Former Pats receiver Stingley dies By DAVE GOLDBERG, AP Football Writer
25 minutes ago
Darryl Stingley spent more than half his life in a wheelchair, a symbol of the violence of the NFL, where large bodies collide at high speeds on every play. He was only 26 when he clashed head-on with the Raiders' Jack Tatum during an exhibition at the Oakland Coliseum as they leaped for a pass.
That play has haunted the NFL for nearly three decades.
On Thursday, the after-effects of Stingley's grievous injury finally took his life at age 55.
He was pronounced dead at Northwestern Memorial Hospital after he was found unresponsive in his Chicago home, according to Tony Brucci, an investigator with the Cook County medical examiner's office.
An autopsy revealed contributing factors were bronchial pneumonia, quadriplegia, spinal cord injury and coronary atherosclerosis, the medical examiner's office said.
Stingley was a star receiver with the New England Patriots when he collided with Tatum on Aug. 12, 1978. With one jolt, his life was forever changed. His neck was broken; he was left a quadriplegic. In time, he regained limited movement in his right arm and was able to operate his electric wheelchair on his own.
"I have relived that moment over and over again," he said in a 1988 interview with The Associated Press. "I was 26 years old at the time and I remember thinking, 'What's going to happen to me? If I live, what am I going to be like?' And then there were all those whys, whys, whys?
"It was only after I stopped asking why, that I was able to regroup and go on with my life," he said.
His death instantly rekindled the debate over the circumstances of the accident.
"I've thought about that throw over and over the years. Could I have changed anything or done anything differently?" Steve Grogan, the Patriots quarterback who threw the pass, said Thursday. "That hit probably was not necessary in a game with no meaning."
But Chuck Fairbanks, the Patriots' coach at the time, said he couldn't find anything illegal or dirty about it. Nor did the officials; no flag was thrown on Tatum.
"I saw replays many, many times, and many times Jack Tatum was criticized," Fairbanks said. "But there wasn't anything at the time that was illegal about that play. I do think probably that play was a forerunner for some of the changes in rules that exist today that are more protective of receivers, especially if there is head-to-head-type contact. I think that probably pre-empted some of the things that happened today."
Gene Upshaw, who played for the Raiders in that game, got to know Stingley well after the injury. Now executive director of the NFL Players Association, he helped push owners to provide benefits for disabled players: $48,000 in Stingley's time; $225,000 now.
"It was one of those things that happens that everyone regrets," Upshaw said. "I know a lot of people in New England think differently, but Jack had no intention of hurting him. I saw him hit people like that a lot of times. That was the way he played."
That style made Tatum a symbol of a violent game and he never was able to shed that reputation. He eventually wrote a book titled: "Final Confessions of NFL Assassin Jack Tatum."
Attempts to reach Tatum by telephone were unsuccessful.
Stingley, who worked as a consultant for the Patriots, often visited paralyzed patients in hospitals and lived a full life despite his disability. He wrote a book about his experiences entitled "Happy to Be Alive," in 1983, and 10 years later started a nonprofit foundation to help inner-city youth in Chicago, where he grew up and attended Marshall High School.
Tatum and Stingley never reconciled. In 1996, they were supposed to meet for a TV appearance, but Stingley called it off after being told it was to publicize Tatum's book.
But when he learned that Tatum needed to have part of a leg amputated because of diabetes, he empathized.
"You can't, as a human being, feel happy about something like that happening to another human being," Stingley told the Boston Globe in 2003. "Maybe the natural reaction is to think he got what was coming to him, but I don't accept human nature as our real nature. Human nature teaches us to hate. God teaches us to love."
Madden remained close to Stingley, visiting him in the hospital daily after the injury.
"After the game, when we found out that Darryl was paralyzed, John told him that from now on he was a Raider and we should treat him as one," Upshaw said.
During his induction last summer to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Madden's thoughts weren't far from Stingley when he said, "We all like to see hard, aggressive play, but you always want the guy to get up."
Ten years ago, there was another scare for Stingley and his family when his son, Derek, was hit in the chest during an Arena Football game in Albany, N.Y. He sustained a concussion, but was not seriously hurt.
Stingley was raised in Chicago and went to Purdue after starring at John Marshall High School. In 1973, the Patriots made him a first-round draft pick.
Just when he got hurt, he seemed ready to become one of the NFL's top receivers.
In 1977, he had 39 catches with a 16.8 average and five touchdowns. Those were very good figures in an era when defensive backs were allowed to hit receivers all over the field and linemen couldn't use their hands to block.
In 1978, when he was injured, the NFL changed rules to open up the game and enacted new ones that are still in effect — making a chuck illegal 5 yards past the line of scrimmage and giving linemen more leeway in their blocks.
Stingley is survived by his wife, Martine, and three sons, Hank, John and Derek. Funeral services are pending.
RIP Darryl Stingley.......
RIP Darryl Stingley.......
A stand up guy. Rest in peace Darryl.......
Stingley made 2 mistakes.
1. He went over the middle on that Raider defense.
2. He left his feet.
By leaving his feet he had no base from which to absorb the impact of a hit.
If he had had one foot down the result likely wouldn't have been the same.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fpbnPHoi04
Ugly play, ugly result.
1. He went over the middle on that Raider defense.
2. He left his feet.
By leaving his feet he had no base from which to absorb the impact of a hit.
If he had had one foot down the result likely wouldn't have been the same.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fpbnPHoi04
Ugly play, ugly result.
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is Stingley's pussy bleeding with all you AFC West assmasters?
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Re: RIP Darryl Stingley.......
X2mvscal wrote:I laughed.Neely8 wrote:A stand up guy.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
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Wet-Brained Fucktard wrote:I know we here like to talk shit and we do tend to get, how you say, immature at times. At some points, the banter on a board like this can be somewhat childish. It happens.
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Raydah James is going to be PISSED that you stole his thunder....![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
T1B- THE place to be for fun, informative sports talk....or NOT:
Wet-Brained Fucktard wrote:I know we here like to talk shit and we do tend to get, how you say, immature at times. At some points, the banter on a board like this can be somewhat childish. It happens.
charlie murphy story about darryl stingley is still the funniest thing ive ever seen on chappelle show. and it was an outtake bonus thinger.
you want me to shut your mouth, because thats the only thing moving right now.
i looked all over youtube and couldnt find the clip. sorry.
you want me to shut your mouth, because thats the only thing moving right now.
i looked all over youtube and couldnt find the clip. sorry.
help me scrape the mucus off my brain
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Was it head to head ? I remember reading "They Call Me Assassin" and Tatum had "the hook". Basically a clothesline move.
Here's a link that seemingly quotes the book.
As he describes: "The Hook is simply flexing your biceps and trying to catch the receiver's head in the joint between the forearm and the upper arm. It's like hitting with the biceps by using a headlock type of action. The purpose of the Hook was to strip the receiver of the ball, his helmet, his head, and his courage."
http://everything2.com/index.pl?node=The%20Hook
Here's a link that seemingly quotes the book.
As he describes: "The Hook is simply flexing your biceps and trying to catch the receiver's head in the joint between the forearm and the upper arm. It's like hitting with the biceps by using a headlock type of action. The purpose of the Hook was to strip the receiver of the ball, his helmet, his head, and his courage."
http://everything2.com/index.pl?node=The%20Hook
With all the horseshit around here, you'd think there'd be a pony somewhere.
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God Damnit Tom, the fucking video (complete with slo-mo) is a fucking few posts above.Tom In VA wrote:Was it head to head ? I remember reading "They Call Me Assassin" and Tatum had "the hook". Basically a clothesline move.
No, it wasnt "the hook", although i'd sure as hell like to give you that right about now.
The draft is a few weeks away, time for the lot of you fucking slouches to shape the hell up.
Don't get your panties in a bunch James. I couldn't tell from the video, it sounded like a head shot, but I recalled Tatum always talking about "the hook".Raydah James wrote:God Damnit Tom, the fucking video (complete with slo-mo) is a fucking few posts above.Tom In VA wrote:Was it head to head ? I remember reading "They Call Me Assassin" and Tatum had "the hook". Basically a clothesline move.
No, it wasnt "the hook", although i'd sure as hell like to give you that right about now.
The draft is a few weeks away, time for the lot of you fucking slouches to shape the hell up.
Sheez killer. I might have to dig up my copy of the book just to prove a point. Did you read it Raiduh man ?
Hell of book. Tough mofo Tatum is. Loved him.
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I'm sure Stingley spent the rest of his life WISHING he had gotten the hook. The hook was devastating, but it sure as hell wouldn't have paralyzed Stingley the way the clean hit Tatum laid on him did.Raydah James wrote:God Damnit Tom, the fucking video (complete with slo-mo) is a fucking few posts above.Tom In VA wrote:Was it head to head ? I remember reading "They Call Me Assassin" and Tatum had "the hook". Basically a clothesline move.
No, it wasnt "the hook", although i'd sure as hell like to give you that right about now.
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