1985 All-Pro Team - Offense

Offense

Position First Team Second Team
Quarterback Dan Marino, Miami Dolphins (AP, PFWA, TSN)
Dan Fouts, San Diego Chargers (NEA)
Dan Fouts, San Diego Chargers (AP-2)
Running back Marcus Allen, Los Angeles Raiders (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN)
Walter Payton, Chicago Bears (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN)
Roger Craig, San Francisco 49ers (AP-2, NEA-2)
Gerald Riggs, Atlanta Falcons (AP-2)
Freeman McNeil, New York Jets (NEA-2)
Wide receiver Mike Quick, Philadelphia Eagles (AP, NEA, TSN)
Steve Largent, Seattle Seahawks (AP, PFWA)
Louis Lipps, Pittsburgh Steelers (NEA, PFWA)
Art Monk, Washington Redskins (TSN)
James Lofton, Green Bay Packers (NEA-2)
Steve Largent, Seattle Seahawks (NEA-2)
Louis Lipps, Pittsburgh Steelers (AP-2)
Art Monk, Washington Redskins (AP-2)
Tight end Todd Christensen, Los Angeles Raiders (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN) Ozzie Newsome, Cleveland Browns (AP-2)
Mickey Shuler, New York Jets (NEA-2)
Tackle Anthony Munoz, Cincinnati Bengals (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN)
Jimbo Covert, Chicago Bears (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN)
Chris Hinton, Indianapolis Colts (AP-2, NEA-2)
Keith Fahnhorst, San Francisco 49ers (NEA-2)
Brian Holloway, New England Patriots (AP-2)
Guard Russ Grimm, Washington Redskins (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN)
John Hannah, New England Patriots (AP, PFWA, TSN)
Randy Cross, San Francisco 49ers (NEA)
Mike Munchak, Houston Oilers (AP-2, NEA-2)
Kent Hill, Los Angeles Rams (AP-2)
John Hannah, New England Patriots (NEA-2)
Center Dwight Stephenson, Miami Dolphins (AP, NEA, PFWA, TSN) Joe Fields, New York Jets AP-2
Billy Bryan, Denver Broncos (NEA-2)

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Famous quotes containing the word offense:

    O, my offense is rank, it smells to heaven,
    It hath the primal eldest curse upon’t,
    A brother’s murder.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    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)

    There is something in the breast of almost every man, which at bottom takes offense at the attentions of any other man offered to a woman, the hope of whose nuptial love he himself may have discarded. Fain would a man selfishly appropriate all the hearts which have ever in any way confessed themselves his.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)