Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Earl Edwards—A Very Talented Journeyman

 By John Turney 
Earl Edwards dropped out of Wichita State in 1966 after being "dismissed" from the football team, along with two other players, for unspecified rules violations. The local paper reported the dismissals, then a short time later the Head Coach George Karras then told the same paper that there had been
"no dismissals".

The next story in the saga reported that there had been an olive branch offered by the coach allowing the three players to return under some unstated conditions. Edwards refused.
Edwards at Wichita State
The previous year he was the Missouri Valley Sophomore Lineman of the Year so bigs things were expected for Edwards but prior to the dismissal he's suffered from a fairly severe ankle injury and was not have the kind of All-America season projected by the school.

Edwards had been a highly recruited athlete out of Tampa, Florida. He'd been offered a football scholarship from 26 schools and a basketball scholarship from ten. He was 6-6, 245 pounds at the time, and his play as a soph caught the eye of the Cowboys, Lions, Packers, and 49ers.

In Spring practice of 1966 the Packers defensive line coach, Dave Hanner, visited the campus and said, "Edwards is going to be a great one". When the 49ers visited and assessed the Shocker team they rated Edwards as good but teammate Bob Hoskins was better. 

So after the controversy Edwards and went to Canada to play football. he was signed by Ottawa and went through their camp but they were not impressed with him, stating he stood up to high. They were very very impressed with his size and speed (reported as 5.2 in full gear) but waived him before the season. 

Edmonton picked him up and made him an offensive tackle for the '67 season. He was quite successful for Edmonton as a defensive tackle, even garnering possible All-Star notice in 1968 but ultimately didn't gat named to the All-CFL team.
Then around 260 pounds, in 1969 the 49ers drafted him on the fifth round, knowing his physical quality and "good film" from Canada, to help them with their defensive line, which was aging in the middle. he'd become eligible for the draft in 1969 since his class was graduating, allowing him to be drafted that year. In the 16th round  (yes there were that many rounds back then) the 49ers took Bob Hoskins, his former teammate at Wichita State. They got both their guys from the Shockers.

Charlie Kreuger was 32 and Roland Lakes was 30. It was time to retool. The ends were younger and their left end was solid (Stan Hindman) and their right end (Bill Belk) was more of a "hustle-type" not really suited for end due to the lack of speed in his pass rush, but was a good run defender. 

However, Edwards was still under contract so the 49ers had to give Edmonton compensation. That turned out to be "immediate and long-term player assistance that will ensure a supply of top talent to the Eskimoes for several years". What?

One Canadian football writer suspected much of that "assistance" was cash but that was never confirmed. He also speculated that since there were waiver wire procedures in both the NFL and CFL that essentially it would be Edmonton would "get the first crack" at the 49ers taxi squad. 

Regardless, the deal was finalized and Edwards was a 49er. As a rookie he got to start, not at tackle., but at end, four games each in place of Hindman and Belk and got no notice. He even got three votes for NFL Defensive rookie in a year, not bad considering Joe Greene won the award and was terrific as a rookie and much better known, being the number one overall pick that year. 

In addition to his starts at the defensive end, he caught a pass as a tight end and took camp snaps on the offensive line.

Edwards prepared for the 1970 season by lifting weights for the first time in his life. He said he was inspired by Curley Culp's performance in Super Bowl IV so he hit the weights and got his weight to 277 with no loss of quickness, but was aiming to get down to 265 pounds when the season started.

That year Tommy Hart, who was a linebacker in 1968-69, was converted to defensive end  (he'd hit the weights as well and was up to 250 pounds from the 220 he was as a rookie) and the Niners took Cedrick Hardman with their top pick. Hart earned the left end position and Belk was the right end with Hardman coming in on likely passing situations and spelled Belk as well until he became the starter the last month of the season. 
Inside Kreuger and Lakes were the starters but Edwards usually played on passing down with Lakes coming out. Edwards also spelled both, gaining experience and provide inside pressure. The 49ers defensive improved as did the team winning the NFL West. 

In July 1971 Lakes was shipped to the Giants for a draft pick and Edwards was the starting tackle. According to Mike Giddings, who was on the 49ers staff at the time, "Earl solidified our line and was an excellent player in 1971 and 1972, and the year before as well, as a rusher. He helped is win the West those three years."

Edwards #74, RDT, in the flex (top shot) and in the 4-3 (lower shot)
Giddings went on, "His PQs (physical qualities) were off the charts. He was tall and so fast and quick for a guy that size. His height and arm length were huge assets. Athletically he could do anything—he was an excellent basketball player, could jump a mile".  Giddings also scoffed at the reported 5.2 forty-time. "He was a 4.8 at least, after practice he'd challenge guys to races and beat a lot of the backs".

"Earl would get a couple of guys to play with him and he'd challenge myself, Paul Wiggin, and Jim Shofner—we had a three-man team, and they never beat us. Of course, we didn't have a ref so I hacked the hell out of Earl. Wiggin had long arms and had a hook shot, so that helped is and Shofer was a helluva a defender. Anyway, Earl could shoot, had an unblockable hook shot... just a great all-around athlete". 

Here is a clip of Edwards with a slap and swim, then gets the double-team—
The marriage ended after 1972, though. To put it kindly he was one of those players that had all the skills but the 49er coaches grew tired of and felt it would be best to part ways. The 49ers shipped Edwards to Buffalo for Randy Jackson and a third-round pick in 1975. 

Ironically, that opened up the right defensive tackle position for Hoskins who'd been rotation player and nickel rusher in 1972. Hoskins played well then next three years for the Niners, averaging 79 tackles, 6½ sacks and 5 stuffs a season.

Meanwhile, the Bills traded 1970 first-round pick, Al Cowlings, to the Oilers (for a second-rounder) and needed to replace him and Edwards was their man. He played the opposite end from Walt Patulski and for a couple of years, they were good.

Patulski gets dumped on a lot for being a number-one overall bust, and maybe so, he did lack the skills of a top overall pick but he was not a bad football player just, perhaps, one who was taken too high.

In 1973 Edwards had 9½ sacks and Patulski has seven. The Bills rushing defense allowed 2241 yards in 1972 and cut that to 1797 in 1973 and the yards per rush dropped from 4.2 to 3.9. What's more, is the team sack total jumped from 22 to 32.
The O.J. Simpson-led offense scored enough to give the Bills a fighting chance in most games as the defense cut the points allowed 377 allowed to 230. and the Bills won nine games.

The defensive stats and points allowed were about the same in 1974 as they were in 1973 as was the record but that year the 9-5 record got them into the playoffs (pounded by the Steelers) but still, things seemed to be on the upswing in Buffalo.

1974, Edwards as RDT in Bills 4-3
The defense was still a 4-3 with left end Patulski (LE), Mike Kadish (LT), Edwards (RT) all starting 14 games with Dave Costa (9 starts) and Bob Kampa (2 starts) playing right end. In the other three games the Bills opened with a 3-4 defense and in those situations Edwards was the right end and Kadish was the nose.
Edwards as the RDE in a 3-4 front

Edwards in a 3-4, but sunk to a 3-tech or 4i, the left DE is wide-9
However it was not that simple, often Edwards and Costa would swap positions in the 4-3 front—

Edwards as a DE in the 4-3
Edwards totaled 8.5 sacks and Patulski 5.5 and as was mentioned the defense, while not in the league with the Steelers, Rams, Cowboys, or Vikings, was pretty good and it could be said that Edwards was the best player in the front seven, whether as a DT, DE, 3-tech or wherever he lined up.
The Bills were optimistic in 1975 and began with a 5-2 record but then the defense fell apart for three games getting walloped by the Colts, Bengals, and Patriots. The offense bailed them out in the patriots game scoring 45 points, but the defense gave up 31, totally just over 100 for those three games while giving up an average of 500 yards in those three contests. 
1975 Edwards, in a four-point stance, at tackle with Toomay the right end

Edwards in 1975, in the 3-4, sunk to a 3-tech (perhaps 4i)
After opening the season with a 4-3 and having acquired Pat Toomay to replace Costa at right end, after the Bengals loss the second in that series) the Bills went with a 3-4 against the Patriots for the rest of the season. Toomay would then only play in passing situations. 

The Bills had seen enough of most of that crew. Toomay was left unprotected in the expansion draft and was taken by the Buccaneers. Patulski was sent to St. Louis for a 2nd round pick and Edwards was traded to the Browns for a third- and sixth-round pick, about the same value they sent to the 49ers to grab Edwards in the first place. 

Only Kadish remained as the Bills traded for Sherman White and drafted Ken Jones (later converted to offensive tackle) who took Patulski's spot and Ben Williams who took over for Jones in 1977 at left end.

Edwards was off to the Browns and was going to play next to Jerry Sherk. He didn't start but split time with Walter Johnson—the old pro who wasn't ready to lose his starting job, not that year anyway.

In August of 1977 the Browns released Johnson (who was picked up by the rival Bengals for depth) and the left defensive tackle position was Edwards'.  he did "fine" but admitted the move from the right side of the line to the left was an issue—
It may seem like a small thing but Edwards was not the first player to not like the move from one side to the other. Coy Bacon tried and then refused to play left in 1972. And there have been others. Not every player is suited to move around instantaneously, it takes time. And Edwards got the hang of it by midseason. In November the press was writing about his"superb play" and his Coach Forrest Gregg added that "Edwards has been an excellent player in the league for a long time".  So, the move was a success. 
Edwards at LDT with the Browns in 1977
His play was particularly needed because 1976 All-Pro defensive tackle Jerry Sherk was hurt in 1977 and missed the first half of the season. Edwards' tackle total jumped from 16 to 61 and he had 3 sacks and 5.5 stuffs. Not spectacular, but solid.
Edwards, #66, takes down a Bengals runner
The 1978 season was his last in Cleveland, it was a typical season, but he did get his hands on three kicks, taking his career total of blocked kicks to four in addition to his usual production. 

He was irked in the 1979 off-season that there had been some media criticism of the Browns defensive line after the season and thought it was management or coaches saying those things to the press. Edwards responded by saying he felt he played well and that Coach Sam Rutigliano told him that, "I was the best defensive linemen he had". 
Browns defensive line coach Buck Buchanan and Head Coach Sam Rutigliano
He had asked to be traded and they couldn't or wouldn't and Edwards said the Browners were "treating me like a piece of meat" for suggesting that he and the others on the defensive line could be replaced and that he "didn't want to be anyone's whipping boy". 

He let the Browns know via the papers, "if they don't like the way I am playing they can trade me or cut me so I can work my own deal". The Browns did the latter, waiving three weeks after his comments in the press.

So he became a free agent who was eventually signed by the Packers who had injury problems on their line. Prior to that, he was talking to the Rams who had lost their starting left tackle, Cody Jones, to an Achilles injury. But the Rams had Mike Fanning ready to start but had little only young players behind him and the ends so they kicked the tires on Edwards. Eventually, the Rams told him "they couldn't use him" but instead signed Bill Dunston for veteran depth. 

Edwards said he was disappointed because he wanted to go to Los Angeles, a place that fit what he wanted to do after football,  as it fit his "lifestyle and ambitions".  

The Packers Defensive Coordinator was Dave Hanner, the same coach who visited Wichita State in the Spring of 1966 so when they needed some help on the defensive line they signed him. It's likely that Hanner remembered that talent he saw over a decade earlier.

Hanner saw him as someone who "(H)as played both defensive end and tackle in the past, but he's primarily a tackle. He had lots of experience, playing is a lot of systems so ours should not be a problem for him to pick up". 

Initially, Edwards made an impact, playing fast and loose and making plays but it ended quickly. In late November, the Packers waived Edwards. Ostensibly it was to promote a youth movement but Edwards admitted that he had not performed as well as he had at the beginning of the season. Head CoachBart Starr said he was waived due to performance when queried by the media.

After his release, Edwards told Green Bay Press-Gazette writer Cliff Christl that the Packer defense was hard to play and said so publically after he was cut. There had been an article in the papers criticizing the defense a couple of weeks prior and Edwards thought the team felt it was him who made the anonymous comments.
Edwards at left defensive tackle, but in a 2-technique, head up on the guard
Edwards felt that was a big part of the reason that he was let go. "I can only speak to the position I play but for a defensive tackle, it is very hard to play the way he (Defensive Coordinator Coach Dave Hanner) wants us to play".

Even though it was a 4-3 defense (they mixed some 3-4 in due to injuries) the tackles had to play nose-up and two-gap plays. This made the tackles read-type players but Edwards noted that foe to the size and advanced techniques of modern players that "it's hard to control the man in front of you and as a defensive line we end up 'catching'— rather than taking the fight to the offensive line".

Edwards added, "We have to wait and see where the offensive lineman's head is going and by then you've lost the battle". I seemed Edwards as alluding to the fact that when he first got to Green Bay he played his old style of penetrating, not reading, but as he was with the team longer and trying to convert to the Packer way, he got more tentative, trying to not get hooked, thinking rather than just reacting. 

"It's a hard defensive to play in this day and age". And it would follow that Edwards knew his defenses, playing in the Flex with the 49ers, a stunting front with the Bills, and multiple schemes and philosophies with the Browns.

Interestingly in a recent post about Dave Pureifory, a defensive tackle referred to the scheme after the Packers traded him in 1978, "Their style was a little outdated . . . it's over, it's dead. Let's leave it that way." So Edwards may have had a point. A strong one. 
Edwards as a nose tackle with the Packers in 1979 
Here is Edwards head up on a tackle, rather than shaded to a shoulder
In a over-shifted 4-3, head up on center. These days that is a "shaded" position

An ever 4-3,  DEs are shaded to should of tackles, DTs are head-up on guards
Edwards called it quits after that ordeal, choosing to pursue raising his family, getting into coaching or teaching rather than catching on somewhere, or coming back for 1980.

Edwards was something of a marvel as a tackle with unique height and quickness and may have been best suited as a right end, but more often than not he ended up playing inside where he had a quickness advantage on most guards. 

His peak was from 1971-74 or so. In 1974 he even got a few votes for All-AFC, making honorable mention. It was even written that had he had come out of school in 1969, he'd have been the number one overall pick, his skill set was that good. 

But overall, his career was a good one, not great. With his abilities perhaps coached wanted more from him but he ended with over 50 sacks and that is nothing to sneeze at. He played multiple positions in multiple schemes, he was a hard worker who has a great first move and as they say "got it done". 

That says a lot.

He was a loquacious guy who first played sports because of the praise he'd received. In the transition time between Wichita State and the CFL Edwards said, "Everybody knows me and respects me because I can play football." he also expressed a desire to work with troubled boys, a mature thing to want at age 20. He also said he would also consider a career as a sports journalist.

He certainly never hesitated to speak his mind. When Sam Rutigliano formed player committees as a way of opening up communication and building unity Edwards made the request that the team hire a masseuse for the players. It was one suggestion from the committees that was not honored but you have to give him credit for trying. 

Edwards sure had a lot of experience at his disposal based on the list of defensive line coaches he had in his NFL career. With the 49ers he had Paul Wiggin, a longtime NFL player, the Bills defensive line coach was Hoff of Famer Stan Jones, who was a great offensive lineman but converted to defensive tackle later in his career. 

With the Browns, his line coach was Dick Modzelewski (who also was the defensive coordinator) and in 1978 Buck Buchanan, the Chiefs HOF defensive tackle to coach the line. And of course with the Packers, it was Hanner, who played 13 years in the NFL.

Throw in his college defensive line coach Bill Parcells it's a Who's Who of NFL defensive line coaches.

His future plans came true as he got into teaching after earning a degree in Sports Psychology at Arizona State University and is now teaching. He had two sons who were excellent athletes, Gavin who played hoops at UConn and played in China and Damien Edwards was was a tackle for the University of South Florida.

After all is said and done, it was a good, colorful career. Nice job. 

Career stats based on official NFL gamebooks— 
Additional stats CFL 15 games in 1967; 16 games in 1968.

3 comments:

  1. Great piece. Lots of research, hard work, and knowledge of the game. I recall Earl Edwards' debut with the Bills against the Jets and he was a tremendous football player. There are so many excellent players that history will not remember. Thank you for helping record his legacy and giving meaning to my childhood recollections of the NFL.

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  2. Earl Edwards has always been a hard worker. I played with him on the team at Blake High School. As a youth he has always had a great heart for the game, and was determined to be a blessing. Wherever he was! Great job Earl Edwards. Dr. Clovis Dunbar family.

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