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College football's 50 greatest wide receivers of the past 50 years
ESPN PLUS ($ MATERIAL)
You could make the case that the seeds of the modern football passing game, college and pro, were planted around 50 years ago.
Bill Walsh was tweaking the Cincinnati Bengals' offense and crafting what would become the West Coast offense. Don Coryell took what would be known as his Air Coryell offense to the big time, jumping from San Diego State to the St. Louis Cardinals in 1973. LaVell Edwards took over as BYU head coach in 1972 and, figuring he had to do something radical to succeed there, took to the air. They would become three of the most influential figures in the modernization of football.
It would take a while for these ideas to percolate to the top of college football, which would be ruled by the wishbone and old-school physicality for a few more years to come. But mad scientists were tinkering.
Let's commemorate the occasion, then, by celebrating the premier FBS wide receivers over these past five decades. Here are the top 50.
Career Stats: 240 catches, 3,391 yards, 27 TDs (also: 339 rushing yards, 1 rushing TD, 1 kick return TD)
One of the most highly touted and important signings of the early Dabo Swinney era, Watkins lived up to his billing, recording 1,219 yards as a freshman and 1,464 as a junior to help boost the profile of a rising Clemson program.
Career Stats: 154 catches, 2,469 yards, 28 TDs
A big-play threat throughout his career, Stokes finished seventh in the Heisman voting in 1993 while catching 82 passes for 1,181 yards and 17 TDs, leading the Bruins to a surprising Rose Bowl bid.
Career Stats: 136 catches, 2,385 yards, 32 TDs
He's known mostly for his exploits with the Seattle Seahawks, but adjusting for the era, his 51-catch, 1,000-yard performance with the Golden Hurricane in 1975 is equivalent to about 90 catches for 1,600 yards today.
Career Stats: 114 catches, 2,504 yards, 27 TDs
Only one Virginia team has ever reached No. 1 in the AP poll: the 1990 team, which resided there for three weeks. Moore was the Cavaliers' most talented player, catching 54 balls for 1,190 yards and 13 TDs that season.
Career Stats: 298 catches, 5,005 yards, 35 TDs
The 1999 Nevada Wolf Pack went just 3-8 and ranked 60th in scoring offense. That should tell you something about Insley's supporting cast: the senior caught, in all caps, ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-FOUR PASSES FOR TWO THOUSAND SIXTY YARDS, and it wasn't nearly enough.
Career Stats: 112 catches, 2,347 yards, 24 TDs (also: 144 rushing yards, 2 rushing TDs)
Yes, that Kirk Gibson. Before going on to win the 1988 National League MVP award in baseball, he was an all-star receiver. His 42-catch, 806-yard performance in 1978 was equivalent to about 75 catches for 1,300 yards today.
Career Stats: 166 catches, 2,619 yards, 23 TDs (also: 105 rushing yards)
Despite playing basically only 2.5 seasons, the former star recruit from Summerville, South Carolina, was one of the sport's steadiest stars, catching between 53 and 57 balls for between 808 and 963 yards in each of his three seasons.
Career Stats: 126 catches, 2,267 yards, 21 TDs (also: 118 rushing yards, 1 punt return TD)
Despite playing only two years -- at a school that has produced endless wideout talent, no less -- Westbrook stood out. As Baker Mayfield's go-to in 2016, Westbrook caught 80 passes for 1,524 yards and 17 TDs as a senior.
Career Stats: 157 catches, 2,707 yards, 26 TDs (also: 227 rushing yards, 3 rushing TDs, 1 punt return TD)
After catching just six passes as a freshman, Tate ignited, first to 58 catches for 1,080 yards in 2008, then a Biletnikoff Award-winning 93 for 1,496 as a junior. Bonus points for a memorable leap into the Michigan State band.
Career Stats: 191 catches, 2,778 yards, 22 TDs (also: 1 passing TD)
Alexander was just beginning to emerge as a go-to star when he tore his ACL late in 2007 and spent most of 2008 as a backup. But in 2009, he put together one of the greatest individual seasons ever: 113 catches for 1,781 yards and 14 TDs. He gained 957 in his last five games. Otherworldly.
Career Stats: 266 catches, 4,345 yards, 43 TDs
Pacific's program folded in 1995, Turner gave Tigers fans some lasting thrills with three consecutive seasons of at least 1,171 receiving yards. He was the all-time career yardage leader at the time of his departure. (He's 11th now.)
Career Stats: 102 catches, 2,070 yards, 16 TDs
Yes, this is a list of receivers, not tight ends. But before becoming an NFL Hall of Fame TE with the Browns, Newsome came to Tuscaloosa as a 6-foot-4, 195-pound wideout. He even returned punts his junior and senior seasons. I say he qualifies.
Career Stats: 280 catches, 4,352 yards, 50 TDs (also: 447 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs, 1 punt return TD)
Edwards' career was more than a single game -- he had two seasons of 1,700+ yards, after all -- but no one has ever made a bigger impression in a single game than when Edwards opened 1998 by catching 21 balls for 405 yards and three scores against defending national champion Nebraska.
Career Stats: 288 catches, 3,413 yards, 29 TDs (also: 1,033 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs, 4 kick return TDs, 1 punt return TD)
The perfect weapon for Dana Holgorsen's version of the air raid, Austin was both a deep threat and a jet sweep whiz. He finished eighth in the Heisman voting as a senior while producing 1932 yards from scrimmage (1289 receiving, 643 rushing) and 15 scores.
Career Stats: 183 catches, 2,937 yards, 20 TDs (also: 47 rushing yards, 1 rushing TD)
Frank Kush's mid-1970s ASU teams so thoroughly dominated the WAC that eventually earned them a Pac-10 bid in 1978. Jefferson was a big reason for that, catching 153 balls for 2,514 yards in his last three years -- equivalent to about 265 for 3,900 today.
Career Stats: 220 catches, 3,924 yards, 20 TDs
When Mike Riley's second Oregon State tenure began, he inherited a gift in Hass, a former walk-on who caught 176 passes for nearly 3,000 yards in his final two seasons alone and won the Biletnikoff as a senior.
Career Stats: 331 catches, 5,278 yards, 52 TDs
Only two FBS players have generated more than 4,600 receiving yards in a career: Insley at 5,005 and Davis at a mind-blowing 5,278. He had three seasons of at least 1,400 yards and 12 touchdowns, and he led WMU to an unbeaten season and Cotton Bowl bid as a senior.
Career Stats: 93 catches, 1,994 yards, 22 TDs (also: 356 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs)
How good did a receiver have to be to earn Heisman votes from a run-heavy offense in the 1970s? Well, Chandler was that good. He caught 44 balls for 967 yards and 10 scores as a junior before finishing 10th in the Heisman voting (and going third in the draft) as a senior.
Career Stats: 151 catches, 2,499 yards, 17 TDs
It's not just that Evans was the best receiver in the SEC in the Aggies' first two years in their new league; it's that he brought his A-game precisely when he did. Against Alabama and eventual national runner-up Auburn in 2013, he caught a combined 18 balls for 566 yards and five scores.
Career Stats: 226 catches, 3,272 yards, 24 TDs (also: 340 rushing yards, 2 rushing TDs)
Originally a UCLA commit, Cooks instead went north to Corvallis, where he eventually became the second Beaver in a decade to win the Biletnikoff. He did most of his damage in his last two seasons: 3,281 receiving yards, 299 rushing yards and 23 combined TDs.
ESPN PLUS ($ MATERIAL)
You could make the case that the seeds of the modern football passing game, college and pro, were planted around 50 years ago.
Bill Walsh was tweaking the Cincinnati Bengals' offense and crafting what would become the West Coast offense. Don Coryell took what would be known as his Air Coryell offense to the big time, jumping from San Diego State to the St. Louis Cardinals in 1973. LaVell Edwards took over as BYU head coach in 1972 and, figuring he had to do something radical to succeed there, took to the air. They would become three of the most influential figures in the modernization of football.
It would take a while for these ideas to percolate to the top of college football, which would be ruled by the wishbone and old-school physicality for a few more years to come. But mad scientists were tinkering.
Let's commemorate the occasion, then, by celebrating the premier FBS wide receivers over these past five decades. Here are the top 50.

50. Sammy Watkins, Clemson
Years: 2011-13Career Stats: 240 catches, 3,391 yards, 27 TDs (also: 339 rushing yards, 1 rushing TD, 1 kick return TD)
One of the most highly touted and important signings of the early Dabo Swinney era, Watkins lived up to his billing, recording 1,219 yards as a freshman and 1,464 as a junior to help boost the profile of a rising Clemson program.

49. J.J. Stokes, UCLA
Years: 1991-94Career Stats: 154 catches, 2,469 yards, 28 TDs
A big-play threat throughout his career, Stokes finished seventh in the Heisman voting in 1993 while catching 82 passes for 1,181 yards and 17 TDs, leading the Bruins to a surprising Rose Bowl bid.

48. Steve Largent, Tulsa
Years: 1973-75Career Stats: 136 catches, 2,385 yards, 32 TDs
He's known mostly for his exploits with the Seattle Seahawks, but adjusting for the era, his 51-catch, 1,000-yard performance with the Golden Hurricane in 1975 is equivalent to about 90 catches for 1,600 yards today.

47. Herman Moore, Virginia
Years: 1988-90Career Stats: 114 catches, 2,504 yards, 27 TDs
Only one Virginia team has ever reached No. 1 in the AP poll: the 1990 team, which resided there for three weeks. Moore was the Cavaliers' most talented player, catching 54 balls for 1,190 yards and 13 TDs that season.

46. Trevor Insley, Nevada
Years: 1996-99Career Stats: 298 catches, 5,005 yards, 35 TDs
The 1999 Nevada Wolf Pack went just 3-8 and ranked 60th in scoring offense. That should tell you something about Insley's supporting cast: the senior caught, in all caps, ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-FOUR PASSES FOR TWO THOUSAND SIXTY YARDS, and it wasn't nearly enough.

45. Kirk Gibson, Michigan State
Years: 1975-78Career Stats: 112 catches, 2,347 yards, 24 TDs (also: 144 rushing yards, 2 rushing TDs)
Yes, that Kirk Gibson. Before going on to win the 1988 National League MVP award in baseball, he was an all-star receiver. His 42-catch, 806-yard performance in 1978 was equivalent to about 75 catches for 1,300 yards today.

44. A.J. Green, Georgia
Years: 2008-10Career Stats: 166 catches, 2,619 yards, 23 TDs (also: 105 rushing yards)
Despite playing basically only 2.5 seasons, the former star recruit from Summerville, South Carolina, was one of the sport's steadiest stars, catching between 53 and 57 balls for between 808 and 963 yards in each of his three seasons.

43. Dede Westbrook, Oklahoma
Years: 2015-16Career Stats: 126 catches, 2,267 yards, 21 TDs (also: 118 rushing yards, 1 punt return TD)
Despite playing only two years -- at a school that has produced endless wideout talent, no less -- Westbrook stood out. As Baker Mayfield's go-to in 2016, Westbrook caught 80 passes for 1,524 yards and 17 TDs as a senior.

42. Golden Tate, Notre Dame
Years: 2007-09Career Stats: 157 catches, 2,707 yards, 26 TDs (also: 227 rushing yards, 3 rushing TDs, 1 punt return TD)
After catching just six passes as a freshman, Tate ignited, first to 58 catches for 1,080 yards in 2008, then a Biletnikoff Award-winning 93 for 1,496 as a junior. Bonus points for a memorable leap into the Michigan State band.

41. Danario Alexander, Missouri
Years: 2006-09Career Stats: 191 catches, 2,778 yards, 22 TDs (also: 1 passing TD)
Alexander was just beginning to emerge as a go-to star when he tore his ACL late in 2007 and spent most of 2008 as a backup. But in 2009, he put together one of the greatest individual seasons ever: 113 catches for 1,781 yards and 14 TDs. He gained 957 in his last five games. Otherworldly.

40. Aaron Turner, Pacific
Years: 1989-92Career Stats: 266 catches, 4,345 yards, 43 TDs
Pacific's program folded in 1995, Turner gave Tigers fans some lasting thrills with three consecutive seasons of at least 1,171 receiving yards. He was the all-time career yardage leader at the time of his departure. (He's 11th now.)

39. Ozzie Newsome, Alabama
Years: 1974-77Career Stats: 102 catches, 2,070 yards, 16 TDs
Yes, this is a list of receivers, not tight ends. But before becoming an NFL Hall of Fame TE with the Browns, Newsome came to Tuscaloosa as a 6-foot-4, 195-pound wideout. He even returned punts his junior and senior seasons. I say he qualifies.

38. Troy Edwards, Louisiana Tech
Years: 1996-98Career Stats: 280 catches, 4,352 yards, 50 TDs (also: 447 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs, 1 punt return TD)
Edwards' career was more than a single game -- he had two seasons of 1,700+ yards, after all -- but no one has ever made a bigger impression in a single game than when Edwards opened 1998 by catching 21 balls for 405 yards and three scores against defending national champion Nebraska.

37. Tavon Austin, West Virginia
Years: 2009-12Career Stats: 288 catches, 3,413 yards, 29 TDs (also: 1,033 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs, 4 kick return TDs, 1 punt return TD)
The perfect weapon for Dana Holgorsen's version of the air raid, Austin was both a deep threat and a jet sweep whiz. He finished eighth in the Heisman voting as a senior while producing 1932 yards from scrimmage (1289 receiving, 643 rushing) and 15 scores.

36. John Jefferson, Arizona State
Years: 1974-77Career Stats: 183 catches, 2,937 yards, 20 TDs (also: 47 rushing yards, 1 rushing TD)
Frank Kush's mid-1970s ASU teams so thoroughly dominated the WAC that eventually earned them a Pac-10 bid in 1978. Jefferson was a big reason for that, catching 153 balls for 2,514 yards in his last three years -- equivalent to about 265 for 3,900 today.

35. Mike Hass, Oregon State
Years: 2003-05Career Stats: 220 catches, 3,924 yards, 20 TDs
When Mike Riley's second Oregon State tenure began, he inherited a gift in Hass, a former walk-on who caught 176 passes for nearly 3,000 yards in his final two seasons alone and won the Biletnikoff as a senior.

34. Corey Davis, Western Michigan
Years: 2013-16Career Stats: 331 catches, 5,278 yards, 52 TDs
Only two FBS players have generated more than 4,600 receiving yards in a career: Insley at 5,005 and Davis at a mind-blowing 5,278. He had three seasons of at least 1,400 yards and 12 touchdowns, and he led WMU to an unbeaten season and Cotton Bowl bid as a senior.

33. Wes Chandler, Florida
Years: 1974-77Career Stats: 93 catches, 1,994 yards, 22 TDs (also: 356 rushing yards, 6 rushing TDs)
How good did a receiver have to be to earn Heisman votes from a run-heavy offense in the 1970s? Well, Chandler was that good. He caught 44 balls for 967 yards and 10 scores as a junior before finishing 10th in the Heisman voting (and going third in the draft) as a senior.

32. Mike Evans, Texas A&M
Years: 2012-13Career Stats: 151 catches, 2,499 yards, 17 TDs
It's not just that Evans was the best receiver in the SEC in the Aggies' first two years in their new league; it's that he brought his A-game precisely when he did. Against Alabama and eventual national runner-up Auburn in 2013, he caught a combined 18 balls for 566 yards and five scores.

31. Brandin Cooks, Oregon State
Years: 2011-13Career Stats: 226 catches, 3,272 yards, 24 TDs (also: 340 rushing yards, 2 rushing TDs)
Originally a UCLA commit, Cooks instead went north to Corvallis, where he eventually became the second Beaver in a decade to win the Biletnikoff. He did most of his damage in his last two seasons: 3,281 receiving yards, 299 rushing yards and 23 combined TDs.