Boomer Esiason

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Boomer Esiason
Position(s):
Quarterback
Jersey #(s):
7
Born: April 17, 1961 (1961-04-17) (age 47)
East Islip, New York
Career information
Year(s): 19841997
NFL Draft: 1984 / Round: 2 / Pick: 38
College: Maryland
Professional teams
Career stats
TD-INT     247-184
Yards     37,920
QB Rating     81.1
Stats at NFL.com
Career highlights and awards

Norman Julius "Boomer" Esiason (born April 17, 1961) is a former American football quarterback and current network color commentator. He played for the National Football League's Cincinnati Bengals, New York Jets, and Arizona Cardinals before working as an analyst for ABC and HBO.

Contents

[edit] Football career

[edit] Early life & University of Maryland

Esiason was born in West Islip, New York and grew up in East Islip, New York. He has Norwegian ancestry.[1] He attended East Islip High School in Long Island, New York, where he graduated in 1979. Esiason played college football at the University of Maryland for Head Coach Bobby Ross and Offensive Coordinator Ralph Friedgen. At Maryland, he set 17 school records. Esiason completed 461 of 850 passes (54.2 percent) for 6,259 yards and 42 touchdowns and was a two-time honorable mention All-American in 1982 and 1983. In his final home game threw two third-quarter touchdown passes to lead a comeback victory over No. 3 North Carolina and seal the ACC title. Esiason graduated with a B.A. in 1984 and received the Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1999. He is today one of the best-known former Terrapin football players.

[edit] Cincinnati Bengals

Following his final year at Maryland, Esiason was selected as the 38th pick in the second round of the 1984 NFL Draft by the Cincinnati Bengals, surprisingly low. ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper was, in Esiason's words, "going ballistic" that he was still available in the latter stages of the first round. Two of his teammates on the Terrapins squad, guard Ron Solt and defensive end Pete Koch, were drafted in the first round by the Indianapolis Colts and the Bengals, respectively. No quarterbacks were drafted in the first round; Esiason was actually the first one selected. He was also drafted by the Washington Federals franchise of the now-defunct United States Football League.

Among the most prolific left-handed quarterbacks in NFL history, Boomer got his first pro start on October 7, 1984, in Cincinnati in a game against the Houston Oilers. On a rainy day, Boomer led the Bengals to a 13-3 win over Houston and scored the game's only touchdown on a quarterback rush near the goalline. Boomer took over for Ken Anderson as the Bengals' full-time starting quarterback on September 22, 1985, in a game in Cincinnati against the San Diego Chargers. He could not repeat the victory of his first career start, as the Bengals fell to the Chargers and eventual Hall of Famer Dan Fouts 44-41. At 6'-4" and 240 pounds, far larger than his predecessor and with a much more powerful arm, Esiason was the signal caller on one of the most potent offenses of the late 1980s, and he was surprisingly mobile, rushing for 1,598 yards on 447 attempts and scoring 7 touchdowns in his career. He was particularly adept at running the difficult play-action pass offense. A little over three years later, Esiason led the Cincinnati Bengals to their second (and to date, their last) appearance in the Super Bowl, where they again lost another close game to the San Francisco 49ers. In Super Bowl XXIII, the 49ers, led by Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana, marched 92 yards on their last drive and won the game on a touchdown pass to receiver John Taylor with 34 seconds remaining in the game. A last-ditch pass to wide receiver Cris Collinsworth was broken up. The final score: 49ers 20, Bengals 16.

[edit] New York Jets, Arizona Cardinals and back to Cincinnati

Esiason signed with his hometown New York Jets in 1993, guiding their offense until 1995. He then signed with the Arizona Cardinals as a free agent in 1996. It was during this season, on November 10, 1996, that Esiason threw for the 3rd best passing yardage day in NFL History, with 522 yards in a 37-34 overtime victory over the Washington Redskins. He contemplated retirement in the offseason, but was talked into playing one more season — with the Cincinnati Bengals. Esiason was surprisingly effective after replacing Kent Graham midway through the season, throwing for 13 td's to only 2 interceptions and garnering a passer rating of over 106 for the season. The final play of his 14-year professional career was a 77-yard touchdown pass to receiver Darnay Scott.

[edit] Records and honors

Boomer Esiason was named to four Pro Bowl games (1986, 1988, 1989, 1993) and holds several NFL career records for left-handed quarterbacks, including most touchdown passes (247), passing yards (37,920), and completions (2,969). Esiason also led the AFC in passing in both 1988 and 1989.

Among the awards Boomer Esiason has earned during his career include the NFL Most Valuable Player Award in 1988 (leading the league with a quarterback rating of 97.4), and the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award in 1995 for his charitable work.

In 2004, he was inducted into the Nassau County Sports Hall of Fame.

[edit] Post-football career

After his retirement, Boomer Esiason went into broadcasting. He was a color commentator for ABC's Monday Night Football from 1998 to 2000. Following his dismissal by ABC (due primarily to personal conflicts between him and play-by-play announcer Al Michaels), Esiason was hired by the Westwood One radio network to become the analyst for radio broadcasts of Monday Night Football games. Esiason also currently serves as an in-studio analyst for The NFL Today on the CBS television network and hosts The Boomer Esiason Show on the Madison Square Garden Network. Every Friday during the season, he calls in to the very popular Washington, D.C., Virginia, and Maryland morning talk radio show Elliot in the Morning to discuss the previous week's action and preview the upcoming week. However, with Boomer's responsibilities with his own new morning radio show, it is unknown if this will continue. While Esiason has thus far not ghostwritten the de rigueur autobiography, he authored a children's reader in 1995 titled A Boy Named Boomer and co-wrote (with Lowell Cauffiel) a 1998 novel titled Toss.

[edit] Boomer and Carton in the Morning

In April 2007 after the firing of Don Imus, CBS Radio gave Boomer a one-week "try-out" as Imus's replacement on WFAN. (The slot had been covered by WFAN afternoon duo Mike and the Mad Dog for several weeks before Boomer's audition.) WFAN announced Esiason as the permanent host on August 13, along with Craig Carton, formerly of New Jersey 101.5 and WIP. Boomer and Carton officially started as of September 4.[2][citation needed] On September 6, Esiason pulled double duty: he worked the morning show on WFAN, then flew to Indianapolis to cover the Indianapolis Colts open the 2007 NFL season against the New Orleans Saints on Westwood One with Marv Albert, then returned to do the morning show the next day. However, both Carton and Albert mocked how tired he was, including jokes about Esiason's intake of Red Bull and espresso. Boomer is now supposedly best of friends with Craig Carton, where they share their spare time, fishing, weightlifting, collecting vintage Flintstones toys, hunting, and attending New York Ranger games at Madison Square Garden. Boomer has also allowed Craig into his circle of friends (Jim Nantz, Dan Marino, Bill Cowher, and Marv Albert) at Westwood Radio and CBS Sports, but not the MSG network.[citation needed]

On July 7th 2008, Boomer and Carton decided to call Chris "Mad Dog" Russo at 8:30 in the morning because of the big Nadal-Federer match. After 20 seconds, while Chris was talking tennis, Boomer started snoring rudely. Chris then took some shots at Boomer's ability to throw interceptions all throughout his career. It ended where Boomer hung up on Russo, and Russo called the two out later in the day for their ridiculous behavior

[edit] Origin of the "Boomer" name

Esiason got the "Boomer" nickname even before he was born. When Boomer's mother was pregnant with him, a friend and old teammate of his dad's college football team visited the Esiason home. The friend was the team's punter. The pre-born Boomer kicked, and the friend, who saw the way Mrs. Esiason reacted and said, "wow, that's quite a little boomer you got there!".[3] Ever since then, they kept the nickname.

[edit] Boomer Esiason Foundation

The Boomer Esiason Foundation was created to fund research to find a cure for cystic fibrosis, a disease of the respiratory and digestive systems. The Foundation also provides education and awareness of cystic fibrosis to provide higher quality of life for people with cystic fibrosis.

While at a 1993 Jets mini-camp, Esiason was notified that his two-year-old son, Gunnar, had to be taken to the hospital with breathing difficulties. Soon after, Gunnar was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. A devastated Boomer Esiason soon after formed the foundation, a charity.

Now 16, Gunnar is an extremely active teenager who undergoes daily treatments and takes medication. He is a quarterback on his school's football team (Friends Academy) In Locust Valley, New York.

Soon after Esiason formed the Foundation he formed a partnership with John Sawyer, a co-founder of the Bengals and the chairman of Sawyer Industries to form a company that would sell what came to be called Boomer's Products to Fight Cystic Fibrosis. The top-selling item is Boomers BBQ Sauce, an award-winning Texas-style sauce with all proceeds going to cystic fibrosis research.

Esiason lives in Manhasset, New York, with his wife Cheryl, their son, Gunnar, and daughter.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Ken Anderson
Cincinnati Bengals Starting Quarterbacks
1985-1992
Succeeded by
David Klingler
Preceded by
Browning Nagle
New York Jets Starting Quarterbacks
1993-1995
Succeeded by
Neil O'Donnell
Preceded by
Dave Krieg
Arizona Cardinals Starting Quarterbacks
1996
Succeeded by
Jake Plummer
Preceded by
John Elway
NFL Most Valuable Player
1988 season
Succeeded by
Joe Montana
Preceded by
Junior Seau
Walter Payton Man of the Year Award
1995
Succeeded by
Darrell Green
Personal tools
Languages