INDIANAPOLIS — When Dallas Clark looks at the evolution of tight ends, he thinks of John Mackey.
The Hall of Famer made it chic for the big guys to catch passes and run down field when it was more popular for them to be blockers or outlet receivers.
Now, four decades later, Clark is carving out his own niche in a very different NFL.
Tight ends are now expected to catch more passes than throw blocks, and like Mackey, Kellen Winslow, Shannon Sharpe and Tony Gonzalez before him, Clark has figured out a way to use his unique skills to create defensive mismatches.
“I think Gonzalez, and Mackey back in his heyday, really changed the position,” Clark said. “I think they really gave guys like (Antonio) Gates and others a chance to excel.”
Clark certainly fits in, too.
At 6-foot-3, 252 pounds, he’s better known for his speed, his ability to run after the catch and his aptitude to stretch the field.
Since the start of 2008, no NFL tight end has been more productive than Clark. His 141 catches and 1,616 yards over the last 25 games rank No. 1 among all tight ends even though he has not yet gone to a Pro Bowl.
That could change this year. With Gonzalez out of the AFC, and Clark tied for second in the NFL with Wes Welker with 64 receptions, Clark seems like a shoo-in.
In addition to the sterling numbers, records are falling at a breakneck pace, too.
In 2007, Clark broke Mackey’s four-decade-old franchise records for receptions and touchdowns by a tight end in one season. Last year, Clark smashed his own record for receptions in a season (77) and broke Mackey’s 42-year-old mark for yards in a season (848). This year, he’s on pace to shatter those numbers again.
But Sunday may be the most awkward record-setting moment yet.
Clark needs one catch to break Mackey’s Colts’ record for career receptions by a tight end (320), and it’s likely to happen in Mackey’s old stomping grounds in Baltimore — the city that hasn’t forgotten the team’s midnight move to Indianapolis.
So Clark’s pal, three-time MVP Peyton Manning, has added the title of diplomat this week.
“I think he (Clark) has a great appreciation for who John Mackey was before he got drafted by the Colts. I know he has more now,” Manning said. “Whether they played in Baltimore or we play in Indianapolis, you still have a great appreciation for great football players. That would be a tremendous accomplishment and a great credit to Dallas. I think it would be special for him because he knows what a great player Mackey was.”
Perhaps nobody understands the situation better than Manning.
In college, Manning won the Unitas Award, then was taken No. 1 overall in the 1998 NFL draft with the clear objective of breaking Unitas’ records.
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Colts’ Dallas Clark closing in on another franchise mark
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