American football player (born 1955)
American football player
Cliff Stoudt
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Position:
| Quarterback
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Born:
| (
1955-03-27
)
March 27, 1955
(age 69)
Oberlin, Ohio
, U.S.
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Height:
| 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
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Weight:
| 215 lb (98 kg)
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High school:
| Oberlin
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College:
| Youngstown State
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NFL draft:
| 1977
/ Round: 5 / Pick: 121
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Games played:
| 66
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TD
-
INT
:
| 23-43
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Passing yards:
| 4,503
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Pass attempts:
| 684
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Pass completions:
| 359
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Player stats at
PFR
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Clifford Lewis Stoudt
(born March 27, 1955) is an American former professional
football
player who was a
quarterback
in the
National Football League
(NFL) for the
Pittsburgh Steelers
,
St. Louis/Phoenix Cardinals
,
Miami Dolphins
and
Dallas Cowboys
. He also was a member of the
Birmingham Stallions
of the
United States Football League
(USFL). Stoudt played
college football
for the
Youngstown State Penguins
. He was selected in the fifth round of the
1977 NFL draft
by the Steelers.
Early life
[
edit
]
Stoudt attended
Oberlin High School
, where he played
quarterback
. He also was one of the state's top prep golfers.
Stoudt accepted a football scholarship from
Youngstown State University
, where he became a four-year starter. As a sophomore, he led the
Penguins
to an 8?1 regular season record and the school's first appearance at the NCAA Division II playoffs, where they lost against the
University of Delaware
.
As a junior, he posted 1,022 passing yards and 406 rushing yards. As a senior, he started all 10 games, passing for 1,259 yards and 5 touchdowns, while also rushing for 307 yards and 7 touchdowns.
He finished his college career with 303 completions out of 637 attempts for 4,387 yards (second in school history), 5,459 total yards (second in school history) and 16 touchdowns.
In 1987, he was inducted into the YSU Athletics Hall of Fame.
[1]
Professional career
[
edit
]
Pittsburgh Steelers
[
edit
]
Stoudt was selected by the
Pittsburgh Steelers
in the fifth round (121st overall) of the
1977 NFL draft
. Stoudt was the third-string quarterback to
Terry Bradshaw
from 1977 to 1979. At the time he set an NFL record, after spending the first 56 games of his career as an active roster member without appearing in an official game.
In 1980, he became Bradshaw's backup. His first career start came against the
Cleveland Browns
.
In 1983, he took over as the starter during Bradshaw's injury-plagued final season in 1983. He led the Steelers to a 9?2 start, but the team melted down late in the season. Steeler fans, accustomed to Bradshaw's late game heroics, turned viciously on Stoudt. The Steelers won the AFC Central with a 10?6 record and stumbled into the playoffs, but were quickly dispatched by the
Los Angeles Raiders
.
Birmingham Stallions
[
edit
]
In 1984, Stoudt left the NFL and signed with the
Birmingham Stallions
of the
United States Football League
. The third game of the season was the home opener for the
Pittsburgh Maulers
on March 11 at
Three Rivers Stadium
, Stoudt was heckled and pelted with snowballs by fans who remembered his lackluster performance of a year earlier. It would turn out to be the only sellout in the one season history of the Maulers.
[2]
Stoudt started every game, registering 3,121 passing yards, 26 passing touchdown, 400 rushing yards, 9 rushing touchdowns and 7 interceptions, while leading the team to a division championship and ranking No. 2 overall in quarterback rating (behind
Jim Kelly
).
In 1985, he had 3,358 passing yards, 34 passing touchdowns, 437 rushing yards, 5 rushing touchdowns and 19 interceptions, repeating as division champion and the No. 2 overall quarterback rating. He led the Stallions to a two-year record of 27-9 (no other team won more games), while passing for 6,479 yards, 60 touchdowns and 26 interceptions. He was a Second Team selection to the 1985 All-USFL team.
In 1986, the league ceased operations after losing most of its claims in an antitrust suit against the
National Football League
, with its top talent absorbed by the NFL in a dispersal draft conducted in the aftermath.
St. Louis / Phoenix Cardinals
[
edit
]
Because the
Pittsburgh Steelers
still owned the rights to Stoudt, on September 1, 1986, he was traded to the
St. Louis Cardinals
in exchange for a conditional draft choice (fifth round #121-
Darin Jordan
). He served as
Neil Lomax
's backup and was also the team holder on kicks. He had two starts each in 1986 and 1988. In 1989, Stoudt asked for his release after the team acquired free agent
Gary Hogeboom
. He was cut in March 1989.
Miami Dolphins
[
edit
]
On April 14, 1989, he was signed as a
free agent
by the
Miami Dolphins
. Although he performed well during most of training camp, he was released on September 3, after he had two interceptions returned for touchdowns in the Dolphins' 20-10 preseason loss against the
Philadelphia Eagles
and
Scott Secules
was promoted as the backup to
Dan Marino
. On September 7, he was re-signed when Marino suffered a right bruised elbow on his throwing arm. He appeared in 3 games and didn't attempt a pass. He was cut on August 28, 1990.
Dallas Cowboys
[
edit
]
On December 24, 1990, he was signed by the
Dallas Cowboys
, to be an emergency back-up quarterback to
Babe Laufenberg
for the season's final game against the
Atlanta Falcons
, after
Troy Aikman
suffered a right shoulder injury in Week 15.
In 1991, he went into
training camp
with Aikman, Laufenberg, and fourth-round draft choice
Bill Musgrave
at quarterback. On August 25, the Cowboys traded for
Steve Beuerlein
to improve the backup position and released Stoudt the next day, opting to keep just 2 quarterbacks.
Career statistics
[
edit
]
NFL statistics
[
edit
]
Year
|
Team
|
GP
|
Passing
|
Cmp
|
Att
|
Pct
|
Yds
|
Avg
|
TD
|
Int
|
Rtg
|
1980
|
PIT
|
6
|
32
|
60
|
53.3
|
493
|
8.2
|
2
|
2
|
78.0
|
1981
|
PIT
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
33.3
|
17
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5.7
|
0
|
0
|
53.5
|
1982
|
PIT
|
6
|
14
|
35
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40.0
|
154
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4.4
|
0
|
5
|
14.2
|
1983
|
PIT
|
16
|
197
|
381
|
51.7
|
2,553
|
6.7
|
12
|
21
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60.5
|
Career
|
30
|
244
|
479
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50.9
|
3,217
|
6.7
|
14
|
28
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58.0
|
USFL statistics
[
edit
]
Personal life
[
edit
]
He lives in Greenville, South Carolina. His son,
Cole
, is a former quarterback at
Clemson
and currently the quarterbacks coach at
Morehead State
.
[3]
Another son, Zack, played quarterback at
Ole Miss
.
[4]
References
[
edit
]
Preceded by
Bob Lane
|
Birmingham Stallions Starting quarterbacks
1985
|
Succeeded by
none
|
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- Bob Gibson
(1946?1949)
- Ron Jaworski
(1969?1972)
- Cliff Stoudt
(1973?1976)
- Trenton Lykes (1984?1987)
- Ray Isaac
(1988?1991)
- Mark Brungard (1992?1995)
- Jeff Ryan (1998?2001)
- Tom Zetts (2003?2007)
- Paul Corsaro
(2008)
- Kurt Hess (2010?2013)
- Nathan Mays (2019)
- Mark Waid (2020)
- Demeatric Crenshaw (2021?2022)
- Mitch Davidson (2023)
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Formerly the
Pittsburgh Pirates
(1933?1939)
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