Rob Hertel|
| Position | Quarterback |
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| Born | (1955-02-21) February 21, 1955 Montebello, California, U.S. |
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| Height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) |
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| Weight | 195 lb (88 kg) |
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| High school | Hacienda Heights (CA) Los Altos |
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| College | USC |
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| NFL draft | 1978: 5th round, 131st overall pick |
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- Cincinnati Bengals (1978)
- Philadelphia Eagles (1980)
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| TD–INT | 0–0 |
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| Passing yards | 9 |
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| Passer rating | 39.6 |
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| Stats at Pro Football Reference |
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Robert Alden Hertel (born February 21, 1955) is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the USC Trojans from 1973 to 1977 and was a member of 1974 national championship team. Hertel was named MVP of the 1977 Astro Bluebonnet Bowl, going 11-15 for 254 yards and 4 touchdowns. He was selected by the Cincinnati Bengals in the fifth round of the 1978 NFL draft. Hertel also played for the Philadelphia Eagles, and was a member of their 1980 Super Bowl XV team.
He also played baseball at USC and was a member of their 1974 National Championship team. Hertel had a career batting average of .312 as a three year starting infielder. He was drafted by MLB teams numerous times, including a first round pick by the Toronto Blue Jays in January 1978, and second round by the San Diego Padres in May 1978.[1]
References
USC Trojans starting quarterbacks |
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- Harold Galloway (1923)
- Chet Dolley (1923)
- John Hawkins (1924)
- Mort Kaer (1924–1926)
- Howard Elliott (1925)
- Morley Drury (1924–1927)
- Don Williams (1928)
- Marshall Duffield (1930)
- Orville Mohler (1931–1932)
- Cotton Warburton (1933)
- Davie Davis (1936)
- Ambrose Schindler (1936–1937, 1939)
- Grenny Lansdell (1937–1939)
- Bob Peoples (1940)
- Bobby Robertson (1939–1941)
- Bob Musick (1944)
- Ainslie Bell (1944)
- Jim Hardy (1942–1944)
- Jack Musick (1944–1946)
- George Murphy (1948)
- Dean Dill (1948)
- Jim Powers (1948–1949)
- Wilbur Robertson (1950)
- Dean Schneider (1949–1951)
- Rudy Bukich (1952)
- George Bozanic (1953)
- Jim Contratto (1953–1955)
- Jim Conroy (1956–1957)
- Tom Maudlin (1957–1958)
- Willie Wood (1957–1959)
- Ben Charles (1959–1960)
- Bill Nelsen (1960–1962)
- Pete Beathard (1960–1963)
- Craig Fertig (1962–1964)
- Troy Winslow (1964–1966)
- Toby Page (1965–1967)
- Steve Sogge (1966–1968)
- Jimmy Jones (1969–1971)
- Mike Rae (1970–1972)
- Pat Haden (1973–1974)
- Mike Sanford Sr. (1975)
- Vince Evans (1975–1976)
- Rob Hertel (1975, 1977)
- Rob Preston (1978)
- Paul McDonald (1978–1979)
- Gordon Adams (1980)
- Scott Tinsley (1980, 1982)
- John Mazur (1981)
- Sean Salisbury (1982–1985)
- Kevin McLean (1984)
- Tim Green (1984)
- Rodney Peete (1985–1988)
- Todd Marinovich (1989–1990)
- Shane Foley (1990)
- Reggie Perry (1991)
- Rob Johnson (1991–1994)
- Kyle Wachholtz (1995)
- Brad Otton (1994–1996)
- John Fox (1997, 1999)
- Mike Van Raaphorst (1997–1999)
- Carson Palmer (1998–2002)
- Matt Leinart (2003–2005)
- John David Booty (2006–2007)
- Mark Sanchez (2007–2008)
- Aaron Corp (2009)
- Matt Barkley (2009–2012)
- Mitch Mustain (2010)
- Max Wittek (2012)
- Cody Kessler (2013–2015)
- Max Browne (2016)
- Sam Darnold (2016–2017)
- Jack Sears (2018)
- Matt Fink (2019)
- JT Daniels (2018–2019)
- Kedon Slovis (2019–2021)
- Jaxson Dart (2021)
- Caleb Williams (2022–2023)
- Miller Moss (2023–2024)
- Jayden Maiava (2024–present)
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Cincinnati Bengals 1978 NFL draft selections |
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- Ross Browner
- Blair Bush
- Ray Griffin
- Dave Turner
- Ted Vincent
- Don Bass
- Dennis Law
- Tom Dinkel
- Rob Hertel
- Steve Geise
- Joe Branson
- Danny Bass
- Bill Miller
- Ron Shumon
- Tom DePaso
- Cal Prince
- Mark Donahue
- Kim Featsent
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