Mercury Morris

Mercury Morris
No. 22
Position: Running back
Personal information
Date of birth: (1947-01-05) January 5, 1947
Place of birth: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Height: 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight: 190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High school: Pittsburgh (PA) Avonworth
College: West Texas State
NFL draft: 1969 / Round: 3 / Pick: 63
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Rushing Yards: 4,133
Average: 5.1
TDs: 31
Player stats at NFL.com

Eugene Edward "Mercury" Morris (born January 5, 1947), is a former American football running back and kick returner. He played for seven years, primarily for the Miami Dolphins in the American Football League, then in the American Football Conference following the 1969 merger with the National Football League.

Morris played in three Super Bowls and was selected to three Pro Bowls. In 1982, Morris was convicted of felony drug trafficking charges. After three and one-half years in prison, Morris was released after a plea agreement in which he pleaded no contest to cocaine conspiracy charges.[1]

Mercury was nicknamed early on in his career for his quickness when running with the ball.

Amateur career

Morris was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Avonworth High School in the northwestern suburbs of the city. Morris attended West Texas State University (now known as West Texas A&M University) from 1965 to 1969, where he was an All-American at tailback in 1967 and 1968. In 1967, he finished second in the nation to O.J. Simpson of USC in rushing yards with 1274.[2] In his record setting year of 1968, he set collegiate records for rushing yards in a single game, with 340, rushing yards for a single season with 1571, and rushing yards over a three-year college career (freshmen being ineligible), with 3388.[2] Simpson broke the single-season rushing just one week after Morris set it.[2] Morris' three-season career rushing record was broken two years later by Don McCauley.</ref name=morris>

After college, Morris was picked in the third round of the 1969 AFL-NFL Common Draft by the AFL's Miami Dolphins.

Pro football career

Early career

Morris excelled as both a running back and kick returner. The majority of his playing days were spent with the Miami Dolphins. From 1969 to 1971, he backed up Jim Kiick at halfback and served as the Dolphins' primary kickoff return man. In his rookie year of 1969, Morris had averaged 26.4 yards per kickoff return, leading the AFL in kickoff returns with 43 and in kickoff return yardage with 1136.[3] Both totals would have also led the NFL.[4] His 105-yard return was the longest in the AFL that season, and he was also one of the AFL's leading punt returners that year.[3] In 1970, he missed some time on the field due to a leg injury, but his 6.8 yard per carry average on 60 runs was the highest in the league among players with at least 50 runs.[5]

Super Bowl years

In 1971, despite being unhappy with his minimal playing time as backup halfback,[6][7] he helped the Dolphins to their first Super Bowl, Super Bowl VI by leading the American Football Conference(AFC) with a 28.2 yard kickoff return average.[4] During the regular season, Morris also made the most of his opportunities at running back, gaining 315 rushing yards on 57 carries for a 5.5 yard average,[3] an average that would have led the NFL had he enough carries to qualify.[8] That season, Morris was selected for the Pro Bowl for the first time as a kick returner, although he also was used as a running back in the game.[7]

In the 1972 and 1973 seasons, Morris earned Super Bowl rings in Super Bowl VII and Super Bowl VIII, and was selected for the Pro Bowl in both years. In 1972, Morris shared the halfback position with Kiick, participating in a few less plays than Kiick, but having more carries as a running back.[9] That year, he ran for exactly 1,000 yds on 190 carries,[3] becoming, with teammate Larry Csonka, the first 1,000-yard tandem in NFL history. Morris was first thought to have finished with 991 yards, but the Dolphins' management asked the league to examine a play in which Morris fumbled a lateral: Morris was awarded the nine yards previously recorded as lost on the play, giving him 1,000 yards for the season. That year, Morris also led the NFL with 12 rushing touchdowns,[3][8] and his 5.3 yard per carry average was third in the NFL.[3]

By 1973, Morris had taken over the starting halfback spot and rushed for 954 yards on 149 carries,[3] despite playing with a neck injury late in the season. His 6.4 yard per carry average led the NFL that season,[3][8] and he finished third in the NFL in rushing touchdowns.

Although Morris' Super Bowl statistics pale in comparison with teammate Larry Csonka, he excelled in several playoff games leading up to Miami's two Super Bowl championships. In 1972, he led the Dolphins in rushing in both the divisional playoff game against Cleveland and the AFC Championship Game against Pittsburgh with 72 yards and 76 yards respectively.[10] In 1973, he led the Dolphins in rushing for the divisional playoff game against Cincinnati with 106 yards, and added 86 more rushing yards in the AFC Championship Game against Oakland.[11]

Late career

Morris continued playing for the Dolphins in 1974 and 1975, before spending the last season of his shortened career playing for the San Diego Chargers in 1976. In 1974, he was limited to playing five games due to a knee injury suffered in a pre-season exhibition game.[12] In 1975, Morris led the Dolphins in rushing yards with 875[3] despite sharing the halfback position with Benny Malone.[13] After being traded to San Diego before the 1976 season, he ran for 256 yards on 50 carries that year and decided to retire after the season, in part due to lingering difficulties from the neck injury suffered in 1973.[14]

Morris finished in the top five of the NFL in rushing touchdowns twice and total touchdowns once during his eight-year career. His career 5.1 yard per carry average is third all time among NFL players (second among running backs and first among halfbacks) with at least 750 rushing attempts, behind quarterback Randall Cunningham and fullback Jim Brown.[15] Morris' career kickoff return average of 26.5 is among the all-time top 20 for players with at least 100 returns, and was in the top 10 at the time of his retirement.[16][17]

Post-football career

In 1974, Morris co-starred as Bookie Garrett in the blaxploitation film The Black Six alongside other football stars of the day.

In 1982, Morris was convicted of cocaine trafficking. He was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment, with a mandatory fifteen-year term. On March 6, 1986, his conviction was overturned by the Florida Supreme Court because evidence Morris had offered to prove his entrapment defense had been excluded under a mistaken characterization as hearsay. Morris was granted a new trial. He was able to reach a plea bargain with the prosecutor, resulting in his release from prison May 23, 1986, after having served three years. He later went on to a career as a motivational speaker. Towards the end of 2006, he was in a television commercial spot for a hair-treatment clinic, along with Wade Boggs.

Mercury frequently is spotted at Washington Redskin games rooting on his nephew, Alfred Morris.

References

  1. "Whatever Happened to Mercury Morris".
  2. 1 2 3 Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. pp. 44–45. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Pro-Football-Reference Mercury Morris". Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  4. 1 2 Neft, Cohen, and Korch (1995). The Sports Encyclopedia Pro Football. p. 772. ISBN 0-312-13186-0.
  5. Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. p. 59. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  6. Larry Csonka and Jim Kiick with Dave Anderson (1973). Always on the Run. p. 204. ISBN 0394485890.
  7. 1 2 Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. pp. 61–63. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  8. 1 2 3 Neft, Cohen, and Korch (1995). The Sports Encyclopedia Pro Football. p. 766. ISBN 0-312-13186-0.
  9. Larry Csonka and Jim Kiick with Dave Anderson (1973). Always on the Run. p. 205. ISBN 0394485890.
  10. Neft, Cohen, and Korch (1995). The Sports Encyclopedia Pro Football. pp. 235, 242. ISBN 0-312-13186-0.
  11. Neft, Cohen, and Korch (1995). The Sports Encyclopedia Pro Football. pp. 253, 260. ISBN 0-312-13186-0.
  12. Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. p. 83. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  13. Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. p. 91. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  14. Eugene "Mercury" Morris with Steve Fiffer (1988). Against the Grain. p. 98. ISBN 0-07-043195-7.
  15. NFL (2008). 2008 NFL Record & Fact Book (Official National Football League Record and Fact Book). p. 633. ISBN 978-1-60320-770-6.
  16. "Pro-Football-Reference Career Yards per Kick Return Leaders". Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  17. Neft, Cohen, and Korch (1995). The Sports Encyclopedia Pro Football. p. 784. ISBN 0-312-13186-0.

External links

Records
Preceded by
Art Luppino
NCAA Division I FBS Career Rushing Yards record
1968–69
Succeeded by
Steve Owens
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