Jim Spavital
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No. 76 | |||
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Position: | FB / LB | ||
Personal information | |||
Date of birth: | September 15, 1926 | ||
Place of birth: | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | ||
Date of death: | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. | ||
Career information | |||
College: | Oklahoma A&M | ||
NFL draft: | 1948 / Round: 1 / Pick: 11 (By the Chicago Cardinals) |
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Career history | |||
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Career NFL statistics | |||
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James J. Spavital (September 15, 1926 – March 7, 1993) was a gridiron football fullback, coach and general manager in six different professional football leagues.
Playing career
He played for the All-America Football Conference's Los Angeles Dons in 1949 and the National Football League's Baltimore Colts during the 1950 season. As a starter in 1950 he had 246 rushing yards and 238 receiving. His 96 yard rush against the Green Bay Packers on November 5, 1950 is the fourth longest run from scrimmage in NFL history. As an Airborne reservist, Jim was called up in 1951 to serve in the Korean Conflict . His reporting date prevented him from playing a full NFL season so he moved north of the border to play for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League enabling him to play a complete season prior to reporting for duty. Wear and tear on his feet effectively ended his playing career. He was also drafted by the New York Giants in the first round of the 1951 NFL Draft after the Baltimore Colts folded.[1]
Coaching career
In 1957 he joined the Oklahoma State coaching staff under coach Cliff Speegle. In 1967 he joined the Saskatchewan Roughriders as an assistant. In 1970 he was hired by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers as head coach. In four seasons as Bombers head coach, he had a 23-39-2 record and two playoff appearances.
In 1974 he was hired as head coach of the Chicago Fire of the World Football League. The team finished 7-13 and folded after the season.
In 1975 he joined the New York Jets, coaching the offensive backfield. The following season he again coached the offensive backfield coach for San Francisco 49ers coach Monte Clark.
In 1977 he returned to the CFL as an assistant coach with the Calgary Stampeders, rejoining a fellow assistant from Saskatchewan, Jack Gotta. In 1981 he was hired as general manager of the Saskatchewan Roughriders.
He left the Roughriders after the season to join the Michigan Panthers of the United States Football League. In the league's first year, the Panthers won the USFL championship, defeating the Philadelphia Stars 24-22. On September 9, 1983 he resigned his post as Panthers GM. In 1989 Spavital was hired by Bill and Hubie Byrne to help put together a new professional football league to begin play in the spring or summer of 1990. Spavital was the director of football operations for the Professional Spring Football League for two years before plans for the league were abandoned.
Jim's son Steve is the head coach at Broken Arrow Senior High in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. Spavital is also the grandfather of Texas A&M offensive coordinator Jake Spavital and Texas Tech cornerbacks coach Zac Spavital.
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- NFL player using deprecated currentteam parameter
- NFL player with pastcoaching parameter
- NFL player with pastexecutive parameter
- Infobox NFL player with debut/final parameters
- Pages using infobox NFL player with dbf parameter
- 1926 births
- 1993 deaths
- People from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- Players of American football from Oklahoma
- American football fullbacks
- Oklahoma State Cowboys football players
- Los Angeles Dons players
- Baltimore Colts (1947–50) players
- American players of Canadian football
- Canadian football fullbacks
- Winnipeg Blue Bombers players
- Oklahoma State Cowboys football coaches
- Saskatchewan Roughriders coaches
- Winnipeg Blue Bombers coaches
- World Football League coaches
- New York Jets coaches
- San Francisco 49ers coaches
- Calgary Stampeders coaches
- American football executives
- 20th-century American businesspeople