sport.wikisort.org - AthleteNeil Kennedy O'Donnell (born July 3, 1966) is an American former football quarterback who played in the National Football League for 14 seasons. He played college football at Maryland and was selected by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round of the 1990 NFL Draft. During his six seasons with the Steelers, O'Donnell received Pro Bowl honors and helped lead them to a Super Bowl appearance in Super Bowl XXX. After leaving Pittsburgh, he was a member of the New York Jets for two seasons and the Cincinnati Bengals for one. O'Donnell spent his last five seasons mostly as a backup with the Tennessee Titans.
American football player (born 1966)
American football player
Neil O'Donnell|
Position: | Quarterback |
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Born: | (1966-07-03) July 3, 1966 (age 56) Morristown, New Jersey |
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Height: | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) |
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Weight: | 228 lb (103 kg) |
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High school: | Madison (Madison, New Jersey) |
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College: | Maryland |
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NFL Draft: | 1990 / Round: 3 / Pick: 70 |
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- Pittsburgh Steelers (1990–1995)
- New York Jets (1996–1997)
- Cincinnati Bengals (1998)
- Tennessee Titans (1999–2003)
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TD–INT: | 120–68 |
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Yards: | 21,690 |
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QB Rating: | 81.8 |
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Player stats at NFL.com · PFR |
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Early life
O'Donnell grew up in Madison, New Jersey, and played high school football there at Madison High School.[1] Neil Kennedy O’Donnell was born July 3, 1966 in Morristown, New Jersey. Neil's four older brothers played for local coaching legend Ted Monica and won state championships. Stephen O’Donnell was an All-State quarterback who went on to play for Duke. Coach Monica had retired by the time Neil enrolled at Madison High School, but mentored him throughout much of his young football life. O'Donnell was the star of the Dodgers varsity team as a sophomore and junior, but the team won just three games in those two seasons. During his senior year, as quarterback, O'Donnell led the team to a respectable 4-2-3 season in 1985. Coach Bobby Ross recruited him to the University of Maryland despite lacking the stats and honors of other high school stars.[2]
College career
At the University of Maryland, O'Donnell redshirted the 1986 season, then played for the Terrapins for three seasons and was the starting quarterback in the 1988 and 1989. He played under head coach Joe Krivak, who was promoted from quarterback coach after Bobby Ross left the program in 1986. The Krivak era was marked by mediocre results and the O'Donnell years featured an especially tough out-of-conference schedule. The Terps finished 5-6 in 1988 and 3-7-1 in 1989, notably tying Penn State, only the second time Maryland had avoided losing to the Nittany Lions in the series up to that point. The Terps failed to reach a bowl game during O'Donnell's career there. He was backed up by QB Scott Zolak, who pushed O'Donnell for playing time during both of his seasons as a starter. O'Donnell wore #14 for the Terps and for most of his Pro Career. He was awarded the Ray Krouse Award for Maryland team MVP in 1989, and finished his Maryland career with 26 touchdown passes, 3 rushing touchdowns, and 5,069 total yards.[3]
Professional career
Pre-draft measurables
Height | Weight | Arm length | Hand span | 40-yard dash | 10-yard split | 20-yard split | 20-yard shuttle | Vertical jump |
6 ft 2+1⁄4 in (1.89 m) |
217 lb (98 kg) |
31+1⁄4 in (0.79 m) |
9+1⁄8 in (0.23 m) | 4.89 s | 1.63 s | 2.89 s | 4.03 s | 32.5 in (0.83 m) |
All values from NFL Combine[4] |
Pittsburgh Steelers
O'Donnell was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers with the 70th overall pick in the 1990 NFL draft. After sitting on the bench for his entire rookie season, he started in eight games during 1991 before becoming the team's primary in 1992.
In the 1992 NFL season, O'Donnell threw for 2,283 passing yards, 13 touchdowns, and 9 interceptions, receiving the only Pro Bowl selection of his career. In perhaps his best regular season game of the year, O’Donnell scored three touchdowns (two passing, one rushing) in a 23-6 victory over the San Diego Chargers.[5]
The Steelers finished 11-5 and took the AFC Central division title, but lost to the Buffalo Bills 24-3 in a divisional playoff game.
In 1993, he had another great season, throwing for a career-high 3,208 passing yards, 14 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions finishing with a 1.4 interception percentage, the second lowest in his career.
O'Donnell led the Steelers to Super Bowl XXX, but threw two interceptions to Dallas Cowboys cornerback Larry Brown to set up short touchdown drives in the second half.
He became a free agent at the end of the season.
New York Jets
The Steelers made an offer to O'Donnell, however on February 29, 1996, he signed a 5-year $25 million contract with the New York Jets. He went 0–6 in his first season as starter before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury, despite throwing for 292 or more yards in three of these starts. His performance improved the following season under new coach Bill Parcells the following year. He eventually fell out of favor with Parcells and lost his starting job to Glenn Foley. O'Donnell refused to re-negotiate his contract, which paid him $6.65M for the upcoming season, Parcells chose to waive O'Donnell.
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Cincinnati Bengals
On July 7, 1998, O'Donnell signed a 4-year $17M contract with the Cincinnati Bengals. In the 1998 NFL season, with the then-1–3 Bengals, O'Donnell threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to Carl Pickens with 20 seconds remaining to score the winning touchdown against 3–1 Pittsburgh. O'Donnell's 90.2 passer rating was sixth among regular starting quarterbacks in the NFL and third in the AFC. However, due to a struggling defense, the Bengals went on to finish 3–13. O'Donnell was released at the end of the season to make room for rookie quarterback Akili Smith.
Tennessee Titans
On July 24, 1999, O'Donnell signed a multi-year contract with the Tennessee Titans, where he served as Steve McNair's backup. He performed well, winning four of his five starts for an injured McNair in 1999, leaving a perennial .500 team at 5–1 upon McNair's return. Later, O'Donnell came off the bench and led Tennessee to a 47–36 victory over Pittsburgh in Week 17 en route to the AFC Championship and Super Bowl XXXIV, in which he was not an active participant.
O'Donnell retired after the 2002 season, but was talked into coming back for one game in December 2003 when McNair and Billy Volek were injured. He started in the regular season finale and delivered a strong performance, completing 18 of 27 passes for 232 yards and two touchdowns, leading the Titans to a 33–13 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
O'Donnell ended his career with the lowest interception percentage in NFL history, averaging just 2.11 interceptions for every 100 pass attempts.[7] Aaron Rodgers has since eclipsed the record (1.46 interception percentage through the 2018–19 season).[8] O'Donnell also wore number 14 during most of his career except during his one-year stint with the Bengals, where he wore number 12. The Bengals did not issue number 14 after the retirement of former quarterback and West Coast offense pioneer Ken Anderson in 1986 until Andy Dalton started wearing number 14 for the Bengals in 2011.
O'Donnell permanently retired after the 2003 season. In 2004, he declined head coach Bill Cowher's offer to return to the Steelers after starting quarterback Tommy Maddox and backup quarterback Charlie Batch both sustained injuries.
O'Donnell found work as a sports analyst, primarily covering the Titans at WTVF, Nashville's CBS affiliate (2005–2007). He is currently a sales representative for FieldTurf in Kentucky and Tennessee.[9]
References
- Eskenazi, Gerald. "PRO FOOTBALL;Jets Waste No Time Wooing O'Donnell", The New York Times, February 17, 1996. Accessed January 3, 2008. "He is a local product, having grown up and played football at Madison High School in New Jersey, not far from where the Giants have run their summer camp."
- "Neil O'Donnell FB". Njsportsheroes.com.
- "Total Offense Records - Maryland Terrapins Athletics - University of Maryland Terps Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on March 17, 2015. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- "Neil O'Donnell, Combine Results, QB - Maryland". Nflcombineresults.com. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
- "Pittsburgh Steelers at San Diego Chargers - September 20th, 1992". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
- "N.Y. Jets Waive Neil O'Donnell". CBS News.
- "Donovan McNabb at Home - Photos - SI.com". Archived from the original on May 29, 2008. Retrieved June 1, 2008.
- "NFL Pass Interception % Career Leaders". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
- "FieldTurf Needs a Sales Rep". Mondesishouse.com. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
External links
Pittsburgh Steelers 1990 NFL draft selections |
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- Eric Green
- Kenny Davidson
- Neil O'Donnell
- Craig Veasey
- Chris Calloway
- Barry Foster
- Ron Heard
- Dan Grayson
- Karl Dunbar
- Gary Jones
- Eddie Miles
- Justin Strzelczyk
- Richard Bell
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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)
- Kenny Pickett (2022–present)
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New York Jets starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the New York Titans (1960–1962) |
- Al Dorow (1960–1961)
- Dick Jamieson (1960)
- Johnny Green (1962)
- Lee Grosscup (1962)
- Butch Songin (1962)
- Dick Wood (1963–1964)
- Galen Hall (1963)
- Pete Liske (1964)
- Mike Taliaferro (1965)
- Joe Namath (1965–1976)
- Al Woodall (1970–1971, 1973)
- Bob Davis (1971–1972)
- Bill Demory (1973)
- J. J. Jones (1975)
- Richard Todd (1976–1983)
- Matt Robinson (1977–1979)
- Marty Domres (1977)
- Pat Ryan (1984, 1986–1989)
- Ken O'Brien (1984–1992)
- David Norrie (1987)
- Tony Eason (1989)
- Kyle Mackey (1989)
- Browning Nagle (1992)
- Boomer Esiason (1993–1995)
- Jack Trudeau (1994)
- Bubby Brister (1995)
- Frank Reich (1996)
- Neil O'Donnell (1996–1997)
- Glenn Foley (1996–1998)
- Vinny Testaverde (1998–2003, 2005)
- Ray Lucas (1999)
- Rick Mirer (1999)
- Chad Pennington (2002–2007)
- Quincy Carter (2004)
- Brooks Bollinger (2005)
- Kellen Clemens (2007, 2009)
- Brett Favre (2008)
- Mark Sanchez (2009–2012)
- Greg McElroy (2012)
- Geno Smith (2013–2014, 2016)
- Michael Vick (2014)
- Ryan Fitzpatrick (2015–2016)
- Bryce Petty (2016–2017)
- Josh McCown (2017–2018)
- Sam Darnold (2018–2020)
- Trevor Siemian (2019)
- Luke Falk (2019)
- Joe Flacco (2020–2022)
- Zach Wilson (2021–present)
- Mike White (2021)
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Cincinnati Bengals starting quarterbacks |
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- Dewey Warren (1968)
- John Stofa (1968)
- Sam Wyche (1968–1970)
- Greg Cook (1969)
- Virgil Carter (1970–1972)
- Ken Anderson (1971–1985)
- Wayne Clark (1974)
- John Reaves (1975, 1977–1978)
- Jack Thompson (1979–1980)
- Turk Schonert (1983–1984, 1989)
- Boomer Esiason (1984–1992, 1997)
- Adrian Breen (1987)
- Dave Walter (1987)
- Erik Wilhelm (1991)
- Donald Hollas (1991)
- David Klingler (1992–1994)
- Jay Schroeder (1993)
- Jeff Blake (1994–1999)
- Neil O'Donnell (1998)
- Paul Justin (1998)
- Akili Smith (1999–2002)
- Scott Mitchell (2000)
- Jon Kitna (2001–2004)
- Gus Frerotte (2002)
- Carson Palmer (2004–2010)
- Ryan Fitzpatrick (2008)
- Andy Dalton (2011–2019)
- A. J. McCarron (2015)
- Jeff Driskel (2018)
- Ryan Finley (2019–2020)
- Joe Burrow (2020–present)
- Brandon Allen (2020–2021)
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Tennessee Titans starting quarterbacks |
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Formerly the Houston Oilers (1960–1996) and the Tennessee Oilers (1997–1998) |
- George Blanda (1960–1966)
- Jacky Lee (1960–1961, 1963, 1967)
- Don Trull (1964–1966, 1968–1969)
- Buddy Humphrey (1966)
- Pete Beathard (1967–1969)
- Bob Davis (1967–1969)
- Charley Johnson (1970–1971)
- Jerry Rhome (1970)
- Dan Pastorini (1971–1979)
- Lynn Dickey (1971, 1973–1974)
- Kent Nix (1972)
- John Hadl (1976–1977)
- Gifford Nielsen (1979, 1981–1983)
- Ken Stabler (1980–1981)
- John Reaves (1981)
- Archie Manning (1982–1983)
- Oliver Luck (1983, 1985–1986)
- Warren Moon (1984–1993)
- Brent Pease (1987)
- Cody Carlson (1988, 1990, 1992–1994)
- Billy Joe Tolliver (1994)
- Bucky Richardson (1994)
- Chris Chandler (1995–1996)
- Steve McNair (1995–2005)
- Will Furrer (1995)
- Neil O'Donnell (1999–2001, 2003)
- Billy Volek (2003–2005)
- Matt Mauck (2005)
- Vince Young (2006–2010)
- Kerry Collins (2006–2010)
- Rusty Smith (2010)
- Matt Hasselbeck (2011–2012)
- Jake Locker (2012–2014)
- Ryan Fitzpatrick (2013)
- Charlie Whitehurst (2014)
- Zach Mettenberger (2014–2015)
- Marcus Mariota (2015–2019)
- Matt Cassel (2016–2017)
- Blaine Gabbert (2018)
- Ryan Tannehill (2019–present)
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Maryland Terrapins starting quarterbacks |
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- William W. Skinner (1892)
- Howard Strickler (1893)
- George Harris (1894)
- No team (1895)
- Frank Kenly (1896–1898)
- Earl Sappington (1899)
- DuVal Dickey (1900)
- Tom Bryan (1901)
- Joshua Matthews (1902)
- Edmund Mayo (1903)
- J. V. Gill (1904)
- Harold Caul (1905)
- Curley Byrd (1906–1907)
- Jack Crapster (1908)
- Burton Shipley (1909–1912)
- Mike Knode (1913–1915)
- Jamie Smith (1916)
- Ray Knode (1916–1919)
- Johnny Groves (1920–1923)
- Bill Supplee (1924)
- Kirkland Besley (1924)
- Edward Tenney (1925)
- Gordon Kessler (1926–1928)
- William W. Evans (1929–1930)
- Al Woods (1930–1932)
- George V. Chalmers (1931)
- Ray Poppelman (1930–1932)
- Dick Nelson (1933)
- Norwood Sothoron (1934)
- Jack Stonebraker (1935)
- Coleman Headley (1935)
- Charlie Weidinger (1936–1938)
- Mearle DuVall (1939–1940)
- Tommy Mont (1941–1942)
- Joe Makar (1943)
- Sal Fastuca (1944)
- Vic Turyn (1945–1948)
- Stan Lavine (1949)
- Jack Scarbath (1950–1952)
- Bob DeStefano (1950)
- Bernie Faloney (1953)
- Charlie Boxold (1953–1954)
- Frank Tamburello (1955)
- John Fritsch (1956)
- Bob Rusevlyan (1957–1958)
- Dale Betty (1959–1960)
- Dick Novak (1959–1961)
- Dick Shiner (1961–1963)
- Ken Ambrusko (1964)
- Phil Petry (1964–1965)
- Alan Pastrana (1966–1968)
- Chuck Drimal (1967)
- Jim Sniscak (1967)
- Dennis O'Hara (1969)
- Jeff Shugars (1969–1970)
- Al Neville (1971–1973)
- Bob Avellini (1972–1974)
- Mark Manges (1975–1977)
- Larry Dick (1975–1977)
- Tim O'Hare (1978)
- Bob Milkovich (1979)
- Mike Tice (1979–1980)
- Brent Dewitz (1981)
- Boomer Esiason (1981–1983)
- Stan Gelbaugh (1984–1985)
- Frank Reich (1984)
- Dan Henning (1986–1987)
- Neil O'Donnell (1988–1989)
- Scott Zolak (1990)
- Jim Sandwisch (1991)
- John Kaleo (1991–1992)
- Scott Milanovich (1993–1995)
- Kevin Foley (1993–1994)
- Brian Cummings (1995–1997)
- Ken Mastrole (1996–1998)
- Randall Jones (1998)
- Latrez Harrison (1999)
- Calvin McCall (1999–2000)
- Shaun Hill (2000–2001)
- Scott McBrien (2002–2003)
- Joel Statham (2004–2005)
- Sam Hollenbach (2004–2006)
- Jordan Steffy (2007–2008)
- Chris Turner (2007–2009)
- Jamarr Robinson (2009–2010)
- Danny O'Brien (2010–2011)
- C. J. Brown (2011, 2013–2014)
- Perry Hills (2012, 2015–2016)
- Caleb Rowe (2012–2013, 2015)
- Shawn Petty (2012)
- Tyrrell Pigrome (2016–2019)
- Max Bortenschlager (2016–2017)
- Kasim Hill (2017–2018)
- Ryan Brand (2017)
- Josh Jackson (2019)
- Taulia Tagovailoa (2020–2022)
- Lance LeGendre (2020)
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На других языках
[de] Neil O’Donnell
Neil Kennedy O’Donnell (* 3. Juli 1966 in Morristown, New Jersey) ist ein ehemaliger US-amerikanischer American-Football-Spieler auf der Position des Quarterbacks. Er spielte für die Pittsburgh Steelers, die New York Jets, die Cincinnati Bengals und die Tennessee Titans in der National Football League (NFL).
- [en] Neil O'Donnell
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