Mike Garrett

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Mike Garrett
refer to caption
Garrett in 1965
No. 21, 25, 20
Position:Running back
Personal information
Born: (1944-04-12) April 12, 1944 (age 80)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Height:5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Weight:191 lb (87 kg)
Career information
College:USC (1963–1965)
NFL draft:1966 / Round: 2 / Pick: 18
AFL draft:1966 / Round: 20 / Pick: 178
Career history
As a player:
As an administrator:
Career highlights and awards
Career AFL/NFL statistics
Rushing yards:5,481
Rushing average:4.2
Rushing touchdowns:35
Receptions:238
Receiving yards:2,010
Receiving touchdowns:13
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR

Michael Lockett Garrett (born April 12, 1944) is an American former football running back who played in the National Football League (NFL) and the American Football League (AFL) for eight seasons with the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Diego Chargers. He played college football for the USC Trojans, where he won the Heisman Trophy in 1965.

From 1993 until 2010 he served as the athletic director at the University of Southern California (USC).[1] Then, he became the athletic director at California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) in 2016.

Early life

Garrett graduated from Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles, California. He was a resident of Maravilla housing projects.

College career

A two time All-American, Garrett set numerous NCAA, Pac-8 Conference and USC records in his career by amassing a then unheard of 3,221 yards and scored 30 touchdowns. Garrett also led the nation in rushing in 1965 with 267 carries for 1,440 yards. He also caught 36 passes, returned 43 punts, returned 30 kickoffs and threw 6 passes. Two of his passes went for touchdowns. Garrett was awarded the 1965 W. J. Voit Memorial Trophy as the outstanding football player on the Pacific Coast. He won the Heisman Trophy after the 1965 regular season.[2] In 1985, he was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Garrett signaled the dawn of the "Tailback U" era, where USC produced a stream of top tailbacks included Heisman winners O. J. Simpson (1968), Charles White (1979) and Marcus Allen (1981), as well as Heisman runners-up Anthony Davis (1974) and Ricky Bell (1976).

Garrett was a brother of the Alpha Kappa Chapter of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity while a student at USC. He is a member of The Pigskin Club of Washington, D.C. National Intercollegiate All-American Football Players Honor Roll.

Professional career

Garrett went on to play in the American Football League (AFL) with Kansas City Chiefs from 1966 to 1969 and in 1970 as the Chiefs moved to the National Football League in 1970. He was traded to the San Diego Chargers and remained with them until 1973.

Garrett was a two-time AFL All-Star. in 1966 and 1967. He played in the first AFL–NFL World Championship Game, now referred to as Super Bowl I, with the Chiefs after the 1966 season. He contributed 17 rushing yards, three receptions for 28 yards, and two kickoff returns for 43 yards in their loss. Garrett won a World Championship ring with the Chiefs in Super Bowl IV, the last AFL–NFL World Championship Game before the AFL–NFL merger, when the AFL's Chiefs beat the NFL's Vikings, 23–7. Garrett was the top rusher of Super Bowl IV with 11 carries for 39 yards and a touchdown, also catching two passes for 25 yards and returning a kickoff for 18 yards. His touchdown came on head coach Hank Stram's iconic 65 Toss Power Trap play call. In his eight professional football seasons, Garrett rushed for 5,481 yards, caught 238 passes for 2,010 yards, returned 14 kickoffs for 323 yards, and returned 39 punts for 235 yards. Overall, Garrett gained a total of 8,049 yards and scored 49 touchdowns (35 rushing, 13 receiving, 1 punt return).

Garrett also was drafted three times by professional baseball teams. He was selected in the 41st round of the 1965 MLB Draft by the Pittsburgh Pirates and by the Los Angeles Dodgers twice, in the fourth round of the 1966 MLB Draft and the 35th round of the 1970 MLB Draft.[3]

NFL career statistics

Legend
Led the league
Won the AFL Championship
Won the Super Bowl
Bold Career high
Year Team Games Rushing Receiving Fumbles
GP GS Att Yds Avg Y/G Lng TD Rec Yds Avg Lng TD Fum FR
1966 KC 14 4 147 801 5.4 57.2 77 6 15 175 11.7 36 1 5 0
1967 KC 14 14 236 1,087 4.6 77.6 58 9 46 261 5.7 34 1 6 3
1968 KC 13 12 164 564 3.4 43.4 37 3 33 359 10.9 43 3 6 2
1969 KC 14 14 168 732 4.4 52.3 34 6 43 432 10.0 41 2 4 0
1970 KC 3 3 21 62 3.0 20.7 18 0 4 4 1.0 5 0 1 0
SD 9 2 46 146 3.2 16.2 22 1 10 127 12.7 44 1 3 1
1971 SD 13 11 140 591 4.2 45.5 36 4 41 283 6.9 40 3 6 2
1972 SD 14 14 272 1,031 3.8 73.6 41 6 31 245 7.9 27 1 8 2
1973 SD 10 9 114 467 4.1 46.7 68 0 15 124 8.3 30 1 6 1
Career 104 83 1,308 5,481 4.2 52.7 77 35 238 2,010 8.4 44 13 45 11

After professional football

After his professional football career, Mike Garrett earned a Juris Doctor from Western State University College of Law in 1986, but never took the bar exam. He was the director of business development for the Great Western Forum, worked in the district attorney's office in San Diego and worked in various management positions. He also did color commentary for USC football telecasts.

In January 1993, Garrett returned to USC to become its sixth athletic director. He came under fire when he hired the heavily criticized Pete Carroll as head football coach in 2001, but was vindicated when USC returned to status as a dominant football power. In 2005, he allowed safety Darnell Bing who was at USC at the time to wear his retired number 20 for his senior season. In 2010, the USC football program was hit with severe NCAA sanctions, and USC self-imposed sanctions on its basketball program, in the wake of allegations about violations involving former USC stars Reggie Bush and O. J. Mayo. These sanctions have been criticized by some NCAA football writers,[4][5][6][7][8] including ESPN's Ted Miller, who wrote, "It's become an accepted fact among informed college football observers that the NCAA sanctions against USC were a travesty of justice, and the NCAA's refusal to revisit that travesty are a massive act of cowardice on the part of the organization."[9] On July 20, 2010, USC's incoming president, Max Nikias, announced major changes in the athletic department, including Garrett's replacement (effective August 3, 2010) by businessman and former USC quarterback Pat Haden.[1][10]

In June 2013, Garrett became athletic director at the historically black college, Langston University, an NAIA school in Langston, Oklahoma. He resigned that position less than two years later.[11] He is a board member for the Lott IMPACT Trophy, which is named after Ronnie Lott and is awarded annually to college football's Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year.[12]

Garrett retired from the position of Executive Director of the Athletics Department at California State University, Los Angeles in 2016.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b USC President-Elect C. L. Max Nikias Announces New Leadership in Athletics Archived July 20, 2010, at archive.today, USC, July 20, 2010
  2. ^ Hall, John - GARRETT RUNS OFF WITH HEISMAN TROPHY - USC Ace Praises His Team - GARRETT HEISMAN WINNER. Los Angeles Times, November 24, 1965
  3. ^ "Mike Garrett minor league statistics & history". Baseball Reference.com.
  4. ^ Jay Bilas, "Anyone know what NCAA's standards are?", ESPN.com, July 1, 2010.
  5. ^ Bryant Gumbel, "Student/Athlete Behavior", Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, September 21, 2010.
  6. ^ Bryan Fischer, " Trojans never stood a chance after taking NCAA's best shot", CBSSports.com, May 26, 2011.
  7. ^ Pete Fiutak, "USC paying for NCAA's inconsistency?", FoxSports.com, May 26, 2011.
  8. ^ Stewart Mandel, "What USC's sanctions mean for Ohio State", SportsIllustrated.com, April 27, 2011.
  9. ^ "What we learned in the Pac-12: Week 14". December 4, 2011.
  10. ^ Billy Witz, "U.S.C. President-Elect Cleans House", New York Times, July 20, 2010.
  11. ^ Klein, Gary (April 16, 2015). "Former USC Athletic Director Mike Garrett leaving Langston University". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 4, 2024.
  12. ^ "Lott IMPACT Trophy -". Archived from the original on May 5, 2013. Retrieved December 15, 2011.

External links