bigunreal said:
Don't forget the Packers during the mid-90s, when their running game was in the hands of two incredily slow, should-have-been FBs, Edgar Bennett and Dorsey Levens.During at least part of this time, they had the young Travis Jersey on the roster, and never seriously considered letting him take carries away from these two plodders, even though he was much, much faster than either of them. Levens continues to get carries with the Eagles at tailback. Incredible!
I've seen a lot about Travis Jervey reading through the many excellent posts and articles on this site. I am a Packer fan too, and I recall watching and especially rooting for Travis for a couple reasons, one that he played at The Citadel which made him rather unique, and two that he was white and I don't find anything wrong with rooting for a member of similar ethnicity especially when they're in an underdog situation. I recall how brilliant he looked with the Packers in preseason, it seemed every time he touched the ball it was 7-10 yards before they could get him, though that was against 3rd and 4th-stringers of course.
But I don't believe he was discriminatedagainst based on being white--not with the Packers at any rate--and I think an objective look into it would validate that. If anything, he was discriminated against because he had trouble holding onto the ball. Also, due to running an offense in collegethat didn't use himoften in that capacity, he was inexperienced catching the ball out of the backfield--which was a requirement for the offense we ranthen.
Not being able to hang onto the ball is one thing Mike Holmgren will not tolerate regardless of your hue. Recall in Seattlehe rid himself of Ahman Green to the Packer'sdelight for the exact same reason. I do remember Travis fumbling, especially returning kicks, and if you're trying to earn a position in the NFL--especially with a Mike Holmgren--a fumble or two is all it takes to be relegated to the doghouse.
Edgar Bennet was not especially fast nor powerful, but he did have a couple of useful attributes.He had great hands catching the ball and he had fantastic balance and sure footing, making hima significant asset on bad fields, and most importantly to a guy like Holmgren, he
never fumbled.He went through like two full years as a feature back without ever losing a fumble--something like that.
Dorsey Levens might not have been very fast, but he had a motor that didn't quit, was as poweful as a horse, and had incredible stamina and would wear down defenses over the course of the game. He also had great hands and was an asset recieving out of the backfield. I think Dorsey proved in the Eagle's playoff game against the Vikes (or was it the Atlanta game?) why he's still in the league when he got that ball on the five and pushed that pile of four or fivedefenders into the endzone by putting his head down, driving his legs and never quitting. One of the most amazing displays of power I've seen from a back that old since Czonka retired.
Perhaps this is unwelcome here, but both Edgar Bennett Dorsey Levens played their hearts out for the Packers and I can think of nothing they ever did to be worthy of scorn. Travis Jervey might well have been treated unfairly when he got to Atlanta, but I don't think those two ever benefitted at Travis's expense for racial reasons, but because of Mike Holmgren's well-known intolerance of losing the ball. Perhaps Travis was just too excited, or was unlucky and they were freak instances, but he
did lose the ball a couple of times in close succession and that's all it takes with a Mike Holmgren--just ask Ahman Green.