1984 All-Pro Team - Offense

Offense

Position First Team Second Team
Quarterback Dan Marino, Miami Dolphins (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN) Joe Montana, San Francisco 49ers (AP-2, NEA-2)
Running back Eric Dickerson, Los Angeles Rams (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN)
Walter Payton, Chicago Bears (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN)
Marcus Allen, Los Angeles Raiders (AP-2, NEA-2)
James Wilder, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (AP-2, NEA-2)
Wide receiver Roy Green, St. Louis Cardinals (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN)
Art Monk, Washington Redskins (AP, PFWA, PFW, TSN)
James Lofton, Green Bay Packers (NEA)
Mark Clayton, Miami Dolphins (AP-2)
Steve Largent, Seattle Seahawks (AP-2)
John Stallworth, Pittsburgh Steelers (NEA-2)
Art Monk, Washington Redskins (NEA-2)
Tight end Ozzie Newsome, Cleveland Browns (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN) Todd Christensen, Los Angeles Raiders (AP-2)
Paul Coffman, Green Bay Packers (NEA-2)
Tackle Keith Fahnhorst, San Francisco 49ers (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW)
Joe Jacoby, Washington Redskins (AP, PFWA, TSN)
Anthony Munoz, Cincinnati Bengals (NEA, TSN)
Bill Bain, Los Angeles Rams (PFW)
Brian Holloway, New England Patriots (NEA-2)
Joe Jacoby, Washington Redskins (NEA-2)
Anthony Munoz, Cincinnati Bengals (AP-2)
Mario Cordoves, Miami Dolphins (AP-2)
Guard Russ Grimm, Washington Redskins (AP, NEA, PFWA)
John Hannah, New England Patriots (NEA, PFWA, TSN)
Ed Newman, Miami Dolphins (AP, PFW)
Randy Cross, San Francisco 49ers (PFW)
Sean Farrell, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (TSN)
Mike Munchak, Houston Oilers (NEA-2)
John Hannah, New England Patriots (AP-2)
Randy Cross, San Francisco 49ers (AP-2, NEA-2)
Center Dwight Stephenson, Miami Dolphins (AP, NEA, PFWA, PFW, TSN) Mike Webster, Pittsburgh Steelers (AP-2)
Randy Clark, St. Louis Cardinals (NEA-2)

Read more about this topic:  1984 All-Pro Team

Famous quotes containing the word offense:

    Crude men who feel themselves insulted tend to assess the degree of insult as high as possible, and talk about the offense in greatly exaggerated language, only so they can revel to their heart’s content in the aroused feelings of hatred and revenge.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    Comparatively, we can excuse any offense against the heart, but not against the imagination. The imagination knows—nothing escapes its glance from out its eyry—and it controls the breast.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    You who have condemned me, I know your kind. Your forebears poisoned Socrates, burned Joan of Arc, hanged, tortured all those whose only offense was to bring light into darkness.
    Karl Brown (1897–1990)