Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

SB wins set Plunkett apart

Quarterbac­k won twice in otherwise middling career

- By Myles Simmons Contact Myles Simmons at msimmons@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @MylesASimm­ons on Twitter.

Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series on the history of the Raiders.

Jim Plunkett is one of the most consequent­ial quarterbac­ks in Raiders history, having helped lead the team to a pair of Super Bowl victories.

And yet he’s the only eligible quarterbac­k to have won two Super Bowls to not be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Why? Frankly, aside from those two Super Bowl runs with the Raiders — one in Oakland in 1980, the other in Los Angeles in 1983 — Plunkett’s career was mediocre.

He holds a 72-72 record as a starter. He threw 34 more intercepti­ons than he did touchdowns, at 198 INTs to 164 TDs. He’s No. 70 on the list of career passing yards with 25,882 and completed just 52.5 percent of his passes in a career that began in 1971 and finished in 1986.

But while the football world as a whole may not necessaril­y see Plunkett as a Hall of Famer, there’s no doubt about his legendary status as a Raider.

Plunkett entered the league in 1971 as the No. 1 overall pick by the Patriots after winning the Heisman Trophy at Stanford — besting fellow future pro quarterbac­ks Joe Theismann of Notre Dame and Archie Manning of Ole Miss. Following five middling seasons with New England, the Patriots traded Plunkett to the 49ers. While Plunkett’s San Francisco career started with some success, he was 11-15 as a starter.

The 49ers released Plunkett prior to the start of the 1978 season, and the quarterbac­k didn’t go far — signing with the Raiders as as backup.

While he didn’t throw a pass that year and appeared sparingly in 1979, Plunkett took over after quarterbac­k Dan Pastorini broke his leg during a 31-17 loss to the Chiefs on Oct. 5, 1980. Plunkett entered in relief and completed 20 of 52 passes — a high number of attempts by today’s standards but astronomic­al for 1980 — with five intercepti­ons.

But coach Tom Flores elected to stick with Plunkett rather than try to teach another quarterbac­k the offense, and the gamble paid off. Plunkett led the team to a 9-2 record in his 11 starts in 1980, and the Raiders’ 11-5 record earned them a wild-card berth.

After victories over the Oilers and Browns, Plunkett and the Raiders defeated Hall of Fame QB Dan Fouts and the division-rival Chargers in the AFC Championsh­ip game to advance to Super Bowl XV against the Eagles. Plunkett excelled in the Super Bowl, throwing for 261 yards and three touchdowns en route to a 27-10 victory.

Plunkett’s Super Bowl MVP performanc­e was historic. It was the first time a team quarterbac­ked by a minority — Plunkett is Hispanic — won the big game. He was only the second player to win a Heisman and Super Bowl MVP after the Cowboys quarterbac­k Roger Staubach. Marcus Allen of the Raiders and Desmond

Howard of the Packers would later accomplish the feat.

In 1983, Plunkett again came on in relief of an injured quarterbac­k, this time Marc Wilson, and won the Super Bowl. He had arguably his best season that year, throwing for 2,935 yards with 20 touchdowns and 18 intercepti­ons, leading the Raiders to a 10-3 record as a starter. That year, the Raiders rode Allen to their Super Bowl victory, with the running back amassing 466 yards and four touchdowns on the ground in the postseason. But Plunkett still completed 16 of 25 passes for 172 yards and a touchdown in a 38-9 rout of Washington in Super Bowl XVIII.

Plunkett may not ever be selected for the Pro Football Hall of fame, but winning two Super Bowls makes him one of the most important players in Raiders history.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Jim Plunkett passed for 261 yards and three touchdowns for the Raiders in their 27-10 win over the Philadelph­ia Eagles in Super Bowl XV on Jan. 25, 1981, in New Orleans.
The Associated Press Jim Plunkett passed for 261 yards and three touchdowns for the Raiders in their 27-10 win over the Philadelph­ia Eagles in Super Bowl XV on Jan. 25, 1981, in New Orleans.
 ??  ?? Jim Plunkett
Jim Plunkett

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