Tag Archives: gameday 1992

Young, Steve

Cards: Action Packed Rookies 1991, GameDay 1992
Acquired:  TTM 2010, C/o The Forever Young Foundation
Sent: 6/11/10     Received: 6/17/10   (6 days. Donation suggested)

From what I understand, Steve Young has been rumored to be an ‘autopenner’. Autopenning is a relatively new and ruthless thing that players can do to fans hoping for an authentic autograph from them. An autopen is a machine that will line up the card and simulate the player’s signature. While I’m not sure what to think of this, many fans decry it because it lessens the interaction between the fan and the player and thus- it is not authentic. I could see how this would anger somebody who had his rookie card and really wanted him to sign it but for these two cards, it wouldn’t really bother me either way.

GameDay came onto the scene in 1992. That along with Skybox and Action Packed were about all I’d collect before I stopped buying football cards during the 1993 season. From there on out my card collecting became sporadic and based solely on teams and players I wanted. GameDay had some really nice cards with their unique design that represented a ticket. The frames are cropped in just a certain way that the players would appear to burst right off the card edge and this Steve Young card is an exceptional example.

Steve Young is another player who just got no respect- but in his case, he went out and proved them all wrong. As you can tell from these two cards, Steve Young is doing what he does best- run. After graduating from BYU, Steve Young signed a then record 10 year 40 million dollar contract with the Los Angeles Express of the USFL. He’d lead the team to the playoffs his rookie season but in 1985 the league financially hemorrhaged.

Steve would be the first player selected in the USFL supplemental draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. After a rough 2 seasons with the Bucs, the 49ers would pull the trigger and trade for the beleaguered quarterback after Tampa Bay drafted Vinny Testaverde with the first pick of the 1987 draft.  Young was considered a loose cannon on the field by Tampa. Forced to improvise due to a patchwork line, Steve would frequently scramble, and in two seasons had only won 3 games in 19 starts.  For points and purposes he was a bust and discarded for a 2nd and 4th round choice from the Niners.

Steve’s rebirth would begin in San Fransisco as future HoFer Joe Montana’s backup. He’d become the league’s best insurance premium, tutored by coaching wiz Bill Walsh and his offensive staff. As Young would bide his time, Montana’s age and frailty would emerge, and at some points a quarterback controversy would emerge. In 1991 after Montana was sidelined for the season, it was largely believed that this was Young’s shot at being the team’s starter, but after injury and relative ineffectiveness- Young would be locked in a quarterback controversy with Steve Bono briefly losing the job to him. He would recover the starting job, but the team only won 10 games and missed the playoffs.

Young would respond by leading the team to the NFC Championship game the next season in 1993, and was named the league’s offensive MVP. Despite his accomplishments, Young would still have to suffer with fans and the owner expressing their desire to see Montana return to the starting role.

With Bono and Young in the fold at the beginning of 1994 though, Montana was expendable to the 49ers and they traded him to greener pastures in Kansas City ending all controversy. Steve would lead the 49ers to SuperBowl victory at the conclusion of the season and was named NFL MVP again setting an NFL record completing over 70% of his passes.

With Young under center the 49ers always were a threat while consistently making the playoffs throughout the 1990s, but Steve suffered multiple concussions due to his competitive style, 290 sacks, and refusal to dive with his feet. He’d retire at the conclusion of the 1999 season, refusing an offer to join Mike Shannahan in Denver.  After posting a 3-16 record in Tampa, Young would go 91-33 with the 49ers.

Since football, Steve has remained active in his charity “The Forever Young Foundation”- which serves children who face significant physical, emotional, and financial challenges by providing academic, athletic, and therapeutic opportunities unavailable to them. He is also a commentator on the NFL draft and also ESPN. He is avidly involved in Utah Sports and is the great-great-great grandson of Brigham Young.

Steve was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005, and had his number retired by the 49ers bringing his career full circle. Winner of 6 passing titles, a then record 112.8 passer rating, the Super Bowl MVP of XXIX, (throwing a record 6 touchdowns)- Young was an AP 4 times, MVP twice and named to 7 Pro Bowls over his career to go along with numerous passing titles repeated 4 times over.  Steve is also recognized as the NFL career leader in rushing touchdowns with 43, (although Otto Graham finished with 44, but the old AAFL’s statistics were not accepted into the NFL statistic books.)

G/Gs 169/143    Att  4149    Comp  2667     Yds   33124     Pct  64.3      Td  232   Int  107   Rat  96.8  |
Rush  722        Yds 4239        Avg  5.9        Td  43      Lg  49

Retrospect video of  Young’s career: http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-game-highlights/09000d5d80130084/Hall-of-Fame-Steve-Young

 

Jackson, Michael (1961-2017)


Cards: Action Packed Rookies 1991, Pro Set 1991, Game Day 1991
Acquired: TTM 2011, C/o Home
Sent: 4/25   Received: 5/9  (14 days)

Michael Jackson went to Southern Mississippi where he was the primary benefactor of future NFL great Brett Farve‘s throws.  They would both be drafted in 1991 and while Farve would go to Atlanta, Jackson would have to wait to be drafted near the top of the 6th round by the Cleveland Browns. A speed merchant and track star since high school, Jackson would establish himself as a long bomb threat for the Browns and also wear  the #1 jersey, further endearing him to the fans as a superstar for his unique choice of jersey for a wide receiver. (Of course, his name happened to be the same as a little known pop star named Michael Jackson).  Michael would grab 17 receptions his rookie season while adding his first two touchdowns to his resume. 1992 would see Jackson become an incumbent at receiver where he’d make 755 yards receiving and 7 touchdowns. In 1993, he’d almost duplicate these statistics, changed his number to 81, (due to uniform number requirements,) and briefly changed his name back to Michael Dyson. An injury shortened 1994 would clear Jackson’s return for 1995 where he made 714 yards receiving and 9 touchdowns.

The Browns in 1996 enraged the city of Cleveland by moving to Baltimore in the middle of the night. While the team had a very bad season, Jackson became quarterback Vinny Testaverde‘s favorite target, with a career high 1201 yards on 76 receptions and a league high 14 touchdowns receiving.  With another 900 yards in the book after 1997, Jackson saw his 1998 shorted by injury and only have 477 yards. He’d retire after the season due to injuries, and move back to Louisiana, where served briefly as mayor of his hometown. Certainly Jackson was the find of the 6th round of the 1991 draft and if he hadn’t have had his career ended prematurely due to injury, he would have been a steal.

At first glance when I got Michael’s autograph through the mail, I was a bit upset because the initial thing I saw was the giant slash going across the card. I thought he had just marked through the card. To my relief it was part of his very unique signature.  (As with many other players, I have begun to give players the duplicate cards that I have floating around in my collection to thank them for their time.) Another group of really nice cards here. I even considered adding in his Score Supplemental 1991 but thought that would be a bit over the top. ProSet was technically beaten to the punch by Hi-Pro Marketing, who released a rookie card of Michael Jackson in their Action Packed Rookies series a few months before anybody else. (Ironically they also had the first Brett Favre card on the market too.) I very much liked all three of these designs, -in particular the GameDay card stands out with its very unique squared shoulders pose of Michael, who looks like a quarterback in this image. ProSet once again delivered very solid photography on their card with an exciting action shot of Jackson sprinting down the field, while Action Packed (as noted above) provided us his first true rookie card on its embossed surface with a nice clean view of Jackson looking for the ball.

G/Gs  114/92      Rec 353     Yds  5393     Avg 15.3       Td 46    Lg 86t

*UPDATE* 5/12/17- Michael Jackson’s motorcycle was traveling at a high rate of speed around 1 a.m. Friday when it crashed into a car that was backing out of a parking space and into both lanes of the highway. Both he and the driver of the car were killed.

Mitchell, Brian

Cards: ProSet 1990, ProSet 1991, GameDay 1992
Acquired: TTM 2011, C/o home
Sent:  4/25    Received: 5/5  (10 days)

Brian Mitchell was a quarterback originally at Southwest Louisiana. An amazing athlete, he owned virtually all the quarterback records when he left the college and was the first NCAA player to throw for over 5,000 yards and rush for over 3,000 in their career. After graduating from college, he was drafted in the 5th round of the 1990 NFL Draft by the Washington Redskins. The Redskins were deep at quarterback so the team decided they’d throw him back there as a return specialist, runningback, and as emergency quarterback. Brian would rack up the return yardage playing for the Redskins through 1999. An electric returner, Mitchell led the league in punt return yards with 600 in 1991,  and was a ProBowl selection in 1995 for the team. In 10 seasons with the Redskins Brian left holding virtually all the Redskins special teams records, racking up over 16,000 yards from scrimmage and 7 punt returns for touchdowns.  After leaving the team, he’d play for the Eagles from 2000-2002 and continued his assault on the record books, setting a league record at the time with 206 kick return yards in a single game.  Brian would play one final season for the New York Giants in 2003, before retiring as a member of the Redskins.

When I initially started this project, Brian was one of the players that I really wanted to honor. Incredibly upon retirement, Mitchell was ranked 2nd all time in yards from scrimmage, had 4 seasons of over 2000 yards, and holds the NFL records for kick returns (607), combined return yards (19013), punt return yards (4999), career kickoff return yards (14014), career fair catches (231), fair catches in a season (33), and punt returns (463). Still most people are unaware of the legacy Mitchell left upon the game and he probably won’t see the Hall of Fame, because of the lack of respect for special teamers. In the meantime, he was inducted into the Redskins Hall of Honor in 2009, works on his foundation (Brian Mitchell Foundation), and has been involved in broadcasting. I was pleased to get Brian’s autograph in 10 days flat from his home in Louisiana.

Great cards of Brian here. ProSet really did their homework and had a card of him before the end of his rookie season in their 1990 update set which was far and ahead of anything anybody produced by at least a year.  Oddly he’d appear in both of Pro Set’s 1990 and 1991 update as the last card in each set. (Sure there were additional inserts after him, but he was the last actual player card.) Mitchell was pretty decent in the first Tecmo Super Bowl, but by Final Edition, he was a dangerous threat in the game. Much like Mel Gray, Brian was a threat to return the kickoff every time he touched the ball and the secret to utilizing him correctly was basically to put him in the starting lineup.

G/Gs 223/16      Rush 388     Yds  1967      Avg  5.1     Td  12     Lg 85t   |
Rec  255      Yds  2336       Avg 9.2      Td  4       Lg 69  |
Kr  607   Yds   14014    Avg  23.1     Td   4       Lg   101t  |
Pr  463     Yds   4999     Avg  10.8     Td   9       Lg  84t