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Miami Herald
Miami Herald
Sport
Barry Jackson

Quarterback pioneer and former Dolphins ’72 team wide receiver Marlin Briscoe dies at 76

Marlin Briscoe, the first Black starting quarterback in professional football history and a key wide receiver on the Dolphins’ 1972 undefeated team, died on Sunday night in a hospital in Norwalk, Cal. He was 76.

The Dolphins were told that heart failure was the cause of death.

His daughter, Angela Marriott, told The Associated Press that Briscoe had been battling pneumonia after being hospitalized with circulation issues in his legs.

Drafted as a cornerback in the 14th round by the Broncos in 1968 – as the 357th overall pick - out of Nebraska-Omaha, Briscoe replaced injured quarterback Steve Tensi as a rookie, became the AFL’s first Black quarterback and established a Denver rookie record with 14 touchdown passes. He was nicknamed the Magician.

Denver wouldn’t allow him to compete for the quarterback job in 1969, so he asked for and was granted his release.

Briscoe then became a Pro Bowl receiver for the Buffalo Bills, who traded him to the Dolphins for a first-round draft pick that was used on Joe Delamielleure, who became a Hall of Fame guard.

Briscoe played three of his nine professional seasons for the Dolphins, catching 57 passes for 858 yards (a 15.1 average) and eight touchdowns in 28 games for Miami, including 20 starts.

He appeared in 10 games and started three for the Dolphins’ undefeated 1972 team, finishing with 16 catches for 279 yards (a 17.4 average) and a team-leading four touchdowns.

He was the Dolphins’ leading receiver in 1973, with 30 catches for 447 yards.

He later played for San Diego, Detroit and New England and then retired after playing the 1976 season. He later became a successful financial broker in retirement while overcoming a 10-year cocaine addiction that at one point left him homeless.

Briscoe was in jail in San Diego when he watched Washington and quarterback Doug Williams beat John Elway’s Denver Broncos in the 1988 Super Bowl. Williams became the first Black quarterback to win a Super Bowl.

Briscoe later gave Williams credit for inspiring him to stop using drugs and turn his life around.

“I felt I was a part of what Doug did,” Briscoe told The Undefeated in 2016. “I felt like what I did all those years ago helped Doug. It was the best feeling I had had in a long time.”

Briscoe worked as a director of the Boys and Girls Club in Los Angeles and was living in Long Beach in recent months.

He was inducted into The College Football Hall of Fame in 2016, and Nebraska-Omaha unveiled a statue in his honor that same year.

Sixteen members of the Dolphins’ undefeated team are deceased: Briscoe, Nick Buoniconti, Jim Kiick, Bob Kuechenberg, Earl Morrall, Jim Mandich, Jim Langer, Bill Stanfill, Jake Scott, Garo Yepremian, Charlie Leigh, Bob Matheson, Billy Lothridge, Wayne Moore, Jesse Powell and Jim Dunaway.

The entire coaching staff, including Hall of Fame head coach Don Shula, is deceased.

The Dolphins plan to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1972 team with several events coinciding with the Sunday night game against Pittsburgh on Oct. 23.

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