Jeff Thomason, Millennium Hall of Fame
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Richard Dunn
It was a big deal for his local friends watching on television when
color commentator John Madden circled him with the magic marker on the
air in the NFC Championship Game for the 1996 NFL season.
Playing tight end for the Green Bay Packers, former Corona del Mar
High standout Jeff Thomason sprang Dorsey Levens with a key block as
Levens caught a 29-yard touchdown pass from Brett Favre and the Packers
went on to capture the Super Bowl.
Thomason, who eventually played on two Super Bowl teams for Green Bay,
hopes to be in the spotlight often in 2000 as he joins a new team, the
Philadelphia Eagles, who will give Thomason a chance to be the starter.
The backup tight end to Mark Chmura in Green Bay, Thomason filled in
nicely for five years, including last season when Chmura missed most of
the season with a neck injury and Thomason stepped in to catch a
career-high 14 passes for 140 yards and two touchdowns.
“It was fun last season,” said Thomason, who played primarily behind
Tyrone Davis. “Mark went down and that was unfortunate for him, but it
gave me an opportunity to play a bit more and catch a few more balls.”
The 6-foot-5, 255-pound Thomason, the only former Newport-Mesa
District athlete currently in the NFL, will rejoin Eagles head coach Andy
Reid, who was his position coach with the Packers from 1995-96.
Thomason, a football and swimming star in high school, was traded to
Philadelphia on March 16 in exchange for tight end Kaseem Sinceno, “a
salary cap” move for the Packers, said Thomason, who had bought a house
in Madison, Wis., and was surprised by the trade.
“I thought I was pretty much set, with Mark’s neck being questionable,
but you never know. That’s just the way it works,” Thomason said. “I got
in my car and drove out to Philadelphia, and now I live just across the
Delaware River in New Jersey.”
Entering his eighth NFL season, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot
Sports Hall of Fame feels lucky. “I always dreamt of playing three or
four years, and the thought of playing five or six years, I’d be happy.
And now I’m pushing my eighth,” he said. “The more you learn about the
sport and understand the different aspects of the game, the more
comfortable you get with it.
“(Football) has been my life now. It’s something I’m very confident
with ... it’s fun in some ways to get out of the shadow of Mark Chmura
now. I think here in Philadelphia I’ll definitely compete for (the No. 1
spot).”
Thomason, who owns a house in Newport Beach but has always used it as
rental property, grew up swimming and playing football in Sacramento.
Sherm Chavoor, Mark Spitz’s coach and long considered one of the best
swim coaches in the country, was Thomason’s first instructor in the pool.
After Thomason’s family moved to Newport Beach, he became a rare standout
in both sports, earning CdM Athlete of the Year honors in 1988.
“The (CdM) coaches said it was the first time they’d ever seen anyone
compete in those two sports,” said Thomason, who won four individual CIF
Southern Section 4-A championships in his prep swim career.
“I think because I swam the sprint events, I could use my size and
strength to my advantage,” added Thomason, the back-to-back CIF champion
in the 50- and 100-yard freestyle events, following a celebrated CdM
football career.
Thomason was a two-way starter (tight end and defensive end) for CdM
football coach Dave Holland, who once said, “I knew Jeff was going to
play major college football, and from there anything can happen.
Physically, he was the best blocking tight end I ever had, and he had
great hands.”
Former CdM swim coach Mike Starkweather once said: “He would virtually
swim anything I asked him to swim.”
Thomason, who has caught 42 passes for 443 yards and three TDs in his
NFL career, played four years at Oregon, the only school to seriously
recruit him out of high school.
“It’s been that way his whole career,” Mitch Melbon, CdM’s quarterback
in the Thomason era, said of his former teammate’s lack of recognition.
“In high school, he was by far the best player on the field. I couldn’t
believe he wasn’t All-CIF.”
Coming out of college, the former two-time All-Pac 10 tight end was seemingly worse off than Mr. Irrelevant, going undrafted in 1992. But
Thomason signed as a free agent with Cincinnati and ended up playing two
seasons for the Bengals, catching four passes for 22 yards.
The sad Bengals went 8-24 in 1992 and ‘93, then Thomason was cut the
following summer. Green Bay tried to sign him, but a signing deadline had
passed and Thomason was out of work. “The Packers said they wanted me
back for a closer look (in 1995),” Thomason once said.
Thomason’s stay in Green Bay as a backup tight end and member of the
kickoff team reached a pinnacle with back-to-back trips to the Super
Bowl, including a title in Super Bowl XXXI against New England in January
1997. The Packers lost to Denver and John Elway in Super Bowl XXXII.
Thomason, who is single, enjoys golf and reading. “That’s one of the
nice aspects of being out of Green Bay -- there’s a little more night
life and more things going on here in Philadelphia,” he said.
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