According to HBCU Legends on Sports Illustrated reporter Kyle T. Mosley, GOAT receiver Jerry Rice is hinting that he may want to take a stab at coaching. Maybe even join the growing list of NFL All-Pros and coaches who are taking their talents and experience to Black college football programs.
Rice Interested In Coaching After Seeing Deion Sanders Succeed
(1994) Jerry Rice and Deion Sanders. đ pic.twitter.com/TtYwFCFMdd
— Timeless Sports (@timelesssports_) December 30, 2018
Rice and Sanders were once fierce rivals when Jerry played for the Niners and Sanders for the Atlanta Falcons. The two GOATs had some epic battles and eventually joined forces in 1994 to help lead San Francisco to a Super Bowl title.
.@DeionSanders and @JerryRice at the Pro Bowl in 1994 đđ pic.twitter.com/1rUHbloZ7v
— NFL Legacy (@NFLLegacy) January 22, 2019
“Not until Deion [Sanders], with Jackson State,” said Rice. “Because I felt like I played the game for such a long time. And I was so totally committed. And I just poured everything into my career, that I didn’t have anything left. Because, as a coach, you really don’t have a life. I mean, coaching. It is hard, man, it takes up the majority of your time. But yeah, it takes a total commitment. And you got to be all in. So, it started to cross my mind just a little bit, now,” stated Rice.
Rice is recognized as the best wide receiver to ever play the game of football. Heâs arguably the greatest player regardless of position.
The former Mississippi Valley State Delta Devil torched the SWAC and HBCU football from 1981-1984 down on the Delta. He quickly garnered the nickname âWorldâ for his amazing catch radius.
Willie Totten and Jerry Rice in the MVSU Football Locker room during a tour of the newly renovated Archie Cooley Jr. Devil's Den pic.twitter.com/LS2oDQenT3
— Mississippi Valley State University (@MVSUDEVILS) September 15, 2017
Rice had 301 receptions for 4,693 yards and 50 touchdowns in his college career. His 50 collegiate touchdown receptions record stood until 2006. He set 18 Division I-AA (FCS) records. The offense he played in at MVSU was the original âRun and Shootâ and the Delta Devils averaged 57 points per game in one season during Riceâs time there.
Jerry Rice finished his career at Mississippi Valley State with 301 catches for 4,693 yards & 50 TD playing for Archie "Gunslinger" Cooley.
The "Satellite Express" was a 5-Wide, No Huddle Offense that would often align in Empty 4×1 to create isolation opportunities for Rice. pic.twitter.com/ObAFiRyPFI
— Coach Dan Casey (@CoachDanCasey) June 19, 2020
Rice Dominated In The NFL: Best Receiver Ever
Jerry Rice caught 22 touchdown passes in 1987. It was a strike year. pic.twitter.com/TKL1owQVay
— Super 70s Sports (@Super70sSports) November 17, 2019
Mr. Rice A Roni is the NFLâs all-time leader in receptions (1,549), yards (22,895) and touchdowns (197). Rice embarrassed cornerbacks and safeties on a weekly basis during his illustrious 21-year first ballot Hall of Fame career. He was a part of three Super Bowl winners.
â To me it was never about what I accomplished on the football field, it was about how I played the game.â #riceandgrind #motivation #workhard #daretobegreat #goatfamily pic.twitter.com/NNP8rrdRsx
— Jerry Rice (@JerryRice) April 6, 2021
Rice Should Be Able To Attract TalentÂ
Sanders’ success at the HBCU level has inspired other retired NFL talents to start coaching. We don’t know if Deion Sanders has discussed the possibility with Rice directly yet, but Mosley spoke to Coach Prime a while back and his advice for any new head coach trying to build a program is: “Recruit. Recruit. Recruit.”
âThe thing that people must realize is you got to recruit, man,” Sanders told Mosley. “You got to be able to compile a staff to be able to recruit, as well as lead young men.”
There’s not a wide receiver in the country who would turn down an opportunity to develop under the tutelage of Jerry Rice. These Hall of Fame coaches are becoming the great equalizer for HBCU football programs.
Deion Sanders has reiterated that the most important aspect of coaching college football is recruiting. He just landed the nationâs No. 1 overall recruit in Travis Hunter and then added the No. 4 receiver in the country in Kevin Coleman.
Sanders continues the momentum by shaking up the college landscape on the heels of leading Jackson State to its first 11-win season in program history.
Prime didnât rest on his rookie accomplishments. He’s steadily turning up and leaving no food on the plate during this recruiting period. Thatâs the grind of coaching. Itâs never really over.
Sanders landed the 55th-best recruiting class during the 2021 cycle, the best ever for an FCS program. With the Hunter and Coleman commitments, the Tigers are well ahead of where they were last year, so itâs expected theyâll finish with a top 30-35 recruiting class once national signing day happens on Feb. 2.
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