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Walter Payton

Sweetness Prime (1977-80) · 1977–1980

5'10"
202 lbs
1975 · Pick 4 · Chicago Bears
1975-1987
Chicago Bears
Skill ScoreHow you win — in-game attributes
93/99
GOAT Tier

Payton's elite Toughness (99) and elite Peak Dominance (97) define this era.

Legacy ScoreCareer dominance — record, titles, defenses
30/99
Contender
Super Bowls (1) +10MVPs (1) +10Pro Bowl (9) +11

Scouting Report

Position ratings · 0-99 scale · Based on career data

Stamina99
Durability95
Vision95
Elusiveness92
Speed92
Power90
Pass Blocking88
Receiving85

Trophy Case

Super Bowl Champion

1986

Beat the Patriots 46-10 — the '85 Bears' only championship

NFL MVP

1977

1,852 rushing yards — Sweetness at his peak

Rushing Champion

1977

Won in 1977 with 1,852 yards — his MVP season

9×Pro Bowl

1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987

9 selections — 'Sweetness' was a perennial star

Walter Payton Man of the Year

1977

The award is literally named after him — community service and excellence

The Story

Defining Moments

Sweetness

Walter Payton rushed for 16,726 career yards — a record that stood for 17 years. He missed one game in 13 seasons. One. In an era of brutal, punishing football, Payton was the iron man. And unlike other power backs, he could also catch, block, throw, and even kick.

The Legacy

The Complete Back

Payton wasn't just a runner — he was the most complete running back in NFL history. He could run inside, run outside, catch out of the backfield, throw halfback passes, and block like a fullback. The Man of the Year Award bears his name because he was the standard for excellence in every dimension.

Beyond the Game

The Walter Payton Award

The NFL's Man of the Year Award was renamed the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award after his passing — the league's most prestigious individual honor for community service. His charitable work, especially with children's causes, set a standard that NFL players still aspire to.

Character & Personality

The Prankster

Despite his fierce on-field persona, Payton was legendary for his pranks. He'd set off firecrackers in the locker room, put snakes in teammates' lockers, and once drove his car through a puddle to intentionally soak a group of reporters. Teammates adored him for it.

The Journey

High School1967–1971

Sweetness in the Mississippi Delta

Columbia High School · Columbia, MS

Grew up in Columbia, Mississippi during the civil rights era. Didn't play football until his junior year — to avoid competing against his older brother on the same team. Once he started, he was unstoppable. Scored 65 touchdowns in two seasons. Named to the All-State team and All-American in his senior year.

65

hs touchdowns

College1971–1974

Jackson State's Greatest

Jackson State University · Jackson, MS

Chose Jackson State, an HBCU, over major programs. Scored 66 touchdowns over four years, set multiple NCAA records, and rushed for 3,563 career yards. Named Black College Player of the Year. His decision to attend an HBCU was a source of immense pride for the Black community in Mississippi.

66

career tds

3563

career rush yards

Professional1975–1987

Sweetness — 13 Years of Excellence

Chicago Bears · Chicago, IL

Selected 4th overall in 1975. Won Super Bowl XX with the dominant 1985 Bears, though controversially did not score a rushing touchdown in the game. Retired as the NFL's all-time leading rusher with 16,726 yards (record held until Emmitt Smith broke it in 2002). Nine Pro Bowls, 1977 MVP. Known as "Sweetness" for his graceful running style and his kind, joyful personality off the field.

1

mvps

9

pro bowls

1

super bowls

16726

career rush yards

Legacy1993

Sweetness Lives On

Pro Football Hall of Fame · Canton, OH

Inducted in 1993. The NFL's Man of the Year Award — given to the player who best combines on-field excellence with off-field community service — was renamed the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award after his passing in 1999 at age 45. His legacy transcends statistics — he embodied joy, toughness, and grace.

Signature Moments

275 Yards — The Single-Game Record

November 20, 1977·vs Minnesota Vikings

Payton rushed for 275 yards on 40 carries against the Vikings, setting the NFL single-game rushing record (later broken by Adrian Peterson). He did it while battling the flu, playing in freezing conditions at Soldier Field.

Like Jordan's Flu Game, Payton's greatest performance came when he was at his sickest.

Super Bowl XX — Sweetness Denied

January 26, 1986·vs New England Patriots

The 1985 Bears won Super Bowl XX in a 46-10 rout, but Payton — the team's heart and soul — was controversially not given a goal-line carry for a touchdown. He rushed for 61 yards but never scored. It haunted him for the rest of his life.

The greatest injustice in Super Bowl history. Even in a blowout victory, Sweetness was denied his moment.

The Sweetness — Never Out of Bounds

1975-1987·vs vs Everyone

Payton never ran out of bounds. He always turned upfield and delivered a hit to the defender. At 5'10" and 200 pounds, he punished linebackers and safeties who tried to tackle him. He had the grace of a dancer and the violence of a linebacker.

He ran into defenders instead of away from them. Walter Payton treated going out of bounds as a personal insult. That's why they called him Sweetness — the contrast between his personality and his brutality on the field.

The Liver Disease — A Champion's Final Fight

February 2, 1999·vs N/A

Payton revealed he had a rare liver disease and needed a transplant. He died on November 1, 1999, at age 45. The entire sports world mourned. The NFL's Man of the Year award is now named after him — the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award. His legacy transcends football.

He fought his final opponent with the same courage he showed on the field. The league named its highest character award after him. Walter Payton was football's greatest human being.

Record-Breaking Performances

The games and seasons that rewrote history

Sweetness: 16,726 Career Rushing Yards

1975-1987career record
16,726 rush yds, 4.4 YPC, 110 TD, 77 games with 100+ yards across 13 seasons

Walter Payton played 190 of 191 possible regular season games in his career. He missed one game — as a rookie. He never missed a game due to injury in 12 consecutive seasons. He rushed for 16,726 yards behind offensive lines that were often among the worst in the NFL. He blocked, caught passes, and even threw 8 career touchdown passes.

Held the all-time rushing record for 18 years (1984-2002). Missed one game in 13 seasons.

Payton carried the Bears offense for a decade before the 1985 defense arrived. When the Bears finally won the Super Bowl, coach Mike Ditka infamously gave the goal-line touchdown to William Perry instead of Payton — a slight that haunted both men.

Greatest Rivalries

Jim Brown vs Walter Payton: The Running Back GOAT Debate

See Jim Brown's profile

The two greatest running backs in NFL history — measured by different standards in different eras.

Head-to-Head

Brown: 12,312 yards in 9 seasons (104.3 YPG — still #1 all-time). Payton: 16,726 yards in 13 seasons (88.0 YPG). Brown led the league in rushing 8 of 9 seasons. Payton missed 1 game in 13 years.

They never played against each other. Brown retired in 1965; Payton was drafted in 1975. But the debate has raged for 50 years: Brown's per-game dominance vs Payton's longevity and completeness.

Defining Moments

Brown's 1963 season1,863 yards in 14 games — pace-adjusted to 2,129 in 16 games. The greatest single rushing season ever.
Payton breaks the record (1984)Passed Brown's 12,312 career yards. Did it with grace and respect for Brown.
Brown retires at 29 (1966)Walked away as the all-time leader, in his prime, to pursue acting. Never looked back.
Payton's Super Bowl XX snub (1986)Ditka gave the goal-line TD to William Perry instead of Payton. The greatest injustice in Super Bowl history.

Turning Point

Payton breaking Brown's all-time rushing record on October 7, 1984. Brown had held the record for 19 years. Payton would hold it for 18 more until Emmitt Smith passed him in 2002.

The Verdict

No consensus. Brown has the higher per-game average and the mystique of walking away at the peak. Payton has the volume, the durability, and the all-around game (blocking, receiving, passing). Both are top-5 NFL players ever.

Brown vs Payton is the purest running back debate because both have unimpeachable credentials. Brown represented raw dominance; Payton represented relentless durability. Both changed what the position could be.

Career Numbers

Career Rush Yards

NFL record at retirement

16726

Career Rush TDs

110

Career Rush Attempts

3838

Career YPC

4.4

Rush Yards/Game

88

100-Yard Games

77

Career Total Yards

Rush + receiving

21264

Career Total TDs

125

Career Receptions

Elite pass-catching back

492

Career Rec Yards

4538

Career Rec TDs

15

20+ Yard Runs

82

Career First Downs

Rushing first downs

815

Longest Run

76

Career Fumbles

86

Career Pass TDs

8 career TD passes — wildcat before wildcat

8

Super Bowl Record

Won SB XX

1-0

Pro Bowl Selections

9

Games Played

13 seasons

190

Verified Feb 2026

Broken ribs, torn ligaments

Played Through Injuries

Played through broken ribs, cracked helmets, and torn ligaments without missing games — "Sweetness" was the toughest man in football

21264

Career All-Purpose Yards

21,264 career all-purpose yards — was the all-time leader in rushing, receiving, and kick return yards combined

275

Single-Game Rushing Record

275 rushing yards in a single game (Nov 20, 1977) — the record stood for 23 years

Season Stats · Sweetness Prime (1977-80)

ChampionshipsNFL Records
1
Rushing TDsPro Football Reference
14
Rushing YardsPro Football Reference
1610

Engine Attributes

Athleticism94
Clutch Factor85
Football IQ88
Peak Dominance97
Playmaking92
Toughness99
Skill Score
93/99
GOAT Tier
Legacy
30/99
Contender

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