Mike Renfro


Michael Ray Renfro is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League for the Houston Oilers and Dallas Cowboys. He played college football at Texas Christian University.

Early years

Renfro attended Arlington Heights High School, where he was a multi-sport athlete. He was a wide receiver in football.
He accepted a football scholarship from Texas Christian University. He was named a starter as a freshman and was second on the team with 21 receptions for 362 yards and 2 touchdowns.
As a sophomore, his production jumped to 49 receptions for 810 yards and 2 touchdowns. As a junior, he led the team with 42 receptions for 773 yards and 3 touchdowns.
His best season came as a senior, posting 50 receptions for 794 yards, including a school and a Southwest Conference single-season record with 10 receiving touchdowns.
Renfro graduated from college as the All-time leading pass receiver in school and Southwest Conference history with 2,739 receiving yards. He also left as the school's career leader in receptions and receiving touchdowns. He played for the Horned Frogs during a low point in the TCU football history, which cost him the opportunity to earn more accolades for his play, after never experiencing a winning season and winning only 4 games in 4 seasons.
In 1988, he was inducted into the Texas Christian University Athletics Hall of Fame. In 2016, he was inducted into the Southwest Conference Hall of Fame.

Professional career

Houston Oilers

Renfro was selected by the Houston Oilers in the fourth round of the 1978 NFL Draft. As a rookie, he started 10 out of 14 games, registering 26 receptions for 339 yards and 2 touchdowns.
In 1979, he started 2 out of 15 games, collecting 16 receptions for 323 yards, a 20.2-yard average and 2 touchdowns. In the playoffs he was involved in one of the most controversial plays in NFL history. Losing 10-17 late in the third quarter, a Pastorini pass to Renfro for an apparent tying touchdown in the 1979 AFC Championship game against the Pittsburgh Steelers was ruled not a catch, costing the Oilers a chance for victory and a trip to the Super Bowl. The play was cited as the impetus for league-wide instant replay in the league, which was instituted in 1986.
In 1980, he started 16 games, tallying 35 receptions for 459 yards and one touchdown. In 1981, he had his best year with the Oilers, starting 12 games, while making 39 receptions for 451 yards and one touchdown.
In 1982, the season was reduced from a 16-game schedule to 9 contests because of the player's strike. He started 4 out of 9 games, posting 21 receptions for 295 yards and 3 touchdowns.
In 1983, he did not play until the fifth regular season game while he was recovering from hepatitis and was eventually placed on the injured reserve list with a left knee injury on November 28. He finished with 23 receptions for 316 yards and 2 touchdowns.
On April 13, 1984, he was traded to the Dallas Cowboys along with a 1984 second-round pick and a fifth-rounder in the 1985 NFL Draft, in exchange for wide receiver Butch Johnson and a 1984 second-round pick.
Although he proved his worth as the team's possession receiver in the Oilers run-oriented offenses of the Earl Campbell era, he never had the opportunities to achieve high receiving numbers, even when catching balls from quarterback greats Dan Pastorini, Kenny Stabler and Archie Manning

Dallas Cowboys

In 1984, he was acquired by the Dallas Cowboys after starter Drew Pearson suffered a career-ending car accident. At the time, he posted his best statistical season with 35 receptions for 583 yards, a 16.7-yard average and 2 touchdowns. He also completed a 49-yard touchdown pass to Doug Donley in a 23-17 win against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Renfro was named the team's most valuable player for the 1985 season, after having a career year with 60 receptions for 955 yards and 8 touchdowns. In the fifth game 30–29 win against the New York Giants, he had a season-high 10 receptions for 141 yards and 2 touchdowns, which would also become the first 100-yard receiving contest in his career. In the NFC Eastern Division title clinching win against the New York Giants, he caught 4 receptions for 123 yards and 2 touchdowns, including a 58-yard catch.
In 1986, he was limited with a shoulder injury he suffered in the first preseason game against the Chicago Bears and spent the first 4 weeks of the season on the injured reserve list. He started 6 out of 12 games, making 22 receptions for 325 yards and 3 touchdowns. He regained his form in the last 4 games, averaging 18.8-yards per reception and catching a touchdown pass in each of the last two.
After the players went on a strike on the third week of the 1987 season, those contests were canceled and the NFL decided that the games going forward would be done using replacement players. Renfro was one of the first Cowboys to cross the picket line. He appeared in 2 games during the replacement games as a backup to Cornell Burbage, only registering 5 receptions for 79 yards against the Washington Redskins. In the eighth game against the New England Patriots, on a fourth-and-13 situation with 1:06 minutes remaining, he had a 43-yard catch to set up the tying field goal in a 23-17 overtime win. On Thanksgiving Day against the Minnesota Vikings, he had 7 receptions for 100 yards and 3 second-half touchdowns, in a game the Cowboys lost 44-38 in overtime. He finished the year second on the team with 46 receptions for 662 yards and 4 receiving touchdowns.
On September 24, 1988, he was released after being replaced with rookie first round draft choice Michael Irvin. He retired having played 10 seasons in the league, recording 323 receptions for 4,708 yards and 28 touchdowns.

Renfro's football family lineage

His dad, Ray Renfro was a four-time world champion All-Pro wide receiver for the Cleveland Browns from 1952–1964 and was once considered the fastest man in football. Ray and Mike are arguably the greatest father-son combination of wide receivers in NFL history combining for 604 receptions, 10,216 yards, and 78 touchdowns. Ray later went on to coach for the Washington Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys. He was the quarterbacks and receivers coach during Dallas’ first Super Bowl win in 1972.
His uncle, Dean Renfro, played receiver for the Baltimore Colts and was also the wide receivers’ coach at TCU during Mike's playing days for the Horned Frogs. Mike's two brothers played college wide receiver. His two sons, nephew and cousin also played receiver at the collegiate level.
His son, Clint, was arguably the best high school recruit in the class that TCU signed in 2006. However, he was unable to participate in football due to multiple injuries. He did compete in track & field for two years. He was a conference champion and the school record holder in the 400 metres hurdles. He attended Carroll Senior High School, where he helped lead the team to state championships as a wide receiver in 2004 and 2005. He was an All-State selection as a wide receiver in 2004. Clint was also the 5A state champion in 300 metres hurdles as a senior and runner-up as a sophomore and junior. He had the second-fastest 300 metres hurdles time in the country in 2006.

Personal life

Renfro served as the ballboy for the Dallas Cowboys, during the time his father worked on the team's coaching staff from 1968 to 1972.