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Preston Pearson

 
Wikipedia: Preston Pearson
Preston Pearson
Date of birth: January 17, 1945 (1945-01-17) (age 64)
Place of birth: Freeport, Illinois, United States
Career information
Position(s): Running back
Jersey №: 26
College: Illinois
NFL Draft: 1967 / Round: 12 / Pick: 298
Organizations
 As player:
1967-1969
1970-1974
1975-1980
Baltimore Colts
Pittsburgh Steelers
Dallas Cowboys
Playing stats at NFL.com

Preston James Pearson (born January 17, 1945 in Freeport, Illinois) is a former professional American football running back in the National Football League who played for the Baltimore Colts (1967-1969), the Pittsburgh Steelers (1970-1974), and the Dallas Cowboys (1975-1980). Before his NFL career, he played for the University of Illinois, where he excelled at basketball. He didn't play college football.

Contents

Professional career

NFL

Pearson was drafted by the Baltimore Colts in the 12th round of the 1967 NFL Draft. Throughout his NFL career, Pearson was used frequently as a rusher, receiver, and kickoff returner on special teams. He played for some of the most famous teams of his era, and played in five Super Bowls (Super Bowl III, Super Bowl IX, Super Bowl X, Super Bowl XII, and Super Bowl XIII) -- tied for second most all-time.[1] His best season was in 1975, when he rushed for 509 yards, caught 27 passes for 351 yards, and gained another 391 yards on kickoff returns. He then went on to assist the Cowboys to a Super Bowl appearance by catching 12 passes for over 200 yards and three touchdowns in their two playoff games, including a seven reception, 123 yard, three touchdown performance against the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC title game. His team ended up losing the Super Bowl to the Pittsburgh Steelers, but he had a good performance—rushing for 14 yards and catching five passes for 53 yards.

In his 14 NFL seasons, Pearson rushed for 3,609 yards, caught 254 passes for 3,095 yards, returned seven punts for 40 yards, and gained 2,801 yards on kickoff returns. Overall, Pearson gained 9,545 total yards and scored 33 touchdowns (17 rushing, 13 receiving, two kickoff returns, one fumble recovery).

During the latter part of his career with the Dallas Cowboys, Pearson was widely recognized as the player who defined the position of "Third-down back" (now referred to as a "change-of-pace" back), paving the way for current players such as Mewelde Moore of the Steelers and Felix Jones of the Cowboys.

Pearson also holds the distinction of being one the few, if not the only, players to have been led by Don Shula, Chuck Noll and Tom Landry — three of the greatest coaches in NFL history with eight Super Bowl titles between them.

Not only were Pearson’s coaches Hall of Famers, but also his quarterbacks (Johnny Unitas, Terry Bradshaw and Roger Staubach), fellow running backs (Lenny Moore, Franco Harris and Tony Dorsett) are also enshrined in Canton.

Asia Pacific Football League

During the formation of the Asia Pacific Football League, Pearson was contracted by the league to consult and assist the league in its organizational efforts. What became of his role is unknown as the APFL never was formed.[citation needed]

After football

In 1981, Pearson teamed with Janie Tilford to form Pro-Style Associates. Pro-Style began by matching corporations with athletic talent to create a unique marketing endeavor for special events. Preston is the president of Pro-Style Assoc.

References

External links


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