Fulton Walker
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Position: | Cornerback / Return Specialist | ||||||
Personal information | |||||||
Date of birth: | April 30, 1958 | ||||||
Place of birth: | Martinsburg, West Virginia | ||||||
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Career information | |||||||
College: | West Virginia | ||||||
NFL draft: | 1981 / Round: 6 / Pick: 154 | ||||||
Career history | |||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||
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Career NFL statistics | |||||||
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Fulton Luther Walker (born April 30, 1958) is a former professional American football defensive back who played for the Miami Dolphins (1981-1985) and Los Angeles Raiders (1985-1986) in the NFL. Before his NFL career, he played for the West Virginia Mountaineers.
NFL Career
On defense, Walker recorded 5 interceptions during his career, which he returned for 62 yards. His main contributions came as a punt and kickoff returner on special teams, recording a total of 145 punts returns for 1,437 yards and 167 kickoff returns for 3,779 yards and a touchdown. Walker's best season was in the strike shortened 9-game season of 1982, when he recorded 3 interceptions on defense and 433 kickoff return yards, assisting his team to a championship appearance in Super Bowl XVII. In 1985, he recorded an NFL record 692 punt return yards. This would stand as a record until 1996 when it was surpassed by Desmond Howard's 870 yards.
Walker is best remembered for his performance on special teams in Super Bowl XVII and Super Bowl XIX. In Super Bowl XVII, Walker recorded 4 kickoff returns for 190 yards and a touchdown, setting Super Bowl records for most kickoff return yards and highest single game yards per return average (47.5). This included a record 98-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the second quarter, the first kickoff ever to be returned for a touchdown in Super Bowl history. He also had a 42-yard return that set up a Dolphins field goal. His contributions helped the Dolphins maintain a lead in the game until late in the fourth quarter, despite Miami quarterback David Woodley being limited to just 4 completions in the entire game. In Super Bowl XIX, Walker contributed 93 kickoff return yards and 15 yards returning punts.
Life after football
In honor of his special teams highlights, the West Virginia Sports Writers Association gives out the Fulton Walker Award each year to the state's top high school special teams player.[1]
Walker lives in Martinsburg, West Virginia, where he was the victim of a violent break-in at his home in August 2013.[2] One of the men involved in the crime, during which Walker was beaten and assaulted, was sentenced to 18 years in prison.[3]
References
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External links
- Pages with reference errors
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- Living people
- 1958 births
- American football cornerbacks
- American football safeties
- American football return specialists
- West Virginia Mountaineers football players
- Miami Dolphins players
- Los Angeles Raiders players
- People from Martinsburg, West Virginia
- Martinsburg High School alumni
- Players of American football from West Virginia