Darryl Talley

Darryl Talley
Darryl Talley
No. 56, 99, 55     
Linebacker
Personal information
Date of birth: July 10, 1960 (1960-07-10) (age 51)
Cleveland, Ohio
Career information
College: West Virginia
NFL Draft: 1983 / Round: 2 / Pick: 39
Debuted in 1983 for the Buffalo Bills
Last played in 1996 for the Minnesota Vikings
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Stats at NFL.com
College Football Hall of Fame

Darryl Victor Talley (born July 10, 1960) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League. He was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the second round (39th overall) of the 1983 NFL Draft. He played college football at West Virginia.

Talley was named a consensus All-American as a senior. He was drafted by and played for the Buffalo Bills for the first 12 seasons of his career, where he appeared in his only two Pro Bowls and played in four Super Bowls, after which he joined the Atlanta Falcons in 1995 and a year later joined the Minnesota Vikings.

Contents

College career

Talley played college football at West Virginia University. Many scouts were pushed away from him, because he played fullback and linebacker in high school, never settling on either position. He also missed his last seven high school games with a broken ankle.

He was a starter from 1979 to 1982 and led the Mountaineers to the 1981 Peach Bowl and the 1982 Gator Bowl. Against Pitt, he intercepted Dan Marino to set up a Mountaineer field goal and blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown. As a senior in 1982, he was selected as West Virginia's third-ever consensus All-American. He started the season off with a win over Oklahoma and was named WVU's season MVP and was named All-American. He also played in the 1983 Hula Bowl.

Legacy

Talley's five tackles-for-a-loss against Penn State stand as a single-game record and his personal-best 15 tackles against Boston College won Sports Illustrated Player of the Week honors. For his career, he had 282 unassisted tackles (first all-time), 202 assisted tackles (second), 28 tackles-for-loss (second) and 19 sacks (fourth). During his four year career, he recorded a school record of 484 career tackles; which has been passed by Grant Wiley.[2]

Talley was named to the 2008 College Football Hall of Fame ballot for nominees for induction.[3] He is also a member of the West Virginia University Sports Hall of Fame.[3]

Professional career

Talley played in the National Football League for 14 seasons and played in four Super Bowls. He never missed a game in his 12-years with the Buffalo Bills. Jim Kelly, the Bills' Hall of Fame quarterback considers Talley his most underrated teammate and believes that Talley should also be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[4]

Buffalo Bills

Talley was selected in the second round of the 1983 NFL Draft by the Bills and played in Buffalo for 12 seasons. He is the Bills' all-time leading tackler with 1,137, and also recorded 38.5 sacks, 12 interceptions for 189 return yards and 2 touchdowns, and 14 fumble recoveries for 76 return yards. He averaged 120 tackles, 3.5 sacks and 6.2 takeaways per season and his mark of 188 regular season games played ranks fifth-most in team history.

While with the Bills, Talley had multiple nicknames on the field as "The Duke of Awesome", "Spider-Man", and "The Hammer". His cheering section at Rich Stadium was known as the "Talley-Whackers". On November 4, 1990, playing against the Cleveland Browns in his hometown, Talley returned an interception for his first career touchdown.[5] After the season, he received the Ed Block Courage Award.[1]

In 2003 Talley became the 20th member on the Wall of Fame in Ralph Wilson Stadium.

Later career

Talley left the Bills to play with the Falcons in the 1995 campaign and then with the Vikings. He left Atlanta on a less than stellar note when it was discovered that he played his last game in Atlanta with a loaded U-Haul truck in the parking lot. He had it so he could go home to spend the holiday with his family once the game was over. He ended his career after the 1996 season and won the Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Distinguished Service Award in 2000.

Personal life

On June 2, 2008 Talley commented that former Bills kicker Scott Norwood should be inducted onto the Bills' Wall of Fame. He stated;

"One thing I wish people would take a look at is out of all the things that we accomplished we wouldn't have done a lot of them without Scott Norwood". He continued on, "Everybody seems to have forgotten Scott. If you look back in the early days we won a lot of games with special teams and him kicking field goals. So I think there's somewhere up there (the Wall) for Scott to be, but nobody wants to acknowledge him because he missed a kick. But as I recall, I missed some tackles in that game, Bruce missed some. Thurman dropped some balls and Jim threw interceptions, but nobody realizes that here is a guy that made major contributions to what this organization was about. It just irks me that people have forgotten him." [sic][6]

He now lives in Orlando, Florida with his wife and two kids.

Talley is the brother of Cleveland Brown John Talley, and is the cousin of New York Yankee Derek Jeter

On April 25, 2009, it was announced at the Bills Season Ticket Holder Draft Day Party at Ralph Wilson Stadium, that fans had voted 26 members to the Bills 50th Season All-Time Team, which was presented by Tops Freindly Markets. The all-star team included the following, including Talley; quarterback Jim Kelly, running back Thurman Thomas, wide receivers Andre Reed, Eric Moulds and James Lofton, tight end Pete Metzelaars, and offensive linemen Joe DeLamielleure, Kent Hull, Billy Shaw, Ruben Brown and Jim Ritcher. The defensive players chosen by the fans were; defensive linemen Bruce Smith, Fred Smerlas and Tom Sestak, linebackers Talley, Mike Stratton, Cornelius Bennett and Shane Conlan, cornerbacks Butch Byrd and Nate Odomes and safeties George Saimes and Henry Jones. The special teams' players selected by the fans were kicker Steve Christie, punter Brian Moorman and special teamer Steve Tasker.[7]

References

External links



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