Mike Gaechter

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Mike Gaechter
No. 27
Position: Safety / Cornerback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1940-01-09)January 9, 1940
Place of birth: Santa Monica, California
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Place of death: Dallas, Texas
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Career information
High school: Antelope Valley (CA)
College: Oregon
Undrafted: 1962
Career history
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Career NFL statistics
Games: 108
Interceptions: 21
Player stats at NFL.com
Player stats at PFR

Michael Theodore Gaechter (January 9, 1940 – August 17, 2015) was an American football safety in the National Football League who spent his entire career with the Dallas Cowboys. He played college football at the University of Oregon in Eugene.

Early years

Born in Santa Monica, California, Gaechter graduated from Antelope Valley High School in Lancaster, and then enrolled at the University of Oregon. Because of grades, he transferred to Clark College in Vancouver, Washington, where he competed in the long jump, the 100, 200, low and high hurdles, and as a member of the relay team.[1]

In 1961, he earned his reacceptance to the University of Oregon. That year during a track meet at the University of Washington in Seattle, he recorded his fastest time with 9.4 seconds in the 100-yard dash at Husky Stadium. In 1962, Gaechter with teammates Mel Renfro, Jerry Tarr, and Harry Jerome, ran the third leg on the University of Oregon’s world record setting team, in the 4x110 yard relay.[2]

Gaechter’s main college sport was track and field, becoming a first-time starter in football until his senior year as the right halfback, and being voted the team's most improved player.[3]

Professional career

Dallas Cowboys

Gaechter was signed by the Dallas Cowboys in 1962 as an undrafted free agent and became the starting left cornerback as a rookie, registering 5 interceptions. In that season, the Cowboys became the first NFL team in history to produce two 100-yard plays in the same game: a 100-yard interception return for a touchdown by Gaechter (a team record)[4] and a 101-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by running back Amos Marsh.[5] His interception return was a franchise record that was broken by Bryan McCann 48 years later in 2010.

Although he had a track background, he was a punishing hitter so he was switched to strong safety in 1963, where he earned the reputation as a feared defensive player in the Cowboys secondary. His late hit in the end zone that upended the Packers' Boyd Dowler after a touchdown reception in the third quarter of the 1966 NFL Championship Game,[6] caused Dowler a shoulder injury and allowed the seldom-used Max McGee to star in Super Bowl I two weeks later.

Gaechter had been a mainstay on the Cowboys defense for most of the 1960s, until rupturing his achilles tendon at the end of the 1969 season, in the third place Playoff Bowl loss to the Los Angeles Rams in January 1970.[7][8] He never fully recovered, finishing with 8 seasons and 21 interceptions (13th in club history) during his time in Dallas. He also has two of the five longest interception returns in team history (100 yards and 86 yards in 1963 against the Washington Redskins).

In 1970, Cornell Green moved from cornerback to strong safety to replace Gaechter who was placed on the injured reserve list. After sitting out the entire season, he was traded in 1971 to the Washington Redskins for a conditional draft choice on July 20.[9]

Washington Redskins

After only a few weeks of training camp in 1971 under new head coach George Allen, Gaechter was released by the Redskins on August 11.[10]

Personal life

In 1972 and 1982, he filed lawsuits against the Dallas Cowboys organization for medical malpractice.[11][12][13] After suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, Gaechter died of heart failure at age 75 on August 17, 2015.[14] His wife Cheri donated his brain for research at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, which launched the Texas Institute for Brain Injury and Repair in 2014 and has established ties to the NFL.[14] After his funeral mass at St. Ann's parish in Coppell, Geachter was buried at Restland Memorial Park in Dallas.

References

  1. http://cf.clark.edu/Athletics/hall_of_fame_bio.cfm?ID=13
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  6. Video on YouTube
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External links