Age: 22
College: Southern California
Height: 6’4” Weight: 230
Prelude:
An
All-American in college, Young was the second of two first-round draft picks
(sixth overall) by the Eagles in 1973. The outspoken rookie moved directly into
the starting lineup and backed up his words with production as part of the
“Fire High Gang” along with tall wide receivers Harold Carmichael (6’8”) and
Don Zimmerman (6’4”).
1973 Season Summary
Appeared in all
14 games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]
Pass
Receiving
Receptions – 55 [4, tied with Ed Podolak]
Most
receptions, game – 8 (for 108 yds.) vs. New England
11/4
Yards – 854 [4]
Most yards,
game – 113 (on 4 catches) at Dallas
11/18
Average gain
– 15.5 (19)
TDs – 6 [12,
tied with Jerome Barkum, Otto Stowe & Larry Brown]
100-yard
receiving games - 4
Rushing
Attempts – 4
Yards – 24
Average gain
– 6.0
TDs – 1
Kickoff
Returns
Returns – 1
Yards – 14
TDs – 0
Scoring
TDs – 7 [18,
tied with seven others]
Points – 42
Awards & Honors:
NFC Rookie of
the Year: UPI
1st
team All-NFL: AP, PFWA, Pro Football Weekly
2nd
team All-NFL: NEA
1st
team All-NFC: AP, Pro Football Weekly
2nd
team All-NFC: UPI
Pro Bowl
Eagles went 5-8-1
to finish third in the NFC East while leading the NFL in passing offense (2998
yds.).
Aftermath:
Young
followed up his outstanding rookie season by gathering in a NFC-leading 63
catches for 696 yards (11.0 avg.) and three touchdowns in 1974. He was again
selected to the Pro Bowl in 1974 and ’75, although his production dropped with
the offensively-challenged Eagles in 1975 and ’76. His first name also went
through several different changes, from Charles to Charlie, Charli, and finally
Charle. A contract dispute forced the trade of his rights to the Los Angeles
Rams in 1977 for QB Ron Jaworski, and he dropped into obscurity behind Terry
Nelson. In three seasons in LA, he caught just 36 passes. Moving on to San
Francisco, Young was a better fit and, in the 1981 Super Bowl-winning season,
had 37 pass receptions for 400 yards and five TDs. Following three years with
the 49ers, he finished up with three seasons with the Seattle Seahawks. For his
13-season career, Young caught 418 passes for 5106 yards (12.2 avg.) and 27
touchdowns and was selected to the Pro Bowl three times.
--
Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were named Rookie
of the Year in the NFL, AFL (1960-69), or USFL (1983-85) by a recognized
organization (Associated Press – Offense or Defense, Newspaper Enterprise
Association, United Press International, The Sporting News, or the league
itself – Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Year).
[Updated 2/6/14]
[Updated 2/6/14]
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