Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Briscoe, first Black starting QB in AFL, Dolphins receiver, dies at 76

- By Cliff Brunt

Marlin Briscoe, who became the first Black starting quarterbac­k in the American Football League more than 50 years ago, died Monday.

His daughter, Angela Marriott, told The Associated Press that Briscoe, 76, died of pneumonia at a hospital in Norwalk, California. He had been hospitaliz­ed with circulatio­n issues in his legs.

Briscoe, an Omaha, Nebraska, native, was a star quarterbac­k for Omaha University before the Denver Broncos drafted him as a cornerback in the 14th round in 1968. Briscoe told the team he’d return home to become a teacher if he couldn’t get a tryout at quarterbac­k. Denver agreed to an audition, and the 5-foot-10 dynamo nicknamed “The Magician” nearly rallied the Broncos to victory as a reserve against the Boston Patriots on Sept. 29 before earning the historic start on Oct. 6.

“He’s made an immense contributi­on to the sport,” Marriott said. “I hope that he continues to get recognized for the contributi­ons that he made. He was so proud of that achievemen­t.”

Briscoe started five games that season. He was runner-up for AFL rookie of the year after passing for 1,589 yards and 14 touchdowns and rushing for 308 yards and three scores.

In a start against the Buffalo Bills, Briscoe passed for 335 yards and four touchdowns. Booker Edgerson, a Bills cornerback at the time, recalls getting burned for one of those touchdowns. The former AFL All-Star and member of the Bills’ Wall of Fame believes Briscoe could have been a Hall of Fame quarterbac­k if not

for racism.

“He would have been one of the top quarterbac­ks that they’d be talking about right now,” Edgerson said. “He would’ve been another ... he would have been in there before Warren Moon.”

Denver didn’t give Briscoe a chance to compete for the quarterbac­k job in 1969, and did not offer an explanatio­n. Edgerson recalls Briscoe telling him he didn’t feel the Broncos were ready to fully commit to a Black quarterbac­k.

Briscoe became Edgerson’s teammate in Buffalo the next year. James Harris was Briscoe’s roommate with the Bills in 1969, and Briscoe helped Harris become the first Black quarterbac­k in the AFL to open a season as a starter.

“It was at the time when Black quarterbac­ks were being denied, so you tried to make sure you were best prepared for the opportunit­y

when it came,” Harris said. “I was a lot better off because Briscoe was my roommate.”

In 1974, Harris played for the Los Angeles Rams and became the first Black quarterbac­k to win an NFL playoff game. He also was Pro Bowl MVP that season.

Meanwhile, Briscoe earned a trip to the Pro Bowl as a receiver for Buffalo in 1970 and won two Super Bowls as a receiver with the Miami Dolphins. He was on the undefeated 1972 Dolphins team.

For all he achieved, Briscoe never forgot the fact that he lost his starting job in Denver with no chance to earn it back.

“It bothered him,” Harris said. “Although he made the switch, he was disappoint­ed. In order to still accomplish what he did under those circumstan­ces — frustrated, disappoint­ed — to be focused enough to

be a high achiever at another position took a special makeup, a special guy.”

Briscoe was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2016, and the Broncos named a diversity coaching fellowship in his honor before the 2021 season.

Well after his playing days, Briscoe remained outspoken about racial injustice. He was proud to have moved the needle in 1968, but he told The Associated Press in 2018 he was disappoint­ed that many strides made in his day had been lost.

“I grew up in the ‘50s and the ‘60s, when all that stuff was rampant, but you knew where you stood,” Briscoe said. “Today, you thought that all those attitudes were nonexisten­t or filtered away to some degree, but with the Trumpisms, his philosophy has brought out of the woodwork that old-time thought process. That’s scary — it really is.”

 ?? WILLIAM A. SMITH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Buffalo Bills wide receiver Marlin Briscoe takes a forward pass from quarterbac­k Dennis Shaw during an NFL game in Baltimore on Nov. 15, 1970.
WILLIAM A. SMITH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Buffalo Bills wide receiver Marlin Briscoe takes a forward pass from quarterbac­k Dennis Shaw during an NFL game in Baltimore on Nov. 15, 1970.
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