Condredge Holloway |
|
| Position | Quarterback |
|---|
|
| Born | (1954-01-24) January 24, 1954 Huntsville, Alabama, U.S. |
|---|
|
| High school | Lee (Huntsville, Alabama) |
|---|
| College | University of Tennessee |
|---|
| NFL draft | 1975: 12th round, 306 (By the New England Patriots)th overall pick |
|---|
|
| 1975–1980 | Ottawa Rough Riders |
|---|
| 1981–1986 | Toronto Argonauts |
|---|
| 1987 | BC Lions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
- 2× Grey Cup champion (1976, 1983)
- Most Outstanding Player (1982)
- Jeff Russel Memorial Trophy (1982)
- CFL All-Star (1982)
- 3× CFL East All-Star (1978, 1982, 1983)
- First-team All-SEC (1973)
- Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame
|
|
|
|---|
|
| Games played | 181 |
|---|
| 1,710–3,013 |
|---|
| Completion % | 56.8 |
|---|
| Passing yards | 25,193 |
|---|
| TD–INT | 155–94 |
|---|
| Passer rating | 88.4 |
|---|
|
|
Condredge Holloway Jr. (born January 25, 1954) is an American former quarterback for the University of Tennessee and later in the Canadian Football League (CFL). Holloway was one of the first African-American quarterbacks to receive national exposure. His nickname at Tennessee was the "Artful Dodger".[1]
Early life and college
Holloway was born to Condredge Holloway Sr., and Dorothy Holloway. Condredge's grandfather on his father's side was born a slave, but was emancipated as a child in 1865. Dorothy was hired to work at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville in 1962.[1]
Holloway starred as a high school baseball player at Lee High School in Huntsville, where he was named to the ABCA High School All-America Baseball Team.[2] He was selected as a shortstop by the Montreal Expos in the 1971 Major League Baseball draft.[3] Holloway was Montreal's first pick, and he was the fourth player selected overall.[4] However, Holloway's mother, insisting her son attend college, refused to sign the contract (Condredge was 17, too young to sign a contract under Alabama law) and instead he went to Tennessee. In so doing Holloway became the first African-American to start at the quarterback position in a Southeastern Conference school.[5] In addition to being the first black quarterback at Tennessee and in the Southeastern Conference, Holloway also was the first black baseball player in Tennessee history. The outstanding prospect bypassed a baseball career, and Holloway opted instead for a two-sport collegiate career and went on to excel on the diamond. He garnered All-SEC and All-America honors as a shortstop in 1975 and finished with a .353 career batting average. Holloway — still the owner of Tennessee's longest hitting streak at 27 games — was selected to Tennessee's All-Century Baseball Team, making him the only Tennessee student-athlete named to all-century squads in both baseball and football.
In his three seasons (1972–74) as a starter, Holloway directed the Vols to the 1972 Astro-Bluebonnet, 1973 Gator, and 1974 Liberty Bowls and an overall record of 25–9–2. He ended his career with the best interception-to-attempt ratio in Tennessee history, throwing just 12 interceptions in 407 collegiate attempts. During his three seasons, he completed 238 of 407 passes for 3,102 yards and 18 touchdowns, and rushed 351 times for 966 yards and nine touchdowns.[6]
After leading the Volunteers to three bowl game appearances from 1972–74, Holloway was drafted by the NFL in 1975—but only in the twelfth round, as a defensive back, by the New England Patriots (few pro teams had African-American quarterbacks at that time). Instead, Holloway went to the Canadian Football League, playing for the Ottawa Rough Riders starting in 1975.[7] Later, he moved to the Toronto Argonauts, capturing the CFL's Most Outstanding Player award in 1982 and guiding the Argos to a Grey Cup championship the following season—Toronto's first title in 31 years. Holloway finished his career with the BC Lions and was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1999.[8]
Currently, Holloway is the assistant athletic director at the University of Tennessee.[9] Holloway is a co-owner of D1 Sports Training in Huntsville, Alabama.
In 1996, he was part of the SEC Football Legends, representing Tennessee.
In 2010, he was selected to the 1970s all-decade team of Madison County, Alabama, high school basketball players by The Huntsville Times.[10]
On February 20, 2011, ESPN Films released The Color Orange: The Condredge Holloway Story. It was produced and narrated by country music star Kenny Chesney.
References
- ^ a b Fuchs, Cynthia. "The Color Orange: The Condredge Holloway Story." www.popmatters.com, February 21, 2011. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
- ^ "1971 ABCA/Rawlings High School All-America Teams". www.abca.org. American Baseball Coaches Association. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
- ^ "1971 Baseball Draft by Baseball Almanac". Baseball Almanac. May 1, 1967. Retrieved December 4, 2024.
- ^ "The Real South: Famous People". AL.com. Archived from the original on May 4, 2008.
- ^ "Condredge Holloway - Football". University of Tennessee Athletics. Retrieved July 13, 2025.
- ^ Career Football Statistics Archived October 31, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, UTSports.com. Retrieved: June 26, 2014.
- ^ Drake, Stephen (2009). Weird Facts about Canadian Football: Strange, Wacky and Hilarious Stories. Montreal: Editions de la Montagne Verte. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-897277-263.
- ^ "Condredge Holloway". Hamilton, Ontario: The Canadian Football Hall of Fame. 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
- ^ "Turn Back Time – Part 2". Toronto Argonauts Football Club. July 25, 2006.
- ^ Bryant, Bill (November 28, 2010). "All-Decade Basketball Teams: 1970s expert picks". The Huntsville Times. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
Tennessee Volunteers starting quarterbacks |
|---|
- Howard Ijams (1891–1893)
- D. C. Chapman (1896)
- Strang Nicklin (1897)
- C. L. Bryan (1899)
- J. G. Logan (1900)
- Sax Crawford (1901–1902)
- T. R. Watkins (1903–1904)
- Walker Leach (1905)
- J. C. Loucks (1906–1908)
- Chauncey Raulston (1909)
- Rufus Branch (1909–1912)
- Red Rainey (1913)
- Bill May (1914–1915)
- Buck Hatcher (1916)
- Willis McCabe (1919)
- Joe Evans (1920)
- Roe Campbell (1921–1924)
- Jimmie Smith (1922)
- Billy Harkness (1924–1926)
- Jimmy Elmore (1927)
- D. Vincent Tudor (1927–1929)
- Roy Witt (1928)
- Bobby Dodd (1928–1930)
- Deke Brackett (1931–1932)
- Beattie Feathers (1933)
- Charles Vaughan (1934)
- Phil Dickens (1935–1936)
- Walter Wood (1937)
- George Cafego (1938–1939)
- Van Thompson (1940)
- Johnny Butler (1941)
- Jim Gaffney (1943)
- Buzz Warren (1943–1944)
- Walter Slater (1946)
- Orvis Milner (1947)
- Jack Armstrong (1948)
- Jimmy Hill (1949–1950)
- Jimmy Hahn (1950–1951)
- Bill Blackstock (1951)
- Hal Hubbard (1952)
- Bill Barbish (1953)
- Jimmy Beutel (1954–1955)
- Johnny Majors (1956)
- Bobby Gordon (1957)
- Billy Majors (1958–1960)
- Glenn Glass (1960–1961)
- Mallon Faircloth (1961–1963)
- Art Galiffa (1964–1966)
- Charlie Fulton (1965)
- Dewey Warren (1967)
- Bubba Wyche (1968)
- Bobby Scott (1969–1970)
- Condredge Holloway (1973–1974)
- Randy Wallace (1975–1976)
- Pat Ryan (1977)
- Jimmy Streater (1978–1979)
- Steve Alatorre (1980–1981)
- Alan Cockrell (1981–1983)
- Tony Robinson (1984–1985)
- Jeff Francis (1987–1988)
- Sterling Henton (1989)
- Andy Kelly (1989–1991)
- Heath Shuler (1992–1993)
- Jerry Colquitt (1994)
- Todd Helton (1994)
- Peyton Manning (1994–1997)
- Tee Martin (1998–1999)
- A. J. Suggs (2000)
- Casey Clausen (2000–2003)
- C.J. Leak (2002)
- James Banks (2002)
- Brent Schaeffer (2004)
- Rick Clausen (2004–2005)
- Erik Ainge (2004–2007)
- Jonathan Crompton (2006, 2008–2009)
- Nick Stephens (2008)
- Matt Simms (2010–2011)
- Tyler Bray (2010–2012)
- Justin Worley (2013–2014)
- Nathan Peterman (2013–2014)
- Joshua Dobbs (2013–2016)
- Quinten Dormady (2017)
- Jarrett Guarantano (2017–2020)
- Will McBride (2017)
- Brian Maurer (2019)
- J. T. Shrout (2019)
- Harrison Bailey (2020)
- Joe Milton (2021–2023)
- Hendon Hooker (2021–2022)
- Nico Iamaleava (2023–2024)
- Joey Aguilar (2025)
|
Ottawa Rough Riders 64th Grey Cup champions |
|---|
- Dick Adams
- Marv Allemang
- Jeff Avery
- Charlie Brandon
- Al Brenner
- Larry Cameron
- Tom Clements
- Merl Code
- Joe Colvey
- Jim Coode
- Peter Crepin
- Doug Falconer
- Mike Fanucci
- Jim Foley
- Tony Gabriel
- Steve Gelley
- Brian Gervais
- Dale Getty
- Art Green
- Bill Hatanaka
- Brian Hedges
- Condredge Holloway
- Moody Jackson
- Mark Kosmos
- Gary Kuzyk
- Molly McGee
- Joe Miller
- Wonder Monds
- Ken Moore
- Paul Moses
- Gerry Organ
- John Palazeti
- Jim Piaskoski
- Mike Raines
- Bill Robinson
- Tom Schuette
- Rudy Sims
- Donn Smith
- Peter Stenerson
- Wayne Tosh
- Jeff Turcotte
- Tuufuli Uperesa
- Rod Woodward
- Head coach: George Brancato
|
Toronto Argonauts 71st Grey Cup champions |
|---|
- Steve Ackroyd
- Joe Adams
- Tony Antunovic
- Joe Barnes
- Ian Beckstead
- Carl Brazley
- Bob Bronk
- Jan Carinci
- Stephen Del Col
- James Curry
- Gordon Elser
- Dan Ferrone
- Marcellus Greene
- Terry Greer
- Michael Hameluck
- Condredge Holloway
- Greg Holmes
- Hank Ilesic
- Franklin King
- Tony Lawson
- John Malinosky
- Ken McEachern
- Cedric Minter
- William Mitchell
- Don Moen
- Rick Mohr
- Darrell Nicholson
- Bill Norton
- John Palazeti
- Leroy Paul
- Paul Pearson
- Kelvin Pruenster
- Emanuel Tolbert
- Geoff Townsend
- Tom Trifaux
- Darrell Wilson
- Earl Wilson
- Head coach: Bob O'Billovich
- Assistant coaches: Joe Moss
|
|
|---|
- Will Bartholomew
- Shawn Bryson
- Chad Clifton
- Cosey Coleman
- Jeremaine Copeland
- Phil Crosby
- Shaun Ellis
- Dwayne Goodrich
- Deon Grant
- Jeff Hall
- John Henderson
- Travis Henry
- Bernard Jackson
- Jamal Lewis
- Andre Lott
- David Martin
- Rashad Moore
- Tee Martin
- Will Overstreet
- Eric Parker
- Peerless Price
- Leonard Scott
- Travis Stephens
- Dominique Stevenson
- Corey Terry
- Raynoch Thompson
- Darwin Walker
- Fred Weary
- Eric Westmoreland
- Keyon Whiteside
- Al Wilson
- Cedrick Wilson
- Head coach: Phillip Fulmer
- Assistant coaches: Mike Barry
- Dan Brooks
- John Chavis
- David Cutcliffe
- Ryan Held
- Condredge Holloway
- Kevin Ramsey
- Kurt Roper
- Randy Sanders
|
Ottawa Rough Riders starting quarterbacks |
|---|
- Gordon
- O'Malley
- Root
- Grambling
- Scarbath
- Bailey
- Ledyard
- Dimitroff
- Jackson
- Tripucka
- Parilli
- Lancaster
- Wood
- Cassata
- Keeling
- Clements
- Holloway
- J. Jones
- Case
- Weatherbie
- Watts
- Starkey
- Calcagni
- Isaac
- McJunkins
- Adams
- Marler
- Quarles
- Dillon
- Burgess
- Renfroe
- Paopao
- Taylor
- Wickersham
- Schlichter
- Dewalt
- Allen
- Kimbrough
- Hobart
- T. Jones
- Barrett
- Fleetwood
- Garza
- Macias
- Ware
- Moore
- Archer
- Taylor
|
Toronto Argonauts starting quarterbacks |
|---|
- Mullen
- Stukus
- Krol
- Dekdebrun
- Wirkowski
- Galiffa
- Dublinski
- Knox
- Rote
- Stephens
- Liske
- Day
- Gabler
- Wilkinson
- Jonas
- Theismann
- Rae
- Bill Bynum
- Ealey
- Adams
- M. Jackson
- Holloway
- Barnes
- Casale
- Hohensee
- Turner
- Watts
- Barrett
- Congemi
- Renfroe
- Foggie
- Dunigan
- Porras
- Kerrigan
- Ham
- Slack
- White
- Graves
- Austin
- Flutie
- K. Bell
- Barker
- Kemp
- Sampson
- S. Jackson
- Bishop
- Ballard
- Allen
- Brady
- Wynn
- McMahon
- Butler
- Joseph
- Pickett
- Reaves
- Lemon
- D. Bell
- Jyles
- Ray
- J. Jackson
- Collaros
- Harris
- Kilgore
- LeFevour
- Willy
- Mathews
- Franklin
- Bethel-Thompson
- Prukop
- Arbuckle
- Pipkin
- Kelly
- Dukes
- Doege
|
Canadian Football League Most Outstanding Player Award |
|---|
- 1953: Vessels
- 1954: Etcheverry
- 1955: Abbruzzi
- 1956: Patterson
- 1957: Parker
- 1958: Parker
- 1959: Bright
- 1960: Parker
- 1961: Faloney
- 1962: Dixon
- 1963: Jackson
- 1964: Coleman
- 1965: Reed
- 1966: Jackson
- 1967: Liske
- 1968: Symons
- 1969: Jackson
- 1970: Lancaster
- 1971: Jonas
- 1972: Henley
- 1973: McGowan
- 1974: Wilkinson
- 1975: Burden
- 1976: Lancaster
- 1977: Edwards
- 1978: Gabriel
- 1979: Green
- 1980: Brock
- 1981: Brock
- 1982: Holloway
- 1983: Moon
- 1984: Reaves
- 1985: Fernandez
- 1986: Murphy
- 1987: Clements
- 1988: Williams
- 1989: Ham
- 1990: Clemons
- 1991: Flutie
- 1992: Flutie
- 1993: Flutie
- 1994: Flutie
- 1995: Pringle
- 1996: Flutie
- 1997: Flutie
- 1998: Pringle
- 1999: McManus
- 2000: Dickenson
- 2001: Jones
- 2002: Stegall
- 2003: Calvillo
- 2004: Printers
- 2005: Allen
- 2006: Simon
- 2007: Joseph
- 2008: Calvillo
- 2009: Calvillo
- 2010: Burris
- 2011: Lulay
- 2012: Owens
- 2013: Cornish
- 2014: Elimimian
- 2015: Burris
- 2016: Mitchell
- 2017: Reilly
- 2018: Mitchell
- 2019: Banks
- 2021: Collaros
- 2022: Collaros
- 2023: Kelly
- 2024: Oliveira
- 2025: Rourke
|
Most Outstanding Player Award in the CFL Eastern Conference/East Division |
|---|
- 1957: Patterson
- 1958: Shatto
- 1959: Faloney
- 1960: Gilchrist
- 1961: Faloney
- 1962: Dixon
- 1963: R. Jackson
- 1964: Shatto
- 1965: Henley
- 1966: R. Jackson
- 1967: Coffey
- 1968: Symons
- 1969: R. Jackson
- 1970: Coffey
- 1971: McQuay
- 1972: Henley
- 1973: Harvey
- 1974: Rodgers
- 1975: Rodgers
- 1976: Edwards
- 1977: Edwards
- 1978: Gabriel
- 1979: Green
- 1980: Dattilio
- 1981: Clements
- 1982: Holloway
- 1983: Greer
- 1984: Crawford
- 1985: Hobart
- 1986: Hood
- 1987: Clements
- 1988: Winfield
- 1989: Champion
- 1990: Clemons
- 1991: Mimbs
- 1992: Snipes
- 1993: Dunigan
- 1994: Pringle
- 1995: Pringle
- 1996: Flutie
- 1997: Flutie
- 1998: Pringle
- 1999: McManus
- 2000: Pringle
- 2001: Jones
- 2002: Calvillo
- 2003: Calvillo
- 2004: Calvillo
- 2005: Allen
- 2006: Roberts
- 2007: Glenn
- 2008: Calvillo
- 2009: Calvillo
- 2010: Calvillo
- 2011: Calvillo
- 2012: Owens
- 2013: Ray
- 2014: Ray
- 2015: Burris
- 2016: E. Jackson
- 2017: Ray
- 2018: Masoli
- 2019: Banks
- 2021: Stanback
- 2022: Lewis
- 2023: Kelly
- 2024: Mitchell
- 2025: Mitchell
|
New England Patriots 1975 NFL draft selections |
|---|
- Russ Francis
- Rod Shoate
- Pete Cusick
- Allen Carter
- Steve Burks
- Steve Grogan
- Steve Freeman
- Lawrence Williams
- Rene Garnett
- Matt Kendon
- Condredge Holloway
- Joe Harvey
- Tom Gossom
- Don Clayton
- Kerry Marbury
- Myke Horton
|
|
|---|
- 1968: None
- 1969: Moore
- 1970: Foote
- 1971: Holloway
- 1972: Goodman
- 1973: Roenicke
- 1974: Sorey
- 1975: Miles
- 1976: James
- 1977: Gullickson
- 1978: Franklin
- 1979: Wallach
- 1980: Francona
- 1981: Dilks
- 1982: None
- 1983: Stoll, Holman
- 1984: Caffrey, Charlton
- 1985: Incaviglia
- 1986: Dean
- 1987: DeShields, Kingwood
- 1988: Wainhouse
- 1989: Johnson
- 1990: Andrews, R. White, G. White, Spencer, Van Ryn, Robertson
- 1991: Floyd
- 1992: Wallace
- 1993: Schwab, Estrada
- 1994: Bocachica, Thurman
- 1995: Barrett
- 1996: Patterson
- 1997: Bridges, Stowe, Hodges, Hebson, Pittman, Tucker, Arthurs, Myers
- 1998: McKinley, Wilkerson
- 1999: Girdley
- 2000: Wayne
- 2001: Karp
- 2002: Everts
- 2003: Cordero
- 2004: Bray
- 2005: Zimmerman
- 2006: Marrero, Willems
- 2007: Detwiler, Smoker, Burgess
- 2008: Crow
- 2009: Strasburg, Storen
- 2010: Harper
- 2011: Rendon, Meyer, Goodwin
- 2012: Giolito
- 2013: None
- 2014: Fedde
- 2015: None
- 2016: Kieboom, Dunning
- 2017: Romero
- 2018: Denaburg
- 2019: Rutledge
- 2020: Cavalli
- 2021: House
- 2022: Green
- 2023: Crews
- 2024: King
- 2025: Willits
|
|
|---|
| Players | |
|---|
| Builders |
- Ackles
- Anselmo
- Back
- R. Bailey
- Ballard
- Barker
- Berger
- Braley
- Brook
- D. W. Brown
- Buono
- H. Campbell
- Chipman
- Clair
- Connellan
- Cooper
- Cosentino
- Coulter
- Crighton
- A. Currie
- G. Currie
- Custis
- Davies
- DeGruchy
- Dojack
- Duggan
- DuMoulin
- Dussault
- Evans
- Forster
- Foulds
- Fracas
- Fulton
- Gaudaur
- Gibson
- Grant
- Grey
- Griffith
- Halter
- Hannibal
- Haylor
- Hayman
- Henick
- Hopson
- Hufnagel
- Bi. Hughes
- Ireland
- Jauch
- G. Johnson
- Keys
- Kimball
- Knight
- Kramer
- Laverty
- Levy
- Lieberman
- Loney
- Matthews
- McBrien
- McCaffrey
- D. McCann
- McCrystal
- McDonald
- McNaughton
- McPherson
- Mitchell
- Metras
- Montgomery
- T. Morris
- C. Murphy
- Newton
- O'Billovich
- Pistilli
- Preston
- Reda
- A. Ritchie
- D. Ritchie
- Rodden
- Ryan
- Sazio
- Schwartz
- Shaughnessy
- Shepherd
- Shivers
- Shouldice
- J. Simpson
- F. Smith
- L. Smith
- Slocomb
- Spencer
- Spring
- Stukus
- P. Taylor
- Tindall
- Towriss
- Uteck
- Warner
- Warwick
- Wetenhall
- S. Wilson
|
|---|
| Media | |
|---|