Christian Adolph Jurgensen III (born August 23, 1934), better known as Sonny Jurgensen , is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League (NFL) for the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Redskins. He was inducted into Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983.
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Jurgensen was born in Wilmington, North Carolina. He became a sporting worker from elementary school, when he led his school to a city grammar school degree in baseball and basketball. He then captured the Wilmington children's tennis championship and pitched for his local Civitan club, which won the city's baseball title.
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Jurgensen attended and played high school soccer at New Hanover High School. He played a number of positions for the team and as a junior was a backup quarterback on the state championship team. After a senior year where he scored three goals and kicked nine extra points, he was selected to start in the quarterback for the North Carolina team at the North Carolina vs. annual. South Carolina Shrine Bowl in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Jurgensen also played basketball and baseball during high school. As a senior on the basketball team, he averages scoring twelve points per game as a keeper and the team is the runner-up of the state title. In the same year in baseball, he fought.339 and played as a pitcher, infielder, and catcher. He also became a hitter-switch.
College career
Jurgensen attends and plays football at Duke University. He joined the university team in 1954 as a reserve midfielder behind Jerry Barger and he completed 12 of 28 bait for 212 yards, with one goal and three interception.
But Jurgensen made the biggest impact of the season as a defense, when he tied a team record with interception in four consecutive games. and end the season with five interceptions. Duke completed the campaign with a regular record of 7-2-1 and Atlantic Coast Conference titles. Then on New Year's Day, Duke defeated Nebraska Cornhuskers 34-7 in 1955 Orange Bowl.
Jurgensen took over as an early quarterback in 1955. He also retained his starting position in the defensive middle class.
Duke ended the season with a 7-2-1 record alongside the ACC championship, but did not go to the bowl because Maryland accepted an automatic league offer to the Orange Bowl. That season Jurgensen completed 37 of 69 passes for 536 yards, three goals and seven interceptions. He rushed 54 times for 48 yards and scored twice. He also performed punts four times for an average of 33.7 and tapped four bait for 17 yards.
Jurgensen's senior season in 1956 did not start well, when Duke lost to South Carolina, 7-0, in the season opener. The game marks the first Duke's ACC loss, coming in the fourth year of the conference's existence. Duke finished the season with a 5-4-1 mark and Jurgensen ended 28-59 for 371 yards.
He threw six interceptions and two touchdowns passed and hurried 25 times for 51 yards with three goals. Jurgensen's last career statistics included 77-156 passes for 1,119 yards, 16 career interception and six goals. He also rushed for 109 yards and tapped 10 passes.
Jurgensen also played baseball for a while at Duke, but declined the invitation to try for the basketball team.
Before being drafted by NFL, Jurgensen worked as a Sunday school bus driver in Herndon, Virginia.
Professional career
Philadelphia Eagles (1957-1963)
Jurgensen was compiled in the fourth round of the 1957 NFL Draft by the Philadelphia Eagles. He was a Philadelphia reserve midfielder, behind Bobby Thomason in 1957 and Norm Van Brocklin, from 1958 to 1960. During that time as a backup that Jurgensen was part of the championship for the only time in his professional career, when Elang won the 1960 NFL Championship.
After Van Brocklin retired in 1961, Jurgensen took over as a Philadelphia starter and had a successful year, passing for a 3,723 yard NFL record, tying the NFL record with 32 goals passes, and was named All-Pro. After the injury-hit season in 1963, Jurgensen was sold to the Washington Redskins on April 1, 1964, in exchange for quarterbacks of Norm Snead and Claude Crabb cornerback. Washington Washington Redskins (1964-1974) Washington Redskins (1964-1974)
Jurgensen took over the play-call for the Redskins during the 1964 season. He was then selected to play in the Pro Bowl after the season and also named the second All-Pro Team.
One of Jurgensen's most impressive games was during the 1965 season, when the Cowboys led 21-0 at the DC Stadium. Jurgensen then threw for 411 yards, leading the team to win 34-31. He rushes for a touchdown on a sneaky quarterback and throws a 35-yard pass game for Bobby Mitchell.
In 1967, Jurgensen broke his own record by passing for 3,747 meters and also set a one-season NFL record for effort (508) and settlement (288). He missed much of the 1968 season due to broken ribs and elbow surgery. He did, however, tie up the NFL record at the start of the 1968 season for the longest pass game in NFL history. The 99-yard run to Jerry Allen happened 15 September 1968 during the Redskins game against the Chicago Bears. Incidentally, the quarterback Redskins had three of the first four appearances of the 99-yard game (Frank Filchock to Andy Farkas in 1939 and George Izo to Bobby Mitchell in 1963 were two other events of the drama). Since Jurgensen's achievement, no other Redskins quarterback has completed a 99-yard pass.
In 1969, Vince Lombardi took over as head coach of the Redskins. That season, Jurgensen led the NFL in an effort (442), settlement (274), settlement percentage (62%), and passing yard (3.102). The Redskins went 7-5-2 and underwent their best season since 1955 (which makes the Lombardi record never trained a losing NFL team intact). Unfortunately, Lombardi died of cancer shortly before the start of the 1970 season. Jurgensen later said that, of the nine head coaches he played during his NFL career, Lombardi was his favorite.
The Redskins enjoyed a revival in the early 1970s under coach George Allen and made it as far as the Super Bowl VII, losing to the Miami Dolphins. However, Billy Kilmer started in place of Jurgensen, who was again disturbed by injuries in 1971 and 1972.
During this period, the quarterback controversy grew between the two, complete with the "I Love Billy" or "I Love Sonny" sport stickers in their vehicles. Conservative style, a more conservative style of ball control from Allen, Kilmer, is more likely to approach high risk Jurgensen. Despite the controversy, Jurgensen is helping his rival. Even to this day, Kilmer still lives at Jurgensen's house when he is in town.
In 1974, at the age of 40 and in his final season, Jurgensen won his third NFL crown even though he was still dividing his time with Kilmer. In what will be the last match of his NFL career, Jurgensen made his first and only appearance in the NFL postseason game in the 19-10 Redskins loss to the Los Angeles Rams in the first round of the 1974 NFC playoffs. He came off the bench with help Kilmer and finish six of 12 bait but also throw three interceptions.
Jurgensen was recognized as the best pure survivor of his time. Five times Pro Bowl selection, he earned three NFL individual graduation degrees. He exceeded 400 yards in one game five times, and threw five goals through in game twice. With 82.6 career rating, the statistics include 2,433 completions for 32,224 yards and 255 touchdowns. He also rushed for 493 yards and 15 goals.
Rating career runner 82.42 Jurgensen is the highest for any player in the "Dead Ball Era" (pre-1978).
Lombardi then told Pat Peppler from Green Bay Packers headquarters that, "If we will have Sonny Jurgensen in Green Bay, we will never lose the game."
Statistics
After soccer
Broadcasting career
After retiring from the Redskins after the 1974 season, Jurgensen began his career as a color commentator, originally with CBS television. Then working with Sam Huff's Hall of Fame linebacker, Jurgensen continued to cover Washington Redskins on the radio. On NBC 4's 2006 broadcast with George Michael, Jurgensen said in his prime he could throw the ball as far as 80 yards.
He covered the team for NBC 4 from 1994 to December 2008, when the Redskins Report was canceled due to budget cuts. He serves as a game analyst in pre-season games and as studio analyst at training camp, making weekly picks, and other tasks.
Awards
Jurgensen was inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame in 1971 and Duke Sports Hall of Fame in 1979. He was then inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983. In 1999, Jurgensen was ranked 9th as a sports figure Best of the North. Carolina by Sports Illustrated and became a member of Wilmington's Walk of Fame in 2004.
Community services
He serves on the advisory board of the Code of Support Foundation, a nonprofit military service organization.
See also
- List of NFLs to CBS commentator pairs
References
External links
- Sonny Jurgensen in Pro Football Hall of Fame
- Career and player information statistics from NFL.com Ã, à · Pro-Football-Reference
Source of the article : Wikipedia