What a player!!!
DALLAS CLARK is destined for the HOF
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FishheadSBR Aristocracy
- 08-11-05
- 40179
#1DALLAS CLARK is destined for the HOFTags: None -
obamaismyuncleSBR Posting Legend
- 12-31-08
- 17801
#2He's from Texas, correct?Comment -
firedawgBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 10-08-08
- 39219
#4he is a beastComment -
FishheadSBR Aristocracy
- 08-11-05
- 40179
#5The Colts may struggle to make the playoffs.Comment -
MartinBlankSBR Hall of Famer
- 07-20-08
- 8382
#6Clark is a great player, but he will not make the Hall of Fame.
Tight ends have a tough time making the HOF.
Hell, Clark's numbers aren't even in Jason Witten (Dallas) class.
Both Clark and Witten entered the league the same year.
Witten has caught 523 passes for 5865 yards..
Clark has caught 367 career passes for 4268 yards.
And forget about Shannon Sharpe.
Shannon Sharpe has 815 career catches, including 62 tds.
Sharpe is still not in the HOF.
I think Clark is going to be viewed as a guy who played with one of the greatest QBs of all-time and not he was surrounded by perhaps the best QB-WR combination outside of Joe Montana-Jerry Rice.
Here are some tight ends that have not been included in the Hall of Fame---and some of them are very very very good.
Keith Jackson--Eagles--461 catches---49 tds
Todd Christensen--Raiders. 481 catches, 41 tds.
Steve Jordan--Vikings. 498 catches, 29 tds
Jay Novacek--Dallas 442 catches, 30 tds (Three Super Bowl rings)Comment -
FishheadSBR Aristocracy
- 08-11-05
- 40179
#7WHITTEN is a sure fire Hall of Famer
Not here to compare.
By the way........
Career TD's
CLARK---41
WHITEN--27Comment -
obamaismyuncleSBR Posting Legend
- 12-31-08
- 17801
#8Dallas Clark is an absolute hands down, HOF'rComment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#9You still like your Finley bet, FH?Comment -
refrain87SBR Wise Guy
- 03-17-10
- 884
#10i agree, he is a great player and will be in the HOFComment -
MartinBlankSBR Hall of Famer
- 07-20-08
- 8382
#11
Shannon Sharpe has put up numbers that make both Witten and Clark seem average, and he is still not in the HOF.
Guys like Jay Novacek, Keith Jackson, Todd Christensen have all had better out than Clark and still are not in the HOF.
Certainly Jackson and Christensen should get a call before Clark---and they are still waiting.Comment -
Mr. JonesSBR Wise Guy
- 09-02-05
- 942
#12Since Livermore, Iowa has about 400 residents, I'm curious did they play 11 man football in high school or was it 8 man foots?
I understand he has a brother who was also a stud footballer.Comment -
frostno98SBR Hall of Famer
- 09-11-07
- 9769
#13No! If either Brent Jones 3x super rings with the 49ers or Jay Novacek is not in the Hall, no way Clark gets in.Comment -
FishheadSBR Aristocracy
- 08-11-05
- 40179
#14
11 man when I played, only 8 man when Dallas attended high school there.........
His brother played linebacker at Iowa State and started for 3 years.Comment -
ronaldSBR MVP
- 10-31-05
- 4919
#16Fish,
BAUS and I have never heard of this guy.Comment -
Chi_archieSBR Aristocracy
- 07-22-08
- 63172
#18guy is gonna need some longevity and Peyton to heal up FASTComment -
Blackroc78SBR MVP
- 08-15-11
- 1189
#19He his a future hall of fame. Great player!Comment -
Chi_archieSBR Aristocracy
- 07-22-08
- 63172
#20is he gonna play next year? what is his contract situation?Comment -
5teamparlaySBR Wise Guy
- 02-06-06
- 989
#21
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
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NFL Football
NEXT STORY >Commentary | Tampa Bay Bucs Mark Barron epitomizes what head coach Greg
Commentary | Opponents forget about Dallas Clark, but Tampa Bay Buccaneers count on him
Published: November 21, 2012 Updated 56 minutes ago
Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Dallas Clark (44) makes a catch past Carolina Panthers' James Anderson (50) and Jon Beason (52) in the first half at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida on Sunday, September 9, 2012. (David T. Foster III/Charlotte Observer/MCT)
David T. Foster III — MCT
RECENT HEADLINES
Commentary | Opponents forget about Dallas Clark, but Tampa Bay Buccaneers count on him
55 minutes ago
By ALAN DELL — adell@bradenton.com
TAMPA
Dallas Clark is quite content to have gotten lost in the hoopla surrounding the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' trifecta of impact newcomers.
If he can continue to run silent, run deep like he did in catching the game-winning, walk-off touchdown against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday, he will be satisfied to maintain his anonymity.
The tight end will never have to worry about being underappreciated.
Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman has shown his gratitude in the past five games, showering Clark with numerous passes that turned into 18 receptions for 174 yards and three touchdowns. Clark had nine catches in the first five games.
Clark is fine with all the attention going to Vincent Jackson, Lavonte David and Doug Martin, the Bucs' new set of terrific triplets. Clark is your prototypical cloak-and-dagger tight end. It's hard to find him, and, when you do, he has already stuck the knife in your heart.
When Bucs head coach Greg Schiano kicked former tight end Kellen Winslow and his surly attitude out of town and signed Clark as a free agent, some moaned.
Though Winslow was a headache, speculation ran rampant that Clark was past his prime, though he had put up great numbers catching passes from Peyton Manning with the Indianapolis Colts.
Even Clark had his doubts. But he also had patience, which is one of his strongest assets.
"You never know what is going to happen when you come into a new situation," Clark said. "You want to be a positive influence and do some things that will help the team. You work hard every day and hope good will happen."
This is turning into a better marriage than the Bucs had a right to expect. Clark learned a lot about turning fourth-quarter drives into mini-miracles with Manning,
and his veteran leadership is paying huge dividends, especially for some of the Bucs' emotionally fragile rookies.
The Bucs and Clark learned a lot about each other in Tampa Bay's winning drive against Carolina.
"We could've folded it in and said, 'All right, get ready for next week,' but the resiliency this team has is special," Clark said. "This team knows you never give up because you never know what can happen. The majority of games in the league come down to the last drive."
He even provided a little cushion for Martin, who sat dejected on the bench after fumbling an apparent touchdown into the end zone.
"Doug learned a valuable lesson," Clark said. "He was thinking he lost the game, but that's not the case. Even if we had lost it wasn't his fault. It is never one person's fault. That is a good thing for him as a rookie to learn. You need to understand that anything can happen in the NFL. There are so many variables involved."
Though he might have a lost step, Clark is still as savvy as ever. On his game-winning catch, the 33-year-old, 10-year veteran changed his route in midstream, causing Panthers linebacker Thomas Davis to fall down and leaving Clark wide open.
"It was awesome in that you rarely call a play and it happens exactly the way you drew it up," Clark said. "I ran that route (the same way) about four times and then all of a sudden I change. If was a perfect call by Coach Sully (Mike Sullivan). I didn't know he fell down. All I knew is that I got around him."
Clark is happy to be with Bucs and to be in the NFL. At 6-foot-3, 252 pounds, he was never of the Mike Ditka, macho-man mold and says if it wasn't for guys like Atlanta Falcons tight end Tony Gonzalez and the San Diego Chargers' Antonio Gates, he might have never been given a second look.
Great tight ends present problems for a defense. They are too big for defensive backs and too quick for linebackers and are adept blockers.
Clark's skill is catching passes.
"If it wasn't for them, I would've been out of a job in a hurry because I was horrible at blocking," Clark said. "It's nice that the game is finding a way to use a guy like me with my abilities because not many years ago it wasn't like that. A trend has been definitely taking place, and now everyone is looking for that receiving tight end. You've got to have a little sprinkle of everything. You've got to have toughness and some ability."
Clark flourished with Manning, breaking the Colts' single-season franchise receiving record by a tight end. He had his best year in 2009, when he caught 100 passes for 1,106 yards and 11 touchdowns.
It's nice to catch all those passes, but Clark will be the first to tell anyone it's still a blue-collar position.
"It's not all that glamorous out there catching the ball when you've got grown men trying to kill you. It's not all that it's cracked up," Clark said. "There are some fun things, and that is what I love about the game and being versatile. I would get a little bored if I just had to block. I like the variety and seeing the mismatches with the safety."
Read more here: http://www.bradenton.com/2012/11/21/...#storylink=cpyComment
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