A Personal Mouse Vs. Mouse Matchup Within 49er-Ram Game
Next year, Jerry Gray and Jerry Rice wonât meet face to face. Their personal mouse-and-mouse game will continue, but Gray is going back to being a safety again, same as he was as a two-time collegiate All-American at Texas. He wonât be playing cornerback anymore. He wonât be right in Riceâs face mask.
For tonight, though, we get one more look at Jerry vs. Jerry, a three-time Pro Bowl player vs. the Super Bowlâs most valuable player.
Bring binoculars.
âIâm looking forward to it,â Gray said after a Ram rehearsal for tonightâs prime-time television hit-com co-starring the San Francisco 49ers. âI expect Jerry Rice is looking forward to it. I expect most everybodyâs looking forward to it.â
Gray leads the Rams in interceptions and ranks third in tackles. He is one of those players you know you ought to know, the same way you know the Ram and Niner quarterbacks and receivers, the same way devoted NFLers know the super-hero of San Franciscoâs secondary, Ronnie Lott.
But, for some reason, you just donât. Heâs the Gray Ghost. He goes quietly about his work, gliding about the premises, springing up behind people at the last possible second and yelling: âBoo!â There is something about Jerry Don Gray that makes him blend into a crowd and remain unnoticed, even while he is materializing into one of footballâs truly fine defensive backs.
Gray goes out there, day after day. Hasnât missed a game since getting drafted in 1985. Hasnât missed a start over the past 57 games. Gray gives a dayâs work for a dayâs pay in a profession that, as we have seen with Brian Bosworth and Herschel Walker and even Bo Jackson, abuses even body-buildersâ bodies.
Gray goes only 6 feet, 185 pounds. He hits bigger.
Thatâs much of what he misses about playing safety. Roaming freely, reading the quarterbackâs eyes, putting a lick on somebody whoâs just felt the football on his fingertips, Gray gets nostalgic just thinking about it.
âI love to run free,â Gray said. âRun free and hit, help out. Have the freedom to go pretty much where I please.
âBut the biggest asset, the thing I like to do best, is to see the whole field in front of me. Itâs the old quarterback in me coming out.â
Until he went to college, Gray was an all-district high school quarterback, and one of the most talented individuals to come out of Lubbock since Buddy Holly. Local folks raved on and on. University recruiters invited him to come play quarterback . . . except the ones from the University of Texas. They wanted him to be a defensive back.
Gray figured a 6-foot quarterback might have trouble getting to the NFL. He didnât see many black quarterbacks around that league, either, at least not back then. So, he became a Longhorn, made 16 interceptions and went to the Rams in the first round.
Then they moved him from safety to corner.
He had to learn new footwork. Had to travel backward. Had to chuck the Jerry Rices of the world at the line, then shadow them wherever they went, one on one. Wasnât easy.
âRice was able to do everything against me. Heâd turn to do an âoutâ route, and Iâd fall for the other fake. He had the âgoâ route whenever he wanted. I guess Iâd grade my performance a C-minus, maybe even a D,â Gray said.
One night against the Rams, Rice had 10 catches for 241 yards. Ate the Ramsâ lunch.
Ever since, Gray and Rice have gone at one another on more equal terms, a couple of fighters who now have seen most of the moves. In the Oct. 1 game at San Francisco, Rice caught only two passes. Two 18-yarders. He hasnât caught fewer in any game all season.
Gray, who turns 27 Saturday, is going to be around for a while, but holds John Robinsonâs IOU that he will get a shot at being a safety next season. He believes he can do the Rams more good there. He also believes: âI can be an All-Pro safety. Coming out of college, if I had put this amount of time into safety, Iâd be All-Pro (at safety) right now.â
For now, Gray has to be satisfied with going after his fourth consecutive trip to the Pro Bowl as a corner. You can bet Rice will make another Pro Bowl, too. Life is just a bowl of Jerries.
Oh, and thereâs that other post-season bowl that still interests the Rams.
âAre we good enough to be a Super Bowl team? We think we are,â Gray said. âAnd beating San Francisco is going to take us one step closer to our goal.
âTheyâll be 11-3 and weâll be 10-4, and weâll be in good shape.â
You will?
âAt least thatâs the attitude weâre taking into the game,â Gray said. âThat weâre going to win. That weâre going to take the fight to San Francisco.â
This is not a neutral corner.