From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sterling Sharpe
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| Born |
April 6, 1965 (1965-04-06)
(age 44)
Chicago, Illinois |
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Career information |
| Year(s) |
1988–1994 |
| NFL Draft |
1988 / Round: 1 / Pick: 7 |
| College |
South Carolina |
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Professional teams |
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|
Career stats |
| Receptions |
595 |
| Receiving Yards |
8,134 |
| Touchdowns |
65 |
| Stats
at NFL.com |
|
Career highlights and awards |
- 5× Pro Bowl selection
(1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994)
- 5× All-Pro selection
(1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994)
- Green Bay Packers Hall of
Fame
- Led NFL in receptions in 1989, 1992, and 1993
- Led NFL in receiving TDs in 1992 and 1994
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Sterling Sharpe (born April 6, 1965 in Chicago, Illinois) is a former American
football wide
receiver and currently an analyst for the NFL Network. He
attended the University of South Carolina, and played from 1988 to 1994 with the
Green Bay
Packers.
Early
life
Growing up, Sharpe lived in Glennville, Georgia with his
grandmother and siblings, including his brother, NFL Pro-Bowl tight
end Shannon
Sharpe. He attended Glennville High School playing running
back, quarterback, and linebacker and was a member of the basketball and track
teams. As a wide receiver at the University of South
Carolina, Sharpe set school records with 169 career receptions
and 2,497 receiving yards and a since-broken record of 17 career
touchdowns. He also set the school record for single-season
receiving touchdowns with 11, which was broken in 2005 by Sidney Rice. Sharpe's
#2 jersey was retired by South Carolina at the end of the 1987
regular season, making him only the second Gamecock to be granted
this honor while still playing. His college coach and mentor, William "Tank" Black,
left the Gamecocks to become a player manager and represented
Sharpe throughout his professional career.
NFL
career
Sharpe was the first round #7 overall draft pick by the Packers
in 1988 and
had an immediate impact on the team. In his rookie season he
started all sixteen games and caught 55 passes. His sophomore
season he led the league with 90 receptions, the first Packer to do
so since Don Hutson in
1945, and broke Hutson's records
for receptions and receiving yards in a season.
A few years later, in 1992, Sharpe and the new quarterback,
Brett Favre, teamed
up to become one of the top passing tandems in the league. In the
final game of that season he and Favre hooked up for Sharpe's 107th
reception of the season which broke the NFL's single-season
receptions record, set by Art
Monk in 1984. That season,
Sharpe became one of only seven players in NFL history to win the
"Triple Crown" at the receiver position: leading the league in
receiving yards, receiving touchdowns, and receptions. Don Hutson (1936, 1941,
1942, 1943, 1944), Elroy Hirsch (1951), Pete Pihos (1953), Raymond Berry (1959), Jerry Rice (1990) and Steve
Smith are the only other players to accomplish this feat. In
the 1993
season Sharpe subsequently broke his own record, with 112
receptions; this also made him the first player to have consecutive
seasons catching more than 100 passes. In 1994, his 18 touchdown
receptions were the second most in league history at the time,
behind only Jerry Rice's 22 in 1987.
Sterling Sharpe's tenure at wide receiver was cut short by a
neck injury suffered during the 1994 season, ending a career in which
he was named an All-Pro five times (1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, and 1994). Since he was unable to continue
playing, and was not on the team to get a Super Bowl ring in 1996, his
brother Shannon gave him the first of the three
he has won [1], citing him as
a major influence in his life by saying
|
“ |
The two people who
influenced me the most, good or bad, are Sterling and my
grandmother. Everything I know about being a man, about football,
everything I know about sports, pretty much in life, is because of
those two people.[2] |
” |
Sharpe is currently an NFL analyst. After several years with ESPN, he moved to the NFL Network in time for
the 2004
season, while continuing to do occasional work for ESPN as a color
commentator. Starting in the 2006 season, he joined NBC's new NFL programming, serving as an analyst,
along with Bob Costas,
Cris
Collinsworth, Peter King and Jerome Bettis. In
2007, he left his role at NBC and was replaced by Tiki Barber. He
continues to work on the NFL Network mainly as an analyst on the
program NFL Playbook.
His younger brother Shannon was one of the NFL's top tight
ends from the 1990s through the early 2000s. Shannon retired in 2003 and once
again followed in his brother's footsteps, becoming a sportscaster.
He has a son and a daughter
NFL
Record
Consecutive games with at least 4 receptions: 34
Personal
Sharpe was the cover subject and star of the 1995 Super Nintendo game
Sterling Sharpe: End 2 End produced by Jaleco. Sharpe also appears in the video game
NFL Street
2 as a member of the NFL Legends team a team depicting NFL
Legends of the 1970s and 1980s in their playing days.
References
| 1988 NFL Draft First
Round Selections |
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Draft
Years
70 • 71 • 72 •
73 • 74 • 75 •
76 • 77 • 78 •
79 • 80 • 81 •
82 • 83 • 84 •
85 • 86 • 87 •
88 • 89 • 90 •
91 • 92 • 93 •
94 • 95 • 96 •
97 • 98 • 99 •
00 • 01 • 02 •
03 • 04 • 05 •
06 • 07 • 08 •
09 |
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