Jerry Sherk

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Jerry Sherk
Oklahoma State
NFL draft:1970 / Round: 2 / Pick: 47
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Games played:147
Fumbles recovered:12
Player stats at NFL.com

Jerry Martin Sherk (born July 7, 1948) is an American former professional football player who was a defensive tackle for the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL) for 12 seasons between 1970 until 1981. He made the Pro Bowl lineup for four straight years from 1973 through 1976,[1] and is widely considered to be among the best defensive players in Cleveland Browns history.[2][3][4]

College career

Jerry Sherk was born in Grants Pass, Oregon.[5] He attended Grants Pass High, where he joined the school's wrestling and football teams.[6]

Sherk attended

All-American
as a Cowboy grappler in 1969. He was inducted to the Oklahoma State Hall of Honor in 2000. He was the key to the Grays Harbor wrestling teams winning wrestling state titles two years in a row. Individually, he also won back-to-back state titles and in 1968, he pinned every opponent he faced.

NFL career

Sherk was selected in the second round (47th overall) of the

AFC Central Division in which each team boasted All-Pro quality defensive tackles: the Pittsburgh Steelers' Joe Greene, the Cincinnati Bengals' Mike Reid, and the Houston Oilers' Curley Culp, with Greene and Culp earning enshrinement in the Pro Football Hall of Fame
.

He was part of a

Pro Bowl
after sacking opposing quarterbacks 5½ times and making 100 tackles, most by any Browns defensive lineman that season. In 1974 Sherk made his second Pro Bowl and led the Browns with 10 sacks to go with his 94 tackles.

In 1975 Sherk made his third consecutive Pro Bowl and was named All-AFC. He is known for punching St. Louis Cardinals QB, Jim Hart, in they eye during the Pro Bowl game causing him to leave the game with six stitches above his eye. According to Hart he did not apologize. He matched his own career-high of 100 tackles and recorded six sacks. In 1976 Sherk recorded 12 sacks and 92 tackles and was voted the

PFWA
, NEA teams as well as being consensus All-AFC for the second consecutive year. November 14, 1976 he set club record with four sacks in one game. He capped the season off by playing in his fourth consecutive Pro Bowl.

At a September 1977

preseason
match against the Green Bay Packers, Sherk seriously injured his knee.
[10] Consequently, he was only able to play in seven games during the 1977 season.[11] He came back in 1978 recording a new career-high in tackles with 105 but only dropped opposing quarterbacks 3 times.

During a November 4, 1979 game at

staph infection that traveled to his knee and nearly killed him.[9][12] Sherk missed the last six games of the 1979 season. His substitute on the field was Henry Bradley.[12] The infection eventually proved to be more problematic than first imagined, and effectively sidelined him for the 1980 season, in which he played in only one game and recorded only one tackle. Sherk's absence prompted the Browns to go to the 3-4 defense
in 1980, with Bradley at nose guard.

He spent his final season, 1981, as a designated pass rusher, coming in to play defensive tackle when the Browns switched from the 3-4 o a four down lineman nickel defense. In that limited role he recorded 12 tackles and three sacks. In all, Sherk totaled 864 career tackles and 69½ sacks.[citation needed] Along the way, blocked 6 kicks, intercepted three passes, and recovered ten fumbles.[citation needed]

Post NFL career

Photography

After leaving football, Sherk worked as a

Baldwin Wallace College in Berea, Ohio, and was sponsored by the Cleveland Touchdown Club Charities.[13]

Mentoring

In 1991 Sherk returned to college, earning a master's degree in counseling psychology. He began counseling various vulnerable populations, becoming especially interested in working with at-risk children. Along the way he created a school-based group mentoring program that uses sports to teach young people how to reach goals in academics and life.

Personal life

Sherk resides in Encinitas, California in San Diego county, with his wife Ann.[9]

References

External links