sport.wikisort.org - AthleteVito "Babe" Parilli (May 7, 1930 – July 15, 2017) was an American football quarterback and coach who played professionally for 18 seasons. Parilli spent five seasons in the National Football League (NFL), three in the Canadian Football League (CFL), and 10 in the American Football League (AFL). He played college football at Kentucky, where he twice received consensus All-American honors and won two consecutive bowl games.
American gridiron football player (1930–2017)
American football player
Vito "Babe" Parilli 1952 Bowman football card |
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Position: | Quarterback |
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Born: | (1930-05-07)May 7, 1930 Rochester, Pennsylvania |
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Died: | July 15, 2017(2017-07-15) (aged 87) Parker, Colorado |
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Height: | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) |
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Weight: | 196 lb (89 kg) |
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High school: | Rochester (PA) |
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College: | Kentucky |
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NFL Draft: | 1952 / Round: 1 / Pick: 4 |
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- Green Bay Packers (1952–1953)
- Ottawa Rough Riders (1954–1955)
- Cleveland Browns (1956)
- Green Bay Packers (1957–1958)
- Ottawa Rough Riders (1959)
- Oakland Raiders (1960)
- Boston Patriots (1961–1967)
- New York Jets (1968–1969)
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- Pittsburgh Steelers (1973) (QB)
- New York Stars (1974)
- Denver Broncos (1977–1979) (QB)
- New England Patriots (1981) (QB)
- Denver Gold (1984) (OC)
- New England Steamrollers (1988)
- Denver Dynamite (1989–1991)
- Charlotte Rage (1992)
- Las Vegas Sting (1994–1995)
- Anaheim Piranhas (1996)
- Florida Bobcats (1997)
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- Super Bowl champion (III)
- AFL champion (1968)
- AFL Comeback Player of the Year (1966)
- Boston Patriots All-1960s Team
- New England Patriots Hall of Fame
- First-team All-AFL (1964)
- 3× AFL All-Star Game (1963, 1964, 1966)
- 1966 AFL All-Star Game MVP
- SEC Player of the Year (1950)
- Inducted into KY Pro Football HOF (2004)
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Pass attempts: | 3,330 |
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Pass completions: | 1,552 |
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Percentage: | 46.6 |
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TD–INT: | 178–220 |
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Passing yards: | 22,681 |
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QB Rating: | 59.6 |
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Player stats at NFL.com · PFR |
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Parilli achieved his greatest professional success in the AFL as the starting quarterback of the Boston Patriots from 1961 to 1967. He earned three All-Star Game selections, while leading the Patriots to their only AFL postseason and championship game appearance in 1963. Present for the entirety of the AFL's existence, Parilli played his final seasons for the New York Jets and was part of the team that won a Super Bowl title in Super Bowl III. After retiring as a player, he served as a coach in the NFL, World Football League, and Arena Football League from 1973 to 1997. He was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1982.
Early years
Parilli was born and raised in Rochester, Pennsylvania, an industrial town northwest of Pittsburgh, Parilli graduated from Rochester High School in 1948.
College career
Parilli played college football at the University of Kentucky in Lexington, and was a quarterback for the Wildcats under head coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. He was a consensus All-American in 1950 and 1951 and was fourth in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1950 and third in 1951. He led the Wildcats to victories in consecutive New Year's Day bowl games in the 1951 Sugar Bowl and 1952 Cotton Bowl.
Statistics
Season | Passing |
Comp | Att | Yards | Comp% | TD | INT |
1949 |
81 | 150 | 1081 | 54.0 | 8 | 13 |
1950 |
114 | 203 | 1627 | 56.2 | 23 | 12 |
1951 |
136 | 239 | 1643 | 56.9 | 19 | 12 |
Career Total |
331 | 592 | 4351 | 55.9 | 50 | 37 |
Early years
Parilli was the fourth overall selection of the 1952 NFL draft, taken by the Green Bay Packers.
He played two seasons with the Packers, two with the Ottawa Rough Riders in Canada, one with the Cleveland Browns in 1956, two more with the Packers, and another with Ottawa in 1959.
AFL
At age 30, Parilli was picked up by the Oakland Raiders of the fledgling American Football League on August 17, 1960,[1] and threw for just over 1,000 yards that season.
On April 4, 1961, he was part of a five-player trade that sent him to the Boston Patriots,[2][3] and he went on to become one of the AFL's most productive and colorful players. Playing for the Patriots from 1961 through 1967, Parilli finished his career with over 25,000 total yards and 200 touchdowns, ending among the top five quarterbacks in 23 categories such as passing yards, passing touchdowns and rushing yards. Parilli was selected for three All-Star Games. In 1964, throwing primarily to Gino Cappelletti, Parilli amassed nearly 3,500 yards passing with 31 touchdowns; the latter was a Patriots record until Tom Brady broke it in 2007. During that season's contest against the Oakland Raiders on October 16, he threw for 422 yards and four touchdown passes in a 43–43 tie. Parilli is a member of the Patriots All-1960s (AFL) Team.
Parilli completed his career with the New York Jets, where he earned a ring as Joe Namath's backup in Super Bowl III, when the Jets stunned the Baltimore Colts by a 16–7 score. Coincidentally, this gave the Jets two quarterbacks from Pennsylvania's Beaver County, with Parilli being from Rochester and Namath being from nearby Beaver Falls and both played for "Bear" Bryant in college, Namath at Alabama. In 1967, it was discovered by Life magazine that Parilli and several other professional athletes were regular patrons of Patriarca crime family mobster Arthur Ventola's major fencing operation called Arthur's Farm in Revere, Massachusetts. Despite the organized crime connection, journalist Howie Carr stated that there was never any inside information passed between Parilli and Ventola. Arthur was the uncle of mob associate Richard Castucci.
Besides his considerable skills as a quarterback, he was one of the best holders in the history of football and was nicknamed "gold-finger" as a result of kicker Jim Turner's then-record 145 points kicked in 1968 (plus another 19 points in the play-offs and in Super Bowl III). He is one of only 20 players who were in the American Football League for its entire ten-year existence, and is a member of the University of Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame. In 1982, Parilli was named to the College Football Hall of Fame.
Because of their Italian surnames, the Patriots' wide receiver-quarterback duo of Cappelletti and Parilli was nicknamed "Grand Opera."
Parilli retired as a player at the age of 40 in August 1970.[4]
Coaching career
In 1974, Parilli became the head coach of the New York Stars of the World Football League; after going bankrupt, the franchise moved to Charlotte mid-season. The next year, he was tabbed as coach of the WFL's Chicago Winds, and briefly seemed to have a chance to coach his old teammate, Joe Namath. But Namath turned Chicago down, and Parilli was replaced in late July after only two pre-season games. (The Winds would play only five regular-season contests before folding, and the rest of the WFL would collapse a few months later.) Parilli would later coach in the Arena Football League, helming the New England Steamrollers, Denver Dynamite, Charlotte Rage, Las Vegas Sting, Anaheim Piranhas and Florida Bobcats.[5]
Death
Parilli died on July 15, 2017, in Parker, Colorado of multiple myeloma at the age of 87.[6]
Honors
Parilli was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1982.[7] On November 15, 2014, he was inducted into the National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame.[8]
See also
- List of NCAA major college football yearly passing leaders
- Other American Football League players
References
- "Parilli joins Oakland Raiders". Pittsburgh Press. UPI. August 17, 1960. p. 45.
- "Parilli is swapped to Boston Patriots". Milwaukee Journal. press dispatches. April 6, 1961. p. 14, part 2.
- "Oakland trades Parilli to Patriots". Reading Eagle. Pennsylvania. Associated Press. April 5, 1961. p. 47.
- "Babe Parilli retires from pro football". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. Florida. Associated Press. August 30, 1970. p. 1C.
- "Babe Parilli". arenafan.com. Retrieved December 19, 2014.
- "Babe Parilli Dies at 87; Standout Quarterback With 'Houdini Hands'". July 15, 2017. Retrieved April 7, 2018 – via NYTimes.com.
- "Parilli, Meredith among hall of fame inductees". Gadsden Times. Alabama. Associated Press. February 7, 1982. p. 39.
- "Nashvillesportsmix.com". nashvillesportsmix.com. Retrieved April 7, 2018.
External links
Babe Parilli |
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Kentucky Wildcats starting quarterbacks |
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- Roscoe Severs (1897)
- Herman Scholtz (1901)
- W. H. Grady (1903)
- Presley Atkins (1904–1905)
- Neville Stone (1906–1907)
- Shelby Post (1908)
- Jake Gaiser (1910)
- Les Guyn (1911)
- Abe Roth (1912)
- Parks (1911–1914)
- Paul Hite (1914)
- Doc Rodes (1915–1916)
- Craig Riddle (1917)
- Bobby Lavin (1919–1921)
- Turner Gregg (1922–1924)
- Gayle Mohney (1925–1927)
- Elmer Gilb (1928)
- Carey Spicer (1929–1931)
- Ralph Kercheval (1932)
- Jack Jean (1933)
- Norris McMillin (1934–1935)
- Vincent Robinson (1936–1937)
- Joe Shepherd (1938–1939)
- Phil Cutchin (1941–1942, 1946)
- George Blanda (1946–1948)
- Babe Parilli (1949–1951)
- Steve Meilinger (1952)
- Bob Hardy (1953–1955)
- Delmar Hughes (1956)
- Lowell Hughes (1957–1959)
- Jerry Eisaman (1960)
- Jerry Woolum (1960–1962)
- Rick Norton (1963–1965)
- Terry Beadles (1966)
- Dave Bair (1967–1968)
- Bernie Scruggs (1969–1971)
- James McKay (1972)
- Mike Fanuzzi (1973–1974)
- Cliff Hite (1974–1975)
- Derrick Ramsey (1976–1977)
- Larry McCrimmon (1978; 1980)
- Terry Henry (1979)
- Randy Jenkins (1980–1983)
- Doug Martin (1982)
- Bill Ransdell (1984–1986)
- Kevin Dooley (1985–1987)
- Glenn Fohr (1987–1988)
- Freddie Maggard (1989–1990)
- Brad Smith (1990–1991)
- Pookie Jones (1991–1993)
- Antonio O'Ferral (1993–1994)
- Jeff Speedy (1994–1995)
- Billy Jack Haskins (1995–1996)
- Tim Couch (1996–1998)
- Dusty Bonner (1999)
- Jared Lorenzen (2000–2003)
- Shane Boyd (2001–2004)
- Andre' Woodson (2004–2007)
- Mike Hartline (2008–2010)
- Randall Cobb (2008)
- Morgan Newton (2009–2012)
- Maxwell Smith (2011–2013)
- Matt Roark (2011)
- Jalen Whitlow (2012–2013)
- Patrick Towles (2014–2015)
- Drew Barker (2015–2016)
- Stephen Johnson (2016–2017)
- Luke Wright (2016)
- Terry Wilson (2018–2020)
- Sawyer Smith (2019)
- Lynn Bowden (2019)
- Will Levis (2021–present)
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Backfield | |
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Line |
- E Dan Foldberg
- E Bill McColl
- T Bob Gain
- T Jim Weatherall
- G Bud McFadin
- G Les Richter
- C Jerry Groom
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- Assistant coaches: Frank Moseley
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Backfield | |
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Line |
- E Bob Carey
- E Bill McColl
- T Don Coleman
- T Jim Weatherall
- G Les Richter
- G Bob Ward
- C Dick Hightower
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1952 NFL Draft first-round selections |
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Green Bay Packers 1952 NFL Draft selections |
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- Babe Parilli
- Billy Howton
- Bobby Dillon
- Dave Hanner
- Tom Johnson
- Bill Reichardt
- Mel Becket
- Deral Teteak
- Art Kleinschmidt
- William Roffler
- Billy Burkhalter
- Bill Wilson
- Billy Hair
- Jack Morgan
- Bobby Jack Floyd
- Johnny Coatta
- Don Peterson
- Howard Tisdale
- Johnny Pont
- Chuck Boerio
- Herb Zimmerman
- Karl Kluckhohn
- Frank Kapral
- John Schuetzner
- Charlie LaPradd
- Charlie Stokes
- I.D. Russell
- Billy Barrett
- Bill Stratton
- Jack Fulkerson
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Green Bay Packers first-round draft picks |
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- Letlow
- Jankowski
- Isbell
- Buhler
- Van Every
- Paskvan
- Odson
- Wildung
- Pregulman
- Schlinkman
- Strzykalski
- Case
- Girard
- Heath
- Tonnemaker
- Gain
- Parilli
- Carmichael
- Hunter
- Switzer
- Bettis
- Losch
- Hornung
- Kramer
- Currie
- Duncan
- Moore
- Adderley
- Gros
- Robinson
- Voss
- Anderson
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- Grabowski
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- Hyland
- Horn
- Carr
- Lueck
- Moore
- McCoy
- McGeorge
- Brockington
- Buchanon
- Tagge
- Barry Smith
- Barty Smith
- Koncar
- Butler
- E. Johnson
- Lofton
- J. Anderson
- Ivery
- B. Clark
- Cumby
- Campbell
- Hallstrom
- Lewis
- Carreker
- Ruettgers
- Fullwood
- Sharpe
- Mandarich
- Bennett
- Thompson
- V. Clark
- Buckley
- Simmons
- Teague
- Taylor
- Newsome
- Michels
- Verba
- Holliday
- Edwards
- Franks
- Reynolds
- J. Walker
- Barnett
- Carroll
- Rodgers
- Hawk
- Harrell
- Raji
- Matthews
- Bulaga
- Sherrod
- Perry
- Jones
- Clinton-Dix
- Randall
- K. Clark
- Alexander
- Gary
- Savage
- Love
- Stokes
- Q. Walker
- Wyatt
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Oakland Raiders 1960 inaugural season roster |
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- Ray Armstrong
- Doug Asad
- Joe Barbee
- Larry Barnes
- Alex Bravo
- Joe Cannavino
- Carmen Cavalli
- Donnis Churchwell
- Wayne Crow
- Don Deskins
- John Dittrich
- Bob Dougherty
- George Fields
- Tom Flores
- Al Goldstein
- Charlie Hardy
- John Harris
- Wayne Hawkins
- Al Hoisington
- L.C. Joyner
- Bob Keyes
- Jack Larscheid
- Paul Larson
- Billy Locklin
- Billy Lott
- Tom Louderback
- Eddie Macon
- Don Manoukian
- Nyle McFarlane
- Riley Morris
- Paul Oglesby
- Jim Otto
- Babe Parilli
- Charley Powell
- Gene Prebola
- Billy Reynolds
- Ron Sabal
- J.D. Smith
- Bill Striegel
- Tony Teresa
- Dalton Truax
- Ron Warzeka
Head Coach: Eddie Erdelatz
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New York Jets Super Bowl III champions |
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- 11 Jim Turner
- 12 Joe Namath (MVP)
- 13 Don Maynard
- 15 Babe Parilli
- 22 Jim Hudson
- 23 Bill Rademacher
- 24 Johnny Sample
- 26 Jim Richards
- 29 Bake Turner
- 30 Mark Smolinski
- 31 Bill Mathis
- 32 Emerson Boozer
- 33 Curley Johnson
- 34 Lee White
- 35 Billy Joe
- 41 Matt Snell
- 42 Randy Beverly
- 43 John Dockery
- 45 Earl Christy
- 46 Bill Baird
- 47 Mike D'Amato
- 48 Cornell Gordon
- 50 Carl McAdams
- 51 Ralph Baker
- 52 John Schmitt
- 56 Paul Crane
- 60 Larry Grantham
- 61 Bob Talamini
- 62 Al Atkinson
- 63 John Neidert
- 66 Randy Rasmussen
- 67 Dave Herman
- 68 Michael Stromberg
- 70 Karl Henke
- 71 Sam Walton
- 72 Paul Rochester
- 74 Jeff Richardson
- 75 Winston Hill
- 80 John Elliott
- 81 Gerry Philbin
- 83 George Sauer
- 85 Steve Thompson
- 86 Verlon Biggs
- 87 Pete Lammons
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- Coaches: Walt Michaels
- Clive Rush
- Buddy Ryan
- Joe Spencer
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Boston Patriots All-1960s Team |
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- Offense
- Parilli (QB)
- Nance (RB)
- Garron (RB)
- Colclough (WR)
- Graham (WR)
- Whalen (TE)
- Long (T)
- Neville (T)
- Neighbors (G)
- St. Jean (G)
- Morris (C)
- Defense
- Dee (DE)
- Eisenhauer (DE)
- Antwine (DT)
- Hunt (DT)
- Addison (OLB)
- Philpott (OLB)
- Buoniconti (MLB)
- Shonta (CB)
- Johnson (CB)
- Webb (S)
- Hall (S)
- Special Teams
- Garron (Ret.)
- Cappelletti (PK)
- Yewcic (P)
- Webb (ST)
- Coach
- Holovak
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New England Patriots Hall of Fame |
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AFL season passing yards leaders |
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AFL annual passing touchdowns leaders |
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Cleveland Browns starting quarterbacks |
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- Cliff Lewis (1946–1947, 1949)
- Otto Graham (1946–1955)
- George Ratterman (1953–1956)
- Babe Parilli (1956)
- Tommy O'Connell (1956–1957)
- Milt Plum (1957–1961)
- Len Dawson (1961)
- Jim Ninowski (1962–1963, 1965)
- Frank Ryan (1962–1968)
- Gary Lane (1967)
- Bill Nelsen (1968–1972)
- Mike Phipps (1970–1976)
- Don Gault (1970)
- Brian Sipe (1974–1983)
- Will Cureton (1975)
- Dave Mays (1977)
- Terry Luck (1977)
- Paul McDonald (1982–1984)
- Gary Danielson (1985–1988)
- Bernie Kosar (1985–1993)
- Jeff Christensen (1987)
- Mike Pagel (1988, 1990)
- Don Strock (1988)
- Mike Tomczak (1992)
- Todd Philcox (1992–1993)
- Vinny Testaverde (1993–1995)
- Mark Rypien (1994)
- Eric Zeier (1995)
- Ty Detmer (1999)
- Tim Couch (1999–2003)
- Doug Pederson (2000)
- Spergon Wynn (2000)
- Kelly Holcomb (2002–2004)
- Jeff Garcia (2004)
- Luke McCown (2004)
- Trent Dilfer (2005)
- Charlie Frye (2005–2007)
- Derek Anderson (2006–2009)
- Brady Quinn (2008–2009)
- Ken Dorsey (2008)
- Bruce Gradkowski (2008)
- Jake Delhomme (2010)
- Seneca Wallace (2010–2011)
- Colt McCoy (2010–2011)
- Brandon Weeden (2012–2013)
- Thad Lewis (2012)
- Brian Hoyer (2013–2014)
- Jason Campbell (2013)
- Johnny Manziel (2014–2015)
- Connor Shaw (2014)
- Josh McCown (2015–2016)
- Austin Davis (2015)
- Robert Griffin III (2016)
- Cody Kessler (2016)
- DeShone Kizer (2017)
- Kevin Hogan (2017)
- Tyrod Taylor (2018)
- Baker Mayfield (2018–2021)
- Case Keenum (2021)
- Nick Mullens (2021)
- Jacoby Brissett (2022–present)
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Green Bay Packers starting quarterbacks |
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- Norman Barry (1921)
- Charlie Mathys (1922–1926)
- Curly Lambeau (1925)
- Pid Purdy (1926)
- Red Dunn (1927–1931)
- Bullet Baker (1928–1929)
- Jack Evans (1929)
- Arnie Herber (1930–1940)
- Paul Fitzgibbon (1931)
- Roger Grove (1931)
- Cecil Isbell (1938–1942)
- Hal Van Every (1940)
- Tony Canadeo (1942–1943)
- Irv Comp (1943–1948)
- Roy McKay (1945)
- Cliff Aberson (1946)
- Jack Jacobs (1947–1949)
- Perry Moss (1948)
- Earl Girard (1949)
- Stan Heath (1949)
- Tobin Rote (1950–1956)
- Bobby Thomason (1951)
- Babe Parilli (1952–1953, 1957–1958)
- Bart Starr (1956–1971)
- Joe Francis (1958)
- Lamar McHan (1959–1960)
- John Roach (1963)
- Zeke Bratkowski (1966–1968, 1971)
- Don Horn (1969–1970)
- Scott Hunter (1971–1973)
- Jerry Tagge (1973–1974)
- Jim Del Gaizo (1973)
- John Hadl (1974–1975)
- Jack Concannon (1974)
- Don Milan (1975)
- Lynn Dickey (1976–1977, 1979–1985)
- Carlos Brown (1976)
- Randy Johnson (1976)
- David Whitehurst (1977–1979, 1981)
- Randy Wright (1984–1988)
- Jim Zorn (1985)
- Don Majkowski (1987–1992)
- Alan Risher (1987)
- Anthony Dilweg (1990)
- Blair Kiel (1990–1991)
- Mike Tomczak (1991)
- Brett Favre (1992–2007)
- Aaron Rodgers (2008–present)
- Matt Flynn (2010–2011, 2013)
- Seneca Wallace (2013)
- Scott Tolzien (2013)
- Brett Hundley (2017)
- Jordan Love (2021)
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New England Patriots starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the Boston Patriots (1960–1970) |
- Butch Songin (1960–1961)
- Tom Greene (1960)
- Babe Parilli (1961–1967)
- Tom Yewcic (1962)
- Eddie Wilson (1965)
- Don Trull (1967)
- Mike Taliaferro (1968–1970)
- Tom Sherman (1968)
- Joe Kapp (1970)
- Jim Plunkett (1971–1975)
- Steve Grogan (1975–1990)
- Neil Graff (1975)
- Matt Cavanaugh (1980–1982)
- Tom Owen (1981)
- Tony Eason (1983–1989)
- Tom Ramsey (1987–1988)
- Bob Bleier (1987)
- Doug Flutie (1987–1989)
- Marc Wilson (1989–1990)
- Tommy Hodson (1990–1992)
- Hugh Millen (1991–1992)
- Scott Zolak (1992, 1995, 1998)
- Jeff Carlson (1992)
- Drew Bledsoe (1993–2001)
- Scott Secules (1993)
- Tom Brady (2001–2019)
- Matt Cassel (2008)
- Jimmy Garoppolo (2016)
- Jacoby Brissett (2016)
- Cam Newton (2020)
- Brian Hoyer (2020, 2022–present)
- Mac Jones (2021–2022)
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Las Vegas Raiders starting quarterbacks |
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- Tom Flores (1960–1961, 1963–1966)
- Babe Parilli (1960)
- Cotton Davidson (1962–1964, 1966)
- Hunter Enis (1962)
- Don Heinrich (1962)
- Dick Wood (1965)
- Daryle Lamonica (1967–1973)
- George Blanda (1968)
- Ken Stabler (1971–1979)
- Larry Lawrence (1974–1975)
- Mike Rae (1976–1977)
- Jim Plunkett (1980–1986)
- Dan Pastorini (1980)
- Marc Wilson (1981, 1983–1987)
- Rusty Hilger (1987)
- Vince Evans (1987, 1993, 1995)
- Jay Schroeder (1988–1992)
- Steve Beuerlein (1988–1989)
- Todd Marinovich (1991–1992)
- Jeff Hostetler (1993–1996)
- Billy Joe Hobert (1995–1996)
- Jeff George (1997–1998)
- Donald Hollas (1998)
- Wade Wilson (1998)
- Rich Gannon (1999–2004)
- Rick Mirer (2003)
- Marques Tuiasosopo (2003, 2005)
- Kerry Collins (2004–2005)
- Aaron Brooks (2006)
- Andrew Walter (2006, 2008)
- Josh McCown (2007)
- Daunte Culpepper (2007)
- JaMarcus Russell (2007–2009)
- Bruce Gradkowski (2009–2010)
- Charlie Frye (2009)
- Jason Campbell (2010–2011)
- Kyle Boller (2011)
- Carson Palmer (2011–2012)
- Terrelle Pryor (2012–2013)
- Matt Flynn (2013)
- Matt McGloin (2013, 2016)
- Derek Carr (2014–present)
- EJ Manuel (2017)
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New England Steamrollers |
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- Founded in 1988
- Folded in 1988
- Based in Providence, Rhode Island
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- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches | |
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Hall of Fame members | |
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Denver Dynamite |
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- Founded in 1987
- Folded in 1991
- Based in Denver, Colorado
| Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
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Arena | |
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Head coaches | |
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Playoff appearances (4) | |
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ArenaBowl appearances (1) | |
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Hall of Fame members | |
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Charlotte Rage |
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| Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
- History of the Arena Football League in Charlotte
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches | |
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Playoff appearances (2) | |
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Hall of Fame members | |
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Anaheim Piranhas |
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| Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
- History of the Arena Football League in Los Angeles
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches | |
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Playoff appearances (2) | |
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Hall of Fame members |
- Sam Hernandez
- Mike Hohensee
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Florida Bobcats |
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| Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
- History of the Arena Football League in Miami
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches |
- Kapp
- Strock
- Dunn
- Fourcade
- Jensen
- Parilli
- Buffington
- Hardy
- Ewart
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Playoff appearances (2) | |
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Hall of Fame members |
- John Corker
- Joe March
- Jon Roehlk
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Seasons (10) |
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1990s |
- 1992
- 1993
- 1994
- 1995
- 1996
- 1997
- 1998
- 1999
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2000s | |
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AFL Coach of the Year Award |
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- 1987: Tim Marcum
- 1988: Perry Moss
- 1989: Babe Parilli
- 1990: Ernie Stautner
- 1991: Fran Curci
- 1992: Perry Moss
- 1993: Danny White
- 1994: Perry Moss
- 1995: John Gregory
- 1996: John Gregory
- 1997: Eddie Khayat
- 1998: Tim Marcum
- 1999: Mike Dailey
- 2000: Darren Arbet
- 2001: Michael Trigg
- 2002: Darren Arbet
- 2003: Todd Shell
- 2004: Mike Neu
- 2005: Doug Plank
- 2006: Will McClay
- 2007: Doug Plank
- 2008: Mike Wilpolt
- 2010: Les Moss
- 2011: Kevin Guy
- 2012: Ron James
- 2013: Bob McMillen
- 2014: Steve Thonn
- 2015: Clint Dolezel
- 2016: Clint Dolezel & Kevin Guy
- 2017: Ron James
- 2018: Omarr Smith
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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Other | |
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