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Al
Davis was an assistant
coach with the 1962 San
Diego Chargers of the
American Football League
when he signed a flanker
Lance Alworth to
a contract after a
spirited bidding battle
with the National
Football League’s San
Francisco 49ers...Book
Lance Alworth for Your Event
Lance epitomized the
glamorous,
crowd-pleasing, deadly
effective approach to
football the Chargers
exhibited in the early
years of the AFL,
enjoying nine
exceptional years in San
Diego before shifting to
Dallas for a final two
years with the 1971 and
1972 Cowboys. His
patented leaping catches
and blazing
after-the-catch runs are
legendary. Statistics
many times are
misleading, but in
Alworth's case, they are
not.
In 11 pro seasons, he
caught 542 passes for
10,266 yards, an
18.94-yard average and
85 touchdowns. During
his nine seasons with
the Chargers, the
graceful receiver
averaged more than 50
catches and 1,000 yards
per season.
He was named All-AFL
seven straight years
from 1963 to 1969 and
played in the league's
last seven All-Star
games. He caught at
least one pass in every
AFL game he played,
including a then-record
96 straight
regular-season games and
105 in a row, if you
count two AFL title
games and seven All-Star
appearances.
It seemed only fitting
that in 1978 he became
the first AFL player to
be elected to the Pro
Football Hall of Fame.
As Charley Hennigan,
himself a great
receiving star with the
Houston Oilers, once
said: "A player comes
along once in a lifetime
who alone is worth the
price of admission.
Lance Alworth was that
player!" |