Art Monk

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{{NFL.com player}} template missing ID and not present in Wikidata.James Arthur Monk (born December 5, 1957, in White Plains, New York), is a former American football wide receiver who played in the National Football League. Nicknamed "Quiet Man" or simply "#81" for his humble and professional demeanor, he played collegiately at Syracuse University as a running back. The Washington Redskins drafted Monk in 1980 and converted him to flanker, a position that he pioneered as a member of Coach Joe Gibbs' innovative offense. Along with Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders, he was part of a prolific wide receiver trio nicknamed "The Posse," as they became one of the rare trio of wide receivers in NFL history to post 1,000-plus yards in the same season (1989). At the end of his career, he played briefly for the New York Jets and the Philadelphia Eagles. The NFL honored Monk by naming him to the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team.

With the Redskins, Monk played in Super Bowl XVIII, Super Bowl XXII and Super Bowl XXVI. He also won a Super Bowl ring as a member of the team in Super Bowl XVII, but did not play in it due to injury. His most impressive Super Bowl performance was in Super Bowl XXVI, recording 7 catches for 113 yards. Monk finished his 16 NFL seasons with 940 receptions for 12,721 yards and 68 touchdowns, along with 332 rushing yards.

Hall Of Fame consideration

Monk's most noteworthy NFL accomplishment was his record for career receptions (940), broken by Jerry Rice during the final week of 1995, Monk's last season in the league. Despite being the first to eclipse 900 receptions, as well as retiring with the single season receptions record (106) and the most consecutive games with a catch (183), Art Monk has been passed over several times for entry into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Peter King and Paul Zimmerman of Sports Illustrated magazine have been outspoken about their respective decisions not to support Monk as a Hall of Fame nominee.

However, Monk also has numerous supporters in the media including Washington Post sportswriter and ESPN personality Michael Wilbon [1], his former coach Joe Gibbs [2], Sirius NFL Radio Host and former New York Jets Director of Player Development Pat Kirwan [citation needed], Indianapolis Colts President Bill Polian [3], and current Dallas Cowboys head coach Bill Parcells [4].

One factor Kings cites is that Monk only made the Pro Bowl 3 times in 16 seasons.[5] However, other players have been enshrined in the hall of fame while making an equal or even fewer number of pro bowl selections, such as Monk's teamate John Riggins, who only made the pro bowl once.

On June 6, 2006, King announced that he was going to consult with Joe Gibbs, re-think his position on Monk, and consider voting in favor of enshrining him into the Hall of Fame.[6]

From the modern era, there are 24 running backs in the Hall of Fame, 23 quarterbacks, but only 17 wide receivers. In 1999, Monk was ranked number 91 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, ranking him behind only 8 receivers. He was the only player on the list then eligible for the Hall of Fame who was not yet in.

The most prominent anti-Monk argument, often cited by Peter King, is that Monk was not the most feared Redskins receiver on his team throughout his tenure; instead opposing teams feared fellow Redskins wide recevier Gary Clark more. Critics of this argument note that both Monk and Clark were feared by opposition defenses, but for different reasons. Monk always got the tough 8 yard completion on 3rd and 7, while Clark would run the post and hitch and go to give the Redskins a huge touchdown. By this line of argumentation, Clark's production should not detract from Monk's Canton credentials, it should enhance them, because Monk's precise route running allowed Gary Clark to be as productive as he was.

Art Monk helped found the Good Samaritan Foundation with his Washington teammates Charles Mann, Tim Johnson and Earnest Byner. Monk also lends his name to a youth/high school football camp.

Lifetime Statistics

Receiving Rec. Yards Avg. Long TD
1980 58 797 13.7 54 3
1981 56 894 16.0 79 6
1982 35 447 12.8 43 1
1983 47 746 15.9 43 5
1984 106 1,372 12.9 72 7
1985 91 1,226 13.5 53 2
1986 73 1,068 14.6 69 4
1987 38 483 12.7 58 6
1988 72 946 13.1 46 5
1989 86 1,186 13.8 60 8
1990 68 770 11.3 44 5
1991 71 1,049 14.8 64 8
1992 46 644 14.0 49 3
1993 41 398 9.7 29 2
1994 46 581 12.3 N/A 3
1995 6 114 19.0 N/A 0
Total 940 12,721 13.5 79 68

Seasons among the league's top 10

Receptions: 1984-1, 1985-2, 1988-9t, 1989-3t

Receiving yards: 1984-4, 1985-3, 1989-10

Receiving TDs: 1991-9t

Among the league's all-time top 50

Receptions: 5

Receiving yards: 9

Receiving TDs: 29t

Yards from scrimmage: 26

Consecutive games with at least one reception: 2(183)

All-Rookie: 1980

3-time Pro Bowler: 1984, 1985, 1986

2-time All-Pro: 1984, 1985

External links