Fullback, Green
Bay Packers
Age: 23
(Sept. 7)
College: Ohio
State
Height: 6’0” Weight: 225
Prelude:
Brockington
started at halfback as a sophomore in college, backed up FB Jim Otis for a
year, and then started at fullback as a senior and rushed for a team-record
1142 yards and scored 17 TDs in 1970. He was chosen by the Packers in the first
round (ninth overall) of the ’71 NFL draft and moved directly into the starting
lineup in combination with HB Donny Anderson.
1971 Season Summary
Appeared and
started in all 14 games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]
Rushing
Attempts – 216
[5, tied with Ken Willard]
Most
attempts, game – 30 (for 142 yds.) at Chicago 11/7
Yards – 1105 [2,
1st in NFC]
Most yards,
game – 149 yards (on 23 carries) at Minnesota 11/14
Average gain
– 5.1 [4]
TDs – 4
100-yard
rushing games – 4
Pass
Receiving
Receptions – 14
Most
receptions, game – 3 (for 9 yds.) vs. NY Giants 9/19, (for 21 yds.) at St.
Louis 12/5
Yards – 98
Most yards,
game – 34 (on 2 catches) vs. Chicago 12/12
Average gain
– 7.0
TDs - 1
All-Purpose
yards – 1203 [10]
Scoring
TDs – 5
Points – 30
Awards & Honors:
NFL Offensive
Rookie of the Year: AP
NFC Rookie of
the Year: UPI, NEA, Sporting News
1st
team All-NFL: AP, PFWA, NEA, Pro Football Weekly
1st
team All-NFC: AP, UPI, Pro Football Weekly, Sporting News
Pro Bowl
Packers went 4-8-2
to finish fourth in the NFC Central.
Aftermath:
Brockington,
who had a new backfield mate in HB MacArthur Lane, followed up by rushing for
1027 yards as the Packers won the NFC Central in 1972 and then had a
career-high 1144 yards in ’73, which led the conference. He was chosen to the
Pro Bowl after each season, having become the first player in NFL history to
reach a thousand yards in each of his first three years. A straight-ahead
runner, he found the going more difficult over time as the team’s lack of a
credible passing attack had defenses keying on stopping the ground game. His
rookie yards-per-carry average was his best, as he averaged 3.7 and 4.3 yards,
respectively, in ’72 and ’73. After gaining 883 yards on the ground in 1974, in
addition to catching a career-high 43 passes, his production dropped sharply as
the wear and tear of his punishing running style began to take its toll and he
never again gained as many as 500 yards in a season. Released by the Packers
early in the 1977 season, he finished up with the Kansas City Chiefs. Overall,
Brockington rushed for 5185 yards on 1347 carries (all but 161 yards and 54
carries coming with Green Bay) and caught 157 passes for 1297 yards (19 for 222
yards with the Chiefs), scoring a total of 34 touchdowns (30 rushing, four
receiving).
--
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).
That was a guy who looked HOF-bound his first few years, but then tailed off, just like John Jefferson.
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