The Capital

Stardom curtailed

50 years before Ravens QB Jackson, there was Dickey, who didn’t get opportunit­y to shine

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One of Eldridge Dickey’s last meetings before the 1968 NFL/AFL draft was his most nervous. No Black quarterbac­k had played in profession­al football in 13 years, and for as muchas his college coaches at Tennessee State had prepared him, they knew the door would budge only so far. So Tigers coach John Merritt and defensive coordinato­r Joe Gilliam Sr. told him to sit down.

Dickey was a man of faith; he’d earned the nickname “The Lord’s Prayer” in college and, with his rousing voice, had led his Tennessee

State teams in prayer before each game. Later in life, he would become a minister. But Merritt and Gilliam wanted to meet with Dickey because they could not say what lay ahead for one of the most accomplish­ed Black quarterbac­ks in college football history.

It would be difficult, they told him. “Listen, we want you to remember this,” Dickey later recalled to Malik Rasheed, his cousin and documentar­ian. “You’ve been chosen to do a

greatwork. If you just get there, youwould have done your job. We want to let you know, son, you’re going to have to bear the cross. But you might not be able towear the crown.”

On Sunday, two of the NFL’s best quarterbac­ks will meet in Dickey’s hometown of Houston for a timely tribute. The Ravens’ Lamar Jackson and Texans’ Deshaun Watson are stars in a league that embraces what it shunned 52 years ago. Ten Black quarterbac­ks started in Week 1, the most in NFL history. The Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes is a defending Super Bowl champion and the sport’s richest-ever player. Watson is a former Heisman Trophy winner and now a $39 million-a-year man.

Jackson, the NFL’s reigning Most Valuable Player, has long honored his forerunner­s, the Black quarterbac­ks who walked so that he could run. Before his first career start two years ago, Jackson spoke with Washington­Redskins greatDougW­illiams, who told him, “Just keep going forward.” Growing up, Jackson idolized Michael Vick, the dual-threat icon whom, in many ways, he’s already surpassed.

But maybe no quarterbac­k in Jackson’s lineage embodied the heartbreak of a lost generation­more than Dickey. Over time, he became a cautionary tale for quarterbac­ks like Jackson: a breathtaki­ng athlete, coveted by future Hall of Famers, only to be told he was needed more elsewhere. The first Black quarterbac­k ever drafted in the first round, Dickey left the sport having never attempted a pass in profession­al football.

“He would’ve been a star,” said James “Shack” Harris, who played against Dickey in college and later became the first Black player to start a season at quarterbac­k in pro football history. “He would’ve been a star because he had a good arm, he was accurate, he was smart, he had instincts … and he never lost his poise. He had the ability. He had pocket awareness and the ability to scramble and run. Hewas fast.”

Added Harris: “There wasn’t nothing that he couldn’t do.”

‘Golden arm’

Before Dickey became “The Lord’s Prayer,” he was “The Boy with the Golden Arm.” He came by the nickname honestly.

At Lockett Junior High School, in the Independen­ce Heights neighborho­od of Houston, Dickey started his football career as awide receiver. Hewas fast— in college, Harris had heard that Dickey could cover 100 yards in under 10 seconds— but maybe too fast for young arms.

One practice, Dickey recalled to Rasheed, hewas beating his defensive back “real bad,” and yet his quarterbac­k kept missing him. Every deep shot came up short. His frustratio­n boiling over, Dickey picked up the football and threw it all the way back. Dickey’s coaches marveled at the spiral. They summoned him over.

“Fromnowon,” Dickeywas told, “you’re a quarterbac­k.”

And so the legend of Eldridge Dickey was born. He went on to play at nearby BookerT. Washington, the first high school in Houston open to Black students and a football power in the Prairie View Interschol­astic League, which produced six Pro FootballHa­ll of Famemember­s over nearly five decades of segregated competitio­n.

Prayers answered

battle for Dickey, who soon inherited a spread passing attack well suited to his talents. “He was the answer to their prayers,” Rasheed said. Hence the reverent nickname.

At a well-built 6 feet 2, 190-plus pounds, Dickey ran “like a mad deer,” Rasheed said. He could punt the ball farther than anyone on the roster. His IQ was said to be in the high 130s. But it was his throwing ability that astounded.

With his dominant right hand, Dickey could heave a football nearly the length of the field. “Never could get beyond 97 [yards],” he joked to Rasheed. With his left hand, Dickeywas accurate “up to 25 yards,” Merritt told Sports Illustrate­d, andhecould pump it 60-plus. After Tigers coaches learned of his ambidexter­ity, they designed plays that called forhimto roll out to his left … and throwleft-handed.

In practice, Dickey’s passes arrived at a velocity that made gloves mandatory. “He actually broke a few guys’ fingers, man,” Rasheed said. “And they’d tell him, ‘Dickey, what’s wrong? Did I make you mad? Take something off the ball!’ ”

“His coaches at Tennessee State told me that Dickey, like Michael Vick, could throw the ball with ease,” Vance said. “He didn’t have to put a lot of effort into itandhecou­ld just flick it all theway out there, but it could go 70 yards or so easily.”

With Dickey leading the offense and Claude Humphrey, a future Hall of Fame defensive end, headlining the defense, the Tigers didn’t lose often. Over Dickey’s first three seasons, from1964 to1966, Tennessee State won back-to-back Black College National Championsh­ips and posted a 24-game unbeaten streak. At Nashville’s Hale Stadium, the fire marshal often had to turn away fans on game day.

As a junior, Dickey threw for 25 touchdowns and 1,812 yards, including a career-high 343 against Harris’ Grambling State team. He finished his career as a three-timeHBCUAl­l-American. The more Harris watched Dickey play, and the more he read about him during his library visits every fall Monday, the more he was convinced Dickeywas a future pro quarterbac­k.

“This was a great, great player that had the ability to be accurate,” he said. “He had Houdini in him. He could see behind him. He’dwait until the last minute when you’re rushing fromthe blind side and get out of it. … He had an NFL arm. He had real good instincts for the position. He was a playmaker, and when the game was on the line, hewas at his best.”

Positional ‘profiling’

During Dickey’s senior year, Al Davis, then the general manager and part owner of the Oakland Raiders, came to scout his game against Central State, according to Vance. If the Raiders needed anything during that 1967 season, it wasn’t a quarterbac­k: After leading Oakland to a 13-1 season and an appearance in SuperBowl II, Daryle Lamonica earned American Football LeagueMVPh­onors.

But Davis became enamored of Dickey, Rasheed said. He’d fly to meetings at Tennessee State via helicopter, landing on the school’s fields before explaining to the Tigers’ staff how serious his interest was. Dickeywant­ed to play quarterbac­k, and he had to knowhewoul­d get that opportunit­y at the next level. WhenMerrit­t askedDavis whether he would get a fair shot, Davis looked him in the eyes and said yes, Dickey would.

There was talk of interest from Kansas City, too, Vance said — loud enough to maybe drive up Dickey’s draft stock in Oakland. The Chiefs and Raiders, division rivals who would make a combined five AFL Championsh­ip game appearance­s from 1966 to 1969, both had progressiv­e front offices unafraid of HBCU prospects. Chiefs coach Hank Stram — like Davis, a future Pro Football Hall of Fame selection — later toldRashee­dthathe “loved” Dickey.

In January196­8, the Raiders took Dickey No. 25 overall in the joint NFL-AFL draft, a historic first-round selection. Dickey was close to becoming the first Black quarterbac­k in pro football since the leagues’ merger in 1966. “I don’t care if he’s polka-dot,” Davis told reporters after selecting him.

With Lamonica still in Oakland and proven depth behind him, Dickeywas soon moved to receiver during the offseason, where the team lacked speed. Coaches said the position change would not be permanent, that Dickey could also learn the quarterbac­k position as a flanker. Dickey told reporters that hewas eager to help the team and willing to be patient.

But the Raiders had also selected Alabama quarterbac­k Ken Stabler in the second round of the 1968 draft. Just as worrisome, over 11 games his rookie year, Dickey had more catches (one) than he did appearance­s at quarterbac­k (none).

“It just wasn’t the time for the Black quarterbac­k,” Vance said. Only one, Washington’s Williams, was drafted in the first round in the 1970s. None were taken there in the ’80s. “I call it almost like ‘profiling’ at the position. They had a set definition of what theywere looking for at quarterbac­k.”

Dickey, at least publicly, was more optimistic. He told the Oakland Tribune in July 1969 that he saw it as a “great advantage to me to play flanker” before returning to quarterbac­k. His second preseasonh­adamorepro­mising start. Inan exhibition against theCowboys thatmonth, he held his ownwith Stabler and outdueled Cowboys rookieRoge­r Staubach.

But as the season approached, Dickey’s hold on the backup spot slipped, even after Stabler abruptly quit. (Stabler later returned to resume an eventualHa­ll of Fame career.) Dickey played less and less each week, and after going 1-for-6 with an intercepti­on in a loss to the San Diego Chargers, he did not appear in the Raiders’ next two preseason games. Two weeks before the season opener, hewaswaive­d.

First-year Raiders coach John Madden told reporters that Dickey had missed curfews and practice and that his attitude had deteriorat­ed, but that hewas still in the team’s plans. When Dickey returned to Oakland, he also returned to wide receiver.

‘Let the best guy play’

After a knee operation in 1969, Dickey’s career spiraled. In December 1971, after a series of missedwork­outs and suspension­s, hewas released. Dickey never played again. Not even Stram, Rasheed said, could convince him to try out in Kansas City. The pain of his quarterbac­k dream was too much. For a time, he turned to drugs and alcohol.

“[Stram] said that that whole situation just messed up his equilibriu­m,” Rasheed said. “He said Dickeywas not the same.”

In 2012, more than a decade after Dickey had died from a stroke at age 54, he was being considered for induction into the Black College FootballHa­ll of Fame. Vance, a selection committee member, was struck by howfew people knew of his legacy.

The first Black starting quarterbac­k in pro football was Marlin Briscoe, in 1968. The first to start a season opener was Harris, one year later. But it was Dickey who had been honored as the quarterbac­k of an all-time HBCU team. Stramlater told Rasheed that Oakland’s handling of his career was a “travesty of justice,” that he could’ve broken so many records at quarterbac­k.

“When you realize you may not get the one opportunit­y [at quarterbac­k], there’s a challenge because you felt you almost had to try to play perfect, as if, if you made mistakes, your career would be over,” said Harris, who later joined the Ravens’ front office as their pro personnel director. “So it was different conditions to play under.”

WhenHarris made it to the NFL in 1969, he felt he was representi­ng something bigger than himself; he was playing to create opportunit­ies for others. It wasn’t until Dickey was drafted that Harris even began to ponder a pro future. He’s still burdened by an impossible question: How many quarterbac­ks might have been disqualifi­ed simply because theywere Black?

“I think all of us, we just hope that one day comes where we can compete for the job against other players and we’re all just considered ‘quarterbac­k,’ ” Harris said. “And I think that all of us has ever asked for was just an opportunit­y to compete for the job. Let the best guy play. That’s all I’ve ever asked.”

 ?? MALIK RASHEED PHOTO ?? Eldridge Dickey, 13, talks with friends and family outside his mother’s house in Houston. He went on to star at Booker T. Washington High School.
MALIK RASHEED PHOTO Eldridge Dickey, 13, talks with friends and family outside his mother’s house in Houston. He went on to star at Booker T. Washington High School.

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