- Otis Taylor (American football)
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For other people of the same name, see Otis Taylor (disambiguation).
Otis Taylor Date of birth August 11, 1942 Place of birth Houston, TX Position(s) Flanker College Prairie View AFL Draft 1965 / Round 5 / 5th Pick Jersey Number 89 Career highlights AFL All-Star 1966 AFC-NFC
Pro Bowl1971, 1972 Honors AFL Champion, 1966, 1969
World Champion, 1969
1× All-AFL (1966)
1× Second-team All-AFL (1967)
2× All-Pro (1971, 1972)Stats Statistics Teams 1965-1969
1970-1975AFL Kansas City Chiefs
NFL Kansas City ChiefsOtis Taylor (born August 11, 1942, in Houston, Texas) was an American college and professional American football player, for Prairie View A&M University and the American Football League's Kansas City Chiefs. Standing 6-foot-3 and weighing 215 pounds, Taylor possessed sure hands and served as a devastating upfield blocker, springing Chiefs running backs for many long runs.
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Professional career
Taylor was drafted by both the AFL (Chiefs) and NFL (Philadelphia Eagles) in 1965. After a famous "baby-sitting" incident, in which Taylor "escaped" from NFL scouts, he was signed for the Chiefs by their legendary scout Lloyd Wells. Taylor caught five touchdown passes during his rookie year, and followed that up in 1966 by leading the AFL with a 22.4 yd/catch average and finishing second in receiving yards (1,297). At season's end, he was voted First-team All-AFL and was selected for the 1966 AFL All-Star team. Taylor led the AFL in receiving touchdowns in 1967 with 11 and led the NFL in receiving yards in 1971 with 1,110. He made the AFC-NFC Pro Bowl twice and in 1971 was named Consensus All-Pro by the Associated Press (AP), the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), the Pro Football Writers Association (PFWA) and Pro Football Weekly. The PFWA also named him First-team All-Pro for the 1972 season. Taylor ranks second on the Chiefs' all-time list in receptions (410), receiving yards (7,306), receiving touchdowns (57) and 100-yard games (20).
Taylor combined with running back Robert Holmes for what was at the time the longest reception in Chiefs history in 1969 when he caught a pass from quarterback Mike Livingston for 79 yards, then lateraled to Holmes, who carried it another 14 yards for a touchdown. However, Taylor's most memorable highlight from that season came in the fourth and final AFL-NFL World Championship Game on January 11, 1970, when he caught a short pass, turned upfield and stiff-armed his way to a 46-yard touchdown in the Chiefs 23-7 upset victory over the NFL's champion, the Minnesota Vikings, who, before Super Bowl IV, had been dubbed by some as "the greatest team in pro football history".
"Otis made my job easy," former Chiefs quarterback and Hall of Famer Len Dawson said. "If you got the pass to Otis, you knew he'd catch it."
Ben Davidson incident
On 1 November 1970, the Chiefs led the Oakland Raiders 17-14 late in the fourth quarter, and a long run for a first-down run by Dawson apparently sealed victory for the Chiefs in the final minute when Dawson, as he lay on the ground, was speared by Raiders’ defensive end Ben Davidson, who dove into Dawson with his helmet, provoking Taylor to attack Davidson. After a bench-clearing brawl, offsetting penalties were called, nullifying the first down under the rules in effect at that time. The Chiefs were obliged to punt, and the Raiders tied the game on a George Blanda field goal with eight seconds to play. Taylor’s unwise retaliation against Davidson’s foul play not only cost the Chiefs a win, but Oakland won the AFC West with a season record of 8-4-2, while Kansas City finished 7-5-2 and out of the playoffs.[1] See also Chiefs–Raiders rivalry.
See also
References
External links
Philadelphia Eagles 1965 NFL Draft selections Ray Rissmiller • Al Nelson • Fred Hill • John Henderson • John Huarte • Gary Garrison • Erwin Will • Al Piraino • Floyd Hudlow • Rick Redman • Louis James • John Kuzniewski • John Fouse • Tom Longo • Otis Taylor • Jim Gray • Dave Austin • Bill Marcordes • Charley Englehart • Bob ShannDraft Years: 1955 • 1956 • 1957 • 1958 • 1959 • 1960 • 1961 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 • 1969 • 1970 • 1971 • 1972 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1977 • 1978 • 1979 • 1980 • 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011Kansas City Chiefs 1966 AFL Champions 52 Bud Abell | 84 Fred Arbanas | 10 Pete Beathard | 78 Bobby Bell | 61 Dennis Biodrowski | 38 Solomon Brannan | 81 Tommy Brooker | 87 Aaron Brown | 86 Buck Buchanan | 71 Ed Budde | 88 Chris Burford | 80 Reggie Carolan | 23 Bert Coan | 56 Walt Corey | 16 Len Dawson | 72 Tony DiMidio | 66 Wayne Frazier | 21 Mike Garrett | 65 Jon Gilliam | 69 Sherrill Headrick | 73 Dave Hill | 12 Jimmy Hill | 55 E. J. Holub | 20 Bobby Hunt | 85 Chuck Hurston | 82 Ed Lothamer | 75 Jerry Mays | 32 Curtis McClinton | 15 Mike Mercer | 64 Curt Merz | 22 Willie Mitchell | 25 Frank Pitts | 14 Bobby Ply | 60 Al Reynolds | 58 Andy Rice | 42 Johnny Robinson | 76 Hatch Rosdahl | 17 Fletcher Smith | 35 Smokey Stover | 89 Otis Taylor | 18 Emmitt Thomas | 45 Gene Thomas | 77 Jim Tyrer | 24 Fred Williamson | 44 Jerrel Wilson
Head Coach Hank Stram
Coaches Tom Bettis | Darrel Brewster | Tommy O'Boyle | Tom Pratt | Bill WalshKansas City Chiefs Super Bowl IV Champions 3 Jan Stenerud | 6 Warren McVea | 10 Mike Livingston | 12 Tom Flores | 14 Ed Podolak | 15 Jacky Lee | 16 Len Dawson (MVP) | 18 Emmitt Thomas | 20 Goldie Sellers | 21 Mike Garrett | 22 Willie Mitchell | 23 Paul Lowe | 24 Caesar Belser | 25 Frank Pitts | 30 Gloster Richardson | 32 Curtis McClinton | 38 Wendell Hayes | 40 Jim Marsalis | 42 Johnny Robinson | 44 Jerrel Wilson | 45 Robert Holmes | 46 Jim Kearney | 51 Jim Lynch | 55 E. J. Holub | 60 George Daney | 61 Curley Culp | 63 Willie Lanier | 65 Remi Prudhomme | 66 Bob Stein | 71 Ed Budde | 73 Dave Hill | 74 Gene Trosch | 75 Jerry Mays | 76 Mo Moorman | 77 Jim Tyrer | 78 Bobby Bell | 82 Ed Lothamer | 83 Morris Stroud | 84 Fred Arbanas | 85 Chuck Hurston | 86 Buck Buchanan | 87 Aaron Brown | 89 Otis Taylor
Head Coach: Hank Stram
Coaches: Tom Bettis | Darrel Brewster | Tommy O'Boyle | Tom Pratt | Bill WalshKansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame 1970: Lamar Hunt • 1971: Mack Lee Hill • 1972: Jerry Mays • 1973: Fred Arbanas • 1974: Johnny Robinson • 1975: Chris Burford • 1976: E.J. Holub • 1977: Jim Tyrer • 1978: Mike Garrett • 1979: Len Dawson • 1980: Bobby Bell • 1981: Buck Buchanan • 1982: Otis Taylor • 1984: Ed Budde • 1985: Willie Lanier • 1986: Emmitt Thomas • 1987: Hank Stram • 1988: Jerrel Wilson • 1989: Ed Podolak • 1990: Jim Lynch • 1991: Abner Haynes • 1992: Jan Stenerud • 1993: Sherrill Headrick • 1994: Jack Rudnay • 1995: Curtis McClinton • 1996: Deron Cherry • 1997: Dave Hill • 1998: Art Still • 1999: Lloyd Burruss • 2000: Christian Okoye • 2001: Derrick Thomas • 2002: John Alt • 2003: Gary Spani • 2004: Joe Delaney • 2005: Jack Steadman • 2006: Neil Smith • 2007: Albert Lewis • 2008: Curley Culp • 2009: Nick Lowery • 2010: Marty Schottenheimer
Categories:- American football wide receivers
- Kansas City Chiefs (AFL) players
- Kansas City Chiefs players
- American Football League All-Star players
- American Conference Pro Bowl players
- Prairie View A&M Panthers football players
- 1942 births
- Living people
- Violence in sports
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