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Redskins Spotlight: Alvin Walton


BigRedskinDaddy

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The following is courtesy of DudeRedskin of BGO

 

Hail

With the playoffs well under way, and our lack of involvement in them, I thought I would try out something new: a short (puff piece) biopic of some of my favorite 'Skins from past years. This initial post describes one of my all time favorite players from the glory days, aka the Gibbs 1.0 dynasty. Alvin Walton was an undersized but FIERCE hitter back when DB's were allowed to crush receivers over the deep middle. In fact, as a young(er) man I remember watching "hit list" vids in whatever bar or another I happened to be in that showed him leveling a receiver, calmly looking down, and then walking away - without barking - and tugging on his gloves as if to say "next." Epic, and brutal.

Most of this info comes via Wikipedia or the Redskins History Database. I make no claim to knowledge that anyone else could not pull down with a little research. I would merely like to open up the forum to discussion that does NOT involve the imminent departure of Kirk Cousins or other similarly depressing subjects. Here goes.

Alvin was born in Riverside, California, and played HS football in Banning. Not coincidentally both places are very familiar to me - one sister still lives in the former and I lived for 16 years adjacent to the latter - but this is not about me. Apologies, and onward. Walton played at Mt. San Jacinto JC before heading to the University of Kansas, where he wrapped up a solid if unspectacular collegiate career before being selected in the third round of the 1986 draft by Bobby B and the B&G brain trust. At 6'0', 180 lbs, he was not physically intimidating even in those days at SS, but he was a ball hawk and separator par excellence. In 77 starts over six seasons in Washington he recorded 12 picks, two of which went back to the house. In my admittedly dim memories, however, his biggest impact was what would never show up on the stat sheet; he was a feared enforcer. I have little doubt that any wideout playing the 'Skins in those years had his head on a swivel whenever he ran a skinny post, crossing pattern, or dig route, looking for #40...with damned good reason. The ex-Jayhawk would take your head off if you didn't keep your eye on him. Many opposing WR's learned this lesson the hard way.

AW went on to win two of the three SB's the 'Skins would garner from 83 to 91, whereupon he was released and ended up working for FedEx and the USPS before attending barber school. After three years out of football he signed with the CFL Baltimore Stallions, where he won a Grey Cup in 1995 - the only time an American team has done so. In later years, sadly, he and his family fell on hard times. Financial hardship forced his wife to pawn his two rings with the intention of redeeming them later, but they were sold before the family could do so. Nonetheless, he, his wife and his seven children continue to soldier on wherever they now live.

On a personal note, this man is what was so great about those teams from that era. Tough, hard-nosed blue collar guys who played every down as if it was their last, and would not give an inch no matter what the score or the time remaining. I still get chills thinking about those Richie Petibon defenses, and his part in them. Here's to you, Alvin. Thanks for the great play and the memories, and may you have many good years left to remember them.
 

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Wow, how sad he lost his rings and hit hard times. I loved this guy. He was absolutely brutal back there. Very Taylor-esque in a lot of ways. He would just crush people and just exuded meanness and nastiness. Was glad to see a little glimpse of that from this year's squad before all the injuries hit. That's what you gotta have. Hope things work out for Alvin. Lot of good memories from his playing career. 

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4 hours ago, RFK Lives said:

I can't find confirmation but I thought he had a fumble recovery in the NFC Championship Game in 1991, remember Berman recapping on PrimeTime, who has the ball, Theodore? Simon? Alvin!!!

He would use the same schtick later with Alvoid Mays of the Redskins.

I don't think he played in that game. In fact, his career was effectively over at that point, though he didn't know it. 

 

You're probably thinking of this game:

https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/199101050phi.htm

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18 hours ago, Rufus T Firefly said:

I don't think he played in that game. In fact, his career was effectively over at that point, though he didn't know it. 

 

You're probably thinking of this game:

https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/199101050phi.htm

I was at that game and it was glorious.  It was the rematch of the bodybag game and the Eagles fans were completely confident that they would destroy us - they were in typical form.  Definitely one of the top three games I've ever attended.  It was awesome we got to play the Eagles in a playoff game and knock them out. 

 

As a side note, think about how dominant the NFC East was during the 1990 season.  The Giants win the Super Bowl but the Eagles and Redskins were also in the playoffs.  Cowboys didn't make it but were on the upswing with Aikman, Smith, Irvin.  The Phoenix Cardinals were, well.....the Phoenix Cardinals.

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11 hours ago, TaylorPainTrain said:

I was at that game and it was glorious.  It was the rematch of the bodybag game and the Eagles fans were completely confident that they would destroy us - they were in typical form.  Definitely one of the top three games I've ever attended.  It was awesome we got to play the Eagles in a playoff game and knock them out. 

 

As a side note, think about how dominant the NFC East was during the 1990 season.  The Giants win the Super Bowl but the Eagles and Redskins were also in the playoffs.  Cowboys didn't make it but were on the upswing with Aikman, Smith, Irvin.  The Phoenix Cardinals were, well.....the Phoenix Cardinals.

Indeed.  There is much truth in the theory that the NFC Beast years weeded out some potential SB winning teams through attrition - consider how many times the 'Skins,  Iggles,  little g-men and Pukes hammered each other during the late 80's-late 90's,  and do the math.  It is entirely possible that one,  two,  or even three possible champs lost their chance in those years simply due to having to play the other juggernauts in their division twice in one season in those days.

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