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| Terry "Blonde Bomber" Bradshaw | |
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Position: Quarterback |
| Member Biography | |
|
Terry Bradshaw lettered four years at Louisiana Tech. The
Bulldogs went 4-16 his first two years and 17-4 the last two.
In his junior year, 1968, Louisiana Tech went 9-2,
including a 33-13 victory over Akron in the Grantland Rice
Bowl. The team was second in the Gulf States Conference.
Bradshaw had 2890 yards of total offense, ranking No. 1 in
NCAA's college division. He was fourth in the nation in
passing with 176 completions. In 1969, Bradshaw's senior
year, Louisiana Tech won the conference. He had 2314 yards
of total offense, ranking third nationally, and 136 pass
completions. One reason for the slight decline in statistics
was Tech's changing from 10 games to 9 in regular season.
Furthermore, Bradshaw had less playing time because of the
many lop-sided victories. In both 1968 and 1969 he was named
quarterback on the Football Coaches All-America, college
division, and was Athlete of the Year in the Gulf States
Conference. He played in the Senior Bowl and was its most
valuable player. In his final home game, Nov. 22, 1969, he
left the field with seven minutes to play. The crowd gave
him a standing ovation. He held 25 school and conference
records. Louisiana Tech retired his jersey, No. 12; the
announcement of this was made by the university president.
A press release stated, "There will never be another one
like him in this school or this conference." Bradshaw was
the first player chosen in the pro draft. He played 14 years
with the Pittsburgh Steelers, 1970-1983, and quarterbacked
them to Super Bowl wins following the 1974, 1975, 1978, 1979
seasons. He was Super Bowl most valuable player twice.
After his playing days, Bradshaw became a network TV analyst
for the pro football season. | |