- Jerrel Wilson
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Jerrel Wilson Date of birth October 4, 1941 Place of birth New Orleans, Louisiana Date of death April 9, 2005 (aged 63)Place of death New Orleans, Louisiana Position(s) Punter College Southern Mississippi Jersey Number 44 Career highlights AFL All-Star 3 times AFC-NFC
Pro Bowl3 times Honors AFL All-Time 2nd Team
Chiefs Hall of Fame, 1988Stats Statistics Teams 1963-1969
1970-1977
1978AFL Kansas City Chiefs
NFL Kansas City Chiefs
New England PatriotsJerrel "Thunderfoot" Wilson (1941–2005) was an American football player. He was a punter who spent sixteen professional seasons, fifteen of them with the Kansas City Chiefs, in the American Football League and then the National Football League. He was selected to three AFL All-Star Teams and three AFC-NFC Pro Bowls. Wilson was elected to the Chiefs Hall of Fame in 1988. He died of cancer on April 9, 2005.
His punts were high, booming shots that arched far down the field, potent weapons in the war for field position. Jerrel Wilson seemed to have the explosiveness of dynamite in his foot, hence the more-than-appropriate nickname of "Thunderfoot." The Southern Mississippi alum was the Chiefs' punter for a team record 15 seasons and is considered one of the best ever to play in the game.
Selected in the 11th round of Kansas City's much heralded 1963 AFL Draft that brought in Hall of Fame members Buck Buchanan and Bobby Bell and fellow Chiefs Hall of Famer Ed Budde, Wilson played more seasons than any player in team history, and his 203 games played are the third most for any player in franchise history behind only guard Will Shields (224) and kicker Nick Lowery (212). He left behind an impressive number of records and honors earned through his kicking expertise: A franchise-record 1,014 punts during his career; highest average yardage in a career with 43.6; in a season with 46.1; in a game with 56.5; and in World Championship games with 46.5. Wilson owns the NFL record for most seasons leading the league in punting average with four, leading in 1965, 1968, 1972 and 1973.
Said Hall of Fame head coach Hank Stram: "Jerrel Wilson made other people aware of how important the kicking game was at a time when special times were not given special consideration. I'm prejudiced, but he's the best punter I ever saw. He'll go down in history as the best kicker in the NFL."
He had four career punts of over 70 yards, each in the first two years of his career, which included a league leading 72 yard boot in his rookie year. He was named to three Pro Bowl teams in three consecutive years from 1970-1972. Wilson was also a reserve running back for the Chiefs and early in his career, accumulating 53 yards on 22 carries spread out over seven seasons. To close his career, Wilson played the 1978 season for the New England Patriots.
Wilson said of his punting style: "The way I attack the football, every time I hit it, I try to bust it, unless I'm around the 50. Then I hit it high. Basically, my power comes from everything. I try to snap everything I have in my body—my hips, knees, everything."
See also
External links
- American Football League Website
- Wilson's citation on the AFL Hall of Fame website
- American Football League All-time Team
- Jerrel Wilson - A Remembrance
- 1963 Kansas City Chiefs Draft
Kansas 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
Kansas 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 WalshAmerican Football League All-Time Team Joe Namath • Clem Daniels • Paul Lowe • Lance Alworth • Cookie Gilchrist* • Don Maynard • Fred Arbanas • Jim Otto • Ed Budde • Billy Shaw • Ron Mix • Jim Tyrer • George Blanda • Nick Buoniconti • Bobby Bell • George Webster • Johnny Robinson • George Saimes • Willie Brown • Dave Grayson • Houston Antwine • Tom Sestak • Jerry Mays • Gerry Philbin • Jerrel Wilson • Weeb EwbankCategories:- 1941 births
- 2005 deaths
- People from New Orleans, Louisiana
- American football running backs
- American football punters
- Southern Miss Golden Eagles football players
- Kansas City Chiefs (AFL) players
- Kansas City Chiefs players
- New England Patriots players
- American Football League All-Star players
- American Conference Pro Bowl players
- American Football League All-Time Team
- Cancer deaths in Louisiana
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