Oakland Raiders I caught part of a replay
of Super Bowl XXII the other day on NFL Network, Oakland Raiders and it was the
start of the third quarter between the Washington Redskins and the Denver
Broncos when announcer Al Michaels said something that caught my
attention. Oakland Raiders It actually made me pause the DVR, hit rewind and
play again so I could hear Michaels one more time. And then another. Oakland
Raiders Sure, there had been rumors that Al Davis had been enamored with
quarterback Doug Williams. Oakland Raiders But in the third quarter of that
Super Bowl, Oakland Raiders after Williams had essentially won the game for Washington with an epic
second quarter that featured five touchdowns, Michaels told the tale. He
reported that Williams had been ticketed to the then-Los Angeles Raiders the
Monday before the NFL’s 1987 regular season was to begin. Then-Washington coach
Joe Gibbs had even told Williams he was on his way to the Raiders. But then,
according to Michaels, the Raiders balked at Washington’s price a
first-round draft pick, or a very good player. Now, we’ve already heard the
tales of John Elway coming so close to being a Raider, and how the Raiders should
have drafted Dan Marino in that same 1983 draft after the purported draft-day
trade to land Elway fell through. And while the Williams-to-the-Raiders story
might not have that same intrigue as either Elway or Marino wearing Silver and
Black, it is interesting nonetheless. Especially when you consider what
Williams accomplished later that strike-torn season, and when you realize who
the Raiders instead used that first-round pick on in the 1983 draft. Williams,
who had been the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ starting quarterback from 1978 through
1982 and had helped author three playoff appearances for them, was also a
pioneer as an African American quarterback, following in the footsteps of James
Harris and Joe Gilliam. And we know that Davis looked beyond skin tone when it
came to players he believed could play Davis
selected QB Eldridge Dickey in the first round of the 1968 draft and
Williams had the big arm Davis was always in search of. But after a contract
dispute ended his time in Tampa Bay, Williams played two seasons in the USFL before
resurfacing in Washington
in 1986 as Jay Schroeder's backup. Williams had not started an NFL game since
Jan. 9, 1983, a playoff loss to the Dallas Cowboys, so yeah, you could
imagine the Raiders not wanting to give up a first-rounder for him less than a
week before the 1987 season. Still, the Raiders were relatively unsettled under
center entering that season as Jim Plunkett had retired and Marc Wilson and
Rusty Hilger were the returners. But even as the Raiders got off to a 3-0
start, the wheels quickly fell off, thanks in part to the strike, which
cancelled one week of games and led to three weeks of replacement player games.
The Raiders finished 5-10, their worst record since going 1-13 in 1962, the
year before Davis arrived in Oakland. And two-time Super Bowl-winning
coach Tom Flores resigned following the season. Would Williams have saved the
season and steadied the Raiders' ship? Meanwhile, in Washington, Williams still had to bide his
time. Sure, he relieved Schroeder a few times in 1987 and even started two
regular-season games, but he did not become Washington’s
starter for good until there was 6:51 remaining in the third quarter of its
regular-season finale against Minnesota.
Williams, a huge team favorite, led Washington
on its playoff run, upsetting the Chicago Bears in the divisional
round and then upending the Vikings in the NFC title game. Then came Super
Sunday, in which he threw all four of his touchdown passes in the historic
second quarter and passed for a then-Super Bowl record 340 yards in
Washington’s 42-10 victory over Elway’s Broncos as Williams became the first
African-American starting quarterback to win a Super Bowl, a feat not matched
until Russell Wilson did it with theSeattle Seahawks this past
February. The trade that never happened between Oakland
and Washington seemed to work out best for Washington, at least on
the surface. But if the Raiders had given up their first-rounder in 1988, they
probably would have missed out on Tim Brown, Oakland Raiders though the Raiders
did do some wheeling and dealing later to acquire three first-rounders, which
they used on Brown, Terry McDaniel and Scott Davis. So, with hindsight always
being 20/20, Oakland Raiders do you essentially trade Doug Williams for Tim
Brown if you’re the Raiders? Oakland Raiders Whatever your answer, remember
this, Oakland Raiders the Raiders and Washington would get together for a trade
in 1988, a deal that would haunt the Raiders as they sent offensive tackle Jim
Lachey to Washington
for… wait for it . Schroeder. Oakland Raiders Williams would only play 15 more
games over the next two seasons before retiring, while Schroeder could not
fully win over the hearts and minds of the Raiders' locker room in five seasons,
Oakland Raiders.