Steve Walsh (American football)
Stephen John "Steve" Walsh (born December 1, 1966, St. Paul, Minnesota) is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League.
Personal life
Walsh has three children Haille, Jordan and Cameron (from his ex-wife Laura) and currently lives in West Palm Beach. Walsh is also the uncle of fellow Cretin-Derham Hall High School alumnus and National Hockey League defenseman Ryan McDonagh who currently plays for the New York Rangers.[1]
College career
After graduating from Cretin-Derham Hall in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Walsh attended and played college football at the University of Miami. After red-shirting a season and backing up Vinny Testaverde in his second, Walsh posted an incredible record of 23-1 in his two seasons as the team's starting quarterback and led the Hurricanes to the 1987 national championship as a sophomore. The following season, Walsh would finish 4th in the Heisman Trophy balloting. A pro-sized passer, he held the school record for career touchdown passes from 1988-2002 before being surpassed by Ken Dorsey. Skipping his final year of eligibility, Walsh left Miami in April 1989 and declared himself eligible for that year's NFL supplemental draft[2]
Statistics
Year |
Comp |
Att |
Comp % |
Passing |
TD |
INT |
1987 |
176 |
298 |
59.1 |
2249 |
20 |
7 |
1988 |
233 |
390 |
59.7 |
3115 |
29 |
12 |
Walsh was interviewed about his time at the University of Miami for the documentary The U, which premiered December 12, 2009 on ESPN.
Professional career
Selected by the Dallas Cowboys with the first overall pick in the 1989 NFL Supplemental Draft, Walsh was reunited with Jimmy Johnson who had been Walsh's head coach in Miami and had just taken over the Cowboys' reigns. However, Dallas had also selected UCLA quarterback, and future NFL Hall of Fame enshrinee, Troy Aikman first overall in the regular 1989 NFL draft. Despite starting five games (and picking up Dallas' only win of the season, a 13-3 victory over the rival Washington Redskins) and playing in three other games, Walsh was never able to move out of Aikman's shadow. Four games into the 1990 season, Dallas traded Walsh to the New Orleans Saints for three draft picks. Walsh would lead the Saints that season to their second ever playoff appearance finishing the season at 8-8 and ironically knocking the Cowboys out of the final playoff spot.
Walsh went on to have an 11-year NFL career, playing not only for the Cowboys and Saints, but also the Chicago Bears, St. Louis Rams, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Indianapolis Colts. After leading the Bears to a playoff victory and finishing the season with a 9-4 starting record, he went on was to start just 4 more games over his next 5 years. He served as a backup to Trent Dilfer in Tampa Bay and Peyton Manning at Indianapolis. Walsh retired after the 1999 season with the Colts and finished his career with 713 completions in 1317 attempts (54.1%), 7,875 yards, 40 touchdowns, and 50 interceptions, for a passer rating of 66.4.
Coaching career
In December 2008, he accepted the Head Football coaching job at Cardinal Newman High School in West Palm Beach, Florida.[3] After a 4-6 record in his first season, Cardinal Newman finished 7-4 in 2010 and earned its first playoff appearance since 2005. Walsh coached the team to a 11-1-1 record in 2011, before losing in the opening round of the 3A playoffs.[4]
References
Miami Hurricanes starting quarterbacks
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Offense |
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Defense |
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Special teams |
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Persondata |
Name |
Walsh, Steve |
Alternative names |
Walsh, Stephen John; Walsh, Stephen J. |
Short description |
All-American college football player, professional football player, quarterback |
Date of birth |
December 1, 1966 |
Place of birth |
St. Paul, Minnesota, United States |
Date of death |
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Place of death |
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