William Joe Cureton (born December 2, 1950) is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. He played for the Cleveland Browns for two seasons[1][2] He played college football for Texas A&M-Commerce, where he was the starting quarterback for the Lions 1972 National Championship team.
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Position: | Quarterback | ||||||
Personal information | |||||||
Born: | (1950-12-02) December 2, 1950 (age 71) | ||||||
Career information | |||||||
College: | East Texas State | ||||||
Undrafted: | 1974 | ||||||
Career history | |||||||
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Cureton was born in Meridian, Texas, to Joe and Lauriece Cureton. His family then moved to the North Texas town of Whitewright, Texas, where he was a standout quarterback at Whitewright High School. In his 3 seasons as a starter, he established himself as one of the area's top passers and led his teams to a combined 16-3-1 record, averaging nearly 30 points per game in each season from 1967-1968 for Coach Clyde McMurray. He was offered an athletic scholarship to play Football by East Texas State University coach Ernest Hawkins. Cureton graduated from Whitewright High School in 1969.
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Cureton joined the East Texas State Lion football team but was a member of the Lion scout team as a redshirt freshman in 1969. The 1969 Lions won the Lone Star Conference Championship. In 1970, he was the back-up quarterback to All-Conference and future Philadelphia Eagle Jim Dietz. Cureton played in all 11 games during the 1970 season in relief of Dietz, completing 6 of 15 pass attempts for 63 yards. The 1970 Lions finished 5-6.
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Heading into his second year on the team, Cureton earned the starting job for the 1971 season, but only played 7 games due to injury. Despite this, the Lions returning to a winning season with a 6–5 record his Sophomore campaign. Cureton completed 75 passes out of 139 attempts for 997 yards, averaging 142 passing yards per game and also threw for 5 touchdown passes.
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During the 1972 season, Cureton led the 1972 Lions to a historic season in which he threw for 1,529 yards and 8 touchdowns, completing 112 pass attempts in the process. The Lions went 8-2 during the regular season, losing only one NAIA game and defeating 3 ranked opponents and winning the 1972 LSC title with a 7-1 league record. The Lions were selected as the 4th team in the NAIA Division I playoffs. In the first round against # 1 ranked Central Oklahoma, Cureton threw a 7 yard touchdown pass and the Lions tallied 519 yards of total offense as they defeated the top ranked Bronchos, 54-0. In the NAIA National Title game that was played in Commerce, Cureton scored a 1 yard touchdown in the 3rd quarter to give the Lions the lead. They defeated Carson-Newman 21-18 for their first National Championship, finishing the season 10-2. Cureton was named First Team All Conference, Honorable Mention All-Texas by the UPI, and an academic All-American by CoSIDA and Academic All-Conference.
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Cureton's final year, he guided the Lions to a 7-4 record, finishing 3rd in the Lone Star Conference. He had another stellar individual season, throwing for 905 yards and 3 touchdown passes despite missing a game due to injury. His final career numbers were 253 completions out of 547 attempts, 3,494 passing yards and 16 passing touchdowns. He also scored 4 rushing touchdowns. As a student at ETSU, he was President of the Gamma Upsilon chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order, and majored in Accounting, graduating in 1973 with a Bachelor's Degree in Accounting from the ETSU Business School.
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Cureton was not drafted during the 1974 NFL draft, but was signed as a free agent by the Cleveland Browns and made the team after a successful training camp in 1974. He played for two seasons for the Browns. He was mainly a reserve in the NFL and was a starter briefly during the 1975 season. He left the NFL to pursue a career in accounting after the 1975 season. During those two seasons he completed 10 of 32 passes for 95 yards, one touchdown, and one interception.
Texas A&M–Commerce Lions starting quarterbacks | |
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Cleveland Browns starting quarterbacks | |
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