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Dan Marino

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Full Name: Daniel Constantine Marino Primary Position: QB
Height/Weight: 6' 4"/216 College: University of Pittsburgh
Birthdate: September 15, 1961 High School: Central Catholic (Pittsburgh, PA)
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Pro Experience: 17 years
Hall of Fame
Rate this Player
4.30
(215 votes)

Contents

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 Early years
    • 1.2 Football career
    • 1.3 NFL records set by Dan Marino
    • 1.4 NFL records tied for
  • 2 Additional statistics
    • 2.1 Life after football
    • 2.2 Dan Marino Foundation
    • 2.3 Clock!! Clock!!
  • 3 Scouting Report
  • 4 Statistics
    • 4.1 Passing Stats
    • 4.2 Rushing Stats
    • 4.3 Fumble Recovery Stats
    • 4.4 Receiving Stats
  • 5 Trivia
  • 6 Video Gallery
  • 7 Picture Gallery
  • 8 See Also
  • 9 Awards
  • 10 Categories

[edit] Biography

Daniel Constantine Marino Jr. (born September 15, 1961) is an American football former quarterback who played for the Miami Dolphins in the National Football League. He holds or has held almost every meaningful NFL passing record, and despite never being on a Super Bowl-winning team, is widely recognized as one of the greatest quarterbacks in football history.

[edit] Early years

Marino was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania of Italian and Polish ancestry. He attended Pittsburgh Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he also starred in baseball, and won Parade All-American honors in football. He was drafted by the Kansas City Royals baseball team in the 1979 amateur draft, but decided to play college football instead.

[edit] Football career

After an excellent high school career, Marino played college ball at the University of Pittsburgh from the 1979 to 1982 seasons, leading the Panthers to a Sugar Bowl triumph over the Georgia Bulldogs in January 1982. The next season (his senior year) was considered a disappointment with regard to the pre-season Heisman Trophy and National Championship hype. His team lost the Cotton Bowl to SMU. Still his college career was impressive. In his final 2 seasons, Marino lead his team to a 22-2 record, and he led the nation in touchdown passes (34) as a junior. Marino left Pitt with 7,905 passing yards and 74 touchdown passes. In 2002, he was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

With the down season of his last year at Pitt and unsubstantiated rumors of drug abuse, Marino's selection status in the 1983 NFL draft plummeted. Five other quarterbacks, including Hall of Famers Jim Kelly and John Elway, had been taken before Don Shula and the Miami Dolphins grabbed Marino with the 27th pick overall.

Being drafted by the defending AFC Champions placed Marino in an ideal situation, where the strong armed rookie could succeed immediately. He posted a 96.0 passer rating that was a rookie record until broken by Ben Roethslisberger's 98.1 in 2004. He brought Miami the division title in 1983, and would also do so in 1984, 1985, 1992, and 1994. His Pro Bowl rookie year ended in disappointment, as the Dolphins were upset by the Seattle Seahawks in a rainy game full of Dolphin turnovers. Marino looked shaky in that game mostly due to a sprained knee he had suffered three weeks prior versus Houston, causing him to miss the last two regular season games. Those two games would be the last non-strike games he would miss until he tore his Achilles Tendon in 1993, a 145-game non-strike consecutive-game streak in all.

The following season would be Marino's best. He threw for 48 touchdown passes and 5,084 yards, both of which shattered previous records. Neither record would be touched until Peyton Manning topped the touchdown mark with 49 in 2004. He would go on to win the NFL Most Valuable Player award in 1984. The '84 Dolphins scored an NFL record 70 touchdowns and posted a 14-2 record. Marino had another 8 touchdown passes in the post-season, four of which came against his hometown Steelers in the AFC Championship Game. In Super Bowl XIX Marino and the Dolphins met Joe Montana and the 49ers. The Dolphins, who had 74 rush attempts in the previous two weeks, called only 8 handoffs, placing their chances squarely on Marino. Marino was above average, completing 29 of 50 passes for 318 yards and a touchdown. Unfortunately, two of his passes were intercepted deep in 49ers territory and he committed the game's lone fumble. The 38-16 loss would be Marino's only Super Bowl appearance; as was the case for most of his career a sparse running attack and average defense would cost the Dolphins. A Pepsi commercial released in the wake of the game had Montana and Marino talking next to a vending machine. Joe bought a Pepsi each for himself and Dan, then Dan says "Next year... I'm buying."

After the Super Bowl loss, Marino's Dolphins went 12-4. On December 2, 1985 Marino completed 14 of 27 passes for 270 yards and triumphed over the 12-0 Chicago Bears in the highest rated Monday Night Football telecast in history. He also brought the Dolphins back to the AFC Championship game the following year, losing in Miami to New England in another game in which wet conditions made the Dolphins turnover prone. New England intercepted Marino twice and recovered 4 fumbles en route to a 31-14 win over the Dolphins, their first win in the Orange Bowl (Miami's home stadium at the time) since 1966.

With Marino at the helm, the Dolphins were a perennial playoff contender, reaching the post-season in 10 of Marino's 17 seasons. In 1992 he made his final appearance in a Championship Game, losing against arch-rival Jim Kelly and the Buffalo Bills, 29-10. Kelly's Bills knocked Marino out of the playoffs three times between 1990 and 1995. Marino's final win was his first playoff road win, and his 37th comeback win, as the Dolphins defeated the Seattle Seahawks in January 2000, the final football game played in the Kingdome. In the next round, also on the road, Marino and the Dolphins were demolished in a 62-7 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. Before the 2000 season, Marino decided to retire, after being ungraciously pushed out of Miami by new coach Dave Wannstedt, a protege of Jimmy Johnson, and declining offers from Minnesota and his hometown of Pittsburgh.

During his professional career (1983-1999) in Miami he was one of the most skilled and revered quarterbacks in the game. He was known for having the quickest release in the sport, throwing dead-on 'bullets', and completing the most miraculous passes; often between defenders. Also, despite the fact that he was not known for his scrambling ability (he averaged less than 1 yard per carry on his 301 career rushing attempts), Marino possessed an uncanny awareness in the pocket, often sliding a step or two to avoid the pass rush. He has the second most fourth quarter comebacks (37) in the history of the NFL, and second most victories (147, John Elway is first in both categories). He was the 1994 NFL Comeback Player of the Year after having a Pro Bowl season when he returned from a season ending achilles tendon injury at Cleveland in 1993. He was selected to play in nine Pro Bowls (1983-87, 1991-92, 1994-95), seven times as a starter, but due to injuries he only played in two of the games (1984, 1992).

[edit] NFL records set by Dan Marino

  • Most Attempts, Career: 8,358
  • Most Completions, Career: 4,967
  • Most Yards Passing, Career: 61,361
  • Most Touchdown Passes, Career: 420
  • Most Passing Yards, Season: 5,084 in 1984
  • Most Games, 400 or more Yards Passing, Career: 13
  • Most Games, 400 or more Yards Passing, Season: 4 in 1984
  • Most Games, 300 or more Yards Passing, Career: 60
  • Most Seasons, 3,000 or more Yards Passing: 13 (1984-92, 1994-95, 1997-98)
  • Most Consecutive Seasons, 3,000 or more Yards Passing: 9 (1984-92)
  • Most Games, Four or more Touchdown Passes, Career: 21
  • Most Games, Four or more Touchdown Passes, Season: 6 in 1984
  • Most Consecutive Games, Four or more Touchdown Passes: 4 in 1984
  • Lowest Percentage, Passes Intercepted, Rookie Season: 2.03 in 1983 (296-6)
  • Most Seasons Leading League, Attempts: 5 (1984, 1986, 1988, 1992, 1997)
  • Most Seasons Leading League, Completions: 6 (1984-86, 1988, 1992, 1997)
  • Most Seasons, 40 or more Touchdown Passes: 2 (1984, 1986)
  • Most Seasons, 20 or more Touchdown Passes: 13 (1983-92, 1994-95, 1998)
  • Most Consecutive Seasons, 20 or more Touchdown Passes: 10 (1983-92)
  • 100 TD Passes in Fewest Amount of Games to Start Career: 44 (9/7/86 at San Diego)
  • 200 TD passes in Fewest Amount of Games to Start Career: 89 (9/17/89 at New England)
  • 300 TD passes in Fewest Amount of Games to Start Career: 157 (9/4/94 vs. New England)

[edit] NFL records tied for

  • Most Seasons Leading League, Yards Gained: 5 (1984-86, 1988, 1992) with Sonny Jurgensen (Philadelphia, 1961-62; Washington, 1966-67, 1969)
  • Most Consecutive Seasons Leading League, Completions: 3 (1984-86) with George Blanda (Houston, 1963-65)
  • Most Consecutive Games, 400 or more Yards Passing: 2 (1984) with Dan Fouts (San Diego, 1982) and Phil Simms (N.Y. Giants, 1985)
  • Most Seasons, 4000 or more Yards Passing: (1984-86, 1988, 1992, 1994) with Peyton Manning (Indianapolis, 1999-2004)

[edit] Additional statistics

Regular Season:

  • Named NFL Most Valuable Player (1984)
  • Played 242 games, starting 240 of them
  • Career completion percentage of 59.4%
  • Career passing efficiency rating is 86.4
  • Threw 252 interceptions in his career
  • First QB in NFL history to have six 4,000-yard seasons (1984-86, 1988, 1992, 1994)
  • Only QB in NFL history to pass for 5,000 or more yards in a single season (5,084 in 1984)
  • Led 37 fourth-quarter comeback victories, second only to John Elway.
  • Holds Dolphins team record for most seasons played, 17.
  • Had 116 wins under Don Shula – the most by a head coach - quarterback combination in NFL history.
  • Won the AFC Offensive Player of the Week honor 18 times in the regular season (and 20 times overall, including playoffs).
  • Started 240 Regular Season Games and Held a 147-93 record as a starter ( Second to John Elway's NFL Best 148-82-1 Regular Season Record )
  • Played in 18 Playoff Games and Held an 8-10 Record in the Playoffs
  • One of only six quarterbacks in NFL history that have achieved two consecutive (back-to-back) 30-touchdown passing seasons at least one time in their careers (the others are Steve Bartkowski, Brett Favre, Dan Fouts, Jeff Garcia, and Y. A. Tittle).

Playoffs:

  • Passed for 4,510 yards over career in playoff games
  • Threw at least one touchdown pass in 16 of his 18 playoff contests, throwing a TD pass in his first 13 postseason contests.

[edit] Life after football

On Sunday, September 17 2000, at halftime of the Dolphins-Baltimore Ravens game at Pro Player Stadium, Dan Marino’s jersey number, 13, was retired. The only other Dolphins jersey number retired at the time was 12, Bob Griese. Since then 39, Larry Csonka, has been retired as well. Marino joined the Dolphins Honor Roll the same day. In a year of accolades from the franchise he led so long and so well, the Dolphins also installed a life-size bronze statue of Marino at Pro Player Stadium (now Dolphin Stadium) and renamed Stadium Street, Dan Marino Boulevard.

In 2003, Marino was honored for his outstanding NCAA career at Pitt with an induction into the College Football Hall of Fame.

In early 2004, Dan Marino briefly returned to the Miami Dolphins as Senior Vice President of Football Operations, but resigned from the newly-created position only three weeks later, saying that the role was not in the best interest of either his family or the Dolphin organization.

Dan Marino was a first-ballot selection to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame on August 7 2005 and was introduced by his oldest son, Daniel. During his induction speech, Dan threw "one last pass" to former teammate Mark Clayton, who was sitting in the audience.

Presently, he lives with his wife, Claire, and six (four by birth, and two by adoption) children in Weston, Florida.

During the football season he is a commentator for both CBS's The NFL Today show and HBO's Inside the NFL.

He also acted in the 1994 comedy Ace Ventura: Pet Detective alongside Jim Carrey and Courteney Cox, as well as made a cameo appearance in the Adam Sandler film Little Nicky where he asks Satan for a Super Bowl ring. He even guest-starred as himself in The Simpsons episode Sunday, Cruddy Sunday (first aired January 31 1999). Marino also cameo's in Holy Man starring Eddie Murphy and Bad Boys II starring Will Smith. He also worked as a project consultant on Any Given Sunday, notice the similarities between himself and Dennis Quaid's character. The music world marked another appearance for Marino, when he featured in a video by Hootie and the Blowfish.

[edit] Dan Marino Foundation

The Dan Marino Foundation, was established in 1992 by Marino and his wife, Claire, after their son, Michael, was diagnosed with autism. The foundation has distributed over $7 million to research, services and treatment programs serving children with neurodevelopment disabilities. The Dan Marino Center, which opened in 1995 along with the Miami Children's Hospital, is an integrated neurodevelopmental center specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of children at risk for developmental and psychological problems. The center saw more than 48,000 children last year alone.

Marino has teamed with other celebrities to raise awareness about autistic spectrum disorders, including fellow NFL great Doug Flutie, whose son also has an autism diagnosis.

On November 7, 2005, the National Basketball Association's Miami Heat honored Marino's charitable works and recognized his service to South Florida with a halftime tribute, including a large donation to the Marino Foundation. Though a Heat jersey with his name and #13 was unveiled, this did not constitute retirement of his number by the Heat.[1]

[edit] Clock!! Clock!!

One of the most storied pieces of Marino folklore is The Clock Play, a classic piece of misdirection devised by Marino and backup QB Bernie Kosar. The date was November 27 1994. The Dolphins were playing the New York Jets at Giants Stadium, and weren't doing too well; in fact they were whitewashed the entire first half. In a classic game of two halves, however, Marino ran riot in the second half, bringing the score back to within three points of the Jets at 24-21 on the back of three touchdown passes to Mark Ingram. The game came down to a 1st and Goal situation, with 0:22 left in the final quarter. Marino approached the line of scrimmage, and shouted "Clock!! Clock!!", miming that he intended to spike the ball and stop the clock at the expense of a down. The Miami offensive line just stood there relaxed, instead of readying themselves for a play; the Jets' defense switched off, and did the same. The bait had been swallowed whole. Instead of spiking the ball, Marino took the snap and blasted a fourth touchdown pass to Ingram, who had breezed past the still-asleep Jets cornerback Aaron Glenn. Stitch on the extra point kick, and the result was 28-24 in favor of the Dolphins.


[edit] Scouting Report

[edit] Statistics

[edit] Passing Stats

year team league games ATT CMP PCT YDS YPA TD INT SKD SKY RAT
1983 MIA NFL 11 296 173 58.4 2210 7.47 20 6 10 80 96
1984 MIA NFL 16 564 362 64.2 5084 9.01 48 17 13 120 108.9
1985 MIA NFL 16 567 336 59.3 4137 7.3 30 21 18 157 84.1
1986 MIA NFL 16 623 378 60.7 4746 7.62 44 23 17 119 92.5
1987 MIA NFL 12 444 263 59.2 3245 7.31 26 13 9 77 89.2
1988 MIA NFL 16 606 354 58.4 4434 7.32 28 23 6 31 80.8
1989 MIA NFL 16 550 308 56 3997 7.27 24 22 10 86 76.9
1990 MIA NFL 16 531 306 57.6 3563 6.71 21 11 15 90 82.6
1991 MIA NFL 16 549 318 57.9 3970 7.23 25 13 27 182 85.8
1992 MIA NFL 16 554 330 59.6 4116 7.43 24 16 28 173 85.1
1993 MIA NFL 5 150 91 60.7 1218 8.12 8 3 7 42 95.9
1994 MIA NFL 16 615 385 62.6 4453 7.24 30 17 18 113 89.2
1995 MIA NFL 14 482 309 64.1 3668 7.61 24 15 22 153 90.8
1996 MIA NFL 13 373 221 59.2 2795 7.49 17 9 18 131 87.8
1997 MIA NFL 16 548 319 58.2 3780 6.9 16 11 21 142 80.7
1998 MIA NFL 16 537 310 57.7 3479 6.48 23 15 23 178 79.8
1999 MIA NFL 11 369 204 55.3 2448 6.63 12 17 9 66 67.4
17 year NFL career 242 8358 4967 59.4 61343 7.34 420 252 271 1940 86.4

[edit] Rushing Stats

year team league games ATT YDS AVG TD LNG
1983 MIA NFL 11 28 45 1.6 2 15
1984 MIA NFL 16 28 -7 -0.3 0 10
1985 MIA NFL 16 26 -24 -0.9 0 6
1986 MIA NFL 16 12 -3 -0.3 0 13
1987 MIA NFL 12 12 -5 -0.4 1 5t
1988 MIA NFL 16 20 -17 -0.9 0 6
1989 MIA NFL 16 14 -7 -0.5 2 2
1990 MIA NFL 16 16 29 1.8 0 15
1991 MIA NFL 16 27 32 1.2 1 11
1992 MIA NFL 16 20 66 3.3 0 12
1993 MIA NFL 5 9 -4 -0.4 1 4t
1994 MIA NFL 16 22 -6 -0.3 1 10
1995 MIA NFL 14 11 14 1.3 0 12
1996 MIA NFL 13 11 -3 -0.3 0 7
1997 MIA NFL 16 17 -14 -0.8 0 1
1998 MIA NFL 16 21 -3 -0.1 1 10
1999 MIA NFL 11 6 -6 -1 0 0
17 year NFL career 242 300 87 0.3 9 0

[edit] Fumble Recovery Stats

year team league games TOT OWR OPR YDS TD
1983 MIA NFL 11 5 2 0 0 0
1984 MIA NFL 16 6 2 0 -3 0
1985 MIA NFL 16 9 2 0 -4 0
1986 MIA NFL 16 8 4 0 -12 0
1987 MIA NFL 12 5 4 0 -25 0
1988 MIA NFL 16 10 7 1 -31 0
1989 MIA NFL 16 7 0 0 -4 0
1990 MIA NFL 16 3 2 0 0 0
1991 MIA NFL 16 6 3 0 -8 0
1992 MIA NFL 16 5 2 0 -12 0
1993 MIA NFL 5 4 2 0 -13 0
1994 MIA NFL 16 9 3 0 -4 0
1995 MIA NFL 14 7 3 0 -14 0
1996 MIA NFL 13 4 1 0 -3 0
1997 MIA NFL 16 8 3 0 -17 0
1998 MIA NFL 16 9 2 0 -9 0
1999 MIA NFL 11 5 0 0 0 0
17 year NFL career 242 110 42 1 -159 0

[edit] Receiving Stats

year team league games REC YDS AVG TD LNG
1983 MIA NFL 11 0 0 0 0 0
1984 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1985 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1986 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1987 MIA NFL 12 0 0 0 0 0
1988 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1989 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1990 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1991 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1992 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1993 MIA NFL 5 0 0 0 0 0
1994 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1995 MIA NFL 14 1 -6 -6 0 -6
1996 MIA NFL 13 0 0 0 0 0
1997 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1998 MIA NFL 16 0 0 0 0 0
1999 MIA NFL 11 0 0 0 0 0
17 year NFL career 242 1 -6 -6 0 0

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Video Gallery

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[edit] Picture Gallery

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[edit] See Also

[edit] Awards

  • Won the AP NFL MVP in 1984
  • Won the AP Offensive Player of the Year in 1984
  • Won the Bert Bell MVP Trophy (Maxwell Club) in 1984
  • Won the PFWA MVP in 1984
  • Won the UPI AFL-AFC Offensive MVP in 1984 and 1994
  • Won the NFL Comeback Player of the Year in 1994

[edit] Categories

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Dan_Marino"

This page was last modified 21:02, 21 March 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

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