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Do you remember Roger Carr? (1 Viewer)

JohnnyU

Footballguy
As a Colts fan he and Bert Jones are two of my favorite players of all-time.

Only five receivers in NFL history averaged 25 yards or more yards per catch in a single season ... that is, only five with a minimum of 40 receptions ... and Roger Carr was one of them.

Wait. Who?

If you were watching the NFL in 1976, you know who. Because 1976 was a magical season for the Baltimore Colts' wide receiver.

Carr caught 43 passes that year, which wasn't exceptional. But he averaged 25.9 yards per reception, which was. It led the NFL. He also led the NFL in receiving yardage, which was noteworthy considering receivers like Drew Pearson and Cliff Branch had All-Pro years.

Dubbed "Louisiana Lightning" because of 4.3 40 speed, Carr had a career that lasted 10 years, with 271 receptions for 5,071 yards and 31 touchdowns - none of which are extraordinary. But look at his career average of 18.7 yards per catch. It's tied for 14th among receivers with 250 or more receptions.

He also had scores on bombs of 90, 89, 79 and 78 yards.


"There's only one person I ever saw who could accelerate to the football," former Colts' quarterback and 1976 league MVP Bert Jones told the Ruston Daily Leader, "and it was Roger."

But there's one season -- the 1976 season -- that stands out, and the envelope, please: He caught 43 passes for 1,112 yards and 11 touchdowns -- producing a 25.9-yard average that's so impressive only four others with 40 or more catches ever eclipsed a 25-yard average:

-- Elbert Dubenion, Buffalo Bills - 27.1 in 1964

-- Warren Wells, Oakland Raiders - 26.8 in 1969

-- Flipper Anderson, Los Angeles Rams - 26.0 - 1989

-- Harlon Hill, Chicago Bears - 25.0 - 1954

If you watched ABC's Monday Night Football for highlights, you saw Carr's 1976 season unfold as Howard Cosell narrated replays of him hauling in Bert Jones' passes, streaking into the end zone and punctuating scores with dunks over the crossbar.

It all started the second week of the season when Carr shredded the Cincinnati Bengals' secondary, catching six passes for 198 yards and three TDs (tying a club record) -- including two of 60 or more yards, with one over Hall-of-Famer Ken Riley.

"I thought I had him," Riley said afterward. "He started out quick . . . and once he got even, he got even quicker. There was no catching him."

The next month he had a five-catch, 210-yard afternoon with two more touchdowns vs. the New York Jets. One was a 79-yard TD; the other a 41-yard score. Then there was a 55-yarder that set up a field goal to produce 17 points in a 20-0 Baltimore victory.

Through that game (Week Seven), Carr was averaging 32.6 yards a catch on 18 receptions and six touchdowns. By comparison, his next six games look almost ordinary: 21 catches for 411 yards and four TDs. But prorate them over a 17-game season, and you have a 60-catch year for 1,164 yards and 11 TDs.

So they were outstanding.

He finished the season with a 114-yard game, pushing him past Branch and Hall-of-Famer Charlie Joiner to lead the league in receiving yards.

The Colts won the AFC East, while Carr was second-team All-Pro (the esteemed Paul "Dr. Z" Zimmerman named him first-team to his New York Post team), voted to the Pro Bowl and had one of the top seasons by any Colts' receiver - including those in Indianapolis.

Sadly, he was never able to duplicate his success after that season.

Contract disputes, leg injuries, injuries to Bert Jones, accusations of shying from contact and even a suspension kept him from ever coming close to his 1976 productivity. So did a contract dispute that in 1977 had him hold out of training camp and most of preseason on the advice of his agent, Howard Slusher.

"I'm in my prime as an athlete," Carr told Bill McIntyer of the Shreveport Times at the beginning of his holdout. "I am as healthy as I'll ever be. I am fast as I ever was. You can count on one hand the guys who are deep threats, Curtis, Branch, Mel Gray in St. Louis, Ken Burrough, myself. I can get the deep six.

"I caught 43 passes and averaged 25.9 yards per catch. That led the league. I set a new Colts' record. Sometimes they can't believe it 'cause I'm a white guy, but it seems the good Lord gave me a knack for it."

Chalk up some politically incorrect points for Carr.

Alas, a knee injury cut short his 1977 season, reducing it to seven games, and Carr finished with 199 yards receiving - fewer than his top game in 1976 and only one yard more than his second-best effort, that 198-yard contest vs. the Bengals.

There were later flashes of '76 ... a big game here or there ... but nothing sustained for an entire season. The closest he came was 1980 when he had 61 grabs for 924 yards, but his yards per catch dropped to 15.1, not exactly emblematic of a big-time deep threat.

Ultimately, Carr was more successful as a small-college football player at Louisiana Tech than as a pro. He set several receiving records there and was voted into the school's Hall of Fame (also the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame).

He was a first-team Little All-American as a junior, a second-teamer as a senior and part of two Division II/College division national champions those seasons.

But Carr didn't go to Louisiana Tech to play football. He was a walk on ... as a punter. There on a track scholarship, he was a long jumper whose punting drew the attention of Bulldogs' coaches. Once he got on the field, though, he "was catching everything," according to former Tech assistant Mickey Slaughter.

And so began his collegiate football career as a receiver.

He led the team in receiving for three consecutive years and was so successful that he not only caught the eye of NFL scouts; one of them gave him his highest possible grade. The Colts swooped in during the 1974 draft, made him their first-round pick (24th overall) and paired him with a quarterback (Jones) who had the arm to reach a receiver with speed to stretch defenses.

It seemed the perfect match, and it was ... but not for long.

"(Carr) could run by anybody," former Colts' executive Ernie Accorsi told the Ruston Daily Leader. "Sometimes, longevity doesn't always define greatness. Roger wasn't in the league that long, but he was as good a deep receiver as I've ever seen."
 
Started watching the NFL in 1980 but I was confined to a boarding school during this period in my life and getting access to a TV to watch a whole game was a struggle. I remember Bert Jones, but not this guy.
 
Definitely remember him...Colts were in the AFC East and that Jones-Mitchell-Carr trio was a good one...I remember a close game between the Pats and Colts where Joe Washington (who I loved in College) scored a TD on a kickoff return for the win...Colts were a good team in that era but never got to the next level.
 
Definitely remember him...Colts were in the AFC East and that Jones-Mitchell-Carr trio was a good one...I remember a close game between the Pats and Colts where Joe Washington (who I loved in College) scored a TD on a kickoff return for the win...Colts were a good team in that era but never got to the next level.
Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Bert Jones didn't play. Washington remains the only NFL player to ever throw a touchdown, catch a touchdown and return a kickoff for a touchdown in a single game. You have to watch this. It's only a minute and half. Shows Carr getting into the action also with two deep TDs. The Colts had already started to decline after winning their division the previous 3 years. It would be downhill after 1977 until the 1995 miracle with Harbaugh and subsequently Manning and Luck after that.
 
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Definitely remember him...Colts were in the AFC East and that Jones-Mitchell-Carr trio was a good one...I remember a close game between the Pats and Colts where Joe Washington (who I loved in College) scored a TD on a kickoff return for the win...Colts were a good team in that era but never got to the next level.
Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Jones didn't play. Washington remains the only NFL player to ever throw a touchdown, catch a touchdown and return a kickoff for a touchdown in a single game. You have to watch this. It's only a minute and half. Shows Carr getting into the action also with two deep TDs.

Watched it when it was live...Washington looked odd back than with the rec-specs.
 
Definitely remember him...Colts were in the AFC East and that Jones-Mitchell-Carr trio was a good one...I remember a close game between the Pats and Colts where Joe Washington (who I loved in College) scored a TD on a kickoff return for the win...Colts were a good team in that era but never got to the next level.
Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Jones didn't play. Washington remains the only NFL player to ever throw a touchdown, catch a touchdown and return a kickoff for a touchdown in a single game. You have to watch this. It's only a minute and half. Shows Carr getting into the action also with two deep TDs.

Watched it when it was live...Washington looked odd back than with the rec-specs.
I watched it at friends apartment, sitting in a kitchen table chair in the middle of his living room with no furniture. We weren't feeling any pain that night. It's the most unbelievable single performance I've ever seen. My buddy lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma when he was in college and he said every time Washington touched the ball everyone in the stadium would stand up.
 
Definitely remember him...Colts were in the AFC East and that Jones-Mitchell-Carr trio was a good one...I remember a close game between the Pats and Colts where Joe Washington (who I loved in College) scored a TD on a kickoff return for the win...Colts were a good team in that era but never got to the next level.
Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Jones didn't play. Washington remains the only NFL player to ever throw a touchdown, catch a touchdown and return a kickoff for a touchdown in a single game. You have to watch this. It's only a minute and half. Shows Carr getting into the action also with two deep TDs.

Watched it when it was live...Washington looked odd back than with the rec-specs.
I watched it at friends apartment, sitting in a kitchen table chair in the middle of his living room with no furniture. We weren't feeling any pain that night. It's the most unbelievable single performance I've ever seen. My buddy lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma when he was in college and he said every time Washington touched the ball everyone in the stadium would stand up.

You got me by a few years...I was just happy my parents let me stay up late to watch it!
 
Carr was before my time, so I really only know of him from his stats, and posts like these, I am much more familiar with Bert Jones and Lydell Mitchell. 25.9 YPR is crazy impressive post-merger, as was Bert Jones 9 YPA. Wonder if Carr's career year would have been a sign of things to come if not for that knee injury? Or if Bert Jones shoulder issues would have made it moot? Its an interesting time capsule.

Side note: thanks for the reminder of that magical 1989 Rams season, where Flipper Anderson and Henry Ellard both went over 1,000 yards while averaging over 19 YPR. 1989 was my intro to the NFL, and man was Ellard such an underrated player from that era. Shame the Rams ran into maybe the best team ever in the 1989 49ers. They somehow avoid SF, and they probably win the Super Bowl, and maybe never leave LA. Maybe we have the St. Louis Jaguars?
 
I was about 10 years old when I started following Bert Jones. The story that caught my attention was when Ted Marchibroda became tired of Irsay's meddling and told Irsay to find a new coach. Irsay accepted the resignation but Bert Jones led a players revolt and Marchibroda was rehired 3 days later and given complete control of personnel. As I got older, I realized there was more involved than Jones, but it made quite an impression on me at the time. It was sad when the Jones and Carr injuries, along with Lydell Mitchell forcing a trade, brought that team down.
 
It would be downhill after 1977
Preseason games don't matter. Except when you return your starter to the final preseason game long after he was done to try to secure the win by running a flea flicker just because you were 0-3 to that point.

Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Bert Jones didn't play.
I try to forget the first Monday Night Football game in '78. Fondly remember the week three upset, But the week 10 game against Washington is the one I fondly remember. Maybe the last of that era. Bert Jones had only briefly played week 7 against the Jets during that season until now and the rust showed. And by the time the rust was getting knocked off the pain in the shoulder was obvious. The way he held his arm you were waiting for it to fall off.

(Forgive me if this is behind a pay wall as it was the only thing I could find - https://www.nytimes.com/1978/11/08/archives/bert-jones-makes-colts-go-camera-records-his-pain.html )

From the opening paragraph-
Confirmation comes from Roger Carr, the wide receiver with the big ears, who said after Baltimore beat Washington, 21‐17, on Monday night, “Bert is the heart and guts of this team.”
:
At last ‘came the winning touch- down pass to Carr with three minutes left and accolades followed for the 27year‐old athlete from Ruston, La., now in his sixth pro season.

Carr said: “He wasn't right until the fourth quarter and then that last touchdown. The ball had all the oldtime rap.”

What if preseason really didn't matter? (Sure there were other anchors around those Colts, but what if Jones is standing on the sideline at the end of that last preseason game where he belonged.)
 
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It would be downhill after 1977
Preseason games don't matter. Except when you return your starter to the final preseason game long after he was done to try to secure the win by running a flea flicker just because you were 0-3 to that point.

Oh.....the Joe Washington game. Bert Jones didn't play.
I try to forget the first Monday Night Football game in '78. Fondly remember the week three upset, But the week 10 game against Washington is the one I fondly remember. Maybe the last of that era. Bert Jones had only briefly played week 7 against the Jets during that season until now and the rust showed. And by the time the rust was getting knocked off the pain in the shoulder was obvious. The way he held his arm you were waiting for it to fall off.

(Forgive me if this is behind a pay wall as it was the only thing I could find - https://www.nytimes.com/1978/11/08/archives/bert-jones-makes-colts-go-camera-records-his-pain.html )

From the opening paragraph-
Confirmation comes from Roger Carr, the wide receiver with the big ears, who said after Baltimore beat Washington, 21‐17, on Monday night, “Bert is the heart and guts of this team.”
:
At last ‘came the winning touch- down pass to Carr with three minutes left and accolades followed for the 27year‐old athlete from Ruston, La., now in his sixth pro season.

Carr said: “He wasn't right until the fourth quarter and then that last touchdown. The ball had all the oldtime rap.”

What if preseason really didn't matter? (Sure there were other anchors around those Colts, but what if Jones is standing on the sideline at the end of that last preseason game where he belonged.)
Bill Belichick called Bert Jones the best pure passer he's ever seen, including Tom Brady. He was destined to be a HOF'er until injuries robbed him.
 
Bill Belichick called Bert Jones the best pure passer he's ever seen, including Tom Brady. He was destined to be a HOF'er until injuries robbed him.
Give Bert Jones a fifteen year career on decent teams and a championship or two and he would be in the greatest of all time conversation,

But this is a Roger Carr thread, and those injuries robbed from him also.
 
I was a diehard Colts fan and remember Carr very well. That Colts team was really good; they were just stuck behind the Steelers & Raiders. They also had Glenn Doughty (the "possession" WR) & Ray Chester at TE.

Carr might have been faster than a 4.3 40. Timing procedures weren't as reliable back then as they are now.
 

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