#84
First | Last | College | Pos | Years | Games | Starts |
---|
Sam | McCullum | Montana State | WR | 1976-1981 | 91 | 78 |
Sam | Clancy | Pittsburgh | DE | 1982-1983 | 16 | 0 |
Dwight | Scales | Grambling State | WR | 1984 | 4 | 0 |
Danny | Greene | Washington | WR | 1985-1986 | 4 | 0 |
Louis | Clark | Mississippi State | WR | 1987-1992 | 56 | 15 |
Kelvin | Martin | Boston College | WR | 1993-1994 | 32 | 29 |
Joey | Galloway | Ohio State | WR | 1995-1999 | 72 | 67 |
Rufus | French | Mississippi | TE | 1999-2000 | 0 | 0 |
Bobby | Engram | Penn State | WR | 2001-2008 | 118 | 74 |
T.J. | Houshmandzadeh | Oregon State | WR | 2009 | 16 | 16 |
Sean | McGrath | Henderson State | TE | 2012 | 4 | 0 |
I told you it would get better...
If you want to appreciate Seahawks history, you probably already know about Jim Zorn and Steve Largent and some of the great defensive players in the '80s and '90s but there's a name you need to know about and that's
Sam McCullum. McCullum was an expansion draft choice who caught the first TD pass in Seahawk history and if that doesn't impress you then he went ahead and caught the second team TD also. He was a fixture in the offense right along Largent and was even named MVP by his teammates in 1980. He was often referred to a "Slow Sam" but he managed nearly 15 yards per reception, a number that would hold up very well even in today's explosive passing games.
McCullum was also famous as the team's union rep leading into the strike-shortened 1982 season. McCullum was cut just as the season was about to begin in a move many believed to be motivated not by his production on the field. It was a horribly way to end what was a very good Seahawk career and at least he did get to raise the 12th man flag in 2005 (although it was pre-season which is BS he deserves another shot!).
http://www.seahawks.com/videos-photos/v ... e6b94b899f
The next #84 was a defensive lineman,
Sam Clancy, who played one year before bolting for the USFL. He was the only lineman in team history to wear a number in the 80s as the practice was winding down league-wide.
**edit** turns out there was another DL-man who wore #82, see that post. Clancy was drafted as a TE which is why he wore #84.
Danny Greene was a former Husky who caught the TD on one of the craziest plays in team history. Monday Night Football vs. the LA Rams in 2005, Dave Krieg fumbled the snap, kicked the ball and somehow managed to pick it up and throw the ball to Greene for the score. Probably the only highlight you'll see of Greene in a Seahawk uniform.
Kelvin Martin is a cautionary tale of overpaying marginal players on Superbowl winning teams. Just saying.
Our most recent #84 was TE
Sean McGrath who played 4 games at the end of 2012 but was cut at the end of the last training camp. He seemed to do OK in Kansas City so not sure why we couldn't have used him.
While McCullum is a old-timers favorite, the MVP at #84 really comes down to two guys who currently reside 4th and 5th in all-time receiving yards in team history (McCullum is 8th).
Bobby Engram was a surprise cut by the Bears in 2001 and was snatched up by the Seahawks. He went on to become Mr. Reliable on 3rd downs and was one of Matt Hasselbeck's favorite targets during the high powered offenses of the early part of this century. Engram would top the list at quite a few other roster numbers in this series....
.... and I know some of you aren't going to l like it....
But the greatest #84 in team history is
Joey Galloway and I don't want to hear any bitching about it.
In Galloway's too brief Seahawk career he was nothing short of electric. He brought a dimension to Seahawk football that we never even knew existed. If you didn't see Galloway play imagine a little bit of what Percy Harvin has shown and that's similar to what Galloway did. When a guy has moves and speed on the field that defenders haven't seen before it just makes them look stupid, and Galloway had all that.
I'm not happy about how he left, and his holdout was a huge black eye that can never be healed, but Dallas didn't give up two #1s because they were stupid. If Galloway hadn't blown out his knee his first year in Dallas he'd be either IN or on his way to the hall of fame.
Galloways numbers in 3 1/2 years are about the same as Engram's in 7 years only with more touchdowns and more electric special teams.
I loved Engram as much as the next guy, but there just isn't any other choice here.
Because he also deserves it here's second place: