Bart Starr
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bart Starr | |
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Date of birth | January 9, 1934 (age 73) |
Place of birth | Montgomery, Alabama |
Position(s) | Quarterback |
College | Alabama |
NFL Draft | 1956 / Round 17/ Pick 200 |
Career Highlights | |
Pro Bowls | 1961, 1962, 1963, 1967 |
Awards | 1967 Super Bowl I MVP 1968 Super Bowl II MVP 1966 AP NFL MVP, 1966 UPI NFL MVP |
Honors | NFL 1960s All-Decade Team Green Bay Packers HOF |
Retired #s | Green Bay Packers #15 |
Stats | |
Statistics | |
Team(s) | |
1956-1971 | Green Bay Packers |
Pro Football Hall of Fame, 1977 |
Bryan Bartlett Starr (born January 9, 1934 in Montgomery, Alabama) is a former professional American football player and coach. Wearing #15, he was the quarterback for the Green Bay Packers (1956-1971) and the MVP of the first two Super Bowls. He earned four Pro Bowl selections and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1977. The son of an Air Force NCO, Starr played High School football at Lanier High School in Montgomery, Alabama, where he earned a spot in the school's Hall of Fame, college football at Alabama, and was a 17th round pick (200th overall) in the 1956 NFL draft. After his playing career, Starr was the head coach of the Packers for nine seasons (1975-1983), compiling a 52-76-3 record. As Vince Lombardi's quarterback, Starr's Packers won NFL Championships in the 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, and 1967 seasons. Following the NFL championships in 1966 and 1967, he led the Packers to convincing victories over the champions of the rival AFL in the first two Super Bowls. He is the only player to quarterback a team to five NFL championships.
Starr was responsible for calling plays when he was quarterback, as was the norm at the time. One of his most famous play calls was in the Ice Bowl against the Dallas Cowboys in the NFL championship game on the final day of 1967. With 16 seconds remaining in the game and trailing 17-14, the Packers called their final timeout. It was third down and goal from the 1 yard line. The two previous plays, handoffs to halfback Donny Anderson, had gained little. Coach Lombardi decided to go for the win rather than try for a tying field goal, not automatic in the frigid weather. In the huddle, Starr called for a dive play to fullback Chuck Mercein, but decided to keep it as a quarterback sneak because the conditions made a handoff riskier than usual. The play was risky enough, because with no timeouts, the Packers would not have had enough time to regroup and call another play if the sneak failed. With the help of an excellent block on Dallas defensive lineman Jethro Pugh by center Ken Bowman and right guard Jerry Kramer, Starr scored the winning touchdown and the Packers won their third straight NFL championship, the fifth in seven years. (It was the Packers' sixth championship game in eight years, as the Packers had lost the 1960 Championship game 17-13 to the Philadelphia Eagles). Two weeks later in Miami, the Packers easily defeated the AFL champion Oakland Raiders 33-14 in Super Bowl II, Lombardi's final game as head coach.
Since the introduction of the NFL championship game in 1933, the Green Bay Packers (1965-67) are the only team to win three consecutive NFL titles.
Starr's playing career ended at the conclusion of the 1971 season. Immediately after his retirement as a player, he served as an assistant coach (quarterbacks) in 1972, when the Packers won the NFC Central division title at 10-4. Starr became head coach of the Packers three years later, in 1975. His regular season record was a disappointing 52-76-2 (.408), with a playoff record of 1-1. Posting a 5-3-1 record in the strike-shortened season of 1982, Starr's Packers made their first playoff appearance in ten years (and their last for another 11 years). They defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 41-16 in the expanded wildcard round of 16 teams on January 8, 1983, then lost to the Dallas Cowboys 37-26 in the divisional round the following week. After a disappointing 8-8 finish the following year, Starr was dismissed in favor of his former teammate, Forrest Gregg.
Starr is now chairman of Healthcare Realty Services.
In 1965, he helped make Rawhide Boys Ranch, a facility designed to help troubled boys, near New London, WI a reality.
In 1999, he was ranked number 41 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players.
Starr is one of five Green Bay Packers to have his number (15) retired by the team. The others are Tony Canadeo (3), Don Hutson (14), Ray Nitschke (66), and Reggie White (92).
Starr has an NFL award named after him. The Bart Starr Award is given, by a panel of judges, to the best Christian player in the NFL.
Starr is an avid backgammon player, often playing under the name "NorthStar12".
[edit] External links
- Pro Football Hall of Fame Bart Starr
- Bart Starr statistics
- 1956 NFL Draft from the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Preceded by Dan Devine |
Green Bay Packers Head Coaches 1975–1983 |
Succeeded by Forrest Gregg |
Preceded by Lamar McHan |
Green Bay Packers Starting Quarterbacks 1959–1971 |
Succeeded by Scott Hunter |
Preceded by First MVP |
AFL-NFL Super Bowl MVPs Super Bowl I, 1967 Super Bowl II, 1968 |
Succeeded by Joe Namath |
Preceded by Jim Brown |
NFL Most Valuable Player 1966 season |
Succeeded by Johnny Unitas |
Green Bay Packers Head Coaches |
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Lambeau • Ronzani • Devore • McLean • Blackbourn • McLean • Lombardi • Bengtson • Devine • Starr • Gregg • Infante • Holmgren • Rhodes • Sherman • McCarthy |
National Football League | NFL's 1960s All-Decade Team |
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Sonny Jurgensen | Bart Starr | Johnny Unitas | John David Crow | Paul Hornung | Leroy Kelly | Gale Sayers | Jim Brown | Jim Taylor | John Mackey | Del Shofner | Charley Taylor | Gary Collins | Boyd Dowler | Bob Brown | Forrest Gregg | Ralph Neely | Gene Hickerson | Jerry Kramer | Howard Mudd | Jim Ringo | Doug Atkins | Willie Davis | Deacon Jones | Alex Karras | Bob Lilly | Merlin Olsen | Dick Butkus | Larry Morris | Ray Nitschke | Tommy Nobis | Dave Robinson | Herb Adderley | Lem Barney | Bobby Boyd | Eddie Meador | Larry Wilson | Willie Wood | Jim Bakken | Don Chandler | |
Categories: 1934 births | Living people | Alabama Crimson Tide football players | American football quarterbacks | Green Bay Packers players | Green Bay Packers coaches | People from Alabama | Pro Football Hall of Fame | AP NFL MVP Award winners | University of Alabama alumni | University of Alabama people | Super Bowl MVPs | NFL 1960s All-Decade Team