Mike Garrett
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Mike Garrett | |
|---|---|
Garrett at the 2003 USC awards presentation |
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| Date of birth | April 12, 1944 |
| Place of birth | |
| Position(s) | Running Back |
| College | USC |
| AFL Draft | 1966 / Round 20 / Pick 5 |
| NFL Draft | 1966 / Round 2 / Pick 18 |
| Jersey Number | 20 |
| Career highlights | |
| AFL All-Star | 1966, 1967 |
| Awards | 1965 Heisman Trophy |
| Stats | |
| Statistics | |
| Teams | |
| 1966-1969 1970 1970-1973 |
AFL Kansas City Chiefs NFL Kansas City Chiefs NFL San Diego Chargers |
| College Football Hall of Fame | |
Michael Lockett Garrett (born April 12, 1944 in Los Angeles, California) is a former American football player who won the 1965 Heisman Trophy as a tailback for the University of Southern California Trojans.
Garrett played professional football for eight seasons with the Kansas City Chiefs and San Diego Chargers and is currently the athletic director at USC.
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[edit] College career
A two time All-American, Garrett set numerous NCAA, Pac 10 Conference and USC records in his career by amassing a then unheard of 3,221 yards and scored 30 touchdowns. Garrett also led the nation in rushing in 1965 with 267 carries for 1,440 yards. He also caught 36 passes, returned 43 punts, returned 30 kickoffs and threw 6 passes. Two of his passes went for touchdowns. In 1985 he was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
Garrett signaled the dawn of the "Tailback U" era, where USC chugged out a stream of top tailbacks included Heisman winners O.J. Simpson ('68), Charles White ('79), Marcus Allen ('81), and Reggie Bush ('06); as well as Heisman runners-up Anthony Davis ('74) and Ricky Bell ('76).
[edit] Professional career
He went on to star in the American Football League playing for the Kansas City Chiefs (1966-1969) and the NFL Chiefs in 1970 before he was traded to the NFL San Diego Chargers (1970-1973). He was a two-time AFL All-Star in 1966 and 1967. Garrett played in the first ever AFL-NFL World Championship Game (Super Bowl I) with the Chiefs after the 1966 season. He contributed 17 rushing yards, 3 receptions for 28 yards, and 2 kickoff returns for 43 yards in their Super Bowl I loss. Garrett won a World Championship ring with the Chiefs in the last AFL-NFL World Championship Game (Super Bowl IV), when the AFL's Chiefs crushed the NFL's Vikings 23-7. Garrett was the top rusher of Super Bowl IV with 11 carries for 39 yards and a touchdown, also catching 2 passes for 25 yards and returning a kickoff for 18 yards. In his 8 professional football seasons, Garrett rushed for 5,481 yards, caught 238 passes for 2,010 yards, returned 14 kickoffs for 323 yards, and returned 39 punts for 235 yards. Overall, Garrett gained a total of 8,049 yards and scored 49 touchdowns(35 rushing, 13 receiving, 1 punt return).
[edit] After professional football
After his professional football career, Mike Garrett earned his Juris Doctor from Western State University College of Law in 1986, but never passed the bar exam. He was the director of business development for the Great Western Forum, worked in the district attorney's office in San Diego and worked in various management positions. He also did color commentary for USC football telecasts.
In January 1993, Garrett returned to USC to become its sixth Athletic Director. He came under fire when he hired the heavily-criticized Pete Carroll as head football coach in 2001, but redeemed himself when USC returned to status as a dominant football power.
[edit] Personal
Garrett graduated from Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles, California.
Garrett was a brother of Alpha Phi Omega while a student at USC.
Garret was a resident of Aliso Village housing projects
[edit] See also
Other American Football League players
[edit] External links
- Mike Garrett's biography at USC
- Mike Garrett's stats
- Mike Garrett's CHOF bio
- Mike Garrett Profile at USC Legends
| Preceded by John Huarte |
Heisman Trophy Winner 1965 |
Succeeded by Steve Spurrier |
| Preceded by Mike McGee |
University of Southern California Athletic Director 1993- |
Succeeded by Current |
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