A tribute to Jackie Parker!

Started by Balticfox, November 24, 2025, 09:19:32 PM

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Balticfox

CFL Hall of Famer Jackie Parker is my favourite football player of all time. Nicknamed "Ol' Spaghetti Legs", his name was already mentioned with awe in the schoolyard when I started grade school in 1958.

After graduating from Mississippi State University in the spring of 1954 he opted to play in Canada with the Edmonton Eskimos. Rumour has it that the executives of the Eskimos met with him in a motel room and laid out $25,000 on the bed and said "Sign the contract and it's yours." The Eskimos badly needed a replacement for 1952 Heisman Trophy winner Billy Vessels who had been drafted into the U.S. Army after one outstanding season for the Eskimos in 1953.

Quote from: WikipediaOnce his college playing days were over Parker was drafted by both the New York Giants of the NFL and the Edmonton Eskimos of the Western Interprovincial Football Union. Despite being offered more money by the Giants Parker chose to sign with the Eskimos in part because his former quarterbacks coach at Mississippi State, Darrel Royal, had become the Eskimos' head coach. Royal never actually coached Parker in Canada as he returned to Mississippi State as the head coach for the 1954 season. At the end of his first season Giants owner Wellinton Mara personally came calling with a contract worth almost twice what Parker was making with the Eskimos but Parker chose to not to go to New York in part because (his wife) Peggy said she liked Edmonton better.

Jackie Parker played for the Edmonton Eskimos from 1954 to 1962 and the Toronto Argonauts from 1963 to 1965. He joined the British Columbia Lions as an assistant coach/general manager in 1966 and even suited up as QB on a fill-in basis for the Lions in 1968. Like many other star players from that era, Parker played both on offence and defence and also served as the Eskimos' placekicker and punter through much of his tenure with the Eskimos.

(Not mine.)





Parker made the Western Conference's all-star team as a running back in 1954, 1957 and 1959 and as a quarterback in 1955, 1956, 1958, 1960 and 1961. He won the Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy as the Western Conference's Most Outstanding Player in 1954, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960 and 1961 and won three Schenley Awards as the CFL's Most Outstanding Player in 1957, 1958 and 1960. He was the lifetime leading scorer of the CFL when he retired.

He played in the 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1960 Grey Cup Games with the Eskimos beating the Montr�al Alouettes in the first three before losing to the Ottawa Rough Riders in the last.

He took over as head coach of the British Columbia Lions during the 1969 season and held the position through 1970. He was the head coach of the Edmonton Eskimos from 1983 until part way into the 1987 season when he resigned for health reasons including being troubled by gout.

As a head coach Jackie Parker wasn't prone to giving long motivational speeches. Shortly after taking over the coaching reins with the Eskimos he is remembered to have said "We've got Calgary this week, men. Last time we lost to Calgary and the coach got fired." Then he looked up and said "Don't want that to happen again."

Nor did he think it was necessary to be a harsh disciplinarian. Kick returner extraordinaire Henry "Gizmo" Williams thought he was in deep trouble when Parker caught him sneaking into the team hotel at 7:00 AM the morning of a game after a whole night of carousing in Montr�al. Parker though merely called Gizmo over and told him to be ready for the game later that day!

Ray Willsey who became an assistant coach in the NFL with the Oakland Raiders among other teams frequently opined "I've seen some pretty good ball players. I've watched Jimmy Brown, Gale Sayers, O.J. Simpson, Y.A. Tittle, Otto Graham and Joe Namath. And without reservation, I'm telling you that Jackie Parker was the best football player I've ever seen. That's one hell of a strong statement. But if my career depended on one play and I had the choice of any player I'd ever watched, I'd have a better chance if I gave the ball to Jackie Parker than anyone. He'd find a way.''

Dan Kelly, the late great St. Louis-based hockey broadcaster, once told an Edmonton audience of a discussion involving the St. Louis Cardinals coaching staff. "When the Cardinals were flying high in the early '70s, six of their coaches were playing cards and drinking beer one night and they started arguing about who they'd like to have on their side if it was fourth down at the five yard line and they had to get the ball into the end zone. One said Jim Brown. Another agreed. A third said Joe Namath. The other three said Jackie Parker. One of the coaches picking Parker was Don Coryell, the man who would become famous as head coach of Air Coryell - the San Diego Chargers. Another was Jim Champion, who had been head coach of the B.C. Lions. And the other was Ray Willsey.''

Jackie Parker was known for his love of gambling and partying as well as for his exploits on the field. Said teammate and eventual Alberta Premier Don Getty about the Eskimos' games "Rollie Miles thought of it as a career. Johnny Bright thought of it as a war. Normie Kwong thought of it as a way to promote his laundry business. Jackie Parker thought of it as something to get out of the way so he could get on with his evening.''

Jackie Parker was inducted into both the Mississippi State University Sports Hall of Fame and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame in 1972 and then the College Football Hall of Fame in 1976.

He was elected to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1971 and Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1987.

Jackie Parker was voted the Canadian Football League's Player of the Quarter Century by the Football Writers of Canada in 1978. The Saskatoon StarPhoenix ran a poll in 2000 to pick the top 50 players in CFL history in which Jackie Parker came in first. Parker was also voted #3 on a list of the CFL's top 50 players since 1945 in a poll conducted by Canadian sports network TSN

He died of throat cancer at the age of 74 on 7 November 2006.

:(
Radically Canadian!


Blue In BC

#1
The 1st CFL game I saw live was the Eskimos against the Rough Riders in Ottawa. Parker against Russ Jackson at QB. That would have been in 1960 or 1961.

Typically in that era he played QB, rusher, receiver, punter, place kicker, punt returner, kick returner and DB.

I wonder if he ever came off the field except due to injury?
One game at a time.

Balticfox

Quote from: Blue In BC on November 24, 2025, 10:15:52 PMThe 1st CFL game I saw live was the Eskimos against the Rough Riders in Ottawa. Parker against Russ Jackson at QB. That would have been in 1960 or 1961.

Wow!

 :o
Radically Canadian!


Blue In BC

#3
Quote from: Balticfox on November 24, 2025, 11:01:21 PMWow!

 :o

Shows how old I am. lol

BTW. Ron Lancaster was still the # 2 QB in Ottawa. Don Getty was the # 2 in Edmonton.

In thinking about it, the year was probably 1960 and I would have seen Normie Kwong, Rollie Miles, Johnny Bright and Tommy Coffee and  play as well. Yikes that's a list of all time greats.
One game at a time.

Balticfox

Quote from: Blue In BC on November 24, 2025, 10:15:52 PMTypically in that era he played QB, rusher, receiver, punter, place kicker, punt returner, kick returner and DB.

I wonder if he ever came off the field except due to injury?

Jackie Parker did some punting but he wasn't usually their first string punter during his years with the Eskimos. And the great Tommy Joe Coffey eventually took over kicking duties after joining the Eskimos in 1959.

Quote from: Blue In BC on November 24, 2025, 11:39:53 PMIn thinking about it, the year was probably 1960 and I would have seen Normie Kwong, Rollie Miles, Johnny Bright and Tommy Coffee and  play as well.

Unless it was an exhibition game, it could not have been 1960 since interlocking games didn't start until 1961. And if the game was therefore in 1961, Tommy Joe Coffey would not have played since he took the year off from playing to pursue other opportunities.

 :)
Radically Canadian!


Blue In BC

#5
Quote from: Balticfox on November 25, 2025, 02:09:06 PMJackie Parker did some punting but he wasn't usually their first string punter during his years with the Eskimos. And the great Tommy Joe Coffey eventually took over kicking duties after joining the Eskimos in 1959.

Unless it was an exhibition game, it could not have been 1960 since interlocking games didn't start until 1961. And if the game was therefore in 1961, Tommy Joe Coffey would not have played since he took the year off from playing to pursue other opportunities.

 :)

Fair enough. It was a long time ago and memory has faded.  I lived in Ottawa from 1958 to 1961 before moving to Halifax. I don't remember which team won or any specific plays. It was an early summer type game held during the Ottawa Exhibition ( like the PNE ).

I didn't mean to suggest Coffey was the primary punter, only that players often played 2 ways in multiple roles.

EDIT:  Turns out there was a pre season game in August 1960. Interestingly it appears all 4 pre season games were against the west.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960_Ottawa_Rough_Riders_season#:~:text=Week,3

One game at a time.

Balticfox

#6
Quote from: Blue In BC on November 25, 2025, 02:44:28 PMIt was an early summer type game held during the Ottawa Exhibition.

Sadly 2010 was the last year for the Ottawa Exhibition. The Western Fair in my home town of London is still going strong though!

Quote from: Blue In BC on November 25, 2025, 02:44:28 PMTurns out there was a pre season game in August 1960.

That then must have been the game you saw since the Eskimos didn't play in Ottawa again until 9 September 1961.

Quote from: Blue In BC on November 25, 2025, 02:44:28 PMI didn't mean to suggest Coffey was the primary punter, only that players often played 2 ways in multiple roles.

While Jackie Parker punted sometimes, Tommy Joe Coffey rarely did so (only on an emergency basis).

:)
Radically Canadian!