sport.wikisort.org - AthleteJohn Paye (born March 30, 1965) is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League and a high school basketball coach.
American football player (born 1965)
American football player
John Paye|
Position: | Quarterback |
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Born: | (1965-03-30) March 30, 1965 (age 57) Stanford, California |
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Height: | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) |
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Weight: | 205 lb (93 kg) |
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High school: | Atherton (CA) Menlo |
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College: | Stanford |
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NFL Draft: | 1987 / Round: 10 / Pick: 275 |
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- San Francisco 49ers (1987–1988)
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Player stats at NFL.com |
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Early life
A 1983 graduate of Menlo School in Atherton, California, Paye lettered in baseball, basketball, and football. In his senior year, Menlo won the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) Division II basketball championship. One of Paye's teammates was Eric Reveno, who played with Paye on the Stanford basketball team and is currently an assistant basketball coach at Georgia Tech.
College and professional career
Paye continued as a starter in football and basketball at Stanford University in the Pac-10 Conference. With All-American John Elway moving on to the NFL, Paye won the starting job at quarterback as a true freshman in 1983, and also started at point guard that year for the Cardinal basketball team; he was the last NCAA Division I athlete to start in both football and basketball as a freshman.[citation needed]
In the 1984 football season, Paye shared time at quarterback with Fred Buckley, and became the starter for the 1985 and 1986 season. In 1986, he led Stanford to an 8–3 record and an invitation to the Gator Bowl against the Clemson Tigers. This was Stanford's first bowl appearance in eight years, but Paye was unable to play due to a shoulder injury. Backup Greg Ennis started instead, and Stanford lost a close game, 27–21.
Paye was selected in the tenth round of the 1987 NFL Draft by the San Francisco 49ers and stayed two seasons with the team, but saw no action in the regular season.
Coaching career
After leaving pro football, Paye returned to Menlo as the girls' basketball coach, coaching his sister Kate. Paye guided the team to three CIF Division V state championships from 1989–1991.[1] He coached boys' basketball at Woodside Priory School in the 1995–1996 season and coached girls' basketball at Notre Dame High School girls' basketball team in Belmont, California. He returned to coach girls' basketball again at Menlo School in 2008, where his team won another CIF state championship, this time in Division II, in 2019.[2]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from NFL.com
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- 1982: Paye
- 1983: Knight
- 1984: Dykes
- 1985: George
- 1986: E. Smith
- 1987: Marinovich
- 1988: Kirby
- 1989: Hastings
- 1990: M. Smith
- 1991: Davis
- 1992: Powlus
- 1993: Booty
- 1994: Kendra
- 1995: Couch
- 1996: Minor
- 1997: Curry
- 1998: Simms
- 1999: Berlin
- 2000: Mauer
- 2001: Clarett
- 2002: Leak
- 2003: Brohm
- 2004: Perrilloux
- 2005: Mustain
- 2006: Clausen
- 2007: Pryor
- 2008: Gilbert
- 2009: Henderson
- 2010: Frazier
- 2011: Green-Beckham
- 2012: Browne
- 2013: Fournette
- 2014: Murray
- 2015: Eason
- 2016: Martell
- 2017: Lawrence
- 2018: Uiagalelei
- 2019: Young
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San Francisco 49ers 1987 NFL draft selections |
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- Harris Barton
- Terrence Flagler
- Jeff Bregel
- Paul Jokisch
- Bob White
- Steve DeLine
- David Grayson
- Jonathan Shelley
- John Paye
- Calvin Nicholas
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San Francisco 49ers Super Bowl XXIII champions |
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- 4 Max Runager
- 6 Mike Cofer
- 8 Steve Young
- 9 Barry Helton
- 15 John Paye
- 16 Joe Montana
- 20 Tory Nixon
- 21 Eric Wright
- 22 Tim McKyer
- 24 Harry Sydney
- 25 Doug DuBose
- 26 Darryl Pollard
- 29 Don Griffin
- 31 Chet Brooks
- 32 Terrence Flagler
- 33 Roger Craig
- 35 Del Rodgers
- 38 Greg Cox
- 42 Ronnie Lott
- 44 Tom Rathman
- 46 Tom Holmoe
- 49 Jeff Fuller
- 50 Riki Ellison
- 51 Randy Cross
- 53 Bill Romanowski
- 54 Ron Hadley
- 55 Jim Fahnhorst
- 57 Sam Kennedy
- 58 Keena Turner
- 60 Chuck Thomas
- 61 Jesse Sapolu
- 62 Guy McIntyre
- 65 Jeff Bregel
- 67 Pete Kugler
- 69 Bruce Collie
- 72 Jeff Stover
- 74 Steve Wallace
- 75 Kevin Fagan
- 76 Dwaine Board
- 77 Bubba Paris
- 78 Pierce Holt
- 79 Harris Barton
- 80 Jerry Rice (MVP)
- 82 John Taylor
- 83 Terry Greer
- 84 Brent Jones
- 85 Mike Wilson
- 86 John Frank
- 88 Calvin Nicholas
- 89 Ron Heller
- 91 Larry Roberts
- 92 Kevin Lilly
- 94 Charles Haley
- 95 Michael Carter
- 96 Danny Stubbs
- 97 Doug Mikolas
- 99 Michael Walter
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- Coaches: Dennis Green
- Tommy Hart
- Mike Holmgren
- Sherman Lewis
- Bobb McKittrick
- Bill McPherson
- Ray Rhodes
- George Seifert
- Lynn Stiles
- Fred von Appen
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Stanford Cardinal starting quarterbacks |
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- Code
- Harrelson
- Tarpey
- Walker
- Bogue
- S. Lewis
- Alustiza
- Paulman
- Albert
- Bell
- Shaw
- Kerkorian
- Garrett
- Brodie
- Douglas
- Nicolet
- Norman
- Sears
- Thurlow
- Berg
- DeSylvia
- D. Lewis
- Washington
- Williams
- Plunkett
- Bunce
- Boryla
- Cordova
- Benjamin
- Dils
- Schonert
- Elway
- Cottrell
- Paye
- Johnson
- Palumbis
- Stenstrom
- Frost
- Butterfield
- Hutchinson
- Husak
- Fasani
- Matter
- C. Lewis
- Edwards
- Ostrander
- Pritchard
- Luck
- Nunes
- Hogan
- Burns
- Chryst
- Costello
- Mills
- West
- McKee
- Sanders
- Patu
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