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Deacon Jones

David D. "Deacon" Jones (December 9, 1938 – June 3, 2013) was an American professional football player who was a defensive end in the National Football League (NFL) for the Los Angeles Rams, San Diego Chargers, and the Washington Redskins. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980.

Deacon Jones
Jones in 1971
No. 75
Position:Defensive end
Personal information
Born:(1938-12-09)December 9, 1938
Eatonville, Florida, U.S.
Died:June 3, 2013(2013-06-03) (aged 74)
Anaheim Hills, California, U.S.
Height:6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Weight:272 lb (123 kg)
Career information
High school:Hungerford (Eatonville, Florida)
College:South Carolina State (1958)
Mississippi Valley State (1960)
NFL Draft:1961 / Round: 14 / Pick: 186
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Interceptions:2
Games played:191
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR
Pro Football Hall of Fame

Jones specialized in sacks, a term that he coined. Nicknamed "the Secretary of Defense", Jones is considered one of the greatest defensive players ever.[1] The Los Angeles Times called Jones "most valuable Ram of all time," and former Rams head coach George Allen called him the "greatest defensive end of modern football".[1]

Early life

Jones was born in Eatonville, Florida, and lived in a four-bedroom house with his family of ten.[2] Jones attended Hungerford High School, where he played football, baseball, and basketball.[3] During high school, Jones developed a lump in his thigh and learned that it was a tumor; he had surgery to remove it by Dr. Ron Alegria.[2]

Late in life, Jones told The San Diego Union-Tribune that when he was 14 years old, he witnessed a carload of white teenagers laughingly hit an elderly black woman with a watermelon. The woman died days later from the injury, and Jones recalls that there was never a police investigation. "Unlike many black people then, I was determined not to be what society said I was," Jones later recounted. "Thank God I had the ability to play a violent game like football. It gave me an outlet for the anger in my heart."[4]

College career

Jones' college football career consisted of a year at South Carolina State University in 1958, followed by a year of inactivity in 1959 and a final season at Mississippi Vocational College, now known as Mississippi Valley State University, in 1960.[5]

South Carolina State revoked Jones' scholarship after they learned that he participated in a protest during the Civil Rights Movement.[2] However, one of the assistant football coaches at South Carolina State was leaving to coach at Mississippi Vocational, and told Jones and some of the other African-American players that he could get them scholarships at the new school.[2] While he was playing at Mississippi Vocational, he and his African-American teammates had to sleep in cots in the opposing team's gym because motels would not take them on numerous occasions.[2]

Professional career

 
 

Due to a lack of television coverage and modern scouting networks, Jones was largely overlooked during his college career. According to an NFL Films interview with writer Ray Didinger, "Deacon was discovered kinda by accident. The Rams were scouting some running backs and they found this defensive tackle who was outrunning the running backs that they were scouting." Jones was drafted in the 14th round of the 1961 NFL Draft by the Los Angeles Rams. He then earned a starting role as a defensive end and teamed with tackle Merlin Olsen to give Los Angeles a perennial All-Pro left side of the defensive line.[5] He became a part of the Fearsome Foursome defensive line of the Rams (along with Lamar Lundy, Rosey Grier, and Olsen), which is now considered to have been one of the best defensive lines of all time.[6]

"I'm probably the toughest (expletive) here. Ain't no
question about that with me. I'm the toughest guy
here... I'm clean. I mean, I ain't got no marks on
me. I don't know nobody else who can say that
who came out of any sport. I ain't got no marks on
me, so I've got to be the baddest dude I know of."

Jones, in an interview with Kevin Jackson[7]

Jones won consensus All-Pro honors five straight years from 1965 through 1969 and was second-team All-Pro in 1964, 1970, and 1972. He was also in seven straight Pro Bowls, from 1964 to 1970, and was selected to an eighth after the 1972 season with the San Diego Chargers.[5] He was voted the team's Outstanding Defensive Lineman by the Los Angeles Rams Alumni in 1962, '64, '65, and '66. In 1971, Jones suffered a severely sprained arch, which caused him to miss four starts, and he ended the season with 4½ sacks, his career-low to that point.

Jones was traded along with Lee White and Greg Wojcik from the Rams to the San Diego Chargers for Jeff Staggs, a second-rounder in 1972 (30th overall—Jim Bertelsen) and a second and third-rounder in 1973 (31st and 60th overall—Cullen Bryant and Tim Stokes respectively) on January 29, 1972.[8][9] He was named San Diego's defensive captain and led all Chargers' defensive linemen in tackles and won a berth on the AFC Pro Bowl squad. He concluded his career with the Washington Redskins in 1974.[5] In the final game of his NFL career, the Redskins allowed him to kick the point-after-touchdown for the game's last score. Along the way, Jones was named the Associated Press NFL Defensive Player of the Week four times: week 14, 1967; week 12, 1968; week 11, 1969; and week 10, 1970.

An extremely durable player, Jones missed only six games of a possible 196 regular-season encounters in his 14 National Football League seasons.[5]

Sacks

Jones was considered by many to revolutionize the position of defensive end. He was credited with coining the phrase "sacking the quarterback".[10] He once stated that a quarterback being sacked devastated the offense in the same way that a city was devastated when it was sacked.[11] In 1999, Jones provided a Los Angeles Times reporter with some other detailed imagery about his forte: "You take all the offensive linemen and put them in a burlap bag, and then you take a baseball bat and beat on the bag. You're sacking them, you're bagging them. And that’s what you're doing with a quarterback."[4]

What separated Jones from every other defensive end was his speed and his ability to make tackles from sideline to sideline, which was unheard of in his time. He also was the first pass rusher to use the head slap, a move that he said was, "to give myself an initial head start on the pass rush, in other words an extra step. Because anytime you go upside a man's head … or a woman; they may have a tendency to blink they [sic] eyes or close they eyes. And that's all I needed."[12] "The head slap was not my invention, but Rembrandt, of course, did not invent painting. The quickness of my hands and the length of my arms, it was perfect for me. It was the greatest thing I ever did, and when I left the game, they outlawed it."[4]

Pro Football Weekly reported he accumulated 173.5 sacks over his career. The total would be third on the all-time sack list, which would have ranked first all-time at the time of his retirement by a substantial margin.[13] Pro-Football-Reference.com in 2021 confirmed this sack total with their research.[14]

In 1967, Jones had 21.5 sacks in only 14 games; he tallied 22 sacks in 14 games the following year. If official, this would have stood as an NFL record until Harvey Martin's 1977 campaign in which he totaled 23 sacks. This number was also equaled by Al Baker a year later. (The term "sack" had not yet been coined at the time, and official sack statistics were not recorded by the NFL until 1982.)[15]

(Source: Los Angeles Rams, San Diego Chargers and Washington Redskins Media Guides)

After football

Acting

Jones worked as a television actor, and appeared in numerous TV programs since the 1970s, most often appearing in cameo roles. He appeared in an episode of The Odd Couple where he and Oscar were in a television commercial selling shaving products. He appeared on The Brady Bunch, and in a Bewitched episode in 1969, he played a guard to the Giant's castle in "Sam & the Beanstalk". Jones also played himself on an episode of Wonder Woman in 1978.

In 1978, he played a Viking named Thall in The Norseman. Fellow Hall of Famer Fred Biletnikoff joined Jones in the film, also portraying a Norseman.[16] That same year, Jones portrayed a fierce defensive lineman named Gorman in the film Heaven Can Wait.

In the series G vs E, he played himself, but as an agent of "The Corps". He also played a role in the hit show, ALF, where he played a father figure to Alf.

Broadcasting

Jones served as a color analyst for Rams broadcasts on KMPC radio in the 1994 season, teaming with Steve Physioc and Jack Snow. In 1998, shortly before Super Bowl XXXII between the Denver Broncos and Green Bay Packers, Jones correctly predicted the Broncos, 11 1/2 point underdogs, would win the game and Terrell Davis would be named MVP of the game.

Business

Jones worked for many companies, including the Miller Brewing Company, Haggar Clothing, Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises, and Epson America, and represented the NFL and Champion Products as spokesman for their Throwback campaigns.[1] Jones was also chairman for AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals in their national hypertension awareness program.[1]

Community involvement

NFL.com reported that Jones made several trips to Iraq to visit the U. S. military.[1][17]

Jones served as the president and CEO of the Deacon Jones Foundation, an organization he founded in 1997 "to assist young people and the communities in which they live with a comprehensive program that includes education, mentoring, corporate internship, and community service."[1]

Bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles

Jones was one of the many former L.A. Rams players who disliked the team's controversial relocation to St. Louis in 1995. He was adamant in interviews and appearances that he played for Los Angeles, not St. Louis, and considered the Rams franchise there a different team that should have a different name.[citation needed] He participated in many grassroots efforts to bring NFL football back to L.A. and also voiced support on many new stadium proposals .[citation needed] The Rams eventually returned to Los Angeles in 2016 after Jones had died.

Honors

He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility in 1980, and was named to the NFL's 75th Anniversary All-Time Team in 1994.[1] In 1999, he was ranked number 13 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, the highest-ranked player to have played for the Rams franchise, the highest-ranked defensive end, and the second-ranked defensive lineman behind Bob Lilly. The same year, he was named by Sports Illustrated as the "Defensive End of the Century".[1] In 2010, he was named to the inaugural class of the Black College Football Hall of Fame.[18]

Personal life

Jones stated that he gave himself the nickname Deacon after joining the Rams because too many David Joneses were in the local phone book. "Football is a violent world and Deacon has a religious connotation," he told the Los Angeles Times in 1980. "I thought a name like that would be remembered."[29]

Jones' wife Elizabeth is the chief operating and financial officer of the Deacon Jones Foundation, based in Anaheim Hills, California,[2] the community in which the couple lived.

Jones was a rhythm and blues singer during his football days, and was backed by the band Nightshift, which later became the group War. Jones sang onstage with Ray Charles,[30] performed on The Hollywood Palace in 1967 and 1968, and on The Merv Griffin Show in 1970. Jones was the inspiration for the name of the 1977 song "Deacon Blues" by Steely Dan.[31]

Death

On June 3, 2013, Jones died at 74 of natural causes after suffering from lung cancer and heart disease at his home in Anaheim Hills, California.[32][33] Jones's death left Rosey Grier as the last surviving member of the Fearsome Foursome, the L.A. Rams defensive line which is widely considered the best such unit in the history of the NFL. Of the former defensive standout, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said, "Even with his fellow Hall of Famers, Deacon Jones held a special status. He was an icon among the icons." Washington Redskins General Manager Bruce Allen, son of Jones's longtime coach George Allen, called him "one of the greatest players in NFL history. Off the field... a true giant."[34] Sports Illustrated columnist Peter King noted at his death that Jones had a profound effect on the way defense was played in the NFL and cited the influence on such later NFL stars as Lawrence Taylor, Deion Sanders, and Michael Strahan.[35] As a tribute to Jones, the NFL created the Deacon Jones Award, which is given annually to the league leader in sacks.[36]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "About Deacon". Deacon Jones Foundation. Retrieved July 18, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e f . Pro Football Weekly. Archived from the original on September 5, 2001.
  3. ^ "The Very Frightening Secretary of Defense: Was Deacon Jones the NFL's Meanest". Deacon Jones Foundation. Retrieved July 23, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ a b c Goldstein, Richard (June 6, 2013). "Deacon Jones Dies at 74; Made Quarterback Sack Brutal and Enthralling". The New York Times. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Deacon Jones' HOF Profile". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved July 18, 2008.
  6. ^ Goldstein, Richard (February 26, 2007). "Lamar Lundy, Lineman on the Rams' Fearsome Foursome, Dies at 71". The New York Times. Retrieved July 21, 2008.
  7. ^ "10 Burning Questions for Deacon Jones". ESPN. Retrieved July 21, 2008.
  8. ^ "Chargers Trade for Deacon Jones," United Press International (UPI), Saturday, January 29, 1972. Retrieved November 1, 2020
  9. ^ 1972 NFL Draft Pick Transactions, February 1 (Rounds 1–7) & 2 (Rounds 8–17) – Pro Sports Transactions. Retrieved November 1, 2020
  10. ^ "Jones, NFL coiner of 'sack the quarterback,' dies at 74". CNN. June 4, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  11. ^ "Jones, NFL coiner of 'sack the quarterback,' dies at 74". CNN. June 4, 2013. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  12. ^ Deacon Jones' Equal Rights (& Lefts) For Women! on YouTube
  13. ^ Turney, John (June 26, 2000). "Setting the record straight on all of those QB takedowns". Pro Football Weekly online. Retrieved July 21, 2008.
  14. ^ "Career Sacks Leaders". ProFootballReference.com.
  15. ^ See Headslap by John Klawitter, 1996. pp. 551-560.
  16. ^ "The Norseman (1978)". IMDb. www.imdb.com. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
  17. ^ "Deacon Jones, Hall of Fame defensive end, dies at 74". National Football League. April 9, 2008. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  18. ^ "All Inductees". BlackCollegeFootballHOF.org. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  19. ^ "S.C. Athletic Hall of Fame: Honorees and Inductees". Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  20. ^ . Central Florida Sports Commission. Archived from the original on August 6, 2011. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  21. ^ . Florida Sports Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on February 26, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  23. ^ . BW SportsWire. August 24, 1999. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  25. ^ . Junior Seau Foundation. Archived from the original on May 7, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  26. ^ . FHSAA.org. December 12, 2007. Archived from the original on June 28, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  27. ^ Burwell, Bryan (September 27, 2009). "Rams finally getting around to retiring Deacon Jones' jersey". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. McClatchey-Tribune News Service. Retrieved March 18, 2014.
  28. ^ Alper, Josh (January 2, 2014). "Robert Mathis wins inaugural Deacon Jones Award". profootballtalk.nbcsports.com. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  29. ^ Thursby, Keith (June 4, 2013). "David 'Deacon' Jones dies at 74; Fearsome L.A. Rams lineman". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  30. ^ Farrar, Doug. "Legendary defensive end David 'Deacon' Jones dies at 74". Yahoo!.
  31. ^ Myers, Marc. "How Steely Dan created Deacon Blues". The Wall St. Journal.
  32. ^ "NFL Hall of Fame defensive end Deacon Jones dead at 74". Fox News. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  33. ^ Goldstein, Richard (June 4, 2013). "Deacon Jones, Fearsome N.F.L. Defensive End, Dies at 74". The New York Times. from the original on November 9, 2020.
  34. ^ "NFL legend Deacon Jones dies at 74". ESPN. June 4, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  35. ^ King, Peter. "Late Deacon Jones would have dominated any era". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
  36. ^ McIntyre, Brian (June 22, 2013). "NFL to honor annual sacks leader with Deacon Jones Award". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved June 22, 2013.

External links

  • Deacon Jones Foundation
  • Deacon Jones at the Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Career statistics and player information from Pro Football Reference
  • Deacon Jones at IMDb

deacon, jones, other, people, named, disambiguation, david, deacon, jones, december, 1938, june, 2013, american, professional, football, player, defensive, national, football, league, angeles, rams, diego, chargers, washington, redskins, inducted, into, footba. For other people named Deacon Jones see Deacon Jones disambiguation David D Deacon Jones December 9 1938 June 3 2013 was an American professional football player who was a defensive end in the National Football League NFL for the Los Angeles Rams San Diego Chargers and the Washington Redskins He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980 Deacon JonesJones in 1971No 75Position Defensive endPersonal informationBorn 1938 12 09 December 9 1938Eatonville Florida U S Died June 3 2013 2013 06 03 aged 74 Anaheim Hills California U S Height 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m Weight 272 lb 123 kg Career informationHigh school Hungerford Eatonville Florida College South Carolina State 1958 Mississippi Valley State 1960 NFL Draft 1961 Round 14 Pick 186Career historyLos Angeles Rams 1961 1971 San Diego Chargers 1972 1973 Washington Redskins 1974 Career highlights and awards2 NFL Defensive Player of the Year 1967 1968 5 First team All Pro 1965 1969 3 Second team All Pro 1964 1970 1972 8 Pro Bowl 1964 1970 1972 5 NFL sacks leader 1964 1965 1967 1969 NFL 1960s All Decade Team NFL 75th Anniversary All Time Team NFL 100th Anniversary All Time Team St Louis Football Ring of Fame Los Angeles Rams No 75 retiredCareer NFL statisticsInterceptions 2Games played 191Player stats at NFL com PFRPro Football Hall of FameJones specialized in sacks a term that he coined Nicknamed the Secretary of Defense Jones is considered one of the greatest defensive players ever 1 The Los Angeles Times called Jones most valuable Ram of all time and former Rams head coach George Allen called him the greatest defensive end of modern football 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 College career 3 Professional career 3 1 Sacks 4 After football 4 1 Acting 4 2 Broadcasting 4 3 Business 4 4 Community involvement 4 5 Bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles 5 Honors 6 Personal life 6 1 Death 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditJones was born in Eatonville Florida and lived in a four bedroom house with his family of ten 2 Jones attended Hungerford High School where he played football baseball and basketball 3 During high school Jones developed a lump in his thigh and learned that it was a tumor he had surgery to remove it by Dr Ron Alegria 2 Late in life Jones told The San Diego Union Tribune that when he was 14 years old he witnessed a carload of white teenagers laughingly hit an elderly black woman with a watermelon The woman died days later from the injury and Jones recalls that there was never a police investigation Unlike many black people then I was determined not to be what society said I was Jones later recounted Thank God I had the ability to play a violent game like football It gave me an outlet for the anger in my heart 4 College career EditJones college football career consisted of a year at South Carolina State University in 1958 followed by a year of inactivity in 1959 and a final season at Mississippi Vocational College now known as Mississippi Valley State University in 1960 5 South Carolina State revoked Jones scholarship after they learned that he participated in a protest during the Civil Rights Movement 2 However one of the assistant football coaches at South Carolina State was leaving to coach at Mississippi Vocational and told Jones and some of the other African American players that he could get them scholarships at the new school 2 While he was playing at Mississippi Vocational he and his African American teammates had to sleep in cots in the opposing team s gym because motels would not take them on numerous occasions 2 Professional career Edit Due to a lack of television coverage and modern scouting networks Jones was largely overlooked during his college career According to an NFL Films interview with writer Ray Didinger Deacon was discovered kinda by accident The Rams were scouting some running backs and they found this defensive tackle who was outrunning the running backs that they were scouting Jones was drafted in the 14th round of the 1961 NFL Draft by the Los Angeles Rams He then earned a starting role as a defensive end and teamed with tackle Merlin Olsen to give Los Angeles a perennial All Pro left side of the defensive line 5 He became a part of the Fearsome Foursome defensive line of the Rams along with Lamar Lundy Rosey Grier and Olsen which is now considered to have been one of the best defensive lines of all time 6 I m probably the toughest expletive here Ain t noquestion about that with me I m the toughest guyhere I m clean I mean I ain t got no marks onme I don t know nobody else who can say thatwho came out of any sport I ain t got no marks onme so I ve got to be the baddest dude I know of Jones in an interview with Kevin Jackson 7 Jones won consensus All Pro honors five straight years from 1965 through 1969 and was second team All Pro in 1964 1970 and 1972 He was also in seven straight Pro Bowls from 1964 to 1970 and was selected to an eighth after the 1972 season with the San Diego Chargers 5 He was voted the team s Outstanding Defensive Lineman by the Los Angeles Rams Alumni in 1962 64 65 and 66 In 1971 Jones suffered a severely sprained arch which caused him to miss four starts and he ended the season with 4 sacks his career low to that point Jones was traded along with Lee White and Greg Wojcik from the Rams to the San Diego Chargers for Jeff Staggs a second rounder in 1972 30th overall Jim Bertelsen and a second and third rounder in 1973 31st and 60th overall Cullen Bryant and Tim Stokes respectively on January 29 1972 8 9 He was named San Diego s defensive captain and led all Chargers defensive linemen in tackles and won a berth on the AFC Pro Bowl squad He concluded his career with the Washington Redskins in 1974 5 In the final game of his NFL career the Redskins allowed him to kick the point after touchdown for the game s last score Along the way Jones was named the Associated Press NFL Defensive Player of the Week four times week 14 1967 week 12 1968 week 11 1969 and week 10 1970 An extremely durable player Jones missed only six games of a possible 196 regular season encounters in his 14 National Football League seasons 5 Sacks Edit Jones was considered by many to revolutionize the position of defensive end He was credited with coining the phrase sacking the quarterback 10 He once stated that a quarterback being sacked devastated the offense in the same way that a city was devastated when it was sacked 11 In 1999 Jones provided a Los Angeles Times reporter with some other detailed imagery about his forte You take all the offensive linemen and put them in a burlap bag and then you take a baseball bat and beat on the bag You re sacking them you re bagging them And that s what you re doing with a quarterback 4 What separated Jones from every other defensive end was his speed and his ability to make tackles from sideline to sideline which was unheard of in his time He also was the first pass rusher to use the head slap a move that he said was to give myself an initial head start on the pass rush in other words an extra step Because anytime you go upside a man s head or a woman they may have a tendency to blink they sic eyes or close they eyes And that s all I needed 12 The head slap was not my invention but Rembrandt of course did not invent painting The quickness of my hands and the length of my arms it was perfect for me It was the greatest thing I ever did and when I left the game they outlawed it 4 Pro Football Weekly reported he accumulated 173 5 sacks over his career The total would be third on the all time sack list which would have ranked first all time at the time of his retirement by a substantial margin 13 Pro Football Reference com in 2021 confirmed this sack total with their research 14 In 1967 Jones had 21 5 sacks in only 14 games he tallied 22 sacks in 14 games the following year If official this would have stood as an NFL record until Harvey Martin s 1977 campaign in which he totaled 23 sacks This number was also equaled by Al Baker a year later The term sack had not yet been coined at the time and official sack statistics were not recorded by the NFL until 1982 15 Unofficial annual sack totalsYear Sacks Team1961 8 Los Angeles Rams1962 12 Los Angeles Rams1963 5 5 Los Angeles Rams1964 22 Los Angeles Rams1965 19 Los Angeles Rams1966 18 Los Angeles Rams1967 21 5 Los Angeles Rams1968 22 Los Angeles Rams1969 15 Los Angeles Rams1970 12 Los Angeles Rams1971 4 5 Los Angeles Rams1972 6 San Diego Chargers1973 5 San Diego Chargers1974 3 Washington Redskins Source Los Angeles Rams San Diego Chargers and Washington Redskins Media Guides After football EditActing Edit Jones worked as a television actor and appeared in numerous TV programs since the 1970s most often appearing in cameo roles He appeared in an episode of The Odd Couple where he and Oscar were in a television commercial selling shaving products He appeared on The Brady Bunch and in a Bewitched episode in 1969 he played a guard to the Giant s castle in Sam amp the Beanstalk Jones also played himself on an episode of Wonder Woman in 1978 In 1978 he played a Viking named Thall in The Norseman Fellow Hall of Famer Fred Biletnikoff joined Jones in the film also portraying a Norseman 16 That same year Jones portrayed a fierce defensive lineman named Gorman in the film Heaven Can Wait In the series G vs E he played himself but as an agent of The Corps He also played a role in the hit show ALF where he played a father figure to Alf Broadcasting Edit Jones served as a color analyst for Rams broadcasts on KMPC radio in the 1994 season teaming with Steve Physioc and Jack Snow In 1998 shortly before Super Bowl XXXII between the Denver Broncos and Green Bay Packers Jones correctly predicted the Broncos 11 1 2 point underdogs would win the game and Terrell Davis would be named MVP of the game Business Edit Jones worked for many companies including the Miller Brewing Company Haggar Clothing Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises and Epson America and represented the NFL and Champion Products as spokesman for their Throwback campaigns 1 Jones was also chairman for AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals in their national hypertension awareness program 1 Community involvement Edit NFL com reported that Jones made several trips to Iraq to visit the U S military 1 17 Jones served as the president and CEO of the Deacon Jones Foundation an organization he founded in 1997 to assist young people and the communities in which they live with a comprehensive program that includes education mentoring corporate internship and community service 1 Bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles Edit Jones was one of the many former L A Rams players who disliked the team s controversial relocation to St Louis in 1995 He was adamant in interviews and appearances that he played for Los Angeles not St Louis and considered the Rams franchise there a different team that should have a different name citation needed He participated in many grassroots efforts to bring NFL football back to L A and also voiced support on many new stadium proposals citation needed The Rams eventually returned to Los Angeles in 2016 after Jones had died Honors EditHe was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility in 1980 and was named to the NFL s 75th Anniversary All Time Team in 1994 1 In 1999 he was ranked number 13 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Football Players the highest ranked player to have played for the Rams franchise the highest ranked defensive end and the second ranked defensive lineman behind Bob Lilly The same year he was named by Sports Illustrated as the Defensive End of the Century 1 In 2010 he was named to the inaugural class of the Black College Football Hall of Fame 18 1980 Elected to South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame 19 1981 Voted to the Central Florida Sports Hall of Fame 20 1983 Elected to the Florida Sports Hall of Fame 21 1999 Recipient of the Gale Sayers Lifetime Spirit Achievement Award 22 1999 Awarded The Order of the Leather Helmet by the NFL Alumni Organization their highest honor 23 2001 Winner of the NFL Alumni Spirit Award for community service 24 2005 Recipient of the Junior Seau Foundation Legend of the Year Award 25 2007 Named to the Florida High School Association All Century Team which selected the Top 33 players in the 100 year history of high school football in Florida s history 26 2009 His number 75 was retired by the Rams on September 27 2009 27 2013 An award for the league leader in sacks is named in his honor and awarded for the first time Robert Mathis of the Indianapolis Colts was the inaugural award winner 28 Personal life EditJones stated that he gave himself the nickname Deacon after joining the Rams because too many David Joneses were in the local phone book Football is a violent world and Deacon has a religious connotation he told the Los Angeles Times in 1980 I thought a name like that would be remembered 29 Jones wife Elizabeth is the chief operating and financial officer of the Deacon Jones Foundation based in Anaheim Hills California 2 the community in which the couple lived Jones was a rhythm and blues singer during his football days and was backed by the band Nightshift which later became the group War Jones sang onstage with Ray Charles 30 performed on The Hollywood Palace in 1967 and 1968 and on The Merv Griffin Show in 1970 Jones was the inspiration for the name of the 1977 song Deacon Blues by Steely Dan 31 Death Edit On June 3 2013 Jones died at 74 of natural causes after suffering from lung cancer and heart disease at his home in Anaheim Hills California 32 33 Jones s death left Rosey Grier as the last surviving member of the Fearsome Foursome the L A Rams defensive line which is widely considered the best such unit in the history of the NFL Of the former defensive standout NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Even with his fellow Hall of Famers Deacon Jones held a special status He was an icon among the icons Washington Redskins General Manager Bruce Allen son of Jones s longtime coach George Allen called him one of the greatest players in NFL history Off the field a true giant 34 Sports Illustrated columnist Peter King noted at his death that Jones had a profound effect on the way defense was played in the NFL and cited the influence on such later NFL stars as Lawrence Taylor Deion Sanders and Michael Strahan 35 As a tribute to Jones the NFL created the Deacon Jones Award which is given annually to the league leader in sacks 36 References Edit a b c d e f g h About Deacon Deacon Jones Foundation Retrieved July 18 2008 a b c d e f Deacon Jones special Page One Pro Football Weekly Archived from the original on September 5 2001 The Very Frightening Secretary of Defense Was Deacon Jones the NFL s Meanest Deacon Jones Foundation Retrieved July 23 2008 permanent dead link a b c Goldstein Richard June 6 2013 Deacon Jones Dies at 74 Made Quarterback Sack Brutal and Enthralling The New York Times Retrieved June 6 2013 a b c d e Deacon Jones HOF Profile Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved July 18 2008 Goldstein Richard February 26 2007 Lamar Lundy Lineman on the Rams Fearsome Foursome Dies at 71 The New York Times Retrieved July 21 2008 10 Burning Questions for Deacon Jones ESPN Retrieved July 21 2008 Chargers Trade for Deacon Jones United Press International UPI Saturday January 29 1972 Retrieved November 1 2020 1972 NFL Draft Pick Transactions February 1 Rounds 1 7 amp 2 Rounds 8 17 Pro Sports Transactions Retrieved November 1 2020 Jones NFL coiner of sack the quarterback dies at 74 CNN June 4 2013 Retrieved June 4 2013 Jones NFL coiner of sack the quarterback dies at 74 CNN June 4 2013 Retrieved June 5 2013 Deacon Jones Equal Rights amp Lefts For Women on YouTube Turney John June 26 2000 Setting the record straight on all of those QB takedowns Pro Football Weekly online Retrieved July 21 2008 Career Sacks Leaders ProFootballReference com See Headslap by John Klawitter 1996 pp 551 560 The Norseman 1978 IMDb www imdb com Retrieved April 1 2011 Deacon Jones Hall of Fame defensive end dies at 74 National Football League April 9 2008 Retrieved June 4 2013 All Inductees BlackCollegeFootballHOF org Retrieved February 25 2021 S C Athletic Hall of Fame Honorees and Inductees Retrieved June 4 2013 Central Florida Sports Hall of Fame Central Florida Sports Commission Archived from the original on August 6 2011 Retrieved June 4 2013 Florida Sports Hall of Fame Inductees 1960 to Present Florida Sports Hall of Fame Archived from the original on February 26 2014 Retrieved June 4 2013 Spirit Awards Finalists Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved June 4 2013 NFL Alumni to Honor Len Dawson Deacon Jones and Paul Salata BW SportsWire August 24 1999 Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved June 4 2013 Felix Jones Named 2011 NFL Alumni Spirit Award Recipient Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved June 4 2013 Legend of the Year Junior Seau Foundation Archived from the original on May 7 2013 Retrieved June 4 2013 FHSAA announces 33 member All Century football team FHSAA org December 12 2007 Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved June 4 2013 Burwell Bryan September 27 2009 Rams finally getting around to retiring Deacon Jones jersey St Louis Post Dispatch McClatchey Tribune News Service Retrieved March 18 2014 Alper Josh January 2 2014 Robert Mathis wins inaugural Deacon Jones Award profootballtalk nbcsports com Retrieved January 2 2014 Thursby Keith June 4 2013 David Deacon Jones dies at 74 Fearsome L A Rams lineman Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 5 2013 Farrar Doug Legendary defensive end David Deacon Jones dies at 74 Yahoo Myers Marc How Steely Dan created Deacon Blues The Wall St Journal NFL Hall of Fame defensive end Deacon Jones dead at 74 Fox News Retrieved June 4 2013 Goldstein Richard June 4 2013 Deacon Jones Fearsome N F L Defensive End Dies at 74 The New York Times Archived from the original on November 9 2020 NFL legend Deacon Jones dies at 74 ESPN June 4 2013 Retrieved June 4 2013 King Peter Late Deacon Jones would have dominated any era Sports Illustrated Retrieved January 29 2016 McIntyre Brian June 22 2013 NFL to honor annual sacks leader with Deacon Jones Award Yahoo Sports Retrieved June 22 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deacon Jones Wikiquote has quotations related to Deacon Jones Deacon Jones Foundation Deacon Jones at the Pro Football Hall of Fame Career statistics and player information from Pro Football Reference Deacon Jones at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deacon Jones amp oldid 1147201850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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