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Latest Jack Tatum Stories

Don't Call JaMarcus Russell a Bust Just Yet

Calling a second-year quarterback a bust after just eight starts would be more than a little short-sighted. But, as sports fans, we demand instant results, and when a No. 1 overall pick is pulling in millions of bills before he's really "earned" it, well, 2-6 records just aren't going to cut it. That's when the four letter B-word tends to get thrown around. Unfair as that may be, that's current sports world we live in.

This of course brings us to Raiders quarterback JaMarcus Russell, and an article in today's Sacramento Bee by Paul Gutierrez, asking fans to please show a little patience in their 23-year old quarterback.
Since the draft began in 1936, 27 quarterbacks have been taken No. 1 overall and just three are in the Hall of Fame: Terry Bradshaw (1970), John Elway (1983) and Troy Aikman (1989). Russell, who has completed 53.5 percent of his 228 attempts for 1,482 yards with seven touchdowns and four interceptions in his first eight career starts, has better numbers than them through the same time frame. Bradshaw's passer rating was a miserable 28.8 through his first eight starts. Elway's initial eight-start rating of 48.8 belied his future success, and Aikman was winless in his first eight starts. That holy trinity went on to win a combined nine Super Bowls.

30 Year Anniversary of Jack Tatum's Hit on Darryl Stingley

In a preseason game on August 12th, 1978, Oakland's Jack Tatum met Patriots receiver Darryl Stingley with a forearm to the head that left Stingley paralyzed.

Stingley broke his fourth and fifth vertebrae and would live the rest of his life as a quadriplegic. At the time of the hit, he was set to be the NFL's highest paid receiver (they had agreed to the contract but they were waiting to sign it when they returned from Oakland). He died in April 2007.

That hit sent shockwaves throughout football. Anti-football fans pointed to it as the violent nature of the game. At the time, Tatum's hit was legal ... but the league then made rules to stop overly-aggressive plays and hits and allowed for some safety for receivers.

Gene Upshaw, a guard for the Raiders at the time, befriended Stingley and carried a long friendship. Upshaw would go on to become leader of the NFLPA, though his work for disabled veterans remains spotty. He has been able to get teams to up their disability benefits.

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