- James Jett
Infobox NFLretired
caption=
position=Wide Receiver
number=82
birthdate=birth date and age|1970|12|28Charles Town, West Virginia
debutyear=1993
finalyear=2002
college=West Virginia
teams=
* Los Angeles / Oakland Raiders (1993-2002)
stat1label=Receptions
stat1value=256
stat2label=Receiving Yards
stat2value=4,417
stat3label=Touchdowns
stat3value=30
nfl=JET633634James S. Jett (born
December 28 ,1970 inCharles Town, West Virginia ), is a formerAmerican football wide receiver and Olympicsprinter who played nine seasons for the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders from 1993 to 2002, in theNational Football League . He attended college atWest Virginia University .Early life
Jett attended Jefferson High School in
Shenandoah Junction, West Virginia , where he earned his diploma through a special IEP completion program.Collegiate career
Jett played
college football atWest Virginia University where he was a four-year starter at receiver and a seven-timeAll-American in track and competed for the gold medal winning4 x 100 m relay team in the1992 Summer Olympics (James Jett outran eventual Olympic gold metalistCarl Lewis in100m during prelims to the games).Freshman season (1989)
Jett entered the 1989 season as the only true freshman to play on the eventual
Fiesta Bowl team. Jett was one of the targets, along with seniorReggie Rembert , for All-American quarterbackMajor Harris . Along with receiving, Jett led the Mountaineers as areturn specialist . Jett finished the season with only 8 receptions but 179 yards and three touchdowns. He also had a total of 35 returns for 504 yards.ophomore season (1990)
Jett entered his sophomore season in 1990 as the leading returning receiver for the Mountaineers, who lost both Rembert and Harris. Jett totaled his best statistical season in his career, recording 31 receptions for 652 yards and 2 touchdowns. He also had a career-low 10 returns for 164 yards.
Junior season (1991)
As a junior, Jett saw his numbers decrease to only 9 receptions for 171 yards and two touchdowns. However, he totaled 45 returns for 619 yards, both career-highs. Jett also had five carries for 28 yards and a pass for 27 yards. He finished the season with 845
all-purpose yards.enior season (1992)
In his final collegiate season, James Jett recorded 19 receptions for 382 yards and 4 touchdowns. He also had 35 returns for 333 yards. Jett finished his career against
Louisiana Tech , where Jett was on the receiving end of a stadium-record 78-yard touchdown reception.Jett played in the
Japan Bowl All-Star game upon his graduation.Legacy
James Jett finished his career with 67 receptions for 1,384 yards and 11 touchdowns. He also had 125 returns for 1,620 yards, totaling 3,076 career all-purpose yards. His all-purpose yardage was fifth on WVU's all-time career list, while his receiving totals was eighth at the time of his graduation.
Jett was inducted into the
West Virginia University Sports Hall of Fame in 2002.Professional career
1993-1995
James Jett signed with the
Los Angeles Raiders as anundrafted free agent following the1993 NFL Draft .During his
rookie season, Jett lead theNFL with over 23 yards per reception and also recorded 771 yards on 33 receptions for 3 touchdowns. Jett averaged 48.2 yards per game his debut season, played in all 16 games but only starting one.In the 1994 season, Jett played in all 16 games, only starting one, again. However, he only recorded 15 receptions for 253 yards (16.9 yards per reception). In 1995, Jett played in all the games on the season but did not start any contests. He finished the season with 13 receptions for 179 yards and a touchdown.
1996-1998
In 1996, Jett finally started all 16 games on the year. At age 26, he recorded 43 receptions for 601 yards and 4 touchdowns. Jett won the
NFL Fastest Man Competition following the season.The following season, he was second among NFL receivers with a personal-best 12 touchdowns in 1997. Jett finished with a career-high 46 receptions for 804 yards. Jett was a finalist in the NFL Fastest Man Competition after winning the competition the previous season.
In the 1998 season, Jett recorded a career-high 882 yards on 45 receptions for 6 touchdowns. He also tallied a career-high 55 yards per game in his final season of starting all 16 games.
1999-2002
At 29 years old, in 1999, Jett recorded 552 yards on 39 receptions for 2 touchdowns. The following year, 2000, he finished with 20 receptions for 356 yards and 2 touchdowns, including a career-long 84-yard reception against the
Atlanta Falcons .In 2001, at 31-years old, Jett played in 11 games on the season, recording two receptions for 19 yards. In his final professional season, 2002, the 32-year old played in and started only one game, but did not record a statistic.
Legacy
James Jett finished his career with 256 receptions for 4,417 yards and 30 touchdowns, a 17.3 yard per reception average. Jett finished his career as the 8th-leading receiver in
Oakland Raiders team history.
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