Jay Schroeder

Jay Schroeder
Position(s)
Quarterback
Jersey #(s)
10, 13, 11
Born June 28, 1961 (1961-06-28) (age 50)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Career information
Year(s) 19851994
NFL Draft 1984 / Round: 3 / Pick: 83
College UCLA
Professional teams
Career stats
TD-INT 114-108
Yards 20,063
QB Rating 71.7
Stats at NFL.com
Career highlights and awards

Jay Brian Schroeder (born June 28, 1961 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is a former professional American football quarterback in the National Football League who played for the Washington Redskins (1985–1987), Los Angeles Raiders (1988–1992), Cincinnati Bengals (1993) and Arizona Cardinals (1994).

He attended Palisades High School and was a high school football teammate of actor Forest Whitaker.

A third round draft pick in the 1984 NFL Draft by Washington after a moderate college career at UCLA, where he only started one game as the backup to Tom Ramsey, memorable however for throwing a miracle winning touchdown pass on a deflection to future NFL star Freeman McNeil to beat arch-rival USC with college football's version of the "immaculate reception." Schroeder was pressed into service during his second year after starting quarterback Joe Theismann suffered a career ending leg injury. His first play as Theismann was being taken off the field was a 50-yard completion to Art Monk, the first of a four-play drive that led to a touchdown to put the Redskins into the lead and ultimately to win the game.[1] Schroeder gained the starting spot on the Redskins in his second NFL season, and led them to a 12-4 record while throwing for a franchise record 4,109 passing yards and making the Pro Bowl. He managed to lead Washington all the way to the NFC title game, where his team was shut out 17-0 by the New York Giants.

The following season, Schroeder suffered a separated shoulder in the first game against the Philadelphia Eagles and was replaced by Doug Williams. Schroeder returned that season, but was continually nagged by the injury, allowing Williams to gain the starting position for the Redskins playoff run. Williams led the Redskins to a championship victory that year in Super Bowl XXII. Schroeder was traded the following season for Raiders tackle Jim Lachey, who proved to be a perennial Pro Bowl player for the Redskins.

He spent several seasons as the Raiders starting quarterback, with varying levels of success. He led the Raiders all the way to the AFC championship game as a starter in the 1990 season. However, his team was blown out by the Buffalo Bills 51-3, and Schroeder was intercepted five times during the game.

Schroeder retired in 1995 with 1,426 of 2,808 completions for 20,063 yards and 114 touchdowns, with 108 interceptions, while also rushing for 761 yards and five touchdowns.

Contents

Baseball career

Schroeder began his sports career in the Toronto Blue Jays minor league system. He was drafted 3rd overall in the 1979 Major League Baseball Draft by the Blue Jays.[2] He was inducted in the Kinston Professional Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996.

Coaching career

In 2007, he began coaching at Snow Canyon High School as the Offensive Coordinator and Quarterbacks Coach. He then became an assistant coach for Oaks Christian High School in California. In December 2010, Jay was hired as the Director of Football Operations[3] at Village Christian High School in Sun Valley, California.

He has also occasionally worked as an analyst for Sky Sports' NFL coverage since November 2007.

References

External links