Shawn Halloran

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Shawn Halloran
Date of birth April 23, 1964 (1964-04-23) (age 44)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Gardner, Massachusetts
Position(s) Quarterback
College Boston College
Statistics
Teams
1987 St. Louis Cardinals

Shawn Michael Halloran (born April 23, 1964 in Gardner, Massachusetts) is a former quarterback for the Boston College Eagles and St. Louis Cardinals and current assistant coach for Yale University.

[edit] Boston College

Halloran came to Boston College in 1983 and was the backup quarterback from 1983 to 1984, playing behind future Heisman Trophy winner Doug Flutie. In 1985, his first season as starter he completed 234 of 423 passes for 2,935 yards. Set BC single season records for pass attempts, completions, and interceptions (23). He lead the team to a 9-3 record and a 27-24 win against the Georgia Bulldogs in the Hall of Fame Bowl, completing a 5 yard game winning touchdown pass to Kelvin Martin with 32 seconds remaining. The touchdown ended a 76 yard drive that lasted 2 minuets and 6 seconds. Halloran completed 31 of 52 attempts for 316 yards and 2 touchdowns. He was the game's Most Valuable Player. In his senior season, Halloran completed 159 of 258 passes for 2,029 yards and 17 touchdowns. The team however did poorly, finishing at 5-6.

[edit] NFL

Halloran signed with the St. Louis Cardinals as a Replacement player during the 1987 season. He appeared in 3 replacement games, including two starts, completing 18 of 42 passes for 263 yards, no touchdowns and 1 interception. He was the backup behind Neil Lomax for the remainder of the season and retired in May of 1988.

[edit] Coaching career

Halloran began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Boston College and later was an assistant coach at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. From 1993-1997 he was Georgetown's offensive coordinator. From 1997-2002 he was Yale's special-teams coordinator. Under his tenure the Bulldogs won the 1999 Ivy League title and coached Yale's all-time leading kicker, punter and punt returner. He spent the next three years as head coach at Franklin & Marshall. He finished with a 17-15 record, back-to-back Eastern College Athletic Conference playoff appearances, and the 2004 Centennial Conference Championship and ECAC Southwest Bowl titles. Franklin & Marshall advanced to the ECAC Southeast Bowl in 2005. He was named offensive coordinator of the Penn Quakers on February 20, 2006. After an unsuccessful season with the Quakers, Halloran was fired and later rejoined Yale as an assistant coach in May 2007.