(Redirected from Doug Williams (football player))
'Douglas Lee Williams' (born
August 9,
1955 in
Zachary, Louisiana) is a well-known
American football quarterback. Williams was best known for his MVP performance in
Super Bowl XXII against the
Denver Broncos.
Career
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Williams was the 17th overall pick of the
1978 NFL Draft, chosen by the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers out of
Grambling State. He led the Bucs to three
playoff appearances and one
NFC title game from 1979 to 1982, but an acrimonious contract dispute with owner
Hugh Culverhouse led Williams to leave the Bucs and the
NFL to play in the
United States Football League. His 31-34-1 regular season record, and 1-3 playoff record made him the best quarterback in Buc history. The Bucs, who had never been to the playoffs before Williams arrived, had gone to the playoffs three times in four years and played in the
1979 NFC Championship Game. The Bucs would not make the playoffs again until after the
1996 season, and lost 10 games in every season but one in that stretch. Many Bucs fans blame Culverhouse's refusal to bend in the negotiations with Williams as a major factor.
Oklahoma/Arizona Outlaws
In 1984, he joined the
Oklahoma Outlaws of the
United States Football League. He would lead his team in passing completing 261 out of 528 passes for 3,084 yards and threw 15 touchdowns, yet he also threw 21 interceptions, ending up with a passer rating of 60.5, during his team's dismal 6-12 season. In 1985, when his team moved to Arizona and fused with the
Arizona Wranglers to become the
Arizona Outlaws, Williams showed some improvement, completing 271 out of 509 passes for 3,673 yards with 21 touchdowns and 17 interceptions, ending up with a 76.4 passer rating. However, his Outlaws' just missed the playoffs with an 8-10 record.
Washington Redskins
After the USFL shut down in 1986, Williams returned to the NFL, joining the
Washington Redskins at the behest of Redskins coach
Joe Gibbs, who had been the quarterbacks coach at Tampa Bay when Williams was there.
Initially Williams served as the backup for starting quarterback
Jay Schroeder, but after Schroeder became injured, Williams ended up starting the last games of the 1987 regular season. When the Skins made the playoffs, Williams, with his 94.0 passer rating, remained starter. He led the team to
Super Bowl XXII in which they routed the
Denver Broncos, becoming the first black quarterback to play in a
Super Bowl, and as of
Super Bowl XLI, the only black quarterback to win one. On Media Day, Williams was reportedly asked one of the most famous questions in Media Day history: "How long have you been a black quarterback?" Although the question has become legendary, the story is seemingly an
urban legend, sprung up from a misunderstanding of some of the questions Williams was asked.
[1] [2]
Facing legendary Denver Broncos quarterback
John Elway, Williams engineered a 42-10 rout, in which the Redskins set an NFL record by scoring five touchdowns in the second quarter. Williams completed 18 of 29 passes for 340 yards, with four TD passes, and was named
Super Bowl MVP.
The
Super Bowl was clearly the high point of Williams' NFL career. He suffered from injuries the following season, and was outshined by
Mark Rypien, who eventually won the starting job from Williams. Williams would play one final season in
1989, as backup to Rypien, during the latter's first
Pro Bowl season.
Williams retired with a 6-8 record as Redskins starter (9-8, counting playoffs) and a 37-42-1 record as a regular season starter (41-43-1, including 7 playoff starts). He had 100 passing touchdowns, and 15 rushing touchdowns, in 88 NFL games.
His
throwback jersey remains one of the most popular jerseys sold by the Washington Redskins.
On the day before Super Bowl XXII, Williams had a 6-hour root canal surgery performed (under full anaesthetic) to repair an abcess under a dental bridge. The pain of this condition caused him to having not slept for several days, as reported in the book "Hit and Tell:War Stories of the NFL"(J.Hession/K.Lynch,Foghorn Press).
College Coach
Williams started off his college head coaching career at
Morehouse College in
1997. He also has previous
NFL experience as a scout for
Jacksonville in
1995 and as offensive coordinator for the
Scottish Claymores of the
World League of American Football in
1995, and tutored running backs for
Navy in
1994. Williams also excelled on the high school level as head coach and athletic director at Point Coupee High School in New Roads, Louisiana in
1991, and in
1993, he was head coach at Northeast High School in his hometown of Zachary, La., where he guided the team to a 13-1 record and the state semifinals.
Williams became the head football coach at
Grambling State University in 1998, succeeding the legendary
Eddie Robinson. He led the Tigers to 3 consecutive Southwestern Athletic Conference titles from 2000-2002, before leaving to rejoin the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as a personnel executive.
Williams currently works for Tampa Bay in the club's personnel department.
External links
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Was Doug Williams asked "How long have you been a black quarterback?"
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Shack Harris & Doug Williams Foundation