Age: 22
College: Oklahoma
State
Height: 6’3” Weight: 252
Prelude:
Determined to
improve their defense, the Chargers traded up in the 1986 NFL draft to take
O’Neal in the first round (8th overall). He was a two-time
All-American in college and moved quickly into the starting lineup where he
performed extremely well until a knee injury in the 13th game
knocked him out for the rest of the year.
1986 Season Summary
Appeared in 13
of 16 games
(Bracketed
numbers indicate league rank in Top 20)
Sacks – 12.5 [9]
Most sacks,
game – 5 vs. Dallas 11/16
Multi-sack
games (2 or more) – 3
Interceptions
– 2
Most
interceptions, game – 1 at NY Giants 9/14, at Kansas City 10/19
Int. return
yards – 22
Most int.
return yards, game – 17 (on 1 int.) at NY Giants 9/14
Int. TDs – 1 [4,
tied with 21 others]
Fumble
recoveries – 2
Forced fumbles
– 3
Tackles – 82
Scoring
TDs – 1
Points – 6
Awards &
Honors:
NFL Defensive
Rookie of the Year: AP, PFWA (co-winner)
AFC Rookie of
the Year: UPI
Chargers went
4-12 to finish fifth in the AFC West while tying for second in the NFL in sacks
(62).
Aftermath:
The severe
knee injury suffered late in his rookie season cost him all of 1987 and the
first half of ’88. By 1989 he was a Pro Bowl performer, listed as an outside
linebacker but often lining up as a down lineman while showing skill in
dropping back into pass coverage. He registered 12.5 sacks and another 13.5 in
1990 as he again received Pro Bowl recognition. A smart and savvy player on the
field, he took criticism for his attitude off of it. Following a lesser year in
1991, O’Neal was moved back to defensive end in ’92 and compiled a career-high
17 sacks as he again received Pro Bowl recognition. It was the first of four
straight Pro Bowl years as he solidified his reputation as one of the NFL’s top
pass rushers while registering 54 sacks. O’Neal left the Chargers as the club’s
all-time sack leader with 105.5 and joined the St. Louis Rams in 1996. After
two disappointing seasons in St. Louis, he moved on to the Chiefs for the final
two years of his career. Overall, O’Neal had 132.5 sacks, which ranked sixth
all-time at the time, and was chosen to the Pro Bowl on six occasions.
[Updated 6/14/13]
[Updated 6/14/13]
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Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were named Rookie
of the Year in the NFL (including NFC/AFC), 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).
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