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Jimmy Orr

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American football player (1935–2020)

Jimmy Orr
circa 1961
No. 44, 86, 28
PositionWide receiver
Personal information
Born(1935-10-04)October 4, 1935
Seneca, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedOctober 27, 2020(2020-10-27) (aged 85)
Brunswick, Georgia, U.S.
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight185 lb (84 kg)
Career information
High schoolSeneca (SC)
CollegeWake Forest
Clemson
Georgia
NFL draft1957: 25th round, 291st overall pick
Career history
Playing
* Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Coaching
Awards and highlights
Career NFL statistics
Receptions400
Receiving yards7,914
Receivingtouchdowns66
Rushing yards122
Stats atPro Football Reference

James Edward Orr Jr. (October 4, 1935 – October 27, 2020) was an American professionalfootball player who was awide receiver in theNational Football League (NFL) for 13 seasons, running from 1958 to 1970.

The speedy Orr was an unrecruited walk-on at theUniversity of Georgia in 1955 and was touted along with a fellow sophomorehalfback mate as "Zip Kids." It quickly became clear that Orr's forte was as a pass receiver rather than a runner, however, and he was cast in the role offlanker in the offense.

Drafted in the late rounds by theLos Angeles Rams in the1957 NFL draft, Orr was traded to thePittsburgh Steelers ahead of his debut 1958 season. There as asplit end he set team records en route to selection as the 1958NFL Rookie of the Year in both the Associated Press and United Press International polls. He was traded to theBaltimore Colts ahead of the1961 NFL season.

Orr played ten years in Baltimore and became a fan favorite, with the corner of the end zone ofMemorial Stadium where he caught many of his passes nicknamed "Orrsville." He retired a Super Bowl champion after the 1970 season.

Biography

[edit]

Early life

[edit]

Jimmy Orr was born October 4, 1935, inSeneca, South Carolina. His father, James Orr Sr., was a prominent doctor in the small community.[1]

He attendedSeneca Senior High School where he was a star basketball player, averaging 19 points a game over his last two years and earning All-State Class A honors.[1]

Orr only played one year of high school football, starting at quarterback.[2] Injuries had prevented him from playing more — a broken arm one year and a broken leg another.[3]

Despite his limited ability to get on the field, Orr's footspeed was impressive. "I had lots of scholarship offers," Orr later claimed, "but I decided to go to school to study — I wasn't going to play football at all."[3]

College career

[edit]

Orr initially enrolled atClemson College, the stateland-grant universityfor whites in his home state ofSouth Carolina, paying his own tuition.[3]

"I guess it was family pressure that got me into that — but I spent one semester there and quit," he recalled.

A desire for athletic competition remained. He had his uncle speak with a friend who was theUniversity of Georgia's former trainer, Neal Alford.[1] Alford encouraged Orr to try to make theBulldogs as awalk-on.[1]

Speedy sophomore halfbacks J.B. Davis (L) and Jimmy Orr were dubbed "The Zip Kids" by the local press in the fall of 1955.

In the spring of 1955 Orr transferred to Georgia and walked on a spring practice.[1] He was not only impressive enough carrying the ball athalfback that he not only made the Georgia team in 1955 but was offered anathletic scholarship beginning in 1956.[3]

As an incoming sophomore who had never played collegiate football elsewhere, Orr was immediately eligible to play for the Georgia varsity team. He began fall practice as the #2 right halfback[4] on the depth chart.[1]

The situation clarified by the time of the September 17 opener againstOle Miss. Orr's erstwhile competitor at right halfback, sophomore J.B. Davis, was moved to left halfback and the two speedy youngsters were paired in a backfield immediately nicknamed "The Zip Kids" by the press.[5] Although Georgia came up on the short end of a 26–13 score in the opener, a 27-yard pass fromquarterback Dick Young to Orr set up a 46-yard aerial strike to Orr — and excitement ensued.[5]

Orr's output in 1955 proved to be most peculiar, however. Although playing in all 10 of Georgia's games as a "halfback," he would carry the ball only 23 times, being limited to just 51 yards — a paltry average of 2.2 yards per carry.[6] Yardage gained through the air was quite another matter, however, with Orr snaring 43 passes for 443 yards and 3 touchdowns — an impressive average of 18.5 yards per catch.[6] Orr was quickly evolving into a "flanker back" — effectively the third receiver in a threeend offense. He would make his mark in the NFL atwide receiver, not as a running back.

Orr would receive aBachelor of Arts degree from Georgia in 1958.[7]

Professional career

[edit]

Los Angeles Rams

[edit]

Jimmy Orr almost missed selection in the1957 NFL draft, eventually taken by theLos Angeles Rams in the 25th round of the 30 round draft with the 291st pick overall.[8] Orr signed his contract with the Rams at the end of June 1958.[9]

College football reverted to thesingle platoon system for economic reasons in 1953 so at Georgia Orr saw game time both as a flanker on the offense and adefensive halfback on the other side of the ball. Intrigued by his speed but aware of the physical limitations of his slender body type in the violent NFL game, head coachSid Luckman and the Rams attempted to cast Orr as a defensive back at the pro level.[10] The experiment would prove short-lived.

Injuries to their ends force Luckman to move Orr to the offense in the last preseason game, a contest against thePittsburgh Steelers.[11] The speedburner got clear for a pass from Rams quarterbackFrank Ryan, with Orr motoring for a 72-yard touchdown to close out scoring in a 31–6 Rams win.[11] Notice was taken on the losing sideline.[11]

On September 24, shortly ahead of start of the1958 NFL season, Orr was traded along with defensive linemanBilly Ray Smith to the Steelers for a third round pick in the1958 draft.[8]

Pittsburgh Steelers

[edit]
Jimmy Orr as he appeared entering the 1959 season with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Jimmy Orr would spend his first three seasons inPittsburgh playing for thePittsburgh Steelers. There was no doubt in the mind of head coachBuddy Parker that in Jimmy Orr his team was acquiring an offensive player, with the local press listing the newcomer variously as a "halfback," "flanker," and "end."[12] His ability as apunter was also noted in training camp and Orr would quickly take on that role, kicking the ball 51 times for an average of 39.7 yards per punt in 1958.[8] Orr wore number 86 in Pittsburgh, a number made famous decades later byHines Ward and since removed from circulation in his honor.

Orr made the start in the season opener against theCleveland Browns at split end. The Steelers, perennially one of the worst teams in the NFL in this era, were soundly thrashed by the mighty Browns 45–12, with newcomer Jimmy Orr providing the best moment of the game for the home team. Spotted in the clear by Pittsburgh quarterbackEarl Morrall, Orr hauled in a pass and sprinted towards an apparent 77-yard touchdown — only to have the ball slip from his hands and bounce out of bounds on the 14 yard line.[13] Whether due to a case of the rookie jitters or another in a long list of examples of the Steelers being the Steelers, Pittsburgh nevertheless managed to make use of Orr's catch, scoring their only touchdown of the day four plays later.[13]

Professional spurs were won in early November, when Orr caught a ball, only to be crushed between two onrushingPhiladelphia Eagles defensive backs.[3]

"I was scared when I saw him get hit," recalled teammateBobby Layne. "He couldn't talk, his eyes were rolling around in his head, and his face was white. I thought he was hurt bad. You know what he said? The first thing he said was 'Did I hold the ball?' Then when they were taking him off the field, he turned around and said, 'I'll be right back.' He was, too — in one play that little critter was right back."[3]

Orr's rookie campaign was a sensational one, with the speedy receiver catching 33 balls for 910 yards, and what prove to be a career best average of 27.6 yards per catch.[8] His 910 yards gained in the air would stand as a Steelers rookie record until finally surpassed byJuJu Smith-Schuster in a 16-game season in 2017.[14] Orr's three touchdowns and 205 yards in the season finale against theChicago Cardinals were team records.[15]

Pittsburgh would finish the year 7–4-1 in the Eastern Division, their first winning record since 1949, with the Steelers victorious in their last seven games in a row.[16]

Both theAssociated Press writers' poll and theUnited Press International coaches' poll named Orr the 1958 NFL Rookie of the Year.[17]

Steeler head coachBuddy Parker was effusive, calling Orr "far and away the best rookie to play in our league last season."[16]

"No other freshman in the league broke club records like Orr did and only two well-established receivers likeDel Shofner of the Rams andLenny Moore of the Colts gained more yards than he did throughout the season," Parker said.[16] "I never saw a rookie pick up like Orr. He learned our system real fast and was a lot of help in the club going undefeated in its last seven games. Jimmy not only has good speed but he has a deceptive pace which makes him a hard fellow to cover. And if the ball is thrown anywhere near him he gets it and holds onto it."[16]

Orr's final two years in Pittsburgh represented solid performances, albeit nothing as sensational as his rookie debut. The1959 season began inauspiciously with a brief hospitalization resulting from a concussion suffered in training camp.[18] This was shortly followed by a knee injury in a preseason game against theChicago Bears when he was cheap-shot 40 yards away from the play by defensive backJack McClairen, sending him to the hospital again for x-rays.[19]

Orr caught 35 balls in 1959 — two more than his rookie year — but gained only about two-thirds as many yards with an average of 17.3 per catch and 5 touchdowns.[8]

In1960, numbers declined again, with Orr grabbing 59 balls for 541 yards (18.7 average) and 4 touchdowns.[8] Although Orr started all but one of the 36 games played by the Steelers over the course of his tenure, the team began to wonder if perhaps the slightly built 25-year old had passed his athletic peak.

With the1961 NFL season around the corner, Orr was traded in a five-player deal with theBaltimore Colts in July.[20] The trade, in which the Colts sent veteran linemenGene "Big Daddy" Lipscomb andBuzz Nutter to the Steelers, was touted by Colts head coach Weeb Ewback as part of a youth movement, with Baltimore also picking up two young and unproven linemen in the transaction,Joe Lewis andDick Campbell.[21]

Orr was ready to embark on the second part of his professional career, ten seasons in Baltimore.

Baltimore Colts

[edit]
Jimmy Orr snags a game-winning touchdown pass against the Washington Redskins, Dec. 1962.

The1961 season, Orr's first with the Colts, would be the least productive year of his NFL prime.

Orr gathered just 18 catches for 357 yards and 4 touchdowns for the year.[22] Back of this lowered output were nagging leg muscle injuries that hobbled the "slight but swift pass-snaring specialist,"[22] affecting his practice time[23] and limiting him to just 5 starts in the 13 games he played.[17] Orr was gaining the reputation for being "injury prone."[24]

Concerns among Colts fans about the trade of starting center Buzz Nutter and the popular defensive lineman "Big Daddy" Lipscomb would be soon forgotten, however, as in1962 Orr followed his worst season with his best, shortly after Orr was presumed dead due to an accident in theUnited States Army National Guard that involved another individual, Edward Orr, sharing a last name and age with Orr.[25]

Orr's breakout year in Colts blue was put into motion by head coachWeeb Ewbank, who in August moved offensive starLenny Moore from flanker — a pass-catching position which evolved from right halfback — to left halfback, a running back position starting behind the quarterback.[26] Jimmy Orr was moved from the split end position, which lined up directly on the left end of theline of scrimmage, to flanker, which started each play slightly behind the line of scrimmage on the right side.[26] The ability to dodge defenders at the line and accelerate into pass routes on the same side of the field that quarterbackJohnny Unitas rolled out had salutatory effect for the speedy-but-undersized Orr.

Orr was also blessed with good health in 1962, able to start all 14 games for the Colts in that season. The result was dramatic: Orr finished 1962 with career highs in receptions (55), yards gained (974), and touchdowns (11), numbers topping those of his stellar rookie year.[8]

Falling just 26 yards short of the elusive 1,000 mark, Orr was nonplussed. "It's my own fault," he joked after the season-ending route of theMinnesota Vikings. "I dropped two passes. I can't remember when I have dropped even one before that I didn't have to make a diving or twisting try for it."[27]

Surprisingly, Orr would not be tapped as an All-Pro in 1962.

The1963 and1964 Baltimore Colts seasons would be productive for Orr, who started 25 of a possible 28 games.[17] Orr gained 708 yards receiving in injury-hamperd 1963 and 867 yards in 1964 — averaging a best-in-league 21.7 yards per catch in the latter season.[17]

Orr would again win accolades in1965 when he snared 10 touchdown passes and gained 847 yards on 45 catches.[17] Following the season, Orr would be named a first team All-Pro by the Associated Press and would gain a spot in January to the1966 Pro Bowl game.[17]

Orr missed almost all of the1967 Baltimore Colts season with injury, came back to catch 29 balls for 743 yards — a league-leading 25.6 yards per catch — in1968, and was hurt again in1969 and1970, when he was relegated to a reserve role.[17]

Orr was a participant in twoSuper Bowls during his career. InSuper Bowl III, a memorable loss by the heavily favored Colts to the upstartNew York Jets of theAmerican Football League (AFL), Orr was involved in one play that subsequently gained legendary status.

On the last play of the first half, ColtsquarterbackEarl Morrall handed the ball toTom Matte, who threw alateral back to Morrall in aflea-flicker play. Orr, wide open at the 20-yard line with an easy path to theend zone, frantically waved for Morrall's attention, but Morrall did not see him and threw instead tofullbackJerry Hill, and the ball wasintercepted.[28]

Orr was also a member of the1970 Colts team that won theAFC championship and did battle with theDallas Cowboys of theNational Football Conference (NFC) inSuper Bowl V. Orr was in uniform but was not inserted into the game, limited to giving words of confidence to Colts kickerJim O'Brien, who hit a last second 32-yard field goal to ice a 16–13 Baltimore win.[29]

After the game, Jimmy Orr announced his retirement in conjunction with teammateBilly Ray Smith after 13 seasons in the National Football League:

"I'm retiring," Orr said. "Billy Ray and I started together with the Rams, then we were traded to the Steelers, and then he was traded to the Colts and he told them to trade for me, so he got me here. And now we're retiring together."[29]

Orr retired a Super Bowl champion, having garnered 400 career receptions for 7,914 receiving yards (19.8 average) and 66touchdowns.[17]

Life after football

[edit]

After retiring from football, Orr returned home to Georgia, where he operated a restaurant in Atlanta.[30]

Orr was an avid golfer in his free time.[8]

Death and legacy

[edit]

Jimmy Orr died October 27, 2020, atBrunswick, Georgia. He was 85 years old at the time of his death.

Orr is remembered for numerous touchdown catches made in the back right corner of the end zone — known to the Memorial Stadium faithful as "Orr's Corner" or "Orrsville."[31] "I must have caught 45 or 50 touchdowns in that right corner," Orr once recalled. "It was sloped some, a little downhill, which helped me, speed-wise. I wasn't all that fast."[31]

NFL career statistics

[edit]
Legend
Super Bowl champion
Led the league
BoldCareer high

Regular season

[edit]
YearTeamGamesReceiving
GPGSRecYdsAvgLngTD
1958PIT12123391027.6787
1959PIT12113560417.3435
1960PIT12122954118.7514
1961BAL1351835719.8644
1962BAL14145597417.78011
1963BAL12114170817.3605
1964BAL14144086721.7696
1965BAL14144584718.85710
1966BAL13133761816.7613
1967BAL5137224.0551
1968BAL13112974325.6846
1969BAL772547419.0472
1970BAL811019919.9292
Career1491264007,91419.88466

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefJim Anderson,"Seneca's Jimmy Orr is Called Georgia's 'Sleepingest Sleeper,'"Greenville [SC] News, Sept. 13, 1955; p. 11.
  2. ^Douglas Mauldin,"Seneca Faces Ex-Stars at 8,"Greenville News, Aug. 29, 1952; p. 20.
  3. ^abcdef"Steelers Find Gold in Orr, Rookie End,"Pittsburgh Press, Nov. 15, 1958; p. 30.
  4. ^Note: Through the middle-1950s football teams typically lined up with two ends and three running backs.
  5. ^abLarry Fox,"Soph Zip Kids Brace Georgia for 'Second Half' of Schedule,"Atlanta Constitution, Sept. 21, 1955; p. 7.
  6. ^ab"Jimmy Orr," College Football Reference, www.sports-reference.com/
  7. ^John Duxbury and Larry Shainman (eds.),Football Register 1968. St. Louis, MO: The Sporting News, 1968; p. 235.
  8. ^abcdefghJoe Marcin (ed.),Football Register 1971. St. Louis, MO: The Sporting News, 1971; p. 208.
  9. ^"Two Rams Sign,"Pittsburgh Press, June 30, 1958; p. 28.
  10. ^"Rams Defense Defeats Offense by 36 to 22,"Los Angeles Times, Aug. 3, 1958; part 3, p. 3.
  11. ^abcHarry Keck,"Jimmy Orr Didn't Think He Could Play in the Cold,"Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Dec. 1, 1958; p. 20.
  12. ^See, for example: Pat Livingston,"New Players to Help Club, Parker Says,"Pittsburgh Press, Sept. 26, 1958; p. 29.
  13. ^abGib Staley,"Browns Waltz to Easy 45–12 Victory Over Pittsburgh Steelers,"Somerset [PA] Daily American, Oct. 6, 1958; p. 5.
  14. ^Steelers rookie receiving records, single game
  15. ^Earl Wright,"Steelers' Orr Named Pro Rookie of the Year,"Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Jan. 4, 1959; p. 26.
  16. ^abcdJimmy Miller,"Selection of Orr As Rookie of Year No Surprise to Parker,"Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Jan. 4, 1959; p. 14.
  17. ^abcdefgh"Jimmy Orr," Pro Football Reference, www.pro-football-reference.com/
  18. ^"Orr Returns to Steeler Workouts,"Somerset [PA] Daily American, Aug. 6, 1959; p. 6.
  19. ^Jimmy Miller,"Bears' Tactics Irk Parker,"Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Aug. 31, 1959; p. 18.
  20. ^Jimmy Miller,"Steelers trade Orr, Lewis and Campbell,"Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 20, 1961, p. 27.
  21. ^Associated Press,"Ewbank Stresses Youth Movement for Colts,"Reading [PA] Eagle, July 20, 1961; p. 18.
  22. ^abBaltimore Colts: 1965 Press, Radio, TV. Baltimore, MD: Baltimore Colts, 1965; pp. 39–40.
  23. ^"Orr Joins Colts for 1962 season,"Baltimore Sun, May 11, 1962; p. 26.
  24. ^"Jimmy Orr Hurt in Practice,"Baltimore Sun, Aug. 4, 1962; p. 13.
  25. ^https://www.youtube.com/wYmlb3yo7TQ?si=_F9Uk0FjAgLSxij7[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ab"Ewbank Shifts Moore in First Major Colt Change,"Salisbury [MD] Daily Times, Aug. 10, 1962; p. 17.
  27. ^Cameron C. Snyder,"Jim Parker Turns Tiger," Dec. 17, 1962; p. 25.
  28. ^David Wellham,"Ex-Bulldogs Receiver Played in Two Superbowls, Dies at 85,"Atlanta Constitution, Oct. 29, 2020; p. C2.
  29. ^abNY Times News Service,"Morrall Makes Good on Second Chance in Super Bowl,"San Antonio Express, Jan. 18, 1971; p. 31.
  30. ^"Colts 1970 Media Guide (Baltimore)". August 26, 1970 – via Internet Archive.
  31. ^abDavid Ginsburg,"Former Colts WR Jimmy Orr Dies at 85,"Elwood [IN] Call-Leader, Oct. 29, 2020; p. 4.

External links

[edit]
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