Riggins was the last one. That is true. But much like Larry Csonka -- who was drafted prior to the NFL/AFL merger in 1970 -- Riggins was a "power-back". So, in essence, he was no different than Cappelletti, Vardell, Muster and the goy drafted by the Packers in 1974, who had a brief career. Obviously Riggins had a Hall of Fame career; the others not even close.
But,
prior to CMAC, had there
ever been a true white tailback/halfback drafted in round one since the 1970 merger? An all-purpose back, not considered a bruising back, much like CMAC is currently?
I thought the answer was no. CMAC was the only true white tailback/halfback drafted in round one since the 1970 merger. But upon closer inspection, I noticed a name from the 1970 draft:
Steve Owens.
Owens is a player I never saw play. Never even seen highlights of him on ESPN Classic, which is how I've seen most of these 1970's backs and stars. I know he won the Heisman at Oklahoma, then went to the Lions in round one. Had a injury shortened rookie season, then
became a big star in 1971 -- very similar season to CMAC in 2018. Was hampered by injuries a bit the next two years, then had a true career ending injury on Thanksgiving Day in 1974. He might've been as good as Riggins, if not for injuries.
I might need some help here from
sport historian or some others. But
was Owens a true tailback/halfback or was he also a power-back like Riggo and Zonk? I'm thinking he was the closest we've seen to CMAC in round one since the merger. CMAC and Owens were drafted 47 years apart. Talk about a drought?
One more quick note on this specific topic: I did a quick net search and found
Craig James was widely projected as a first round pick prior to the 1983 draft by several sources, including the
New York Times. So James could've been considered another white tailback drafted to "
be the man" for an NFL team, but he signed a huge (at the time) deal with the Washington Federals* of the USFL.
Three quick notes, comments:
1) Freethinker, thanks for keeping tabs and doing the updates.
2) To the poster
Rocky Bleier and others looking to add names to the list. Several years back I did an extensive search of the running backs from 1970 up until Hillis/Gerhart era. Thought I got them all, but might've missed some lesser knowns from the 1970's -- i.e Bob Burns, who I only knew about because his son played with the Oakland A's......Also, we have a 1987 Replacement Player (strike scab) on the list named
Joe Dudek. I recently went back and looked at the 1987 stats and it seemed a lot white running backs were allowed to run the ball those three weeks. Patriots had a rookie from Stephen F. Austin named
Michael LeBlanc gain 145 yards in a replacement game. I did a quick net search, but could not ascertain if he was black or white. At quick glance the name is probably white, but a ton of Haitians have the surname LeBlanc. Saw a black DB last weekend (Eagles?) named LeBlanc.
3) When we looked up most of the game stats around 2010/2011,
I'm not sure we included "post season" games in the equation. I believe I did not. So, for example, I think we might've short-changed goys like Riggins and Csonka. Riggo definitely had a 100 yard plus game in a Super Bowl. Larry C. might've also, although he shared the carries with Kiick and Morris.
*
https://www.washingtonpost.com/arch...75-819a-4118-8fa5-5f3558c995ad/?noredirect=on