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Earl Morrall
No. 15
Quarterback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1934-05-17) May 17, 1934 (age 79)
Place of birth: Muskegon, Michigan
Height: 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)
Career information
High school: Muskegon (MI)
College: Michigan State
NFL Draft: 1956 / Round: 1 / Pick: 2
Debuted in 1956 for the San Francisco 49ers
Last played in 1976 for the Miami Dolphins
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
TDINT 161–148
Yards 20,809
QB Rating 74.1
Stats at NFL.com

Earl Edwin Morrall (born May 17, 1934) is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. Morrall, who also occasionally punted, played 21 seasons in the National Football League as both a starter and reserve. In the latter capacity, he became known as one of the greatest backup quarterbacks in NFL history. Morrall made Pro Bowl appearances following the 1957 and 1968 seasons.

Contents

Pre-professional career[edit]

Morrall led Muskegon High School in Muskegon, Michigan, to a state football championship in 1951, setting off a determined recruiting effort by the University of Michigan, the University of Notre Dame and Michigan State University. The efforts of the colleges were enough for the principal of Muskegon High, George A. Manning, to complain that Morrall's education was suffering.

Eventually choosing Michigan State, Morrall played three seasons for the Spartans, leading them to a 9-1 regular season record in 1955. He capped his senior year with a victory over the UCLA Bruins in the 1956 Rose Bowl game. Morrall also played baseball at Michigan State and played in the College Baseball World Series as a shortstop and third basemen. He was offered the opportunity to play professional baseball but chose instead to play NFL football.

National Football League career[edit]

In his more than two decades on the professional gridiron, Morrall played for six different teams, starting with his rookie year in 1956 as a first-round selection by the San Francisco 49ers. On September 16, 1957, he was traded along with guard Mike Sandusky to the Pittsburgh Steelers in exchange for linebacker Marv Matuszak and two first-round draft picks. Despite the high cost of the transaction, the Steelers traded Morrall just over a year later to the Detroit Lions in order to obtain future Hall of Famer Bobby Layne. Morrall would be with the Lions for the next six years, having his best season in 1963 by throwing for 24 touchdowns and more than 2,600 yards. The following year, he suffered a season-ending shoulder injury in an October 18 contest against the Chicago Bears.

After spending the off-season rehabilitating from his injury, Morrall was dealt to the New York Giants as part of a three-team transaction on August 30, 1965. Enduring his role during the Giants' rebuilding phase, Morrall threw for 2,446 yards and 22 touchdowns that season, but found himself seeing spot duty over the course of the next two years. On August 25, 1968, he was traded to the Baltimore Colts for an undisclosed draft choice.

When regular Colts signal caller Johnny Unitas was injured in the final exhibition game, Morrall became the team's starter. Morrall proceeded to lead the Colts to a 13-1 record, then added two playoff victories en route to winning the NFL's Most Valuable Player award, leading the Colts into Super Bowl III. However, in one of sport's greatest upsets, the Colts lost 16-7 to the New York Jets, with a second-quarter interception of a pass by Morrall symbolizing the team's luck on the day. Wide receiver Jimmy Orr was wide open near the end zone, but Morrall inexplicably didn't see Orr (despite having successfully run the same play earlier in the year). His throw down the middle was short and picked off by Jim Hudson to blunt the Colts' momentum. Two years later, Morrall again replaced an injured Unitas in Super Bowl V, but the occasion proved to be much happier as the Colts won 16-13 over the Dallas Cowboys on a 32-yard field goal by Jim O'Brien at the end of regulation.

On April 25, 1972, Morrall was claimed on waivers for $100 by the Miami Dolphins, reuniting him with his former Colt head coach, Don Shula. Shula described Morral as "an intelligent quarterback who's won a lot of ball games for me."[1]

Morrall replaced the injured Bob Griese for the Dolphins during the team's October 15 win over the San Diego Chargers.[2] The victory gave Miami a 5-0 record, with Morrall building on that win to lead the team to the first undefeated regular season in the NFL since 1942 and only undefeated season ever, starting 11 out of 17 games that year. After notching a win in the team's first playoff game against the Cleveland Browns, Morrall struggled against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Championship game, leading to the return of Griese. However, Morrall's efforts did not go unnoticed when he was named American Football Conference Player of the Year also in 1972, along with the inaugural NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award.

Morrall would remain as a Dolphin quarterback for the next four seasons before finally announcing his retirement on May 2, 1977.[3] Until first Doug Flutie and then Vinny Testaverde almost 30 years later, Morrall was the oldest quarterback to start and win a football game in the NFL. In those 21 seasons, Morrall was part of 255 games, completing 1,379 passes for 20,809 yards and 161 touchdowns.

Post-professional career[edit]

Earl Morrall became the quarterback coach at the University of Miami in 1979.[4] During his time there he worked with Jim Kelly, Bernie Kosar and Vinny Testaverde. In 1989 he was elected to the Davie, Florida city council and eventually became mayor.[5]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

Awards
Preceded by
Johnny Unitas
AP NFL Most Valuable Player
1968
Succeeded by
Roman Gabriel
Preceded by
First selection
NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award
1972
Succeeded by
Roman Gabriel



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166 videos foundNext > 

1972 Miami Dolphins

This is a segment from the 1986 program, "20 Years of the Miami Dolphins," telecast on Miami's WPLG Channel 10. It includes brief highlights and summaries of...

Judging Talent with Dolphins' quarterback Earl Morrall and Coach Don Shula

Why did Miami Dolphins quarterback Earl Morrall get picked up by Don Shula so late in his career? Why because the coach was such a great judge of talent, of ...

Earl Morrall of the 1972 Miami Dolphins

http://www.fansedge.com/Earl-Morrall-Memorabilia-_-365729570_PG.html?social=youtube Earl Morrall, the quarterback who saved the day when he replaced an injur...

America's Game - Missing Rings - 1968 Baltimore Colts - Earl Morrall - Mike Curtis - Jimmy Orr

Recalling 72' with Dolphins' quarterbacks Bob Griese and Earl Morrall

It's the quarterback hour of the 1972 undefeated Dolphins as both Bob Griese and Earl Morrall reminisce about their remarkable NFL season. Go to www.mouthpie...

2013 Taste of the NFL - Earl Morrall Breakfast

Miami Dolphins Walk of Fame ceremony Dec 16, 2012

The Dolphins induct 6 new members into there Walk of Fame. With the theme of "unsung heros" the 6 are : Manny Ferandez, Earl Morrall, Nat Moore, AJ Duhe, Tim...

5 mailday august 25 2012

http://www.theautographboss.com/awfantasyleague/ http://www.autographweekly.com/ GO MailDay Mafia GO http://www.theautographnetwork.com/ http://www.rackrs.co...

Super Bowl 3 Highlight Film - 2

The official Super Bowl highlight film of Super Bowl III from 1969.

GameON! Taste of the NFL Special

This week GameON! comes to you from New Orleans, the site of Super Bowl XLVII and the 2013 Taste of the NFL. Guests Include: Wayne Kostroski - Taste of the N...

166 videos foundNext > 

5 news items

 
Giants.com
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 09:37:07 -0700

It was the longest play from scrimmage in Giants history, eclipsing a 98-yard pass from Earl Morrall to Homer Jones at Pittsburgh on Sept. 11, 1966. It was the 4th pass of at least 90 yards in Giants history. Finished the regular season with 6 catches ...
 
The Phinsider
Wed, 12 Jun 2013 11:02:37 -0700

Miami quickly scored 17 points before the half - a one-yard Nottingham rush, a 37 yard pass from Earl Morrall to Melvin Baker, and a 28-yard field goal from Garo Yepremian. Miami tied the score at 24 with a third quarter 46-yard touchdown pass from ...
 
The Phinsider
Sun, 02 Jun 2013 10:19:58 -0700

Miami scored 3-points on a 37-yard Yepremian field goal in the 1st, two touchdowns in the second (a 35-yard fumble recovery by Dick Anderson and an 18-yard pass from QB Earl Morrall to Howard Twilley), and another touchdown in the 3rd off a 19-yard ...
 
Steelers Depot
Fri, 31 May 2013 17:52:47 -0700

Shula still won those games and he won a chunk of them with 38-year-old Earl Morrall at quarterback. Shula was an excellent tactician, and unlike Chuck Noll, didn't have a bevy of stars. Says Accorsi, who disagrees: "I would pick Noll for the 1970s. He ...
 
Esto
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 07:17:23 -0700

Llegó a dos Super Bowls con Earl Morrall y a otro con David Woodley. Para los que vieron a los Delfines con Shula, pueden confirmar que no ha existido un mejor entrenador en ajustes durante los partidos. Siempre tenía una jugada especial para una ...
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