How Good Was Preston Pearson ACTUALLY?

Preston Pearson is one of the strangest re-evaluation cases of the 1970s NFL. He did not play college football, entered the league as a twelfth-round pick, and still built a fourteen-year career that ran through Don Shula, Chuck Noll, and Tom Landry. The easy version of his story is that he was a useful role player on great teams. The better version is more interesting. Pearson appeared in five Super Bowls with three different franchises, became a trusted playoff receiving weapon for Roger Staubach, and helped define the third-down back role before the modern passing game had a clean name for it. In this episode, we look at what the numbers say, what the era hides, and why Pearson’s value was always bigger than a simple rushing total. In this episode, we cover: How a college basketball player became an NFL running back His early years with the Baltimore Colts and Pittsburgh Steelers The injuries and roster changes that kept reshaping his career Why Tom Landry used him differently in Dallas His 1975 playoff surge with the Cowboys The real case for Pearson as an early third-down back The verdict on how good he actually was Players, coaches, and teams covered: Preston Pearson Baltimore Colts Pittsburgh Steelers Dallas Cowboys Don Shula Chuck Noll Tom Landry Roger Staubach Franco Harris Tony Dorsett Drew Pearson Subscribe for more NFL history, forgotten stars, and honest football re-evaluations from Touchdown Timewarp. #NFLHistory #DallasCowboys #PittsburghSteelers #BaltimoreColts #TouchdownTimewarp