James Samuel Everett III (born January 3, 1963), is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback for 12 seasons in the National Football League (NFL), primarily with the Los Angeles Rams. He played college football for the Purdue Boilermakers and was selected third overall in the 1986 NFL draft by the Houston Oilers. Unable to work out a contract agreement with Everett,
During the 1985 season, Everett finished with 3,589 yards of total offense, second in the nation behind Robbie Bosco of BYU, and a school record at the time (later surpassed by Drew Brees). He finished sixth in balloting for the 1985 Heisman Trophy, and was a second-team All-American.
Everett earned regular membership on the Distinguished Students list at Purdue, and graduated with a degree in industrial management. During his time at Purdue, Everett regularly tutored fellow Purdue athletes in courses such as calculus and statistical analysis. He was also initiated into the Sigma Chi fraternity as an undergraduate. During his senior year, he was awarded the Big Ten Medal of Honor in recognition of his athletic and academic achievements.
- 1984: 3,256 yards with 18 TD vs 16 INT in 11 games
- 1985: 3,651 yards with 23 TD vs 11 INT in 11 games
NFL career
1986 draft and trade to Rams
Before the 1986 draft, Everett was generally rated the best quarterback available, although some scouts had him behind Iowa’s Chuck Long. The Indianapolis Colts traded up from the sixth position to the fourth with the expected goal of drafting Everett before the St. Louis Cardinals, who picked fifth, did so. However, Everett would be drafted third overall by the Houston Oilers. It is widely believed the Oilers, who possessed a developing franchise quarterback in Warren Moon and a capable backup in Oliver Luck — drafted Everett merely to prevent the Colts doing so.
Conflicts between Oiler general manager Ladd Herzeg and Everett's agent Marv Demoff meant Everett would never sign with the Oilers, A wait-and-see attitude regarding established starter Moon meant that the Oilers did not consider trading Everett until the last week of August. Eventually, when protracted negotiations between ownership and Demoff broke down with the regular season already underway, the Oilers decided to trade Everett. The San Francisco 49ers, who had lost champion Joe Montana for the season to back surgery, were initially expected to gain his services.
New Orleans Saints
The Rams traded Everett to the Saints in March 1994. In return, the Los Angeles Times reported, Los Angeles received "a seventh-round pick in the 1995 draft".
In three years with the Saints, benefiting from receivers such as Quinn Early and former Falcon receiver Michael Haynes and former Bear fullback Brad Muster in the backfield, Everett threw 22, 26, and 12 touchdowns. Nevertheless, the team finished 7–9, 7–9, and 3–13 in those three years, respectively. The Saints, like many other NFL teams, released or traded core players when the NFL's salary cap took effect around the time Everett arrived. The Dome Patrol defense had also largely been dismantled by 1994. Only Sam Mills remained on the Saints' roster by 1994, and that was Mills's final season, as he departed for the expansion Carolina Panthers the following year. Running backs Dalton Hilliard and Craig Heyward had also both left the Saints by 1994.
San Diego Chargers
Everett signed with the Chargers in June 1997. In his first start for San Diego, he defeated the Saints, 20–6, in his return to the Superdome. 1997 was his final NFL season.
Over his career, Everett performed well enough to be among league leaders in several passing categories. His 203 touchdown passes rank 45th all-time, and his 34,837 passing yards are 33rd all-time. He also ranks 35th all-time in completions and 32nd all-time in pass attempts. On a year-to-year basis, he was among the top ten league leaders in pass attempts (seven times), completions (eight times), pass yards (seven times), and passing touchdowns (six, including leading the league twice).
Everett's two postseason victories (both in 1989) tied him with Vince Ferragamo, James Harris, and Norm Van Brocklin for second-most playoff victories during the Rams' first stint in Los Angeles (as of 2018, it is now the third-most). Only Ferragamo had more wins (three) during the Rams' 49-year stint in Los Angeles. Kurt Warner's five playoff victories during the Rams' years in St. Louis have since superseded Ferragamo's record.
NFL career statistics
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! colspan="2"| Legend
|-
| style="background:#ff0; width:3em;"|
| Pro Bowl selection
|-
| style="background:#cfecec; width:3em;"|
| Led the league
|-
| Bold
| Career high
|}
Regular season
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! rowspan="2"| Year
! rowspan="2"| Team
! colspan="3"| Games
! colspan="9"| Passing
|-
! GP !! GS !! Record !! Cmp !! Att !! Pct !! Yds !! Avg !! TD !! Int !! Lng !! Rtg
|-
! 1986 !! LAR
| 6 || 5 || 3–2 || 73 || 147 || 49.7 || 1,018 || 6.9 || 8 || 8 || 60 || 67.8
|-
! 1987 !! LAR
| 11 || 11 || 5–6 || 162 || 302 || 53.6 || 2,064 || 6.8 || 10 || 13 || 81 || 68.4
|-
! 1988 !! LAR
| 16 || 16 || 10−6 || 308 || 517 || 59.6 || 3,964 || 7.7 || style="background:#cfecec;"|31 || 18 || 69 || 89.2
|-
! 1989 !! LAR
| 16 || 16 || 11−5 || 304 || 518 || 58.7 || 4,310 || 8.3 || style="background:#cfecec;"|29 || 17 || 78 || 90.6
|-
! style="background:#ff0;|1990 !! LAR
| 16 || 16 || 5−11 || 307 || 554 || 55.4 || 3,989 || 7.2 || 23 || 17 || 55 || 79.3
|-
! 1991 !! LAR
| 16 || 16 || 3–13 || 277 || 490 || 56.5 || 3,438 || 7.0 || 11 || 20 || 78 || 68.9
|-
! 1992 !! LAR
| 16 || 16 || 6–10 || 281 || 475 || 59.2 || 3,323 || 7.0 || 22 || 18 || 67 || 80.2
|-
! 1993 !! LAR
| 10 || 9 || 3−6 || 135 || 274 || 49.3 || 1,652 || 6.0 || 8 || 12 || 60 || 59.7
|-
! 1994 !! NO
| 16 || 16 || 7−9 || 346 || 540 || 64.1 || 3,855 || 7.1 || 22 || 18 || 78 || 84.9
|-
! 1995 !! NO
| 16 || 16 || 7−9 || 345 || 567 || 60.8 || 3,970 || 7.0 || 26 || 14 || 70 || 87.0
|-
! 1996 !! NO
| 15 || 15 || 3−12 || 267 || 464 || 57.5 || 2,797 || 6.0 || 12 || 16 || 51 || 69.4
|-
! 1997 !! SD
| 4 || 1 || 1−0 || 36 || 75 || 48.0 || 457 || 6.1 || 1 || 4 || 62 || 49.7
|-
! colspan="2"| Career !! 158 !! 153 !! 64–89 !! 2,841 !! 4,923 !! 57.7 !! 34,837 !! 7.1 !! 203 !! 175 !! 81 !! 78.6
|}
Jim Rome altercation
Following the 1989 regular season, Everett was reportedly "shellshocked" from the numerous times he was sacked and hit in the NFC Championship Game against the San Francisco 49ers (the 49ers won, 30–3). At one point in the game, Everett was so rattled that he collapsed to the ground in the pocket in anticipation of a sack, even though the 49ers' defensive players had not yet reached him, a play now known as Everett's "phantom sack".
His struggle eventually led to a 1994 confrontation with then Talk2 host Jim Rome. Rome had regularly mocked Everett's aversion to taking hits on the field, mockingly referring to him as "Chris" Everett (a reference to female tennis player, Chris Evert). When Everett appeared as a guest on Talk2, Rome wasted no time, calling him "Chris". Everett dared Rome to repeat it to his face again, implying that a physical confrontation would ensue were Rome to do so. When Rome did it anyway, Everett overturned the table between them and shoved Rome to the floor while still on the air. Rome was not injured and no legal action was taken following the confrontation.
In a 2012 interview with Deadspin, Everett stated that "a large burger franchise" wanted to use the footage in an ad. Everett agreed, but Rome did not, blocking the deal.
Post-NFL
After his NFL career ended, Everett received an MBA degree from Pepperdine University and started an asset management business. Eventually, he settled in Dana Point, California.
See also
- List of most consecutive starts by a National Football League quarterback
- List of NCAA major college football yearly total offense leaders
