John Hufnagel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Hufnagel | |
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Date of birth | September 13, 1951 |
Place of birth | Coraopolis, Pennsylvania |
Position(s) | quarterback |
College | Penn State |
NFL Draft | 1973 / Round 14 |
Statistics | |
Team(s) | |
1973-1975 1976-1979 1980-1983 1984-1986 1987 |
Denver Broncos Calgary Stampeders Saskatchewan Roughriders Winnipeg Blue Bombers Saskatchewan Roughriders |
John Coleman Hufnagel (born September 13, 1951, in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania) is a American football coach and former pro quarterback. He is currently the offensive coordinator of the New York Giants of the National Football League.
Contents |
[edit] Coach
Hufnagel began his coaching career as a player-coach for the Canadian Football League's Saskatchewan Roughriders in 1988. From 1990-96 Hufnagel was the offensive coordinator for the Calgary Stampeders, where he helped future Pro Bowlers Doug Flutie and Jeff Garcia earn All-CFL honors. In 1997, Hufnagel became head coach and general manager of the Arena Football League’s New Jersey Red Dogs. In two seasons there, he posted a 17-11 record.
After two seasons (1999, 2000) as the quarterbacks coach for the Cleveland Browns, Hufnagel was named the quarterbacks coach of the Indianapolis Colts, where he coached Peyton Manning to a 62.7 percent completion percentage and for 4,131 yards passing. He spent the 2002 season as the quarterbacks coach on Tom Coughlin’s staff in Jacksonville. That year, quarterback Mark Brunell threw only seven interceptions in 416 pass attempts, and a 85.7 quarterback rating. He spent the 2003 season with the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots. Under Hufnagel’s tutelage, Tom Brady earned a second Super Bowl MVP award, completing 60.2 percent of his passes for 3,620 yards and 23 touchdowns.
Hufnagel became the offensive coordinator of the New York Giants in 2004, and molded them into NFL’s most potent offenses. Tiki Barber set a franchise rushing record two years in a row, and the Giants became only the fifth team in NFL history to have five different players score at least seven touchdowns. (Tiki Barber, Jeremy Shockey, Plaxico Burress, Amani Toomer and Brandon Jacobs). Hufnagel is also credited with the rapid development of quarterback Eli Manning. However, Hufnagel is sometimes criticized for his often predictable playcalling. Also in 2006, he was criticized for failing to utilize Tiki Barber and Jeremy Shockey more.
[edit] Quarterback
Hufnagel was the 14th-round draft choice of the Denver Broncos in the 1973 NFL Draft. There he would play for three seasons before beginning a 12-year career in the Canadian Football League with Calgary Stampeders (1976-79), the Saskatchewan Roughriders (1980-83 and 1987), and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers (1984-86).
Hufnagel was named an All-American at Penn State University in 1972, where he was the starting quarterback for three seasons (1970-1972), earning a 26-3 record. As a junior, he was instrumental in the Nittany Lions' 30-6 Cotton Bowl victory over the University of Texas and played in a 14-0 loss to the University of Oklahoma in the 1973 Sugar Bowl as a senior. In 1972, Hufnagel set Penn State’s single-season record for passing yards (since broken) and he remains among the top 10 in most major career passing categories. He finished sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting that year.
He attended Montour High School in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania.
[edit] Personal
Hufnagel earned a Bachelor of Science in marketing from Penn State University in 1973. He and his wife, Penny, have two daughters and a son and live in New Jersey.
[edit] External links
- John Hufnagel statistics, databasefootball.com
- John Hufnagel's bio, www.giants.com
Categories: 1951 births | American football coaches | American football quarterbacks | Calgary Stampeders players | Canadian Football League coaches | Canadian Football League quarterbacks | Cleveland Browns coaches | Denver Broncos players | Indianapolis Colts coaches | Jacksonville Jaguars coaches | Living people | New England Patriots coaches | New York Giants coaches | Penn State Nittany Lions football players | Sportspeople from Pittsburgh | Penn State University alumni | Saskatchewan Roughriders players | Winnipeg Blue Bombers players