Matt Leinart
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Matt Leinart with his Heisman trophy in winter 2005 |
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Arizona Cardinals — No. 7 | |
Quarterback | |
Date of birth: May 11, 1983 | |
Place of birth: Santa Ana, California | |
Height: 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) | Weight: 230 lb (100 kg) |
National Football League debut | |
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2006 for the Arizona Cardinals | |
Career history | |
College: Southern California | |
NFL Draft: 2006 / Round: 1 / Pick: 10 | |
Teams:
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Career highlights and awards | |
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Selected NFL statistics (through Week 17 of the 2007 NFL season) |
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TD-INT | 13-16 |
Passing yards | 3,194 |
QB Rating | 71.2 |
Stats at NFL.com |
Matthew Stephen Leinart (born May 11, 1983 in Santa Ana, California) is an American football quarterback (QB) for the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League. He played college football for the University of Southern California Trojans, leading them to an AP national championship in 2003, a BCS national championship in 2004, and an appearance in the 2005 BCS national championship game. Leinart earlier played QB at Mater Dei High School, Santa Ana. In 2004, his junior year at USC, he won the Heisman Trophy. He also won the inaugural Manning Award for college quarterbacks in the same season.
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[edit] Early years
Leinart was born with strabismus (“crossed eyes”), as his left eye was not aligned correctly with his right. He underwent surgery when he was three years old and was fitted with special glasses to correct the problem, but the eyewear combined with Leinart's already-overweight frame to make him an easy target for ridicule at the hands of other children.[1] “I used to get made fun of for being cross-eyed. It's just a terrible thing because kids are so cruel to the fat kid, to the kid with the glasses. So I turned to sports.,” he would later say.[2]
Leinart attended Mater Dei High School and was a student and a letterman in football. In football, as a junior, he led his team to a California Interscholastic Federation Division I co-Championship, and was named the Serra League's Offensive Most Valuable Player.
[edit] College career
Leinart redshirted his first year (2001) and saw no action. As a redshirt freshman the next year (2002), he was a backup to future Heisman Trophy winner and current Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer, who was in his senior season at USC (one which would conclude with Palmer's Heisman victory). While Leinart appeared in a few plays during his freshman year, he threw no passes.
In his sophomore season (2003), Leinart beat out Matt Cassel, a redshirt junior who backed up Palmer in 2002, and Purdue transfer Brandon Hance for the starting job at quarterback. Going into the 2003 season, Carroll and his coaching staff selected Leinart not because he had set himself significantly ahead of the pack in practice, but because they needed a starting quarterback.[3] There was some thought in the press that Leinart would merely hold the starting position until highly-touted true freshman John David Booty, who had bypassed his senior year in high school to attend USC, could learn the offense.[3]
His first career pass was a touchdown against Auburn. Leinart would win the first three games of his career before the then-No. 3 Trojans suffered a 34-31 triple-overtime defeat at California on September 27 that dropped the Trojans to No. 10.
Leinart and the Trojans bounced back the next week in one of Leinart's most famous college moments against Arizona State. Leinart injured his knee in the second quarter and was not expected to play again that day, but he returned to the game and finished 12-of-23 for 289 yards in a 37-17 victory.
Leinart and the Trojans won their final eight games and finished the regular season 11-1 and ranked #1 ranking in the AP and coaches' polls. However, USC was left out of the BCS championship game after finishing third in the BCS behind Oklahoma and LSU. The Trojans went to the Rose Bowl and played University of Michigan. Leinart was named the Rose Bowl MVP after he went 23-of-34 for 327 yards, throwing three touchdowns and catching a touchdown of his own. The Trojans finished #1 in the AP Poll despite not even playing in the national title game.
In 13 starts, Leinart was 255/402 for 3,556 yards and 38 TDs with 9 INTs. He finished sixth in the Heisman voting (Oklahoma quarterback Jason White won the Trophy that year).
[edit] Later years
The Trojans started Leinart's junior season (2004) with victories in their first three games. On September 25, the Trojans played Stanford University. After Stanford took a 28-17 halftime lead, Leinart sparked the offense with a 51-yard pass to Steve Smith and scored on a one-yard sneak to cut the Cardinal lead to four points. Leinart and the Trojans were able to take the lead on a LenDale White touchdown rush and hold on for the victory, 31-28. Leinart completed 24 of 30 passes.
He finished on a weaker note in the final regular season game against UCLA, as he was held without a touchdown pass for the first time in 25 starts. Nonetheless, Leinart was invited to New York for the Heisman ceremony, along with teammate Reggie Bush, Oklahoma's freshman sensation Adrian Peterson, incumbent Jason White, and Utah's Alex Smith. In what many had considered one of the more competitive Heisman races, Leinart became the sixth USC player to claim the Heisman trophy.
In 2005, USC went wire-to-wire at #1 in the polls and earned a bid to the BCS title game at the Orange Bowl against Oklahoma, which was also 12-0 and had been on USC's tail all season. A dream matchup on paper (including White vs. Leinart, which was to be the first time two Heisman winners would play against each other), the Orange Bowl was a thumping, as Leinart threw for five touchdown passes on 18-for-35 passing and 332 yards to lead the Trojans to a 55-19 victory. Leinart received Orange Bowl MVP honors and the Trojans claimed their first BCS national championship (2nd straight #1 finish in the AP), extending their winning streak to 22 games.
Aside from a home game against Fresno State, the Trojans remained relatively unchallenged for the rest of the season, running their record to another 12-0 regular season and 34 wins in a row.
Leinart and the Trojans completed a perfect regular season, finishing 12-0, during which Leinart threw for a career-high 400 yards against Notre Dame. After an incomplete pass and a sack led to a fourth-and-nine situation with ninety seconds left at the Trojans' own 26-yard line, Leinart called a gutsy audible fade route at the line and threw deep against the Irish's man-to-man coverage, where Dwayne Jarrett caught the ball and raced to the Irish' 13-yard line, a 61-yard gain. Leinart moved the ball to the goal line as time dwindled and scored on a controversial QB sneak that gave the Trojans a 34-31 lead with three seconds to go, giving the Trojans their 28th straight victory and one of the most memorable and dramatic finishes in the history of the USC-Notre Dame rivalry.
Before his final home game at the LA Coliseum, Leinart was overcome by emotion after seniors were introduced before the kickoff; his play suffered for the first half as he overthrew receivers multiple times, though he ended up passing for three touchdowns in a 66-19 rout.[4] Leinart, who was having arguably a better season than in 2004, was again invited to New York for the Heisman ceremony along with teammate Reggie Bush and Texas quarterback Vince Young. As a former Heisman winner, Leinart cast his first-place vote for Bush and ended up third in the voting behind the winning Bush and runner-up Young.
The Trojans advanced to the Rose Bowl to face Vince Young and No. 2 Texas in the BCS title game. The title game was considered another "dream matchup". Leinart himself had a great game, going 29-of-40 for a touchdown and 365 yards, but was overshadowed by Young, who piled up 467 yards of total offense and rushed for three touchdowns, including a score with 19 seconds remaining and two-point conversion to put the Longhorns ahead, 41-38. The Trojans lost for the first time in 35 games, and Leinart lost for just the second time in his 39 career starts.
Leinart's #11 jersey has been retired at USC.
[edit] Career
Leinart finished his college career 807/1245 (64.8%) for 10,693 yards and 99 touchdowns with just 23 interceptions. He is USC's all-time leader in career touchdown passes and completion percentage, and is second at USC behind Palmer in completions and yardage. He averaged nearly 8.6 yards per attempt, and averaged only one interception every 54 attempts. He was 37-2 as a starter.
[edit] NFL career
[edit] 2006 NFL Draft
Leinart was considered one of the top NFL prospects of the 2006 NFL Draft class. Standing 6'5" (1.96 m) and weighing 225 pounds (100 kg), this left-handed thrower has the prototypical size for a quarterback. And while much of his success has been predicated on the high level of talent that USC head coach Pete Carroll surrounded Leinart with (as well as the schemes of former Trojans offensive coordinator Norm Chow), Leinart has a very accurate arm, and, perhaps more importantly, he possesses rare football intelligence along with outstanding decision-making and leadership skills; however, has mediocre to average arm strength
By returning to USC for his senior season in 2005, Leinart probably hurt his draft position, as he most likely would have been selected with the first overall pick of the draft. Instead of "going number one," Leinart was selected tenth overall in the 2006 Draft by the Arizona Cardinals. Ironically, Leinart was close to being drafted by the Denver Broncos, however the move didn't come to fruition after the Buffalo Bills refused to trade their 8th pick with Denver. Leinart wears jersey #7, the same number he wore when he played varsity football at Mater Dei.
[edit] Arizona CardinalsLeinart was involved in a prolonged holdout with the Cardinals on August 8, 2006. He became the last first round draft pick without a contract in place. However, on Monday, August 14, 2006, Leinart agreed to a six-year, $51 million contract, becoming the very last member of the draft to sign a contract, and not before Cardinal Coach Dennis Green said that he had lost his patience.[6][7] Despite signing late, Leinart played in the second quarter of the exhibition game against the New England Patriots on August 19, 2006.[8] During the 4th week of the NFL season, unofficial sources projected that Matt would take over as the starting quarterback due to an abysmal performance by Kurt Warner in the previous game. During the week coach Green held a conference and specifically pointed out that Warner would still start that week's game. In a November 26th game, he set an NFL rookie record with 405 passing yards. His quarterback rating is 74.0. He suffered a sprained left shoulder (throwing arm) in a week 16 win over the San Francisco 49ers. In 11 starts, Leinart threw for 2,547 yards and 11 touchdowns. He finished the season with a 4-7 record. Leinart opened the 2007 season on Monday Night Football against the San Francisco 49ers as the starting quarterback. After some poor plays, he began alternating with Warner. On October 10, 2007, Leinart suffered a fractured left collarbone after being sacked by St. Louis Rams linebacker Will Witherspoon. Three days later, he was placed on Injured Reserve, effectively ending his season. Warner took over the starting quarterback position from that point on.[9] In Leinart's 2nd season with Arizona, he started 5 games and completed 53.6% of his passes (60/112) and threw for 647 yards, 5.8 yards per attempt, 2 touchdowns, and 4 interceptions. His passer rating was 61.9. He averaged 129 yards and 0.4 touchdowns per start. Kurt Warner, who started the final 11 games, threw 27 touchdowns and 17 interceptions and rushed for another touchdown, completed 62.3% of his passes (281/451), and threw for 3,417 yards. His yards per attempt was 7.6, and his passer rating was 89.8. With Warner finishing the 2007 season in the top 10 in most quarterback categories, and after having outplayed Leinart, it appeared that a quarterback controversy was well underway, but Leinart declared, "I'm the quarterback" and that the Cardinals is "my team" after the final game of the season. [edit] Television appearancesMatt Leinart made an appearance on the show Punk'd (May 1st, 2006 episode) featuring Ashton Kutcher as the host. In his appearance, Leinart was questioned by police officers who noticed him interacting with a prostitute. (All characters acting specific roles except for the oblivious Leinart). He also has appeared in several commercials on television, most notably for ABC's hit-sitcom Desperate Housewives. He also appeared in Nike's "Football is Everything" commercial as the backup quarterback on the sidelines holding a clipboard. He also starred in an NFL Sunday Ticket commercial with the Manning family (Peyton and Eli are surprised that father Archie is helping him with his throwing, only to have Archie say that "he always wanted a lefty"). In 2007, he appeared in the NFL Shop commercial with Steven Jackson and Adam Vinatieri where he threw an Arizona Cardinals throw blanket to a fan who made a diving catch. Most recently, Leinart appeared in a commercial for ESPN the Magazine. [edit] ControversyOn April 1, 2008, pictures surfaced of Matt Leinart at a weekend party that showed him having a good time with young women in a hot tub. The pictures also showed him with a beer bong. Arizona Cardinals officials were disappointed in these pictures, as were fans, expecting Matt to be working hard on his rehab assignments for the upcoming season, instead of partying it up. Others are not as upset about these picture, stating that Matt did not break any laws, and what he does in his own time is up to him, as long as it is legal. [10] [edit] Other Cameo Appearances
[edit] Personal lifeLeinart's son, Cole Cameron Leinart, was born on October 24, 2006 in California. Cole's mother is USC women's basketball player Brynn Cameron.[11] Leinart had broken up with Cameron before the baby was born. Though they had a dispute over child support early on, they have since settled their differences and Leinart now has a regular schedule for seeing his son. [12] [edit] Honors[edit] 2004
[edit] 2005
[edit] 2006
[edit] Career statistics[edit] College
[edit] NFL
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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