sport.wikisort.org - AthleteKent Douglas Graham (born November 1, 1968) is a former American football quarterback. Graham played quarterback at the University of Notre Dame before transferring to The Ohio State University. After his college football career, Graham had a lengthy career in the National Football League (NFL) during which he played for the New York Giants in two separate stints, as well as starting for the Arizona Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Steelers. He finished his career in 2002 with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
American football player (born 1968)
American football player
Kent Graham|
Position: | Quarterback |
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Born: | (1968-11-01) November 1, 1968 (age 53) Winfield, Illinois |
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Height: | 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) |
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Weight: | 231 lb (105 kg) |
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High school: | Wheaton North (IL) |
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College: | Ohio State |
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NFL Draft: | 1992 / Round: 8 / Pick: 211 |
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- New York Giants (1992–1994)
- Detroit Lions (1995)
- Arizona Cardinals (1996–1997)
- New York Giants (1998–1999)
- Pittsburgh Steelers (2000)
- Washington Redskins (2001)
- Houston Texans (2002)*
- Jacksonville Jaguars (2002)
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* Offseason and/or practice squad member only |
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TD–INT: | 39–33 |
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Yards: | 7,801 |
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QB Rating: | 69.0 |
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Player stats at NFL.com |
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Early years
Graham attended Wheaton North High School in Wheaton, Illinois, where he was awarded the National High School Quarterback of the Year honor by The National Quarterback Club in 1986. Recruited by Notre Dame, he won his first career start for the Irish as a freshman against Boston College in 1987. However, the option-run offense implemented by coach Lou Holtz was an imperfect fit for the drop-back passer, and after his sophomore year he transferred to Ohio State, where he was the starter for the 1991 campaign in which the Buckeyes finished 8-4.
Professional career
Graham began his NFL career with the Giants in 1992, after the team drafted him in the eighth round of that year's NFL Draft. Due to injuries to starters Phil Simms and Jeff Hostetler, Graham was forced into the starting lineup and started three games before he too was injured. He stayed with the team for two more years, only getting one more start, before leaving to play with the Detroit Lions in 1995. After not seeing any action, he signed with the Arizona Cardinals in 1996, where he eventually became the team's starting quarterback. In two separate stints as Cardinals quarterback, Graham threw for a combined 3,032 yards, 16 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions.
Graham returned to the Giants in 1998 to serve as backup to Danny Kanell, who had led the team to the NFC East title the previous year. He moved into the starting lineup in Week 12 after Kanell had led the Giants to a 3 - 7 record in the first ten games. Graham led the Giants to two wins in his first three starts, then secured a major upset over the then-undefeated and eventual Super Bowl champion Denver Broncos in Week 15 by throwing a late touchdown pass to Amani Toomer to clinch the victory. Graham finished the season 5-1 as the team's starter, and won his final four starts.
Graham started the 1999 season as the starter ahead of offseason acquisition Kerry Collins. He held a winning record in his nine starts, finishing 5-4, but struggled most of the year. After back-to-back ineffective performances he was benched during a Week 11 game against the Washington Redskins in favor of Collins. He did not see another snap as a Giant. Graham was released during the off-season (February 10, 2000) due to his lack of consistency and to create room under the salary cap.
In February 2000 Graham was signed by the Pittsburgh Steelers on a $5.1 million deal over three years to replace Mike Tomczak, who had been released in the off-season, as the backup for Kordell Stewart. In the wake of Stewart, who was having to cope with drastic changes to the offensive team members (including Tomczak, who had served as his mentor), having a mediocre 1999 season and a competitive first training camp, Steelers coach Bill Cowher (who, according to media rumors, was nearly fired by the Steelers organization for giving Stewart too many chances [citation needed]) assigned Graham as the starting quarterback for the start of the 2000 season. Despite solid efforts, Graham performed less than impressive, beginning the season 0-3 due to Pittsburgh's defensive weaknesses. In the third game of the season vs. the Tennessee Titans, Graham threw for 254 yards in one of the best offensive showings for the Steelers in over two seasons before injuring his hip late in the game and being replaced by Stewart, who went on to lead the team to two straight victories as Graham recovered. This built a quarterback controversy among fans and media, as many of the Steeler faithful supported Graham ahead of Stewart despite Stewart's recent successes with the team (having led the team to the playoffs twice in his first two full years as starter). However, Graham struggled mightily upon his return to the Steelers and eventually lost whatever playing time he had earned. After platooning with Graham, Stewart returned to the starting position and Graham was cut at the end of the year.
In 2001, he was signed by the Redskins. After initial starter Jeff George was cut, Graham became the team's second stringer for much of the season. In 2002, Graham was picked in the expansion draft by the Houston Texans to be their third-string quarterback. He never played again.
Personal life
His son, Taylor Graham, attended the New York Giants rookie minicamp in 2015 tryouts.[1]
References
External links
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- Jeff Alm
- Steve Belles
- Ned Bolcar
- Tony Brooks
- Derek Brown
- Rodney Culver
- Bob Dahl
- Pat Eilers
- Pat Fallon
- Bryan Flannery
- Kent Graham
- Mark Green
- Donn Grimm
- Tim Grunhard
- Andy Heck
- Reginald Ho
- Raghib Ismail
- Anthony Johnson
- Andre Jones
- Mirko Jurkovic
- Scott Kowalkowski
- Todd Lyght
- Tony Rice
- Tim Ryan
- Stan Smagala
- Rod Smith
- Frank Stams
- George Streeter
- Pat Terrell
- Ricky Watters
- Chris Zorich
- Assistant coaches: Barry Alvarez
- Vinny Cerrato
- Pete Cordelli
- Chuck Heater
- Joe Moore
- John Palermo
- George Stewart
- Jim Strong
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Notre Dame Fighting Irish starting quarterbacks |
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Ohio State Buckeyes starting quarterbacks |
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- Large
- Harley
- Workman
- Cramer
- McDonald
- Dye
- Scott
- Hallabrin
- Horvath
- Savic
- Leggett
- Borton
- Long
- Kern
- Lamka
- Hare
- Greene
- Gerald
- Schlichter
- Tomczak
- Karsatos
- Tupa
- Frey
- Graham
- Herbstreit
- Hoying
- Jackson
- Germaine
- Bellisari
- McMullen
- Krenzel
- Zwick
- Smith
- Boeckman
- Pryor
- Bauserman
- Miller
- Guiton
- Barrett
- Jones
- Haskins
- Fields
- Stroud
- McCord
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New York Giants 1992 NFL draft selections |
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- Derek Brown
- Phillippi Sparks
- Aaron Pierce
- Keith Hamilton
- Michael Wright
- Stacey Dillard
- Corey Widmer
- Kent Graham
- Anthony Prior
- George Rooks
- Nate Singleton
- Charles Swann
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New York Giants starting quarterbacks |
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- Jack McBride (1925, 1932)
- Hinkey Haines (1926–1928)
- Bruce Caldwell (1928)
- Benny Friedman (1929–1931)
- Hap Moran (1931–1932)
- Red Smith (1931)
- Harry Newman (1933–1934)
- Ed Danowski (1935–1939)
- Tony Sarausky (1936)
- Eddie Miller (1940)
- Tuffy Leemans (1941–1943)
- Emery Nix (1943)
- Arnie Herber (1944–1945)
- Frank Filchock (1946)
- Paul Governali (1947–1948)
- Charlie Conerly (1948–1961)
- Travis Tidwell (1950–1951)
- Tom Landry (1952)
- Arnold Galiffa (1953)
- Bob Clatterbuck (1954)
- Don Heinrich (1955–1959)
- George Shaw (1959–1960)
- Y. A. Tittle (1961–1964)
- Gary Wood (1964, 1966)
- Earl Morrall (1965–1966)
- Tom Kennedy (1966)
- Fran Tarkenton (1967–1971)
- Randy Johnson (1971–1973)
- Norm Snead (1972–1974, 1976)
- Craig Morton (1974–1976)
- Jim Del Gaizo (1974)
- Joe Pisarcik (1977–1979)
- Jerry Golsteyn (1977–1978)
- Randy Dean (1978)
- Phil Simms (1979–1981, 1984–1993)
- Scott Brunner (1980–1983)
- Jeff Rutledge (1983, 1987)
- Mike Busch (1987)
- Jim Crocicchia (1987)
- Jeff Hostetler (1988–1992)
- Kent Graham (1992, 1994, 1998–1999)
- Dave Brown (1994–1997)
- Danny Kanell (1997–1998)
- Kerry Collins (1999–2003)
- Jesse Palmer (2003)
- Kurt Warner (2004)
- Eli Manning (2004–2019)
- Geno Smith (2017)
- Daniel Jones (2019–present)
- Colt McCoy (2020)
- Mike Glennon (2021)
- Jake Fromm (2021)
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Arizona Cardinals starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the Chicago Cardinals (1920–1959), St. Louis Cardinals (1960–1987), and Phoenix Cardinals (1988–1993) |
- Paddy Driscoll (1920–1925)
- Arnold Horween (1922–1924)
- Hal Erickson (1926–1928)
- Roddy Lamb (1927)
- Don Hill (1929)
- Bunny Belden (1930)
- Walt Holmer (1931–1932)
- Joe Lillard (1933)
- Phil Sarboe (1934–1935)
- Pug Vaughan (1936)
- Pat Coffee (1937)
- Jack Robbins (1938–1939)
- Hugh McCullough (1940)
- Ray Mallouf (1941)
- Bud Schwenk (1942)
- Ronnie Cahill (1943)
- John Grigas (1944)
- Vince Oliver (1945)
- Paul Collins (1945)
- Paul Christman (1945–1949)
- Ray Mallouf (1948)
- Virgil Eikenberg (1948)
- Jim Hardy (1949–1951)
- Frank Tripucka (1950–1952)
- Charley Trippi (1951–1952)
- Don Panciera (1952)
- Jim Root (1953, 1956)
- Steve Romanik (1953–1954)
- Ray Nagel (1953)
- Lamar McHan (1954–1958)
- Ogden Compton (1955)
- M. C. Reynolds (1958)
- King Hill (1959–1960)
- John Roach (1959–1960)
- George Izo (1960)
- Sam Etcheverry (1961–1962)
- Ralph Guglielmi (1961)
- Charley Johnson (1962–1966, 1968–1969)
- Buddy Humphrey (1965)
- Terry Nofsinger (1966)
- Jim Hart (1967–1981, 1983)
- Gary Keithley (1973)
- Pete Beathard (1971)
- Tim Van Galder (1972)
- Gary Cuozzo (1972)
- Steve Pisarkiewicz (1978–1979)
- Mike Loyd (1980)
- Neil Lomax (1981–1988)
- Cliff Stoudt (1986, 1988)
- Shawn Halloran (1987)
- Sammy Garza (1987)
- Gary Hogeboom (1989)
- Tom Tupa (1989, 1991)
- Timm Rosenbach (1989–1990, 1992)
- Stan Gelbaugh (1991)
- Chris Chandler (1991–1993)
- Steve Beuerlein (1993–1994)
- Jay Schroeder (1994)
- Jim McMahon (1994)
- Dave Krieg (1995)
- Boomer Esiason (1996)
- Kent Graham (1996–1997)
- Jake Plummer (1997–2002)
- Stoney Case (1997)
- Dave Brown (1999–2000)
- Jeff Blake (2003)
- Josh McCown (2003–2005)
- Shaun King (2004)
- John Navarre (2004)
- Kurt Warner (2005–2009)
- Matt Leinart (2006–2007, 2009)
- Derek Anderson (2010)
- John Skelton (2010–2012)
- Max Hall (2010)
- Kevin Kolb (2011–2012)
- Ryan Lindley (2012, 2014)
- Brian Hoyer (2012)
- Carson Palmer (2013–2017)
- Drew Stanton (2014, 2016–2017)
- Blaine Gabbert (2017)
- Sam Bradford (2018)
- Josh Rosen (2018)
- Kyler Murray (2019–present)
- Colt McCoy (2021)
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Pittsburgh Steelers starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the Pittsburgh Pirates (1933–1939) |
- Tony Holm (1933)
- Warren Heller (1934)
- Johnny Gildea (1935–1937)
- Ed Matesic (1936)
- Max Fiske (1937–1938)
- Frank Filchock (1938)
- Byron White (1938)
- Hugh McCullough (1939)
- Billy Patterson (1940)
- Boyd Brumbaugh (1941)
- Coley McDonough (1941)
- Bill Dudley (1942, 1945–1946)
- Allie Sherman (1943)
- Roy Zimmerman (1943)
- John Grigas (1944)
- John McCarthy (1944)
- Buzz Warren (1945)
- Johnny Clement (1947–1948)
- Charley Seabright (1947)
- Ray Evans (1948)
- Joe Gasparella (1948)
- Joe Geri (1949–1951)
- Jim Finks (1949–1955)
- Chuck Ortmann (1951)
- Bill Mackrides (1953)
- Ted Marchibroda (1956)
- Jack Scarbath (1956)
- Earl Morrall (1957–1958)
- Len Dawson (1957)
- Bobby Layne (1958–1962)
- Rudy Bukich (1960–1961)
- Ed Brown (1962–1964)
- Bill Nelsen (1964–1967)
- Tommy Wade (1965)
- Ron C. Smith (1966)
- George Izo (1966)
- Kent Nix (1967–1968)
- Dick Shiner (1968–1969)
- Terry Hanratty (1969–1971, 1973–1974)
- Terry Bradshaw (1970–1983)
- Joe Gilliam (1973–1974)
- Mike Kruczek (1976)
- Mark Malone (1981, 1984–1987)
- Cliff Stoudt (1983)
- David Woodley (1984–1985)
- Scott Campbell (1985)
- Bubby Brister (1986, 1988–1992)
- Steve Bono (1987)
- Todd Blackledge (1988–1989)
- Neil O'Donnell (1991–1995)
- Mike Tomczak (1993–1996, 1999)
- Jim Miller (1996)
- Kordell Stewart (1997–2002)
- Kent Graham (2000)
- Tommy Maddox (2002–2004)
- Ben Roethlisberger (2004–2021)
- Charlie Batch (2005–2007, 2010–2012)
- Dennis Dixon (2009–2010)
- Byron Leftwich (2012)
- Michael Vick (2015)
- Landry Jones (2015–2017)
- Mason Rudolph (2019–2021)
- Devlin Hodges (2019)
- Mitchell Trubisky (2022–present)
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