The Quiet Receiver Who Was Always Known

Filed under: Articles, 2006 Pre-Season — sotg at 11:24 pm on Thursday, May 11, 2006

         Marvin Harrison is currently number 1 in receptions among active receivers with 927, but up until May 10th 2006, you may not have guessed who was 2nd . . . the best WR in the history of the Jacksonville Jaguar franchise, Jimmy Smith with 862; 70 of which he earned in 2005 as a 37-year-old while collecting another 1,000+ yard season.

          He retired Thursday where he went from the number 2 in receptions among active players to 7th all-time as well as 11th all-time in receiving yards with 12,287. He is also currently tied for 2nd all time with Tim Brown for 1,000-yard seasons with 9 while boasting 5 Pro-Bowl appearances in his 13 season career.

          But his stats are only the beginning of the story for the man his teammates call J-Smooth. Drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in 1992 as the 3rd receiver overall, Smith missed his rookie season after breaking his leg. In 1993 appendicitis required an emergency surgery. As a result, he suffered an infection and would eventually miss that season due to stomach problems that plagued him throughout the year.

In 1994, due to his lack of production, the Cowboys cut him. He made an effort to make the Philadelphia Eagles squad, but they too kept him off their roster leaving his NFL career for dead.

In 1995, however, with the birth of the Jaguar franchise, so was re-born the chance for greatness in the J-Smooth legacy. While he only earned 288 yards that year, it was the prelude to 7 straight 1,000 yard seasons which featured a 1600+ yard performance in 1999 where he collected 116 receptions. ’99 was not only the best year in Smith’s career, but also one of the best in the history of the Jaguar franchise that made it to a second AFC Championship game.

During 2001, Smith underwent 3 separate surgeries to remove scar tissue from his abdomen. The ordeal nearly ended his career. He managed not only to recover, but posted 112 catches for 1,373 yards.  Medical concerns would not be the only hurtle he faced that year as he was arrested that November for suspicion of drunk driving where it was alleged he tested positive for cocaine.

Sadly, the cocaine usage would resurface again in 2003 forcing Smith into a 4 game suspension and several weeks in rehab after publicly admitting his addiction. During the remaining 12 games in the season he gained 805 yards. He most assuredly would have gained 1,000+ had he played the full season, and thusly his run-in with drugs kept him out of the number 2 spot for consecutive 1,000-yard seasons where his 10 would be behind only Jerry Rice’s 11 .

While watching NFL Live on ESPN, I actually heard some moron try and claim that Jimmy Smith DOESN’T belong in the Hall of Fame, but was deserving of consideration.

In addition to all of his receiving feats, the Jags’ #82 was also a solid blocker and one of the best route runners. He was a player who quietly would record his 1,000+ yards and his 70 + catches every year while doing the little things his job required. Sure, you may have never heard about him because of the team he was on, but you never heard FROM him because of the lack of championships his team has played him in, or due to his discontent for his contract, or even playing this ridiculous “disrespect” card that players and even entire teams whine and cry about.

If you don’t find his stats to be credit enough by themselves, then look also at his character — a man who bounced back from constant medical adversity and even rehabilitated himself from a drug addiction to become the longest lasting piece of the Jacksonville passing puzzle. Much more than the “cat’s meow “, he was the Jaguars’ roar.

 

 


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