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Vince Ferragamo
Vince Ferragamo LA Rams-Super Bowl XIV 1980
Vince Ferragamo as QB for the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl XIV in 1980
Personal Information
Position(s)
Quarterback
Jersey #(s)
15, 5
Born April 24 1954 (1954-04-24) (age 69)
Career information
Year(s) 19771986
NFL Draft 1977 / Round: 4 / Pick: 91
College California & Nebraska
Professional teams
Career stats
TD-INT 76-91
Passing Yards 11,336
QB Rating 70.1 RTG
Stats at NFL.com
Career highlights and awards

  • Sporting News College Football Player of the Year (1976)
  • NCAA All-American (1976)
  • NFC Champion (wtih L.A. Rams 1979)

Vince Anthony Ferragamo (born April 24, 1954 in Torrance, California) was a former American football quarterback in the National Football League and Canadian Football League.

College career[]

Ferragamo began his college career as a California Golden Bear, but it soon became obvious that he couldn't unseat All-American Steve Bartkowski and soon to be All-American Joe Roth, so he transferred to the University of Nebraska.[1]

He was a two-time lettermen at Nebraska in 1975 and 1976, the final year of which he earned All-America and All-Conference Honors in the Big 8. He also led the Huskers to a victory against Texas Tech in the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl.

Nebraska was ranked No. 1 to open the 1976 season but managed only to tie LSU, 6–6, in a game at Tiger Stadium on September 11. The two teams were said to have waged "unrelenting trench warfare".[2] Ferragamo capped his college career by leading the Cornhuskers to a victory over Texas Tech in the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl in the Houston Astrodome.

Professional career[]

National Football League[]

He played for the Los Angeles Rams (1977-1980 and 1982-1984), Buffalo Bills (1985) and Green Bay Packers (1985-1986). After leading the 9-7 Rams to road victories over the Dallas Cowboys and Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 1979 NFL Playoffs, Ferragamo started for the Rams in Super Bowl XIV, in which the Rams led after three quarters of play before being overwhelmed by the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-19.

Ferragamo enjoyed his best statistical season in 1980 in which he threw for 30 touchdowns, tied for second most in the NFL. The Rams again made the playoffs, but were defeated by Dallas, 34-13 in an NFC Wild Card Playoff game.

Canadian Football League[]

Ferragamo played for the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League for one year, 1981. He was signed to a large contract by NFL and CFL standards ($400,000, compared to $300,000 the Rams offered him, and the $47,500 they had paid him for 1980.) However, Ferragamo had a difficult time adapting to Canadian football and Montreal went on to win only three games during the season against 13 losses. Ferragamo's last game in Canada was a loss to the Ottawa Rough Riders in the Eastern semi-final. Ferragamo did not even play in that game as it was backup QB Ken Johnson who started for the Alouettes. His stats during his one season in Montreal were 175 of 342 passes completed (51.2%) for 2175 yards, with 7 TD passes and a whopping 25 interceptions.

Return to NFL[]

On December 26, 1982, Ferragamo threw for 509 yards in a game against the Chicago Bears, at the time the second highest passing mark in league history behind former Ram Norm Van Brocklin. It was the third time in league history that a quarterback had passed for over 500 yards in a game, the first by Norm Van Brocklin (554 yards) and the second by Y.A. Tittle (505 yards). Subsequent to his return, Ferragamo led the Rams back to the NFL playoffs during the 1983 season behind the running of rookie Eric Dickerson. After beating the favored Cowboys in Irving in the wild card matchup 24-17, Ferragamo and the Rams were drubbed by the defending Super Bowl champion and Super Bowl-bound Washington Redskins by the score of 51-7.

He has been featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated twice, once in 1980 and again in 1981.

Present Day[]

Ferragamo currently owns a real estate business in southern California, and is about to launch a private label company, Ferragamo-Migneco Vineyards, featuring fine quality domestic and imported wines. He is also the chairman of the Vince Ferragamo Foundation (www.vffoundation.org) a charitable organization that focuses on raising donations for children's organizations such as the Special Olympics and the Ronald McDonald House. Template:Start box

References[]

  1. Conferences. Sports Illustrated (9 September 1974). Archived from the original on 4 August 2011. Retrieved on 29 April 2015.
  2. Hilburn, Chet. The Mystique of Tiger Stadium: 25 Greatest Games: The Ascension of LSU Football (Bloomington, Indiana: WestBow Press, 2012), p. 51

External links[]

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