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Garrison Hearst
File:Garrison Hearst.jpg
Hearst with Georgia in 1991
No. 23, 20     
Running back
Personal information
Date of birth: (1971-01-04) January 4, 1971 (age 53)
Place of birth: Lincolnton, Georgia
Career information
College: Georgia
NFL Draft: 1993 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3
No regular season or postseason appearances
Career history
* Phoenix / Arizona Cardinals ( 1993)
Career highlights and awards
* AP NFL Comeback Player of the Year (2001)
Attempts     1,831
Rushing yards     7,966
Avg Yards per Attempt     4.35
Rushing TDs     30
Receptions     229
Receiving yards     2,065
Stats at NFL.com
Stats at pro-football-reference.com

Gerard Garrison Hearst (born January 4, 1971) is a former running back in the National Football League (NFL) for ten seasons. He played college football for the University of Georgia, and was recognized as an All-American. A first-round pick by the Arizona Cardinals, he also played professionally for the Cincinnati Bengals, San Francisco 49ers and Denver Broncos of the NFL. He ran for 1,000 yards or more in four different seasons. He was named the NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award in 2001.

Early years[]

Garrison Hearst was born in Lincolnton, Georgia. He attended Lincoln County High School in Lincolnton, where he was an all-state running back and broke several records.

College career[]

Hearst attended the University of Georgia, and played for the Georgia Bulldogs football team from 1990 to 1992, leading the nation in touchdowns (21) and in scoring (11.5 points per game) in his junior year. During his career, he established new school and Southeastern Conference (SEC) records for points scored in a season (126), total touchdowns (21), rushing touchdowns (19), and average yards per carry (6.8)*. Hearst was a consensus All-America selection, the Doak Walker Award recipient, ESPN's ESPY Winner for Outstanding Collegiate Athlete and SEC Player of the year in 1992. He finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting.

Hearst finished his college career second on the Georgia records list in rushing yardage (3,232), all-purpose yardage (3,934), and 100-yard rushing games (16); trailing only Herschel Walker. He also finished third in career rushing touchdowns (33).

Regarded as an excellent prospect, he was taken in the 1993 NFL Draft third overall by the Arizona Cardinals.[1]

Statistics[]

Rushing Receiving
YEAR ATT YDS AVG LNG TD NO. YDS AVG LNG TD
1990 162 717 4.4 50 5 7 45 6.4 16 0
1991 153 968 6.3 69 9 16 177 11.0 24 0
1992 228 1,547 6.8 75 19 22 324 14.7 64 2
Totals 543 3,232 6.0 75 33 45 546 12.1 64 2

Professional career[]

Arizona Cardinals[]

Hearst was drafted by the Phoenix Cardinals in the 1993 NFL Draft.[2] In Hearst's first two seasons with the Cardinals, he was used sparingly. In 1995, however, he broke out as a pro player, rushing for 1,070 yards.[3] He was cut by the Cardinals in the 1996 training camp.[4]

Cincinnati Bengals[]

Hearst was then claimed off waivers by the Cincinnati Bengals.[5] He played there one season, gaining 847 yards,[6] but was then picked up by the San Francisco 49ers.

San Francisco 49ers[]

Hearst's best years came with the 49ers. In his first year, 1997, he ran for 1,019 yards and four touchdowns,[7] becoming the 49ers' first 1000-yard rusher since 1992 (Ricky Watters). The four touchdowns were more than he had scored in his entire pro career before 1997.

Hearst's true coming out, however, occurred in 1998. He ran for 1,570 yards and 7 touchdowns while averaging 5.1 yards per carry.[8] His total rushing yards placed him third in the NFL, behind only Terrell Davis and Jamal Anderson. Hearst set a then franchise record for rushing yards in a season, breaking the former record held by Roger Craig (1,502 yards in 1988). The record held until 2006 (Frank Gore).[9] His 535 receiving yards gave him a combined 2,105 yards on the season, another franchise record previously held by Craig (2,066 yards in 1985), also now held by Frank Gore (2,180 yards in 2006). Against the Detroit Lions late in the season, he set a then single-game franchise record of 198 rushing yards, which was later broken in 2000 (Charlie Garner). He also had the longest running play in the NFL earlier in the season, when he ran 96 yards for a game-winning touchdown in overtime on Opening Day versus the New York Jets. The play was later featured on NFL Films as one of the best two running plays in NFL history.

Following the great season by Hearst, he rushed for 128 yards and caught 3 passes for 15 in their wildcard win over the Green Bay Packers. The 49ers next faced the Atlanta Falcons in the Divisional Playoffs. On the first play from scrimmage, Hearst suffered a gruesome ankle break when his foot was caught in the Georgia Dome turf and twisted severely as he tried to spin away from Falcons' defensive end Chuck Smith. Doctors said he might not play again, even though the 49ers kept him on their roster as an inactive player.

Hearst ran into complications following surgery as circulatory problems choked off the blood supply in the area, leading to Avascular Necrosis, causing the talus bone in his foot to die. [10] Bo Jackson suffered this same condition in his hip and was forced to retire from football.

After over two years of rehabilitation, Hearst played football in 2001 and became the first player in NFL history to come back to football after suffering avascular necrosis. He had an excellent season as well, rushing for 1,206 yards on a 4.8 average. The 49ers, who were 10-22 in 2 seasons without Hearst, went 12-4 that year. He won the NFL Comeback Player of the Year award.[11]

Hearst remained with the 49ers for two more seasons, but was used less often, the focus of the 49ers' running game shifting to Kevan Barlow. Hearst still ran for 972 yards and 768 yards in 2002 and 2003, respectively.

Hearst was released during the 49ers' offseason after the 2003 season, in which the 49ers let go of several key players, including quarterback Jeff Garcia and wide receiver Terrell Owens.

Denver Broncos[]

Hearst signed with the Denver Broncos [12]and in his final season, he was considered a "third down specialist" who had eight first downs, and 81 yards on 20 attempts with one touchdown (4.1 yards/carry)[13] before being placed on IR with a broken hand. He was not re-signed in 2005.

Statistics[]

Rushing Receiving
YEAR TEAM ATT YDS AVG LNG TD NO. YDS AVG LNG TD
1993 PHO 76 264 3.5 57 1 6 18 3.0 9 0
1994 ARI 37 169 4.6 36 1 6 49 8.2 29 0
1995 ARI 284 1,070 3.8 38 1 29 243 8.4 39 1
1996 CIN 225 847 3.8 24 0 12 131 10.9 40 1
1997 SF 234 1,019 4.4 51 4 21 194 9.2 69 2
1998 SF 310 1,570 5.1 96 7 39 535 13.7 81 2
1999 SF
2000 SF
2001 SF 252 1,206 4.8 43 4 41 347 8.5 60 1
2002 SF 215 972 4.5 40 8 48 317 6.6 16 1
2003 SF 178 768 4.3 36 3 25 211 8.4 26 1
2004 DEN 20 81 4.1 11 1 2 20 10.0 15 0
Totals 1,831 7,966 4.4 96 30 229 2,065 9.0 81 9

Personal[]

Hearst is married and has four children. He resides in Georgia.[14]

Gay slur controversy[]

In 2002, Hearst made inflammatory anti-gay comments to the Fresno Bee after Esera Tuaolo came out of the closet. "Aww, hell no! I don't want any faggots on my team. I know this might not be what people want to hear, but that's a punk. I don't want any faggots in this locker room."[15] Three weeks later, Hearst apologized for his comments.[16][17]

49ers Records[]

San Francisco 49ers Franchise Records

  • Most Rushing Yards (4th), Game - 198 Vs Detroit Lions (12/14/98)
  • Most Rushing Attempts (Tied 4th), Game - 31 vs Seahawks (12/1/02)
  • Most Consecutive 100-Yard Rushing Games (2nd), Season - 4 (1998)
  • Most 100-Yard Rushing Games (2nd), Season - 6 (1998)
  • Most Rushing Attempts (Tied 2nd), Season - 310 (1998)
  • Most Rushing Yards In a Season (2nd) - 1,570 (1998)
  • 5th All-Time in Rushing Yards (5,535)
  • Led NFC in Rushing Average (1998)
  • Led NFL in Longest Run (1998)

See also[]

  • List of NCAA major college football yearly scoring leaders

References[]

  1. "Toretta Wins Two More Awards". Chicago Tribune. The Chicago Tribune. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1992-12-07/sports/9204210583_1_gino-torretta-davey-o-brien-award-maxwell-award. Retrieved November 22, 2012.
  2. "Garrison Hearst - Draft Year" (in en-us). http://football-players.pointafter.com/q/8829/77543/When-was-Garrison-Hearst-drafted.
  3. "Garrison Hearst Stats | Pro-Football-Reference.com" (in en). https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/H/HearGa00.htm.
  4. Reports, From Staff And Wire. "Hearst cut loose by Cardinals | chronicle.augusta.com". http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/1996/08/21/met_199244.shtml#.WJDA-tArLC0.
  5. "Sports | NFL -- Packer Lineman Brown Fined, Not Suspended -- That's A Boost For Line Beset By Injuries | Seattle Times Newspaper". http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19960822&slug=2345336.
  6. "Garrison Hearst" (in en). http://www.nfl.com/player/garrisonhearst/2501104/profile.
  7. "Garrison Hearst: Career Stats at NFL.com" (in en). http://www.nfl.com/player/garrisonhearst/2501104/careerstats.
  8. "1998 NFL Leaders and Leaderboards | Pro-Football-Reference.com" (in en). https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/1998/leaders.htm.
  9. "San Francisco 49ers Single-Season Rushing Leaders | Pro-Football-Reference.com" (in en). https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/sfo/single-season-rushing.htm.
  10. https://www.si.com/vault/2002/01/07/316504/true-grit-garrison-hearst-refused-to-call-it-quits-despite-two-seasons-on-the-sidelines-with-a-debilitating-ankle-injury-and-now-hes-back-in-stride-and-playing-a-key-role-in-the-49ers-surprising-run-to-the-playoffs
  11. "Garrison Hearst wins AP Comeback Player of Year". chronicle.augusta.com. Morris Communications, LLC.. http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2002/01/11/pro_332469.shtml. Retrieved November 22, 2012.
  12. "Garrison Hearst joins Broncos" (in en). UPI. http://www.upi.com/Garrison-Hearst-joins-Broncos/77721080257249/.
  13. "Garrison Hearst". http://www.espn.com/nfl/player/stats/_/id/385/garrison-hearst.
  14. Garriott, Khalil. "Where Are They Now Garrison Hearst". NFLPlayers.com. NFL Players. https://www.nflplayers.com/Articles/Where-are-they-now/Where-Are-They-Now-Garrison-Hearst/. Retrieved November 22, 2012.
  15. Hearst Doesn't Want 'Faggots' in Locker Room Archived June 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  16. 49ers' Hearst retreats from gay slur
  17. Hearst owns up to slur - Why did it take 3 weeks for this story to spread?

External links[]

Template:Southeastern Conference Football Player of the Year navbox

Template:Phoenix Cardinals 1993 draft navbox

Template:AP NFL Comeback Player

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