Joe Ferguson

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Joe Ferguson
No. 12
Position: Quarterback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1950-04-23) April 23, 1950 (age 74)
Place of birth: Alvin, Texas
Career information
College: Arkansas
NFL draft: 1973 / Round: 3 / Pick: 57
Career history
Career NFL statistics
TDINT: 196–209
Yards: 29,817
QB rating: 68.4
Player stats at NFL.com

Joseph Carlton Ferguson Jr. (born April 23, 1950), is an American former football quarterback in the National Football League.

Biography

Ferguson played high school football in Shreveport, Louisiana, for Woodlawn High School. He guided the Knights to the Louisiana High School Athletic Association Class AAA (the top classification at the time) state championship in 1968. Ferguson succeeded Terry Bradshaw as Woodlawn's starting quarterback.

Ferguson played college football at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, where he held the school's single game record for most completions until broken in 2012 (31 against Texas A&M in 1971) and in that same season was named the Southwest Conference's Offensive Player of the Year.

The Buffalo Bills selected Ferguson in the third round of the 1973 NFL Draft.[1] Although he is most famous for playing with the Bills from 1973 to 1984, Ferguson also played three seasons for the Detroit Lions and two seasons for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and one final season with the Indianapolis Colts.

Ferguson placed in the top 10 in pass attempts five times, completions and passing yards four times, passing touchdowns six times, and yards per pass three times. At one time he shared, with Ron Jaworski, the NFL record for consecutive starts by a quarterback with 107, until he was replaced by Joe Dufek on September 30, 1984. He has a 1–3 record in the NFL postseason, winning against the New York Jets in 1981. His three losses came from the Cincinnati Bengals in those same playoffs, the San Diego Chargers the year before in 1980 (a game in which he played the entire contest with a sprained ankle), and in 1974 to the Pittsburgh Steelers. He retired after the 1990 season after playing only one game with the Colts.

Ferguson's best season came in 1975, when he tied Fran Tarkenton for the NFL lead with 25 touchdown passes and compiled a passer rating of 81.3. Ferguson also surpassed 20 touchdown passes in three other seasons (1980, 1981, 1983).

Ferguson is one of few quarterbacks who started immediately as a rookie, and his team won four of his first six starts. He is one of only two rookie quarterbacks to accomplish this feat, being joined by the Atlanta Falcons' Matt Ryan in 2008.

In 1993 Ferguson was inducted into the Bills' Wall of Fame. Seven years earlier, he had been inducted in the National Federation of State High Schools Association's Hall of Fame in 1986 for his outstanding play at the high school level. The number 12 has been retired by the Bills in honor of both Ferguson and Jim Kelly. He is also in the Arkansas and Louisiana halls of fame. He returned to football in 1995 when, at the age of 45, he signed a contract with the San Antonio Texans of the Canadian Football League. He retired at the end of the year to become the quarterbacks coach at the University of Arkansas. He later coached at Louisiana Tech University, Ruston High School, and Captain Shreve High School in Shreveport as head coach. He has since returned to Arkansas and is in the commercial/residential real estate business.

In May 2005, Ferguson was diagnosed with Burkitt's lymphoma cancer and underwent treatment at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. In January 2008, Ferguson was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. In February 2008, he was treated at M.D. Anderson in the intensive care unit for pneumonia. In July 2009, it was reported that Ferguson had recovered from his battles with cancer.[2]

Ferguson is a brother-in-law of Joe Raymond Peace, former Louisiana Tech University head football coach, who is married to Ferguson's sister. He is an uncle of former University of Tennessee Volunteers player Robert Joseph Peace.

Ferguson is an honorary board member for S.A.V.E. (Student Against Violence Education).[3]

References

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  2. Ex-QB Joe Ferguson Feeling Good After Battles with Cancer
  3. http://www.buffalo-save.org
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Consecutive starts by a quarterback in the NFL
(107)

1983–1984
Succeeded by
Ron Jaworski
(116)