Quarterback, New York Giants
Age: 36 (Oct. 24)
15th
season in pro football, 13th in NFL and 2nd with Giants
College: LSU
Height: 6’0” Weight: 195
Prelude:
While drafted
by the NFL’s Detroit Lions in 1948, Tittle instead signed with the Baltimore
Colts of the AAFC. He had an immediate impact, leading the league in yards per
attempt (8.7) and throwing for 16 TDs against 9 interceptions. After another
year in the AAFC, Tittle and the Colts joined the NFL in 1950, and he led the
league in pass completions (161) although the team went a dismal 1-11 and
folded. Picked up by the 49ers in ’51, he gradually took over from Frankie
Albert as the starting quarterback and was selected to the Pro Bowl following
the 1953, ’54, and ‘57 seasons. In 1957 the 49ers tied for first in the Western
Conference and Tittle also received MVP consideration. He suffered through an
injury-plagued season in 1958 and, and while he bounced back with a Pro Bowl
year in ’59, by ’60 found himself in competition with the up-and-coming John
Brodie. With Head Coach Red Hickey committing to a shotgun offense for 1961,
Tittle was dealt to the New York Giants in the preseason and revived his career
as he threw for 2272 yards and 17 TDs. The Giants topped the Eastern Conference
and Tittle was selected for the Pro Bowl and received MVP recognition from the
Newspaper Enterprise Association.
1962 Season Summary
Appeared in all
14 games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]
Passing
Attempts – 375
[3]
Most
attempts, game – 42 vs. Dallas 12/16
Completions –
200 [3]
Most
completions, game – 27 vs. Washington 10/28
Yards – 3224 [2]
Most yards,
game – 505 vs. Washington 10/28
Completion
percentage – 53.3 [9]
Yards per
attempt – 8.6 [3, tied with Bart Starr]
TD passes – 33
[1]
Most TD
passes, game – 7 vs. Washington 10/28
Interceptions
– 20 [6, tied with Charley Johnson & Milt Plum]
Most
interceptions, game – 3 at Cleveland 9/16, vs. Philadelphia 11/18
Passer rating
– 89.5 [3]
500-yard
passing games – 1
300-yard
passing games – 4
200-yard
passing games – 7
Rushing
Attempts – 17
Most
attempts, game – 3 (for -9 yds.) at Pittsburgh 9/30
Yards – 108
Most yards,
game – 21 (on 1 att.) at St. Louis 10/7, (on 2 att.) vs. St. Louis 11/4
Yards per
attempt – 6.4
TDs – 2
Points
TDs - 2
Points – 12
Postseason: 1
G (NFL Championship vs. Green Bay)
Pass attempts
– 41
Pass
completions – 18
Passing yards
– 197
TD passes – 0
Interceptions
– 1
Awards & Honors:
NFL MVP: UPI,
Sporting News
1st
team All-NFL: AP, UPI, NEA
1st
team All-Eastern Conference: Sporting News
Pro Bowl
Giants went 12-2
to finish first in the Eastern Conference while leading the NFL in total yards
(5005). Lost NFL Championship to Green Bay Packers (16-7).
Aftermath:
Tittle
continued his success in 1963, breaking his own record for TD passes with 36,
leading the league in passing, and receiving MVP, All-Pro, and Pro Bowl
recognition once more. The Giants won the Eastern Conference for the third
straight time, but still came up short in the title game against the Bears. The
team collapsed in 1964, Tittle’s last season. He retired as NFL career leader
in pass attempts (3817), completions (2118), and yards (28,339). The Giants
retired his #14, and Tittle was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame,
Class of 1971.
--
MVP Profiles feature players who were named MVP or
Player of the Year in the NFL, AAFC (1946-49), AFL (1960-69), WFL (1974), or
USFL (1983-85) by a recognized organization (Associated Press, Pro Football
Writers Association, Newspaper Enterprise Association, United Press
International, The Sporting News, Maxwell Club – Bert Bell Award, or the league
itself).
To bad Y.A. Tittle never won a Championship. If there was ever a Quarterback out there that deserved at least One Championship, it is Y.A. Tittle.
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