The lightest player in the NFL, McNeil was nicknamed "the Ice Cube" because he was small and difficult for tacklers to grab hold of. It was also a play off Bears defensive tackle William Perry’s nickname, “The Refrigerator”. McNeil was drafted in 1984 and selected to the Pro Bowl in 1987. Known for his explosive returning ability, McNeil scored four touchdowns in his NFL career, including an 84-yard punt return against the Detroit Lions and a 100-yard kickoff return against the Pittsburgh Steelers.[1]
In his four seasons at Baylor, McNeil caught 163 passes for 2,651 yards, returned 101 punts for 886 yards, returned 31 kickoffs for 573 yards, and scored 17 touchdowns.[6] He set school records for receptions and receiving yards which still stand among the top ten all-time to the present day.[3][7]
Professional football career
USFL
Our last signing was Gerald McNeil. He had been born in West Germany and became a high school track star in Texas and a college football legend at Baylor. He came with only one drawback: He was 5-foot-7 and weighed 139 pounds. Soaking wet. But he ran a 4.19 in the 40. We signed him immediately.
McNeil was selected by the San Antonio Gunslingers in the 1984 USFL Territorial Draft. He was later traded to the Houston Gamblers. In his two seasons with the Gamblers, he caught 91 passes for 1,518 yards, returned 69 punts for 830 yards, returned two kickoffs for 62 yards, and scored ten touchdowns.[8] He was the USFL's leading punt returner in 1985.[1]
NFL
McNeil was selected by the Cleveland Browns in the second round of the 1984 NFL Supplemental Draft of USFL and CFL players.[9] He made his NFL debut in 1986 and played four seasons with the Browns, then played his fifth and final season with the Houston Oilers. In 1987 he made the pro bowl as a kick returner, returning 34 punts for 387 yards and a career best 11.4 yards per return average.
In his five NFL seasons, McNeil caught 29 passes for 380 yards, returned 191 punts for 1,717 yards, returned 91 kickoffs for 1,852 yards, and scored four touchdowns.[10]
In 1986, McNeil was the only player in the NFL and the first since 1978 to return both a punt and a kickoff for a touchdown in the same season.[1]
Although McNeil's listed weight was 145 lb (66 kg), McNeil stated in a March 2013 interview that "I usually came in around 140 pounds, but a lot of times I would lose 10, 12 pounds during the season very easily, so I played most of the time between 125 and 130."[11]
^ abArgovitz, Jerry; Miller, J. David (2013). "Chapter 40: A Better Mousetrap". Super Agent: The One Book the NFL and NCAA Don't Want You to Read. New York: Sports Publishing. ISBN978-1613210680.