Celebs Temecula BIOS

Kellen Winslow
No. 80 Tight End
College: Missouri
NFL Draft: 1979 / Round: 1 / Pick: 13
San Diego Chargers (1979–1987)
5× Pro Bowl (1980–1983, 1987)
Pro Bowl Co-MVP (1981)
NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team
NFL 1980s All-Decade Team
NFL leader in receptions (1980, 1981)
San Diego Chargers Hall of Fame
Pro Football Hall of Fame (1995)
Receiving Yards: 6,741
Touchdowns: 45
Bobby Bell
No. 78 LB / DE
College: Minnesota
NFL Draft: 1963 / Round: 2 / Pick: 16
AFL Kansas City Chiefs (1963-1969)
NFL Kansas City Chiefs (1970-1974)
Pro Football Hall of Fame (1983)
NCAA championship (1960)
6× AFL All-Star selection
5× First-team All-AFL selection
AFL Champion, 1966 and 1969
Super Bowl IV Champion, 1969 season
AFL All-Time Team
3x NFL Pro Bowl selection
First-team All-Pro selection
NFL 1970s All-Decade Team
1962 Outland Trophy
North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
Kansas City Chiefs #78 retired
Interceptions 26
Sacks 40
Touchdowns 8
Isaac Curtis
No. 85 WR
College: California - San Diego State
NFL Draft: 1973
Round: 1
Cincinnati Bengals (1973-1984)
4× Pro Bowl selection (1973, 1974, 1975,
1976)
Receptions 416
Receiving yards 7,101
Touchdowns 53
Louis Lipps
No. 83 WR
College: Southern Mississippi
NFL Draft: 1984
Round: 1
Pittsburgh Steelers (1984-1991)
New Orleans Saints (1992)
AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year
(1984)
2× Pro Bowl selection (1984, 1985)
2× All-Pro selection (1984, 1985)
Pittsburgh Steelers Team MVP (1989)
1984 Joe Greene Award
Receptions 359
Receiving Yards 6,019
Touchdowns 39
Mark May
No. 73 OT
College: Pittsburgh
NFL Draft: 1981
Round: 1
Washington Redskins (1981–1990)
San Diego Chargers (1991)
Phoenix Cardinals (1992–1993)
Pro Bowl selection (1988)
2x Super Bowl Champion (XVII, XXII)
70 Greatest Redskins
Outland Trophy (1980)
Consensus first-team All-American (1980)
Games played 158
Games started 141
Fumble recoveries 5
George Rogers
No. 38 RB
College: South Carolina
NFL Draft: 1981
Round: 1 / Pick: 1
New Orleans Saints (1981–1984)
Washington Redskins (1985–1987)
Pro Bowl (1981, 1982)
Super Bowl champion (XXII)
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year (1981)
Heisman Trophy (1980)
Consensus first-team All-American (1980)
Rushing yards 7,176
Average 4.2
Touchdowns 54
In the 1981 NFL Draft the New Orleans
Saints selected Rogers with the first pick
overall. He was the first of five Heisman
Trophy winners selected by the Saints
In his first season, Rogers led the league
in rushing with 1,674 yards, which set a
high for rookies at that time. He was
selected as the NFL Rookie of the Year for
1981 and earned a trip to the Pro Bowl. In
1992, Rogers was named to the AllCentury Team at University of South
Carolina. He holds memberships in the
University of South Carolina Athletic Hall
of Fame, the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame,
and the New Orleans Saints Hall of Fame.
In 1997, he received the honor of being
inducted into the National Football
Foundation and College Football Hall of
Fame. Also, the road that runs along the
north end of Williams-Brice Stadium was
renamed in his honor and is now known
as George Rogers Boulevard.
Jim Thornton
No. 80 TE
College: Cal State Fullerton
NFL Draft: 1988
Round: 4
1988-1991 Chicago Bears
1993-1994 New York Jets
1995 Houston Oilers
Games Played 97
Catches 107
Touchdowns 7
He was given the nickname of "RoboCop"
because of his physique.
Dermontti Dawson
No. 63 Center
College: Kentucky
NFL Draft: 1988 / Round: 2
Pittsburgh Steelers (1988–2000)
7× Pro Bowl (1992–1998)
NFL 1990s All-Decade Team
Pittsburgh Steelers All-Time Team
Pittsburgh Steelers #63 no longer issued
Pro Football Hall of Fame (2012)
Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame
Games played: 184
Games started: 181
Tom Mack
No. 65 Guard
College: Michigan
NFL Draft: 1966 / Round: 1 / Pick: 2
Los Angeles Rams (1966–1978)
11× Pro Bowl
4× First-Team All-Pro
Pro Football Hall of Fame (1999)
University of Michigan Athletic Hall of
Honor (2006)
Games played: 184
Games started: 162
During Mack's career with the Rams, the
club enjoyed a .720 winning percentage
with a won-lost-tie record of 129-48-7,
won their division eight times,
and reached four NFC championship
games.
Charlie Joiner
No. 18 Wide Receiver
College: Grambling State
NFL Draft: 1969
As Player:
Houston Oilers (1969–1972)
Cincinnati Bengals (1972–1975)
San Diego Chargers (1976–1986)
As coach:
San Diego Chargers (1987–1991)
Buffalo Bills (1992–2000)
Kansas City Chiefs (2001–2007)
San Diego Chargers (2008–2012)
3× Pro Bowl
San Diego Chargers Hall of Fame
San Diego Chargers 50th Anniversary
Team
Pro Football Hall of Fame (1996)
Games played: 239
Games started: 211
Receptions: 750
Receiving Yards: 12,146
Touchdowns: 65
Mike Haynes
No. 22, 40 Cornerback
College: Arizona State
NFL Draft: 1976 / Round: 1
New England Patriots (1976–1982)
Los Angeles Raiders (1983–1989)
9× Pro Bowl
1984 NFL Defensive Player of the Year
Super Bowl Champion (XVIII)
NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team
NFL 1980s All-Decade Team
1976 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year
1976 UPI AFC Rookie of the Year
1984 George S. Halas Trophy
New England Patriots #40 retired
Pro Football Hall of Fame (1997)
Interceptions: 46
Touchdowns: 5
Ranked #93 on The Sporting News' list of
the 100 Greatest Football Players. Haynes
is considered by many football experts to
be the best overall cornerback in the
history of the NFL.
Hank Bauer
No. 37 Running Back
College: California Lutheran
Undrafted: 1976
Dallas Cowboys (1976)*
San Diego Chargers (1977–1982)
Chargers Most Inspirational Player 1978
Chargers Special Teams MVP 1980–1981
NFL Alumni Special Teams Player of the
Year
TBS NFL Special Teams Player of the Year
Charger team captain
San Diego Chargers 50th Anniversary
Team
NFL Record 52 special teams tackles in
1981
Scored 3 TDs on 4 carries
Games played: 86
Touchdowns: 21
Sports anchor for KFMB from 1987–
2002.S
Currently a radio color analyst for National
NFL games, including for the Chargers
radio broadcasts.
The highlight of his career included two
USO tours on behalf of the NFL.
Dwight Hicks
No. 22 Safety
College: Michigan
NFL Draft: 1978
San Francisco 49ers (1979–1985)
Indianapolis Colts (1986)
2× Super Bowl champion (XVI, XIX)
4× Pro Bowl selection
2× NFC Champion
2× All-Pro selection
Interception: 32
INT yards: 602
INT return TDs: 3
Hicks was a key player on the 49ers
dynasty in the 1980s.
The young, but hard-hitting secondary
would affectionately be known as "Dwight
Hicks and his Hot Licks".
After his football career, Hicks went on to
become a popular character actor in
numerous films / TV appearances.
Rod Martin
No. 53 Linebacker
College: USC
NFL Draft: 1977
Los Angeles Raiders (1977–1988)
2x Super Bowl Champion (XV, XVIII)
2x Pro Bowl (1983, 1984)
AP First-team All-Pro Selection (1984)
AP Second-team All-Pro selection (1983)
NEA First-team All-Pro selection (1982)
NEA Second-team All-Pro Selection (1981)
PFWA First-team All-Pro selection (1984)
The Sporting News First-team All-Pro
selection (1983)
INT: 14
INT yards: 225
Touchdowns: 4
Sacks: 33.5
Fumble recoveries: 10
3 interceptions were a Super Bowl record
in Super Bowl XVIII.
Brad Daluiso
No. 3 Kicker
College: UCLA
Seasons: 12
1991 Atlanta Falcons
1991 Buffalo Bills
1992 Denver Broncos
1993-2000 New York Giants
2001 Oakland Raiders
Daluiso appeared in Super Bowl XXVI for
the Buffalo Bills.
Daluiso appeared in Super Bowl XXXV for
the New York Giants.
Richard Tyson
Born in Mobile, Alabama.
Actor
1986–present
Spouse: Tracy Kristofferson
His most prominent role was as the villain
Cullen Crisp, Sr. in Kindergarten Cop costarring alongside Arnold
Schwarzenegger. He also starred as high
school bully Buddy Revell in the 1987
comedy Three O'Clock High. Tyson can
also be seen in the Farrelly Brothers
movies, Kingpin, Me, Myself & Irene and
There's Something About Mary.
Richard Tyson's acting credits also include
guest appearances on the TV shows CSI:
NY, Boomtown, Martial Law as well as the
films The Visitation, Moscow Heat, Liar's
Poker and Black Hawk Down.
Other Invitees
(Have Not Confirmed)
James Lofton – NFL HOF
Rolf Benirschke - Chargers
Benny Ricardo – Chargers
Quentin Jammer – Chargers
Jim Weatherly – Raiders
Jim McMahon – Bears
Ed Marinaro – NFL/Actor
Eric Wright – NFL
Eric Weddle - NFL