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Steve Beuerlein

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Steve Beuerlein
refer to caption
Beuerlein at a golf tournament in 2008
No. 7, 11
Position:Quarterback
Personal information
Born: (1965-03-07) March 7, 1965 (age 59)
Hollywood, California, U.S.
Height:6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Weight:220 lb (100 kg)
Career information
High school:Servite (Anaheim, California)
College:Notre Dame
NFL draft:1987 / round: 4 / pick: 110
Expansion draft:1995 / round: 1 / pick: 1
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
TDINT:147–112
Passing yards:24,046
Passer rating:80.3
Stats at Pro Football Reference

Stephen Taylor Beuerlein (born March 7, 1965) is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. After his playing career, he became an NFL and college football analyst for CBS.[1]

High school career

[edit]

In his senior year, Beuerlein led Anaheim's Servite High School to the California Interscholastic Federation 1982 Southern Section Big Five championship, where he was named player of the year.[2] In the first game of the year he played against Ohio's famed Moeller High School. Although Servite led Moeller early in the 4th quarter, Moeller won 29–15, but Beuerlein's performance caught the eye of Notre Dame head coach Gerry Faust, who had coached for 18 years at Moeller prior to taking the Notre Dame job.[3][4][5] After Servite went on to win its final eleven games en route to a 31–7 victory over Long Beach Poly in the CIF-SS Big 5 championship game (and a #4 national ranking), Faust offered Beuerlein a full scholarship, and he attended Notre Dame the following year.[4]

College career

[edit]

As a true freshman in the 1983 Notre Dame season, the 18-year-old Beuerlein got his first start in the fourth game, relieving senior quarterback and four-year starter Blair Kiel, who had begun the season with a 1–2 record.[6] Beuerlein started the remaining eight games of the regular season, splitting playing time with Kiel, and winning his first five starts. He lost his final three starts of the regular season in close games decided by five points or less, but the Irish' 6–5 record was good enough for a Liberty Bowl bid, where Kiel got the start for the first time since the Miami game and led the Irish to a 19–18 victory over Doug Flutie's 13th-ranked Boston College team.[7]

Beuerlein entered his sophomore 1984 season as the starter at quarterback. In the fifth game of the season against #14 Miami, he was knocked out of the game with an injury to his throwing shoulder. He missed only one game, and started the rest of the season's games, taking repeated cortisone injections.[8] He led the Irish to a 4–1 finish to the regular season and a 7–4 record, losing only to #11 South Carolina, and with victories at #6 LSU and #14 USC, before losing in the Aloha Bowl to #10 SMU. In that game, Beuerlein noticed a deterioration in the condition of his throwing shoulder, which had been worsening since the injury. Beuerlein also blamed the injury on throwing a school-record 18 interceptions.[8] After an unsuccessful offseason rehab, Notre Dame sent Beuerlein to a California orthopedist in April, where the doctor discovered a bone chip in his collarbone, which had ground away much of his acromioclavicular joint. He had surgery immediately, which removed an inch of his collarbone and the entire remaining parts of his AC joint.[8]

Five months after surgery to his throwing shoulder, Beuerlein was starting the 1985 season opener at Michigan. Beurlein was benched for the Ole Miss game in favor of sophomore backup Terry Andrysiak after throwing just three touchdowns at that point [9] After good play coming off the bench that game, Beurlein won his starting job back.[10]

Before Beuerlein's senior year, Faust resigned after five seasons.[5] The university then hired Minnesota head coach Lou Holtz. Beuerlein enjoyed his best statistical season in 1986 under Holtz, throwing for 2211 yards, 13 TDs and 7 INTs. In his final collegiate game, Beuerlein threw three second-half touchdowns, helping lead the Irish to an upset over the 17th ranked USC Trojans.[11] The win gave Beuerlein a perfect 40 record against the Trojans, the only Notre Dame quarterback ever to do so besides Ralph Guglielmi from 1951 to 1954.[12]

Beuerlein started 39 out of 46 games for the Irish during his four-year career, with a 21–18 record. He graduated in 1987 with a degree in American Studies, having broken nearly every passing and total offense record in Notre Dame history.[1]

Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Season Games Passing Rushing
GP Cmp Att Pct Yds Avg TD Int Rtg Att Yds Avg TD
1983 10 75 145 51.7 1,061 7.3 4 6 114.0 23 -9 -0.4 0
1984 10 140 232 60.3 1,920 8.3 7 18 124.3 58 -75 -1.3 1
1985 11 107 214 50.0 1,335 6.2 3 13 94.9 43 -19 -0.4 1
1986 11 151 259 58.3 2,211 8.5 13 7 141.2 53 35 0.7 1
Career 42 473 850 55.6 6,527 7.7 27 44 120.3 178 -62 -0.4 3

Professional career

[edit]
Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split 20-yard shuttle Vertical jump Broad jump Bench press
6 ft 2+38 in
(1.89 m)
203 lb
(92 kg)
30 in
(0.76 m)
10 in
(0.25 m)
5.10 s 1.69 s 2.88 s 4.63 s 23.0 in
(0.58 m)
7 ft 9 in
(2.36 m)
3 reps
All values from NFL Combine[13]

Los Angeles Raiders

[edit]

Beuerlein was drafted by the Los Angeles Raiders in the fourth round of the 1987 NFL draft,[1][14] but suffered a season-ending injury in preseason play.

He made his NFL debut in 1988 under new head coach Mike Shanahan, starting and winning the season opener against the San Diego Chargers 24–13, his first game in Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum since upsetting USC in college two years prior. The Raiders would lose Beuerlein's next two starts in close games, including a loss to the crosstown Los Angeles Rams, where Beuerlein threw for 375 yards, then the third-highest total in Raiders history.[15] Beurlein was eventually benched for the more experienced Jay Schroeder, who had been acquired from the Washington Redskins only one day before the season opener. Beuerlein came off the bench for Schroeder twice before regaining the starting job, losing it again near the end of the season. The Raiders finished third in the AFC West division, with a record of 7–9.[16]

In 1989, Schroeder was named the starter. After a 1–3 start, Shanahan was fired. Under new coach Art Shell, Beuerlein started the final six games after a three-interception outing by Schroeder in a Week 10 loss to San Diego, winning the Raiders' starting job.[17] The Raiders finished 8–8 for another third-place finish in the AFC West.[18]

Going into the 1990 season, Beuerlein was to be the lowest-paid starting QB in the league, at a salary of $140,000.[17] This led to a contract dispute and holdout, and although he eventually signed before the start of the season, the holdout angered Raiders owner Al Davis, who refused to allow the Raiders' coaches to play Beuerlein.[19] Schroeder was handed the starting job with Vince Evans as the backup, and Beuerlein was held inactive for every game. To compound matters for Beuerlein, the Raiders finished 12–4, and advanced all the way to the AFC title game.[17]

Dallas Cowboys

[edit]

Less than a week before the start of the 1991 season, the Raiders traded Beuerlein to the Dallas Cowboys, who desired a back-up for Troy Aikman, in exchange for a fourth round draft choice. According to head coach Jimmy Johnson, the Cowboys had "been actively pursuing Beuerlein for quite some time", including a trade agreement worked out in January that Davis reportedly backed out of.[17][20] When Aikman injured his knee in Week 13 against the Washington Redskins, Beuerlein came off the bench and threw a 4th-quarter touchdown pass to Michael Irvin, as the Cowboys held on for a 24–21 victory, defeating the 11–0 Redskins in their home stadium.[21][22] He then started the remaining four games of the regular season, winning all four and leading the Cowboys to an 11–5 record, their best since the 1983 season under Tom Landry. They also made the playoffs for the first time since the 1985 season, capturing the fifth seed as a wild-card team.

With Aikmain's knee healthy enough to start the first playoff game at the Chicago Bears, Johnson decided to continue playing Beuerlein, a move that upset Aikman at the time.[23][24] Beuerlein threw for 180 yards, with 1 touchdown and no interceptions in leading the Cowboys to a 17–13 win at Soldier Field. It was the Cowboys’ first road playoff win in over a decade. The following week, he started at Detroit, but was relieved by Aikman early in the game as the Cowboys would go on to lose, ending their playoff run as the Cowboys were blown out by the Detroit Lions.

In 1992, a healthy Aikman had a breakout season, and Beuerlein played sparingly but still managed to appear in all 16 regular season games. The Cowboys finished with a 13–3 record and reached Super Bowl XXVII. Beuerlein relieved Aikman with 7:06 left in the game and Dallas up by 35 points. On his last play as a Cowboy, Beuerlein fumbled the ball on a botched handoff to Derrick Gainer.[25] The Cowboys defeated the Buffalo Bills 52–17 and Beuerlein received his first and only Super Bowl championship.

Phoenix / Arizona Cardinals

[edit]

After his play in Dallas, as an unrestricted free agent entering the 1993 season Beuerlein was a highly sought-after quarterback on the free agent market. He would eventually sign a three-year, $7.5 million contract with the Phoenix Cardinals and become their new starting quarterback.[26] After three-straight seasons of five wins or less, head coach Joe Bugel was on the hot seat before the season even began after owner Bill Bidwill gave him an ultimatum demanding that Bugel win at least nine games in order to keep his job.[27] After the Cardinals started the season 2–6, Beuerlein was briefly benched in favor of Chris Chandler, but regained the starting job after two games.[28] Beuerlein led the Cardinals to victories in four of their last five games, including passing for three touchdowns and a career-high 431 yards in a 30–27 overtime win at Seattle.[29] The Cardinals finished with a 7–9 record and Bugel was fired.[30]

Beuerlein passed for the first of his three career 3000-yard seasons in 1993, finishing in the top-10 in almost every statistical passing category,[31] despite throwing passes in only 14 games.[28]

The newly renamed Arizona Cardinals hired Buddy Ryan as both head coach and general manager in 1994. Beuerlein was benched after an 0–2 start.[32] Ryan called him "one of the worst quarterbacks he had ever seen" and stated to the press that Beuerlein was "a cancer that needed to be cut out."[19][33] Amid frequent changes at quarterback, Beuerlein went 3–4 as a starter as the team finished 8–8, with Ryan making him a scapegoat for the team's mediocrity.

Jacksonville Jaguars

[edit]
Beuerlein with the Jaguars in 1995.

At the end of the 1994 season, Ryan and Beuerlein's contentious relationship would come to an end when Ryan exposed him to the 1995 NFL expansion draft.[34] The Jacksonville Jaguars took him with the number one selection.[35] Beuerlein was the starting quarterback for the first game in team history, starting the first two games before spraining his right MCL in a game against the Cincinnati Bengals.[36] While he was healthy two weeks later, and he initially started in a Week 5 game against the Houston Oilers, he would be replaced mid-game by backup Mark Brunell who would keep the starting job for the next six games. Beuerlein would not see action again until Week 11 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, coming off the bench for an injured Brunell in the fourth quarter, leading a team-record 96-yard touchdown drive, and throwing what was potentially the game-tying touchdown. Head coach Tom Coughlin decided to go for a two-point conversion and the win, which failed and the Jaguars lost 17–16.[36] Beuerlein started three of the next four games in relief of Brunell – all losses – as the Jaguars finished their inaugural season with a 4–12 record. Beuerlein reportedly had a confrontational relationship with head coach Coughlin, and finished the season as the third quarterback behind rookie Rob Johnson.[37] As he was in the last year of his original three-year deal with the Cardinals, after the season he became a free agent.

Carolina Panthers

[edit]

1996 season

[edit]

Before the 1996 season, the Carolina Panthers signed Beuerlein to a three-year contract, as a backup to second-year QB Kerry Collins.

He made four starts in relief of an injured Collins, going 3–1, finishing the year with eight touchdowns and only two interceptions, and a passer rating of 93.5.[38]

1997 season

[edit]

After an injury to Kerry Collins in the beginning of the 1997 season, Beuerlein started the first two regular season games going 1–1. Beurelein started another game and occasionally played in relief of Collins. Beuerlein also served as a mentor to Collins, relating his stories of watching other young quarterbacks struggle in their early years before becoming stars.[39]

Beuerlein started three games and played in seven, as the Panthers finished with a 7–9 record.[40]

1998 season

[edit]

In 1998, Beuerlein gained the starting job permanently in Week 5 after Collins' on-field and off-field problems continued, and he benched himself after an 0–4 start and was ultimately released one week later.[41]

Beuerlein threw 17 touchdowns and 12 interceptions, completing 63% of passes for 2613 yards, however the Panthers finished with a 4–12 record and head coach Dom Capers was fired.[42]

1999 season

[edit]

In 1999, Beuerlein beat newly acquired Jeff Lewis for the starting job.[43]

In Week 14, Carolina visited Green Bay in their first game at Lambeau Field since the 1996 NFC Championship Game. Beuerlein, who had served as Collins's backup but did not play in that January 1997 tilt, passed for a then franchise-record 373 yards.[44] Beuerlein won the game against the Packers on a last-second quarterback draw.[45] He later stated that the draw play was the favorite of his career and that "people still ask me about that play almost every single day."[45]

In the final week against the Saints, Beuerlein threw a team record five touchdown passes in a win, but the Panthers failed to make the playoffs due to the NFL's tie breaker rules.[46]

Beuerlein's 4,436 passing yards led the league, and at the time was the 11th-highest passing yardage total ever.[47][48] He also led the NFL with 343 completions, and his 94.6 passer rating and 36 touchdown passes were second only to the 1999 MVP Kurt Warner.[47]

Beuerlein made the Pro Bowl for the first and only time in his career, tying offensive guard Bob Young for the most seasons in the league (13) before making his first Pro Bowl.[49]

2000 season

[edit]

Beuerlein entered the 2000 season as the starter with little competition. He threw for 3,730 yards, but was sacked league-leading 62 times, which was then tied for the second-most sacks ever on a quarterback in a season.[50][51] Beuerlein also threw a career-high 18 interceptions.[51] The Panthers finished with their third 7–9 record in six seasons.

2001 season

[edit]

Beuerlein was released two months into the offseason by head coach George Seifert.[52] Seifert named Jeff Lewis to take over as the starter,[53] but a bad preseason by Lewis led to rookie Chris Weinke to be designated as starter when Lewis was cut Aug 31. The Panthers won their season opener against the Minnesota Vikings. The 2001 Panthers then went on to lose all 15 of their remaining games, finishing 1–15, and Seifert was fired after the season.[53]

Panthers franchise records

[edit]

During his five seasons in Carolina, Beuerlein set almost every Panthers passing record, including most career attempts (1,723), completions (1,041), passing yards (12,690), passing touchdowns (86), highest completion percentage (60.4%), and highest passer rating (87.7),[54] some of which have since been broken by Jake Delhomme and Cam Newton.[55] Those that remain include:

  • Career passer rating (87.7)
  • Seasons with 4000+ passing yards (1; with Cam Newton)
  • Single-season passing yards (4,436 in 1999)
  • Single-season passing touchdowns (36 in 1999)
  • Single-season passing attempts (571 in 1999)
  • Single-season passing completions (343 in 1999)
  • Single-season completion percentage (63.0% in 1999)[56]
  • Single-season times sacked (62 in 2000)
  • Single-season yards per game (277.3 in 1999)
  • Single-season 300+ passing yard games (5 in 1999)
  • Most touchdown passes in a game (5, 2000-01-02 NOR; with Cam Newton x3)[57]
  • As of August 2017, he holds three of the top eight single-game passing yard totals in Carolina team history (373, 368, and 364).[58]

Denver Broncos

[edit]

Before the 2001 season, Beuerlein signed with the Denver Broncos to back up Brian Griese,[59] reuniting him with Mike Shanahan, his Raiders coach from the 1980s. In 2001, Beuerlein missed his first full season due to injury since his rookie year, but returned in 2002, starting three games and appearing in eight, including a week 11 game against the Seahawks where Beuerlein came off the bench and threw two 4th-quarter touchdowns on his only two pass attempts of the game.[60]

Before the 2003 season, after the Broncos signed former Cardinals QB Jake Plummer to be their new starter, Beuerlein considered retiring at age 38, but decided to play one more year after Shanahan personally visited his home and asked him to stay.[61] He appeared in four games and started two in relief of an injured Plummer, and helped the Broncos to a 5–1 start before his season ended in a Week 7 game at the undefeated Minnesota Vikings. Beuerlein played poorly, throwing three interceptions as the Vikings blitzed him relentlessly, sacking him five times and knocking him down on numerous other occasions.[62] He was knocked out of the game late in the third quarter with a fractured finger on his throwing hand on an incompletion, with Danny Kanell taking over for the rest of the game. Although the injury was expected to keep him out for only a maximum of six weeks, the Broncos needed the roster spot and he was placed on injured reserve, ending his season and ultimately his career.[61]

Retirement

[edit]

Although the Broncos wanted him to return for his 18th NFL season, at age 39, Beuerlein decided to retire from professional football.[53] Only one week after his finger injury, Beuerlein reflected on the many struggles he had to endure in his NFL career to Sports Illustrated's Peter King. Beuerlein said, "Hey, I've been in the wrong place at the wrong time a lot. But I was a fourth-round pick. To last 15, 16, 17 years in the league, what can I complain about? I've lived the dream a long time. The only thing I'd change is how it ended."[63]

In July 2004, Beuerlein signed a one-day contract with the Panthers to retire as a member of the team. Commenting on the decision to retire with the team, Beuerlein stated "This in my mind was the way it was meant to be. I couldn't think of a better way to bring this 17-year run to an end. My heart has always been here with this organization and when I sat back and decided I wanted to step down, there was no doubt I wanted to do it as a Carolina Panther."[53]

NFL career statistics

[edit]
Legend
Led the league
Bold Career high
Year Team Games Passing Rushing
GP GS Record Cmp Att Pct Yds TD Int Rtg Att Yds TD
1987 RAI 0 0 Did not play due to injury
1988 RAI 10 8 4–4 105 238 44.1 1,643 8 7 66.6 30 35 0
1989 RAI 10 7 4–3 108 217 49.8 1,677 13 9 78.4 16 39 0
1990 RAI 0 0 DNP
1991 DAL 8 4 4–0 68 137 49.6 909 5 2 77.2 7 -14 0
1992 DAL 16 0 12 18 66.7 154 0 1 69.7 4 -7 0
1993 PHO 16 14 6–8 258 418 61.7 3,164 18 17 82.5 22 45 0
1994 ARI 9 7 3–4 130 255 51.0 1,545 5 9 61.6 22 39 1
1995 JAX 7 6 1–5 71 142 50.0 952 4 7 60.5 5 32 0
1996 CAR 8 4 3–1 69 123 56.1 879 8 2 93.5 12 17 0
1997 CAR 7 3 1–2 89 153 58.2 1,032 6 3 83.6 4 32 0
1998 CAR 12 12 4–8 216 343 63.0 2,613 17 12 88.2 22 26 0
1999 CAR 16 16 8–8 343 571 60.1 4,436 36 15 94.6 27 124 2
2000 CAR 16 16 7–9 324 533 60.8 3,730 19 18 79.7 44 106 1
2001 DEN 0 0 Did not play due to injury
2002 DEN 8 3 1–2 68 117 58.1 925 6 5 82.7 5 9 1
2003 DEN 4 2 1–1 33 63 52.4 389 2 5 49.0 5 13 0
Total 147 102 47–55 1,894 3,328 56.9 24,046 147 112 80.3 225 496 5

Football analyst

[edit]

In 2004, Beuerlein joined CBS Sports as a game analyst for The NFL on CBS, where he travels each week during the season to NFL venues in order to provide color commentary for games. Beuerlein also occasionally calls college football games for CBS.[1] In 2024 Beuerlein became the Compass Media Networks Dallas Cowboys radio analyst, replacing longtime legend Danny White who had held the position since the broadcasts began in 2011.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "CBS Sports TV Team – Steve Beuerlein". CBSSports.com. Archived from the original on October 14, 2012.
  2. ^ Henderson, Martin (November 26, 1996). "THE BEST EVER : Choosing Greatest County Football Players Isn't Easy". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  3. ^ Katz, Michael (October 15, 1983). "A Freshman Stabilizes Notre Dame". The New York Times. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  4. ^ a b Shepard, Greg (September 1983). "The Making of a Champion" (PDF). Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Crowe, Jerry (November 24, 2008). "For him, the Notre Dame job was a Faustian bargain". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
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  7. ^ "Liberty Bowl 1983". Archived from the original on February 18, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
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  16. ^ "1988 Los Angeles Raiders". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
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  18. ^ "1989 Los Angeles Raiders". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
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  36. ^ a b Zizzo, Mike (November 23, 1995). "Beuerlein Likely To Regain Jaguars' Quarterback Reins". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  37. ^ Dame, Mike (September 29, 1996). "Beuerlein, Happy At Last, Returns To Face Jaguars". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved February 17, 2012.
  38. ^ "1996 Carolina Panthers". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
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  45. ^ a b Fowler, Scott (November 30, 2008). "Beuerlein's draw play silenced Lambeau Field". The News & Observer. Archived from the original on March 6, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  46. ^ London, Mike (January 3, 2000). "Forty-five isn't enough for Panthers". Salisbury Post. Archived from the original on February 25, 2001. Retrieved February 23, 2012.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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  51. ^ a b "2000 NFL Standings, Team & Offensive Statistics". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  52. ^ "Beuerlein is released by Panthers". The Philadelphia Inquirer. March 20, 2001. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  53. ^ a b c d "Beuerlein retires as a Panther". USA Today. July 28, 2004. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  54. ^ "Steve Beuerlein NFL Football Statistics – 1996–2000". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  55. ^ "Jake Delhomme NFL Football Statistics – 2003–2009". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  56. ^ "Carolina Panthers Passing Single-season Register". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  57. ^ "Carolina Panthers 2011 NFL Record & Fact Book" (PDF). NFL.com. Retrieved February 17, 2012.
  58. ^ "Single Game Bests". Carolina Panthers Official Site. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
  59. ^ "Broncos Sign Beuerlein as a Backup". The New York Times. May 31, 2001. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  60. ^ "Beuerlein Rescues Broncos". Orlando Sentinel. November 18, 2002. Retrieved February 17, 2012.
  61. ^ a b Marshall, John (October 21, 2003). "Beuerlein on injured reserve; career may be over". USA Today. Retrieved February 19, 2012.
  62. ^ "Broncos Beuerlein knocked out with injured finger". ESPN.com. October 19, 2003. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
  63. ^ King, Peter (October 27, 2003). "Burned Beuerlein". SI.com. Archived from the original on October 28, 2003. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
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