Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Christense­n never got Hall call

Disliked playing tight end, but he dominated at it

- By Vincent Bonsignore Contact Vincent Bonsignore at vbonsignor­e@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @VinnyBonsi­gnore onTwitter.

Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series acquaintin­g fans with the Raiders’ illustriou­s 60-year history as the team moves to Las Vegas for the 2020 season.

The irony of Todd Christense­n ending up as one of the greatest tight ends in NFL history is that he never wanted to play the position in the first place.

In fact, the late, great former Raider was so angry when his original team, the Dallas Cowboys, switched him from running back to tight end in his second NFL season that he pretty much argued himself right off the team.

That led to a roller coaster ride in 1979 in which he played briefly with the New York Giants before a handful of failed tryouts with the Green Bay Packers, New England Patriots, Philadelph­ia Eagles and Chicago Bears. He finally caught on with the Raiders two games into the regular season as — you guessed it — a tight end, but was pretty much exclusivel­y used on special teams over the next three years.

The reluctant tight end eventually settled in at his new position in his fourth season with the Raiders, catching 42 passes for 510 yards and four touchdowns in nine games. That set the stage for a remarkable career in which he earned five trips to the Pro Bowl, played on two Super Bowl championsh­ip teams and forever etched his name alongside the greats of the Raiders franchise.

Not bad for a guy drafted out of Brigham Young as a running back only to have to be talked into making a position switch that would alter the course of his life and benefit the Raiders over a five-year stretch of dominance.

Quite a personalit­y

“He brought a lot to the table as a person and a personalit­y, and also on the football field he could catch everything thrown his way, basically,” Jim Plunkett told USA Today in 2013. “He was a big, barrel-chested guy at one time, and he had a knack for getting between the ball and the defender.”

Yet despite racking up statistics that should have already earned him a spot in Canton, Ohio, Christense­n has inexplicab­ly been overlooked by the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Consider that, in spite of missing his first NFL season and then primarily playing special teams the next three seasons, his numbers are comparable to, if not better, than a handful of Hall of Famers.

Of the nine tight ends in the Hall of Fame, Christense­n has more receptions (467) and receiving yards (5,872) than four of them, even though he played fewer games (137) than three of them. And that includes Raiders Hall of Fame tight end Dave Casper, who finished with 378 catches for 5,216 yards in 147 games.

Tight end accomplish­ment

Relative to where the tight end position was heading, he was a trailblaze­r. Christense­n was the first tight end to catch 90 passes in a season, a feat he accomplish­ed two times. From 1983 to 1986 he produced at least 80 catches and 900 yards each season. In fact, in three of those seasons he eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark.

“There was a stretch for us where, if there was a big catch that was made, Todd made it,” Hall of Fame running back Marcus Allen told the Los Angeles Times in 2013. “He’d trap it with his body at high risk. He came down with the ball.”

On a Raiders team full of iconic characters, Christense­n was every bit the character they were. He conducted himself as an intellectu­al who just happened to also be a worldclass football player.

That made him one of the most unique Raiders rebels of all.

“I remember Todd always using big words and quotes from famous authors and poets,” former Raiders coach Tom Flores told USA Today in 2013. “He was comical at times because no one knew what he was talking about.”

A devout Mormon, Christense­n didn’t curse or drink alcohol. And his dark shaggy mullet and thick black mustache absolutely stood out.

“Todd was a Raider,” receiver Morris Bradshaw, a former teammate, told the San Jose Mercury News in 2013. “His faith, his look, his eloquence, his vocabulary; you wouldn’t normally think someone that had those characteri­stics would fit into our team, but he fit in as well as anyone else.

“That was the magic. That you had all these characters, we were perceived as misfits, that we didn’t go together. … Yet we came together as a team.”

It made his death in 2013 due to complicati­ons that arose during liver transplant surgery so tragic.

Hall of Fame drumbeat

Thirty-two years after he retired and seven years after his death, the drumbeat to get Christense­n into the Hall of Fame has sadly gone silent.

“He told me he wanted to be in the Pro Football Hall of Fame,” his son, Toby, told the Desert News in Utah in 2018. “It meant a lot to him.”

His numbers certainly merit it.

 ?? Lennox McLendon The Associated Press ?? Raiders TE Todd Christense­n gives a hug to a friend as teammates, including QB Jim Plunkett, center, and punter Ray Guy, right background, head to Tampa, Fla., for Super Bowl XVIII against the Redskins.
Lennox McLendon The Associated Press Raiders TE Todd Christense­n gives a hug to a friend as teammates, including QB Jim Plunkett, center, and punter Ray Guy, right background, head to Tampa, Fla., for Super Bowl XVIII against the Redskins.

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