Great question, I always wondered about that as well. Also, Brad Van Pelt came into the league as a LB in 1973, but was allowed to wear #10. I think he got away with that because he was listed as either a backup kicker or punter, and was allowed to continue to wear it throughout the rest of his career.Teo wrote:Something I always ask is this: I believe that in 1973 they outlawed that new defensive linemen wore numbers from 80-89, so why Phil Tabor was assigned number 80 in 1979 by the Giants?
There are a few others. Michael Morton, a return specialist, wore #1 with the Bucs in 1982-83. His natural position was a RB, but I guess he also "gamed" the rule by being called a "specialist", a category shared with QBs, Ks and Ps.
Michael Jackson, the Browns WR (who incidentally played one game as Michael Dyson to honor his father), was somehow allowed to wear #1 for his first two seasons in the league in 1991-92, before switching to #81 in 1993.
I also recall seeing a few obscure backup WRs wear numbers in the high teens in the early '90s when teams ran out of numbers in the '80s, well before the WR number rule was adjusted.