. . "70013"^^ . . . "New Orleans Saints"@en . "Earl Christian Campbell (born March 29, 1955), nicknamed The Tyler Rose, is a former professional American football running back. He, Paul Hornung, and O. J. Simpson are the only Heisman Trophy winners to have also been first overall National Football League draft picks and members of both the Pro Football Hall of Fame and College Football Hall of Fame."@en . . . "thigs"@en . "4.3"^^ . . . . . . "CAM251095"@en . "* Houston Oilers \n* New Orleans Saints"@en . . "1955-03-29"^^ . "Total"@en . . "Player of American football"@en . . "e-campbell77"@en . . . "1978"^^ . "Touchdowns"@en . "74"^^ . . "40"^^ . "40"^^ . . . "Earl Campbell"@en . "Earl Campbell"@en . . . . "203435"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "College\n* 2× All-American \n* Heisman Trophy \n* UPI Player of the Year \n* TSN Player of the Year \n* Harley Award Winner \n* Texas Longhorns #20 retired\n* College Football Hall of Fame inductee \nNFL\n* 5\u00D7 Pro Bowl selection \n* 3\u00D7 AP First-Team All-Pro \n* 1978 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year \n* 1978 NFL MVP \n* 1979 NFL MVP \n* 1980 NFL MVP \n* 1978 NFL Offensive Player of the Year \n* 1978 AFC Offensive Player of the Year \n* 1979 NFL Offensive Player of the Year \n* 1980 NFL Offensive Player of the Year \n* 3\u00D7 NFL Rushing champion \n* Tennessee Titans #34 retired\n* Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee \n* Rated #55 NFL Player of all-time by NFL.com"@en . . . . . "Rushing Average"@en . . . . "1955-03-29"^^ . "1978"^^ . "11"^^ . "Campbell, Earl"@en . . "1985"^^ . . . . "9407"^^ . . . . . . "Houston Oilers"@en . "Touchdowns"@en . "1"^^ . . "74"^^ . "70013"^^ . . . . . "5"^^ . "Earl Campbell signing autographs in Kerrville, Texas."@en . "1"^^ . . . "244"^^ . . . . . "10213"^^ . "Earl Christian Campbell (born March 29, 1955), nicknamed The Tyler Rose, is a former professional American football running back. He, Paul Hornung, and O. J. Simpson are the only Heisman Trophy winners to have also been first overall National Football League draft picks and members of both the Pro Football Hall of Fame and College Football Hall of Fame. He was born in Tyler, Texas, the sixth of eleven children. His father died when Campbell was 11 years old. He began playing football in fifth grade as a kicker, but moved to linebacker and then to running back in sixth grade. In 1973, he led the Corky Nelson-coached John Tyler High School to the Texas 4A State Championship (4A then was the largest classification in the state). Then-Oklahoma Sooners head coach Barry Switzer, who unsuccessfully recruited Campbell, said in his 1989 book that Campbell was the only player he ever saw who could have gone straight from high school to the NFL and immediately become a star."@en . "C/CampEa00"@en . . . . . . "Rushing yards"@en .