Tag Archives: Houston Oilers

White, Lorenzo “Lo”

Cards: Action Packed 1991, Score Supplemental 1989, GameDay 1992
Acquired: TTM 1993, C/o The Houston Oilers
See Also: Lorenzo White (2) , Lorenzo White ‘Lo’ (3)

Wow… Lorenzo White had these suckers stamped.

Unlike the Jeff George cards that I had in 1992 that had suffered the same fate, (that I later replaced with real autographs) I was unable to replace these in time for this post. The ink didn’t pool at all on these cards. It is obvious though because the signatures are all at the same angle and there are articles of missing ink across each signature. I dislike stamps. I don’t mind autopens if they look legit. I compared this one to others and while there are some of these floating around, it’s obvious in comparison that this was lifted from his contract as opposed to his ‘natural signature’. I’d rather have a player return a card unsigned than stamp them, as it just ruins these cards for me.

Lorenzo White played with names such as Bobby McAllister, Willie Bouyer, and Andre Rison at Michigan State, during one of the team’s last heydays. He was drafted in the first round by the Houston Oilers in 1988 and had some exciting highlight film and some longer nicknames such as the “Great White Hope from the Green and White”. Lo was also an excellent receiver out of the backfield with deceptive speed at 5’11”, 222.

The problem was Lorenzo was a fumbling machine that rarely double cluched the football with both arms. In about 200 touches in 1990 he had 7 fumbles. The game Tecmo Super Bowl infamously memorialized  this by giving him some of the worst ball control in the game. He was almost guaranteed to fumble the ball once a game, and I’d always run out of bounds instead of take the hit with him. While his numbers improved and he became a pretty surehanded back after that, White never could completely erase those memories from fans.

With a new coach in place in Jack Pardee, he’d begin to thin the herd in 1990 after a conversion to the Run N Shoot offense. Gone were Alonzo Highsmith, Mike Rozier, and eventually Allen Pinkett. Lo would be one of the survivors and would produce a career high 1226 yards rushing and 641 yards receiving in 1992 starting for the team. His 1992 season would earn his one and only Pro Bowl moment.  He also gobbled down over 1,800 yards from scrimmage- the most by a runningback probably since Earl Campbell.

My best memory of Lo was that season when he made a 69 yard grab on a screen against the Cleveland Browns in the final minutes of the game to help the team engineer a comeback. He’d be injured during the 1993 season, clearing the way for Gary Brown to take the starting job.

In 1995, White signed via free agency and played for the Cleveland for one final season, but not before going down in Super Tecmo Bowl history as a member of the Browns.

Rush  1062         Yds  4242            Avg  4.0           Td 30              Lg 44            
Rec  192          Yds  1738          Avg 9.1            Td  6                lg  69

Bethune, George

Card: Ultimate WLAF 1991
Acquired: In Person 1992, San Antonio Riders v. Sacramento Surge

George Bethune was drafted by the LA Rams in the 7th round of the 1989 draft from Alabama. He wouldn’t start any games but would manage to stay on the roster through the 1990 season, making 4 sacks and 1 fumble recovery playing linebacker. After not making the roster in 1991, George was the first defensive player chosen in the WLAF’s positional draft by the Sacramento Surge in 1992 at #1 overall. The pick came to the Surge via the Ohio Glory, who received Sacramento’s #1 pick (#2 overall), and starting center Curtis Wilson.  Bethune was penciled in at defensive end for the team and finished second on the team with 7 sacks (3rd in the league). The WLAF would reorganize after the 1992 season but Bethune kept his playing dreams alive.  I’d get his autograph at that final game back in 1992 on this great Ultimate Card.

George was signed by the Houston Oilers in 1992, but would be cut in training camp. He’d subsequently also be cut by the Packers in 1993.  George the tried his hand at the CFL and headed north to Canada to play for the Winnepeg Blue Bombers, and then later was acquired by the Sacramento Gold Miners in a trade during 1994. He’d play one final season with the team as they’d transition to San Antonio to become the Texans, but when the CFL folded in North American Operations, George retired.  Below are his WLAF statistics.

G/Gs  N/a     Tac   N/a      Sac  7.0     Fum  N/a    Int   0       Yds  0     Avg -.-    Td 0       Lg  -.-

Johnson, Richard “911”

Card: Action Packed 1991
Acquired: In Person, Houston Oilers Training Camp 1992

After an All Big 10 and All American showing at Wisconsin, Richard Johnson was taken in the first round of the 1985 draft behind future teammate Ray Childress. To say that Richard Johnson’s career would get off to a slow start is an understatement.  He wouldn’t even make his first interception until the 1986 season, and soon would ride himself into head coach Jerry Glanville‘s doghouse. Johnson would cling to the roster- just because of his first round status riding behind Steve Brown and Patrick Allen in the secondary, making spot starts and 7 interceptions over 5 seasons.  Aptly nicknamed “911” for his ability to show up when the Oilers needed him, during the 1988 playoffs, Richard would make a critical interception against the Browns preserving the Oilers’ victory.

With Glanville out in 1990, and the team doing an overhaul, new head coach Jack Pardee decided to go with a different defensive philosophy in the secondary, and Richard, found a chance to redeem himself.  Starting all 16 games in 1990 across from Cris Dishman, Johnson would lead the AFC in interceptions with 8, more than doubling his total, before an ACL injury sidelined him in the playoffs.  In 1991, teams would throw away from Richard, afraid of his cover skills, and he wouldn’t make another interception, before his career ended during the 1992 season.

The game Tecmo Bowl rewarded Richard for his excellent 1990 performance, where he is considered one of the best defensive backs in the game. I’ve been debating sending this former Oiler a few more cards to sign, and may do so at a later date. Richard Johnson, defensive back, is not to be confused with Richard Johnson, wide receiver who played for the Houston Gamblers and Detroit Lions roughly during the same time period.

G/Gs 98/37     Tac n/a     Sac 1.0   Fum 1    
Int  15     Yds 106      Avg  7.0    Td 1     lg 35