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Don Woods (American football)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American football player (born 1951)

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Don Woods
Woods in 1976
No. 33, 47
PositionRunning back
Personal information
Born (1951-02-17)February 17, 1951 (age 74)
Denton, Texas, U.S.
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight210 lb (95 kg)
Career information
CollegeNew Mexico
NFL draft1974: 6th round, 134th overall pick
Career history
Awards and highlights
Career NFL statistics
Rushing attempts763
Rushing yards3,087
Rushing TDs16
Stats atPro Football Reference

Donald Ray Woods (born February 17, 1951) is an American former professionalfootball player who was arunning back for theSan Diego Chargers andSan Francisco 49ers of theNational Football League (NFL) from 1974 to 1980.

College career

[edit]

Woods attendedNew Mexico Highlands University for college before transferring to theUniversity of New Mexico his senior year when New Mexico Highlands dropped their football program.[1] He was a mobile quarterback for the Lobos, leading the team with both 869 yards on 52 of 124 passes, and 971 yards on 220 rushes for 11 touchdowns,[2] and winning the team's MVP award.[3] In a game against rivalNew Mexico St., he rushed for 188 yards, at the time the fourth most in school history, for which he won the UPI Back of the Week award on Sept. 15, 1973.[3] He also both rushed and passed for 100+ yards in the same game twice, againstUtah (100 and 134) andColorado St. (148 and 128).[3]

Professional career

[edit]

Woods was selected in the 6th Round of the1974 NFL draft by theGreen Bay Packers. Green Bay released Woods at the end oftraining camp and he was subsequently picked up by the Chargers early in the1974 season. He was used almost exclusively as a running back, despite playing quarterback in college (albeit one who ran almost twice as often as passed). The move proved very fruitful for San Diego, as Woods, despite not suiting up until the third week of the season, went on to set a then-NFL-rookie-rushing-record of 1,162 yards in only 12 games, including a then-rookie-record seven 100-yard rushing performances (weeks 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 12, and 14). Woods was selected the 1974NFL Rookie of the Year. His seven rushing touchdowns and 96.8 rushing yards per game remainChargers franchise rookie records, and his 1,162 rushing and 1,511 yards from scrimmage are second only to the numbersLaDainian Tomlinson put up in 2001.

A knee injury slowed Woods down during the1975 campaign and while having several solid years with the Chargers, was never able to recapture the electricity of his rookie campaign. Woods was eventually phased out of the Chargers offense and traded to San Francisco during the1980 season, finishing out his career that season with the 49ers. Woods finished his career with 3,087 career rushing yards and scored a total of 21 touchdowns. As of November 2021, Woods remains number 8 on the all-time Chargers rushing list.

NFL Career Statistics

[edit]
Source[4]RushingReceivingPassingKick Returns
YearTmGRushYdsTDRecYdsTDFmbCmpAttYdsTDIntSkRtYdsTDAPYd
1974SD12227116272634934132811036101572
1975SD58731721310101000000000418
1976SD11126450334224111211100000674
1977SD14118405118218120100001270650
1978SD16151514334295050000002370846
1979SD150000000000000110010
1980SD24100000012600100010
SF105022902017102000000000400
Career8576330871614513585153845211713504580

References

[edit]
  1. ^Gary Herron (August 3, 2010)."Former Rookie of the Year has celebrity golf tournament".www.rrobserver.com. Rio Rancho Observer. RetrievedAugust 19, 2014.
  2. ^"1973 New Mexico Lobos Stats".College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  3. ^abcSeeNew Mexico Sports Media Guide (PDF)
  4. ^"Don Woods Stats".Pro-Football-Reference.com.
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  • Bob Burns (1953)
  • Jerry Lott (1954–1956)
  • Chuck Roberts (1957–1958)
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  • Rick Beitler (1966)
  • Terry Stone (1967–1968)
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