Pat Haden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pat Haden

Pat Haden gives USC's traditional "Fight On" sign as he walks the sideline of a Trojans football game.
No. 11
Quarterback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1953-01-23) January 23, 1953
Place of birth: Westbury, New York
Height: 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)Weight: 182 lb (83 kg)
Career information
High school: Bishop Amat Memorial High School
College: Southern California
NFL Draft: 1975 / Round: 7 / Pick: 176
Debuted in 1975 for the Southern California Sun
Last played in 1981 for the Los Angeles Rams
Career history

Career highlights and awards

Career NFL statistics as of 1981
Pass attempts 1,363
Pass completions 731
Percentage 53.6
TD-INT 52-60
Passing Yards 9,296
QB Rating 69.6
Stats at NFL.com

Patrick Capper "Pat" Haden (born January 23, 1953) is the athletic director at the University of Southern California. He played quarterback for the USC Trojans before playing professionally in the NFL for the Los Angeles Rams from 1976 to 1981. He is a Rhodes Scholar, was a practicing attorney from 1982 to 1987, and was a partner at Riordan, Lewis & Haden, a private equity firm, from 1987 to 2010. He is also known for his work as a former sportscaster, beginning with CBS Sports in 1982, and ending his career in that field as a color commentator for NBC Sports Notre Dame football coverage.

Biography

Early years

Haden was born in New York to working-class Irish parents, the fourth of five children. He had a close relationship with his mother, Helen Haden, who told her children to "Live your life so that you have standing room only at your funeral."[1]

As a boy, Haden had a boyhood paper route, then worked at a shoe store where he also pushed accessories in order to earn an extra commission. He had the same mentality in sports, where he used smarts and toughness he gained from keeping up with his older brothers to compensate for physical shortcomings. By high school, his parents had moved to Southern California.[1]

Playing career

High school career

Haden played high school football at Bishop Amat Memorial High School in La Puente, California, where he became starting quarterback.[1] He became close friends with teammate J.K. McKay, son of then-USC football coach John McKay; the two were opposites: J.K. was quick-witted and easygoing, while Haden was not. Some have attributed his introverted nature in grade school as a result of being teased for his unique middle name. Haden and McKay shared the CIF Southern Section Player of the Year award in 1970. When Haden's parents had to move again, he stayed with the McKays for his senior year of high school.[1] He was highly sought after and was recruited by many schools, including Notre Dame. Haden was inducted into the National High School Hall of Fame in 1995.

College career

Prior to College Football Haden and McKay won the CIF championship game in overtime against Lakewood High School. The game was played at the LA Coliseum, where Haden would go on to lead the Trojans to many victories. Both Haden and J.K. McKay joined the highly regarded USC Trojans under head coach John McKay; the two joined a group of friends in living at an apartment building just off campus.[1] At USC, he made it to three Rose Bowl appearances and won two national championships. In the final game of his college career, the 1975 Rose Bowl, he was named co-MVP. Haden also was a recipient of the Today's Top V Award in 1975, which at the time honored five (now ten) senior student-athletes. He was put into the GTE Academic All-American Hall of Fame in 1988. He was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame in 1995. An athletic and academic stand-out, he was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship.[1]

In 1973 he threw for 1,832 yards with 13 TD vs 11 INT. In 1974 he threw for just 988 yards (in part due to 98 fewer pass attempts) but still threw 13 TD vs 11 INT.[2]

Professional career

Haden played one season in the World Football League for the Southern California Sun, which allowed him to attend school at Oxford University under his Rhodes Scholarship. His decision to go to the United Kingdom for schooling hurt his NFL possibilities as well as a lack of height (he stood 5-10) and lack of arm strength and he dropped to the 7th round of the NFL Draft.[3]

Haden made the Los Angeles Rams' roster in 1976 as the third quarterback behind James Harris and Ron Jaworski. When both Harris and Jaworski were injured, Haden was pressed into duty in the second game of the season. Running a low-risk offense to cover his limitations, he responded by playing mostly mistake-free football, letting running backs Lawrence McCutcheon and John Cappelletti shoulder the offensive load and passing only occasionally. Harris returned to the lineup as starting quarterback and Haden went back to a backup role. In a Monday night game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Harris played poorly in a 20-12 loss, and Rams head coach Chuck Knox was ordered by team owner Carroll Rosenbloom to bench Harris, who is black, in favor of Haden, who is white. This is documented in Knox's autobiography Hard Knox: The Life of an NFL Coach and William Rhoden's Third and a Mile: The Trials and Triumph of the Black Quarterback. At the time of the quarterback change, Harris was the top-rated passer of the National Football Conference. Many argue that this fact alone supports that the move was racially motivated. That race played a role in the decision seems likely given the bias against black quarterbacks at the time. However, an argument from statistics cannot be used to prove that racism. At the end of season, Haden's QB rating was 94.8% compared to Harris' 89.6 (neither had enough attempts to qualify for leader board). Additionally, Haden had a better won-loss record as the starter than Harris, at 5-1-1, compared to 3-2. The Rams went on to win the NFC Western Division title and a 1412 upset of the defending NFC champion Dallas Cowboys in the opening round, but the Rams fell to the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship Game.

Because of Haden's limitations, the Rams wanted experience and a stronger arm at the quarterback position for the 1977 NFL season. Harris and Jaworski were traded, and the Rams decided to give creaky veteran Joe Namath a chance. Namath started the first four games, but it was evident his knees couldn't take it anymore, so the Rams went back to Haden. With Knox constricting the offense to hide Haden's flaws, the Rams took eight victories in the last 10 games, winning the NFC West and making the playoffs once again. Their first-round opponent was the Vikings at home, but the Rams lost 147 in the Mud Bowl. Haden's hands were too small to grip the soggy ball, leading to a dismal passing performance (14-32 for 130 yards, 3 interceptions).

Haden was rewarded with the starting position from day one in 1978. The Rams started fast, going 8-0, but tailed off to 12-4, still winning their third straight NFC West Division title. Haden threw a pair of touchdown passes and led the Rams to a 34-10 victory against the Vikings in the first round of the playoffs. The Dallas Cowboys, however, walloped the Rams 28-0 in the 1978 NFC Championship Game on their way to the Super Bowl. Haden was voted the Washington D.C. Touchdown Club NFC Player of the Year of the 1978 season.

Haden began the 1979 season as the starter, but a broken finger midway through the season sidelined him in favor of Vince Ferragamo. Ferragamo ended up leading the Rams to Super Bowl XIV.[4]

Because of Rams' coach Ray Malavasi's policy of giving an injured starter his job back, Haden began the 1980 season as the starter with Ferragamo as the backup. Haden was injured in the Rams season opener against the Detroit Lions. Ferragamo took over as the starter and didn't relinquish the job (despite Haden returning mid-season), passing for a then Rams-record 30 touchdown passes.

Ferragamo, however, bolted the Rams for the Canadian Football League. Haden once again went into the 1981 season as starter, but was injured midway through the season. After the season, while recovering from knee surgery and contemplating retirement, he got a call from CBS about a broadcast job and decided to take the job.[1]

Broadcasting career

After spending a few years at CBS, Haden was hired to do color commentator for NBC Sports' coverage of Notre Dame college football, and held similar duties for their Arena Football coverage from 2003 through 2006 and Fox Sports' Bowl Championship Series coverage in 2008. His position as the Notre Dame color commentator is ironic in that he, as USC's quarterback in 1974, helped orchestrate one of Notre Dame's greatest losses (and, conversely, one of USC's greatest wins, known as "The Comeback"). The Trojans won 5524 despite trailing 240 at one point and 246 at halftime.[5] Haden admits that his mother wanted him to go to Notre Dame and always lights a candle in her memory at the grotto whenever he is on campus.[citation needed]

Haden also previously was a color man for CBS Sports' college football coverage (being one of a three-man booth with former Notre Dame coach Ara Parseghian and play-by-play man Brent Musburger, and later working with Jim Nantz), and provided color commentary for TNT's Sunday night football coverage and Westwood One's radiocasts, primarily working the Sunday night schedule which immediately followed his TV commitments (at the time, TNT and ESPN split the Sunday night games between them, with TNT broadcasting the first half of the season and ESPN the second half).

Private equity career

In 1987, he joined Riordan, Lewis & Haden, a private equity firm based in Los Angeles that focuses on making investments in growing, profitable businesses with $20 – 200 million in revenue. He has served as a director of a number of RLH portfolio companies including TetraTech, Systems Management Specialists, Data Processing Resources Corporation (formerly NASDAQ: DPRC), The Apothecary Shops, and Adohr Farms. Haden remained a partner at RLH until assuming the position of Athletic Director for the University of Southern California.

Athletic director

Haden replaced Mike Garrett as the USC Trojans athletic director on Aug. 3, 2010.[6]

Education

Haden received a B.A., magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Southern California, a J.D. from Loyola Law School[7] and a B.A. in economics from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar.

Community activities

Haden has served on numerous nonprofit boards. He sits on the boards of the Rose Hills Foundation and the Fletcher Jones Foundation, and has also served on the boards of non-profit organizations including the University of Southern California, the Good Samaritan Hospital, Boys Town of Southern California, the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Los Angeles, and the Crippled Children's Society of Los Angeles. He is former chair of the March of Dimes Reading Olympics in Los Angeles and the Boys Life National Illiteracy Campaign.

Haden is a Board Member for the Lott IMPACT Trophy, which is named after Ronnie Lott and is awarded annually to college football's Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year.[8]

Haden was awarded the Ambassador Award of Excellence by the LA Sports & Entertainment Commission in 2003 for his community involvement.[9]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 David Wharton, Pat Haden is still a dashing figure, Los Angeles Times, July 24, 2010, Accessed July 25, 2010.
  2. http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/usc/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2011-12/misc_non_event/2011-footbl-media-guide.pdf
  3. 1975 NFL Draft on databaseFootball.com
  4. Rank, Adam (2013-02-26). "Alt Ranks: Most spectacular USC QBs in NFL history". National Football League. Retrieved 2013-02-26. 
  5. "2006 USC Media Guide: USC Football History" (PDF). usctrojans.cstv.com. Retrieved 2008-04-25. 
  6. USC President-Elect C. L. Max Nikias Announces New Leadership in Athletics, USC, July 20, 2010
  7. California State Bar Membership Records
  8. Lott IMPACT Trophy | Defensive College Football Award
  9. "As Tribute Columns Go, This Is No Award Winner". 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.