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Dave Stalls

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Name
  
Dave Stalls

Positions
  
Defensive end

Games played:
  
99

Weight
  
113 kg

College:
  
Height
  
1.96 m

High school:
  
Hamilton (OH) Taft

Role
  

Dave Stalls Rebounding Wins Dave Stalls Rebound SolutionsRebound

Date of birth:
  
(1955-09-19) September 19, 1955 (age 60)

NFL draft:
  
1977 / Round: 7 / Pick: 191


Place of birth:
  

Dave Stalls: Football Defensive End


David Milton Stalls (born September 19, 1955) is a former American football defensive end in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Los Angeles Raiders. He played college football at the University of Northern Colorado and also played in the United States Football League for the Denver Gold.

Contents

Dave Stalls Dave Stalls A life more Satisfying than Winning Two Super

Early years

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Stalls attended Hamilton Taft High School and did not start playing football until ninth grade, because he used to focus on ice hockey instead.

Dave Stalls David Stalls Dallas Cowboys Pinterest Stalls and David

After not receiving much interest and writing letters to 40 prospective schools, he received a scholarship offer from Division II Northern Colorado University. He was a four-year starter at defensive tackle and received third-team Little All-American honors in 1975.

Dallas Cowboys

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Stalls was selected in the seventh round (191st overall) of the 1977 NFL Draft by the Dallas Cowboys. As a rookie he was a core special teams player. In 1978, he was used mainly as a pass-rush specialist at left defensive tackle in place of Jethro Pugh or Larry Cole and emerged as a key reserve, registering 4 unofficial sacks (fourth on the team).

Dave Stalls NFL retirees submit to tests to identify fatal brain

In 1979, he unexpectedly started the first 12 games at left defensive tackle (replacing the retired Jethro Pugh) ahead of former first-round draft choice Larry Bethea, until being replaced by Cole, after the Cowboys traded for John Dutton who would play left defensive end. He finished with 51 tackles and 5 unofficial sacks (tied for fourth on the team).

Dave Stalls BUCPOWERCOM

In 1980, Ed "Too Tall" Jones unretired and the Cowboys opened training camp with 8 quality defensive linemen, when they usually kept seven. The team decided to retain Bethea and Bruce Thornton instead, and traded Stalls to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in exchange for a 1981 seventh round pick (#173-Ron Fellows) and a 1982 fourth round pick (#101-Brian Carpenter).

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers traded for Stalls to replace an injured defensive end Wally Chambers. In 1981, he was a backup end and defensive tackle used mostly on passing downs, until injuries to Bill Kollar and a Lee Roy Selmon's season ending knee injury, forced him to start 9 games at left defensive end.


In the 1982 strike shortened season, he led the team in sacks (6.5) ahead of the future hall of famer Selmon. The next year, he had a contract holdout during training camp and asked for the Buccaneers to trade him to the Denver Broncos, in order to pursue his veterinarian interests in the offseason. Complicating matters was a tense relationship with head coach John McKay and the team's ownership, because of his NFL players' union activities.

Stalls ended up renegotiating his contract after the Broncos didn't accept giving up a fourth-round draft choice as part of the trade. He eventually reported to the team and had to pay $40,000 in fines for missing time. On October 18, he was waived after the Buccaneers were notified that he signed a future services contract with the Denver Gold of the United States Football League.

Los Angeles Raiders (first stint)

On November 10, 1983, needing help on the defensive line, the Los Angeles Raiders signed Stalls to a short-term contract after the Denver Gold agreed to loan him. Although he didn't have the size, he was used as a pass-rushing nose tackle where his quickness created mismatches in route to the Raiders winning Super Bowl XVIII.

Denver Gold (USFL)

Stalls took two weeks off after the Super Bowl to physically recover from the grind of the NFL season and joined training camp in February. In 1984, he led the team in sacks with 12.5 (sixth in the league) but his production started to decline halfway through the season because of his body exhaustion. On May 18, he announced his retirement to concentrate in his next career.

Los Angeles Raiders (second stint)

After sitting out the previous year attending veterinary school at Colorado State University, he was signed by the Los Angeles Raiders as a free agent on July 21, 1985. The team used him again as a pass-rush specialist from the nose tackle position. He was released on October 3.

Personal life

After football, he experienced many careers such as marine biology at California State University, veterinary medical studies at Colorado State University, investment banking at Boettcher & Company and Stern Brothers, sales at MCI Telecommunications, youth advocacy with the Center for the New West, senior management with the City of Denver's Recreation Department, founder & executive director of The Spot (gang youth center), executive director of Aspen Youth Experience, President/CEO of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Colorado, and currently the founder & executive director of the Street Fraternity in Denver, Colorado.

References

Dave Stalls Wikipedia