Gary Reasons
No. 55 | |
Date of birth: | February 18, 1962 |
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Place of birth: | Crowley, Texas |
Career information | |
Position(s): | Linebacker |
Height: | 6 ft 4 in (193 cm) |
Weight: | 234 lb (106 kg) |
College: | Northwestern State |
NFL Draft: | 1984 / Round: 4 / Pick: 105 |
Organizations | |
As player: | |
1984-1991 1992 |
New York Giants Cincinnati Bengals |
Career stats | |
Playing stats at NFL.com | |
Gary Phillip Reasons (born February 18, 1962 in Crowley, Texas) is a former American football linebacker for the New York Giants of the National Football League, winning Super Bowl XXI and Super Bowl XXV as a member of the team.
Biography
Reasons was also a part of two key plays during his career.[1][2] The first came during a critical late-season December 1989 game against the Denver Broncos at snowy Mile High Stadium. On fourth-and-goal from the Giants 1-yard line, John Elway handed off to Bobby Humphrey, who went airborne trying to break the plane of the goal line. But Reasons also went airborne; his hit sent Humphrey spinning backward like a helicopter. The Giants, propelled by an incredible 57-yard touchdown on a screen pass to speedy David Meggett on third-and-31, went on to win that game and the NFC East that season before falling to the Los Angeles Rams in the infamous Flipper Anderson game at Giants Stadium.
The second came during the playoffs of the 1990-1991 season. During the NFC Championship Game versus the San Francisco 49ers, Reasons ran for 30 yards on a fourth-quarter fake punt play, which helped the Giants win 15-13 and advance to the Super Bowl. Only a tackle by 49ers punt returner John Taylor prevented Reasons from scoring, but Matt Bahr did cap the drive with a field goal that brought the Giants to within 13-12.
Reasons was the first player to be named three times to the Division I-AA All-America team while playing college football at Northwestern State and in 1996 he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
In 2004 and 2008 Reasons served as the Head Coach for the Oklahoma City Yard Dawgz arena football team.
See also
- History of the New York Giants (1979-1993)
References
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