James Jett
James
Jett came to WVU on a football scholarship and left not only as a
four-year starter at wide receiver but as a seven-time track All-American
and Olympic gold medalist. The native of Shenandoah Junction in West
Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle finished fifth at 100 meters in the U.S.
Olympic Trials in New Orleans, earning him a spot on the 4x100 Olympic
relay team.
Jett ran the first two rounds of that race in Barcelona,
then gave his spot in the finals to Carl Lewis; all team members earned a
gold medal. The West Virginia state track athlete of the year in 1990,
1991 and 1992, Jett earned NCAA indoor and outdoor All-America honors at
50, 100 and 200 meters during his career and finished as NCAA runner-up at
100 and 200 meters in 1992.
The only true freshman to play on WVU’s 1989 Gator Bowl
team, Jett over his four-year football career totaled 11 touchdown catches
and 1,384 receiving yards, ranking him eighth among WVU career leaders at
that time. His 78-yard TD catch from Darren Studstill in his last game
against Louisiana Tech in 1992 set a then-stadium record. Also a return
man, Jett finished with 3,076 career all-purpose yards, then fifth best in
WVU history. He played in the Japan Bowl all-star game.
Signed as a free agent by the NFL’s Oakland Raiders, he
has been a member of that team since 1993, playing in 140 professional
games. His career totals include 256 catches, 4,417 yards (17.3 avg) and
30 scores; he is the eighth leading receiver in Raider history. Jett led
the AFC with 12 touchdowns in 1997 and his longest career catch was an
84-yard touchdown vs. Atlanta in 2000. In 1996, he won the NFL Fastest Man
competition and was a finalist in 1997.
Jett and his wife Cara live in the Oakland area; they have
two children, James Jr. and Jordan.