Bert Bell reportedly called “one of
the greatest catches I have ever seen in pro football.”
Mr. McDonald and Van Brocklin proved a formidable pair for
the Eagles. They combined for one of the most memorable touchdowns in franchise
history, a 35-yard reception on a frigid afternoon that helped the Eagles to a
17-13 win over Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers in the 1960 NFL title game at
Franklin Field. It was the team’s third championship (the first Super Bowl was
played in 1967), and the only championship game a Lombardi-coached team lost.
“You can’t go any higher,” Mr. McDonald said in 2005 as the
Eagles prepped for a Super Bowl appearance. “We were at the top of the hill
looking down yelling, ‘Hello! Nobody expected us to be here.’ ”
The next season, Mr. McDonald set a franchise record with
seven catches for 237 yards receiving in a game against the New York Giants. He
went on to finish with 64 receptions for a league-leading 1,144 yards and 13
touchdowns.
After retiring from football, he founded Tommy McDonald
Enterprises, which created portraits and plaques for athletes.
A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.
“I think catching passes is judgment, mostly,” Mr. McDonald
once said, according to the Hall of Fame. “I’ve got good vision; good
peripheral vision. I think sometimes I can see things the defensive back
doesn’t see. I watch for him to make his move — you’ve got to study the guys in
this league — and if he’s a fraction late compensating for mine, then I’ve got
him beat.”
His notable teammates included:
Chuck Bednarik, Billy Ray Barnes, Abe Gibron, Sonny Jurgensen, Jerry Norton, Tom Scott, Pete Retzlaff, John Madden, Norm Van Brocklin, Jess Richardson, Art Powell, Maxie Baughan, Ted Dean, Don Meredith, Chuck Howley, Bob Lilly, Mel Renfro, Cornell Green, Roman Gabriel, Bill Munson, Deacon Jones, Rosey Grier, Merlin Olsen, Eddie Meador, Bill George, Tom Mack, Tommy Nobis, Frank Ryan, Paul Warfield, Leroy Kelly,
His coaches included: Hugh Devore, Buck Shaw, Nick Skorich, Tom Landry, George Allen and Blanton Collier.
He played for team owners Happy Hundred, Rankin M. Smith Sr., Clint Murchison, Jr. and Art Modell.
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