Ring Of Honor Contestants- Ricky Bell
Second in a series of 10 Bios and Movies: Your nominations for Ring of Honor
Ricky Bell (1955-1984)
Buccaneer 1977-81
Ricky Bell came to Bucs amid controversy. Taken with the no. 1 overall pick by Tampa Bay, he was taken ahead of Heisman Trophy winning Tony Dorsett due to his familiarity with John McKay’s I Formation offense. At USC, Ricky held a single game rushing record for 347 yards against Washington State, and led the nation as a Junior with 1875 yards.
But the Buccaneers took him first in the 1977 draft, and Tampa Bay did not have an offensive line nor a quarter back to take the pressure off of him. As a result he was often injured during his first two years with the team, and the term Bust had crept up a little too frequently.
In 1979 however, with strong armed QB named Doug Williams and a large Offensive line in front of him, Ricky reminded everyone why he was picked so high. With a 1,263 yard season and speedster tailback Jerry Eckwood from Arkansas to change up the pace, Ricky was a formidable weapon, and hard to bring down. In the playoffs, McKay fed him the ball a then record 38 times for 142 yards and total domination of the Philadelphia Eagles.
Something happened though after that magical season, the runs just were not there. He had a Ricky Bell like outing vs the Giants, but by the end of the season, he didn’t even have half the yards from the year before. 1981 was even worse, and with the arrival of Tailback James Wilder, Ricky hardly got any carries other than mop up duty.
He was traded to the San Diego Chargers in 1982 in the hopes a return to the west coast would benefit him. It did not, and he was out of the league at the end of the year. Then came 1983, a news reporter from the St. Pete Times had found Ricky Bell selling shoes in California weighing in at a mere 165 pounds. The next year, at the age of 29, Ricky Bell was dead from complications of a rare muscle disease that attacks the muscles in the body. It was not diagnosed until it was too late.
In 1991, a made for TV movie called A triumph of the heart starring Mario Van Peebles as Ricky Bell showed the world the tragic story of this short lived Buccaneer great.
Ricky Bell from Niko H on Vimeo.
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4 comments
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Comments
great job on these videos man
I’m really enjoying them, they are helping me actually not have to swallow my vomit as I indulge in Bucs history.
All joking aside, I am really impressed. Thanks for spending your offseason so productively for the fanbase.
know what you believe in and why you believe in it
by MentallyMIA on Jun 11, 2009 9:39 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Tis not a problem
Wait till you see what Im doing for season…..
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by Niko Houllis on Jun 11, 2009 11:20 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Being born in 1979
I never had a chance to get to see Ricky Bell play. When I told my older brother about the ring of Honor selections this site was doing the first two names out of his mouth were Lee Roy Selmon and Ricky Bell. I challenged him on the Ricky Bell selection. But he did remind me it is for the Bucs Ring of Honor not the Pro Football Hall of Fame. After seeing the videos on Ricky Bell I tend to agree with him now. Before the dark days of the franchise Lee Roy and Ricky were the Heart and Soul of this team and deserve to go into the Ring of Honor in the same year. Without those two there would not have been the limited early on success that they had.
by PewterPirate55 on Jun 11, 2009 10:16 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
I think any of the ten nominated
deserve to be the first ones in.
Too bad only two can go.
BucStop.com a new blog for Bucs Fans <
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by Niko Houllis on Jun 11, 2009 11:22 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs

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