The best players in pro football history released by other teams

If you were released by an NFL team today, your career may not be over! Several pro football Hall of Famers were once cut by other teams.

On the annual occasion of the NFL’s cruel necessity to trim its rosters down to the mandated 53 players, it’s important to remember that for the hundreds of players who heard the worst possible professional news on Tuesday, August 30, that there is hope after getting cut by one team. If you’ve put good tape out there, other teams will see it, and you might get another shot that way. Perhaps a coach or executive you’ve worked with before is on another team, and that person wants you where they are now. Or maybe a team that’s wafer-thin at your position will roll the dice.

Given the sheer numbers, it makes sense that players cut by one team would find success elsewhere. In rare occasions, players who have been jettisoned, unwanted, have rolled up to other places and played at levels that landed them (at the very least) in a Ring of Honor somewhere, and (at the very most) in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Not everybody releasing players this week is right. And not every player released this week is wrong. It’s important for all of those players to remember that, and perhaps to be inspired by this list of the best players in pro football history to find themselves released by one team, only to succeed beyond anybody’s wildest expectations somewhere else.

Jets legend WR Don Maynard dies at 86

Jets legend and Pro Football Hall of Famer Don Maynard died at 86 years old Monday

New York Jets legend Don Maynard died at the age of 86 on Monday, the Pro Football Hall of Fame announced. Maynard was a four-time Pro Bowler and Super Bowl champion with the Jets, spending 13 years with the franchise.

He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1987 after racking up 633 catches, 11,834 yards and 88 touchdowns in his career. Maynard was one of the best wide receivers of his era, leading the league in receiving yards once (1967) and yards per game twice (1967-68).

He also caught the most touchdown passes of any player in 1965, scoring 14 times for the Jets.

He got his start in the NFL as a member of the Giants when he was a ninth-round pick in 1957. He didn’t make his debut until the 1958 season and missed the entire 1959 campaign to play in the CFL for the Tiger-Cats.

Maynard finished his career with an average of 18.7 yards per reception, which is tied with Roger Carr for the 16th-highest in NFL history.

Pro Football Hall of Famer Don Maynard dies at 86

Pro Football Hall of Famer Don Maynard has died at 86

Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver Don Maynard died Monday at the age of 86.

Maynard played for the New York Jets and was Joe Namath’s favorite target. He was a member of the Super Bowl III champions.

Maynard was also on the other side of a game in football history. He played for the New York Giants in the famous 1958 NFL championship that saw the Baltimore Colts win in overtime, 23-17.

He played mostly on special teams and was the first player to touch the ball, on a kick return, to start the famous overtime period of “The Greatest Game Ever Played.”

In the 1968 AFL Championship Game, Maynard caught six passes for 118 yards and two touchdowns – the game’s first and last scoring plays in a 27-23 victory over the Raiders. Shortly before the winning reception, Maynard hauled in a 52-yard, wind-altered bomb from Namath.

Maynard called it “the greatest catch I ever made.”

In the Super Bowl, Maynard did not make a catch due to a hamstring injury. However, his presence on the field served as a decoy that attracted attention from the Colts.

When he retired in 1973 after one season with the St. Louis Cardinals, he was pro football’s career receiving leader with 633 catches for 11,834 yards and 88 touchdowns. In 1987, he was elected to the Hall of Fame.

 

 

Did Giants give up on WR Don Maynard too soon?

The answer seems obvious, but the question has been posed anyway: Did the New York Giants give up on WR Don Maynard too soon?

Every professional sports franchise has made personnel decisions they regret down the road. The New York Mets famously traded away a young Nolan Ryan and the Nets let Julius Erving slip through their hands.

In the NFL, the story is the same, as illustrated in a recent article by Bleacher Report’s Brett Sobleski, who created a list of players teams gave up on too soon.

For the New York Giants, it was Hall of Fame wide receiver Don Maynard, who was selected int he ninth round of the draft out of Texas Western. by the Giants in 1957.

Maynard played one season for the Giants in 1958, catching five passes for 84 yards and rushing four times for 45 yards in 13 games. He was realized by the Giants during their 1959 training camp, which was held at St. Michael’s College in Vermont back then. It was a decision the Giants would come to regret as Maynard returned two years later as a member of the newly-formed New York Titans of the AFL.

“This isn’t a typical start to a Hall of Fame career. Yet that’s exactly the path Don Maynard took,” writes Sobleski. “He eventually found success in the Big Apple as Joe Namath’s favorite target during the Jets’ glory years.

“To this day, Maynard remains the Jets’ all-time leader in receptions (627), receiving yards (11,732) and receiving touchdowns (88). Think about those numbers for a moment. Maynard hasn’t played for the Jets since the ’72 campaign. The NFL is more pass-happy than ever. No other Jets receiver comes within 3,400 yards of Maynard’s franchise record.”

To be fair, the Giants were an NFL powerhouse from 1956-63 and were in the middle of their golden era. They were comfortable with their backfield trio of Frank Gifford, Alex Webster and Mel Triplett. They also had Kyle Rote and Bob Schnelker as their main receivers. There wasn’t really room fro the young Maynard.

Maynard did not really distinguish himself with the club, but he never got the benefit of playing with Y.A. Tittle, either. The AFL sported a wide open offense style that featured the vertical pass. Maynard was deep threat and the Giants just weren’t a deep-throwing team behind 38 year-old quarterback Charley Conerly. It wasn’t until they traded for Y.A. Tittle the next season, that the passing game took off. It would have been interesting to see how Maynard would have fit in there.

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