sport.wikisort.org - AthleteRobert Charles Holly, Jr. (born June 1, 1960) is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins, Philadelphia Eagles and Atlanta Falcons. He played college football at Princeton University.[1]
American football player (born 1960)
American football player
Bob Holly|
Position: | Quarterback |
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Born: | (1960-06-01) June 1, 1960 (age 62) Clifton, New Jersey |
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Height: | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) |
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Weight: | 200 lb (91 kg) |
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High school: | Clifton (NJ) |
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College: | Princeton |
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NFL Draft: | 1982 / Round: 11 / Pick: 291 |
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- Washington Redskins (1982–1983)
- Philadelphia Eagles (1984)
- Atlanta Falcons (1984–1985)
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- Super Bowl Champion (XVII)
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Player stats at NFL.com · PFR |
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Born and raised in Clifton, New Jersey, Holly attended Clifton High School.[2]
He attracted the attention of NFL scouts at Princeton in 1981 when he set a school record by throwing for 501 yards against Yale, and scoring the go-ahead touchdown on a keeper himself late in the game in a 35-31 victory,[3] Princeton's first over arch-rival Yale since 1966. That year, he set a school record (since broken) by throwing for 2,668 yards, and was named first-team All-Ivy.[4]
He was drafted in the 11th round by the Redskins in 1982, and served as the backup to Joe Theisman that season, in which the Redskins won the Super Bowl. He played in 5 regular season games for the Redskins in 1983, completing his only pass attempt, and he appeared in one playoff game, completing the two passes he attempted.[5]
He was a member of the Philadelphia Eagles and Atlanta Falcons in 1984, but did not appear in any games. He played in four games for the Falcons in 1985, completing 24 of 39 passes for 295 yards and one touchdown.[6]
He was injured in a car accident in the off-season after the 1985 season, and retired from pro football.
References
- The Football Encyclopedia, St. Martin's Press, 1994, ISBN 0-312-11435-4
- Bob Holly Stats, Pro-Football-Reference.com. Accessed March 14, 2018.
- "Princeton Football Timeline". Archived from the original on 2009-07-13. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
- GoPrincetonTigers.com ("Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2012-01-25.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)/pdf7/135152.pdf?SPSID=54345&SPID=4263&DB_OEM_ID=10600) - The Football Encyclopedia, St. Martin's Press, 1994, ISBN 0-312-11435-4
- The Football Encyclopedia, St. Martin's Press, 1994, ISBN 0-312-11435-4
Princeton Tigers starting quarterbacks |
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- D. P. Morgan
- P. T. Kimball
- Richard Hodge
- J. Hancock
- Edgar Allan Poe (1889)
- Philip King (1891–1893)
- William Ward (1894)
- Billy Suter
- F. L. Smith (1896)
- John Baird (1897)
- A. V. Duncan
- Ralph Hutchinson
- A. E. Meier
- C. J. Freeman
- F. G. Pearson
- J. Roy Vetterlein
- Edward Dillon (1906–1907)
- Frank Bergin
- Ballou (1910)
- Hobey Baker
- Frank Murrey (1918)
- John Strubing (1919)
- Donold Lourie (1920–1921)
- John P. Gorman
- Dan Caulkins
- Dutch Hendrian
- David Allerdice (1939–1940)
- Dick Kazmaier (1951)
- Ron Landeck (1965)
- Scott MacBean (1969)
- Rod Plummer (1970)
- Fred Dalzell (1972)
- Ron Beible (1973–1975)
- Kirby Lockhart (1977)
- Ken Barrett (1978)
- Mark Lockenmeyer (1980)
- Bob Holly (1981)
- Brent Woods (1982)
- Doug Butler (1983–1985)
- Jason Garrett (1987–1988)
- Joel Sharp (1989–1990)
- Chad Roghair (1991)
- Joel Foote (1992–1993)
- Brock Harvey (1995)
- Harry Nakielny (1997)
- John Burnham (1998)
- David Splithoff (2000–2002)
- Matt Verbit (2002–2004)
- Jeff Terrell (2005–2006)
- Bill Foran (2007)
- Greg Mroz (2007)
- Brian Anderson (2007–2008)
- Tommy Wornham (2009–2011)
- Andrew Dixon (2010)
- Connor Kelley (2010)
- Quinn Epperly (2011–2014)
- Connor Michelsen (2012–2014)
- Chad Kanoff (2015–2017)
- John Lovett (2018)
- Kevin Davidson (2018–2019)
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Washington Redskins 1982 NFL Draft selections |
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- Vernon Dean
- Carl Powell
- Todd Liebenstein
- Mike Williams
- Lamont Jeffers
- John Schactner
- Ralph Warthen
- Ken Coffey
- Randy Trautman
- Harold Smith
- Terry Daniels
- Dan Miller
- Bob Holly
- Donald Laster
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Washington Commanders starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the Boston Braves (1932), Boston Redskins (1933–1936), Washington Redskins (1937–2019), and Washington Football Team (2020–2021) |
- Hank Hughes (1932)
- Jim Musick (1933)
- Steve Hokuf (1934)
- Pug Rentner (1934–1935)
- Bill Shepherd (1935)
- Eddie Britt (1936)
- Ed Smith (1936)
- Sammy Baugh (1937–1952)
- Bill Hartman (1938)
- Frank Filchock (1938–1939, 1941, 1944)
- Jim German (1939)
- Roy Zimmerman (1942)
- George Cafego (1943)
- Jim Youel (1946–1947)
- Jack Jacobs (1946)
- Tommy Mont (1948)
- Harry Gilmer (1949–1951)
- Eddie LeBaron (1952–1953, 1955–1959)
- Jack Scarbath (1953–1954)
- Al Dorow (1954–1956)
- Ralph Guglielmi (1955, 1958–1960)
- Eagle Day (1960)
- Norm Snead (1961–1963)
- Sonny Jurgensen (1964–1974)
- Dick Shiner (1965)
- Jim Ninowski (1968)
- Billy Kilmer (1971–1978)
- Randy Johnson (1975)
- Joe Theismann (1976–1985)
- Mike Kruczek (1980)
- Jay Schroeder (1985–1987)
- Ed Rubbert (1987)
- Doug Williams (1987–1989)
- Mark Rypien (1988–1993)
- Stan Humphries (1990)
- Jeff Rutledge (1990)
- Rich Gannon (1993)
- Cary Conklin (1993)
- Heath Shuler (1994–1995)
- John Friesz (1994)
- Gus Frerotte (1994–1998)
- Jeff Hostetler (1997)
- Trent Green (1998)
- Brad Johnson (1999–2000)
- Jeff George (2000–2001)
- Tony Banks (2001)
- Shane Matthews (2002)
- Patrick Ramsey (2002–2005)
- Danny Wuerffel (2002)
- Tim Hasselbeck (2003)
- Mark Brunell (2004–2006)
- Jason Campbell (2006–2009)
- Todd Collins (2007)
- Donovan McNabb (2010)
- Rex Grossman (2010–2011)
- John Beck (2011)
- Robert Griffin III (2012–2014)
- Kirk Cousins (2012–2017)
- Colt McCoy (2014, 2018–2019)
- Alex Smith (2018, 2020)
- Mark Sanchez (2018)
- Josh Johnson (2018)
- Case Keenum (2019)
- Dwayne Haskins (2019–2020)
- Kyle Allen (2020)
- Ryan Fitzpatrick (2021)
- Taylor Heinicke (2021)
- Garrett Gilbert (2021)
- Carson Wentz (2022–present)
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Washington Redskins Super Bowl XVII champions |
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- 3 Mark Moseley
- 5 Jeff Hayes
- 7 Joe Theismann
- 8 Bob Holly
- 17 Tom Owen
- 20 Joe Lavender
- 21 Mike Nelms
- 22 Curtis Jordan
- 23 Tony Peters
- 25 Joe Washington
- 29 Mark Murphy
- 30 Nick Giaquinto
- 32 Vernon Dean
- 38 Clarence Harmon
- 39 Otis Wonsley
- 40 Wilbur Jackson
- 44 John Riggins (MVP)
- 45 Jeris White
- 46 LeCharls McDaniel
- 47 Greg Williams
- 50 Larry Kubin
- 51 Monte Coleman
- 52 Neal Olkewicz
- 53 Jeff Bostic
- 54 Peter Cronan
- 55 Mel Kaufman
- 56 Quentin Lowry
- 57 Rich Milot
- 58 Stuart Anderson
- 62 Donald Laster
- 63 Fred Dean
- 65 Dave Butz
- 66 Joe Jacoby
- 68 Russ Grimm
- 69 Perry Brooks
- 71 Garry Puetz
- 72 Dexter Manley
- 73 Mark May
- 74 George Starke
- 75 Pat Ogrin
- 76 Mat Mendenhall
- 77 Darryl Grant
- 78 Tony McGee
- 79 Todd Liebenstein
- 80 Virgil Seay
- 81 Art Monk
- 82 Rich Caster
- 84 Mike Williams
- 85 Don Warren
- 86 Clint Didier
- 87 Charlie Brown
- 88 Rick Walker
- 89 Alvin Garrett
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- Coaches: Don Breaux
- Joe Bugel
- Dan Henning
- Larry Peccatiello
- Richie Petitbon
- Wayne Sevier
- Rennie Simmons
- Charley Taylor
- LaVern Torgeson
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