John FrieszNo. 17 |
---|
Position: |
Quarterback |
---|
Personal information |
---|
Date of birth: |
(1967-05-19) May 19, 1967 |
---|
Place of birth: |
Missoula, Montana |
---|
Height: |
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) |
---|
Weight: |
220 lb (100 kg) |
---|
Career information |
---|
High school: |
Coeur d'Alene (ID) |
---|
College: |
Idaho |
---|
NFL draft: |
1990 / Round: 6 / Pick: 138 |
---|
Career history
|
---|
|
Career NFL statistics as of 2000 |
---|
|
|
|
John Melvin "Deep" Friesz (pronounced "Freeze") (born May 19, 1967) is a former professional football player, a quarterback in the National Football League for four teams. Selected in the 1990 NFL Draft by the San Diego Chargers, he later played for the Washington Redskins, Seattle Seahawks, and New England Patriots.
Early life
Born in Missoula, Montana, Friesz moved with his family in 1975 to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.[1] He attended Coeur d'Alene High School and graduated in 1985. Friesz spent those seasons as a back-up and became the starter in his senior season in the fall of 1984.[1] His first game was against perennial state power Borah in Boise, who had beaten the Vikings 27-23 at Coeur d'Alene in 1983.[2] The #2-ranked CDA Vikings returned the favor and beat the Lions 19-14 on the then-green AstroTurf of Bronco Stadium. Friesz completed 21 of 40 passes for 260 yards and two touchdowns in his starting debut.[3] The Vikings took over the top spot in the state poll and beat Rogers of Spokane 46-0 the following week.[4] They won their first ten games, but lost in the state semifinals 25-20 to Capital, who also had handed them their last loss, at the finals in 1983.[5] The game was played at a neutral site, the Kibbie Dome in Moscow, Friesz's future home field. He finished the season with over 1,900 yards passing and 19 touchdowns in eleven games.[6]
He enrolled at the University of Idaho, recruited by head coach Dennis Erickson,[6] after attending the coach's Vandal football camp in the summer of 1984.
College career
Friesz redshirted in 1985 as the Vandals won their first outright Big Sky Conference title since 1971. In 1986, under new head coach Keith Gilbertson, he served as the backup to Scott Linehan, who would go on to become head coach of the St. Louis Rams.
Friesz was the Vandals starting quarterback for three years, beginning in 1987, when he threw 28 touchdown passes as a sophomore and was named player of the year in the Big Sky and second team All-American (Division I-AA). In his junior season of 1988, he guided the Vandals to a 9-1 regular season and two playoff wins, ending the season with a road loss in the Division I-AA semi-finals. He was a consensus All-American selection at quarterback.
In his senior season in 1989, Freisz threw 31 touchdowns and for over 4,000 yards in guiding the Vandals to their third consecutive conference championship. Idaho went undefeated in conference play (8-0), the only time in school history. Friesz averaged over 360 yards per game and passed for over 300 yards in ten consecutive games. He received the Walter Payton Award as the outstanding player in the nation in Division I-AA.[7]
In his college career, #17 passed for over 10,000 yards and was the conference player-of-the-year for three consecutive years. The Vandals' annual MVP award has been renamed the John Friesz Award in his honor.
In August 2006 John Friesz was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in South Bend, Indiana.[8] His #17 was officially retired by the University of Idaho in October 2006.[9] The same number was retired by his high school in 1991.[10]
Professional career
In the 1990 NFL Draft, Friesz was the tenth quarterback selected, taken in the sixth round (138th overall) by the San Diego Chargers.[11] Other quarterbacks in this draft were Jeff George (#1 overall pick), Heisman Trophy winner Andre Ware, future Super Bowl starter Neil O'Donnell, and Scott Mitchell.
Friesz became the starting quarterback for the Chargers in 1991, his second season. He suffered a season-ending knee injury in a pre-season game in 1992. The Chargers then acquired QB Stan Humphries from the Washington Redskins, who was drafted by then Redskins GM Bobby Beathard, who was the Chargers GM at that time. Humphries became the Chargers starting QB and led the Chargers who were 0-4 to start the 1992 season to an 11-5 record, helping the Chargers end a 10-year playoff drought and winning their first AFC West Division title since 1981 under rookie coach Bobby Ross.
Friesz would return to the Chargers the next season as the backup QB and left the Chargers as a free agent prior to the 1994 season.
Friesz passed for over 8,600 yards and 45 touchdowns in his professional career.[12]
References
- 1 2 Meehan, Jim (October 12, 1996). "Friesz rocks on". Spokesman-Review. p. C1.
- ↑ "Vikes face tough test in opener". Spokane Chronicle. August 30, 1984. p. 26.
- ↑ "Coeur d'Alene dumps Borah". Spokane Chronicle. September 1, 1984. p. 10.
- ↑ "Vikings Friesz Pirates, romp 46-0". Spokane Chronicle. September 8, 1984. p. 10.
- ↑ "Viking title hopes dead". Spokesman-Review. November 12, 1984. p. 15.
- 1 2 "Idaho's Erickson calls this group the best he's ever had with Vandals". Lewiston Morning Tribune. February 14, 1985. p. 2C.
- ↑ "Making of a legend". Gem of the Mountains, University of Idaho yearbook. 1990. p. 174.
- ↑ "John Friesz". College Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 27, 2011.
- ↑ http://www.uiargonaut.com/content/view/2691/50/
- ↑ "Coeur d'Alene High to retire no. 17 worn by John Friesz". Spokesman-Review. May 5, 1991. p. C5.
- ↑ http://nfl.com/draft/history/years/1990
- ↑ http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/FrieJo00.htm
External links
|
---|
|
- Edwards (1893)
- G. P. Mix (1894)
- Fred Moore (1897)
- Frank Griffin (1901)
- Robert Ghormley (1901)
- Howard Kirkwood (1902)
- Frank Mix (1902)
- John Middleton (1903–05)
- William Robertson (1906)
- Rodney Small (1907–08)
- Enoch Perkins (1909–12)
- Harold Purdy (1913–15)
- Sam Morrison (1915)
- Bertram Dingle (1916–17)
- Boyd Brigham (1918)
- Ralph Breshears (1919)
- Howard Breshears (1920–22)
- Vernon Stivers (1922–24)
- Glenn Jacoby (1925–27)
- Paul Hutchinson (1928)
- Waldemar Pederson (1929)
- George Wilson (1930–32)
- Emmert Davis (1931)
- Willis Smith (1931–33)
- Elbert Inman (1934)
- Clarence Devlin (1934)
- Russell Honsowetz (1935)
- Walter Musial (1936)
- Earl Gregory (1937)
- Hal Roise (1938)
- Merle Stoddard (1939)
- Mac Beall (1940)
- Pete Hecomovich (1941–42)
- Dan Davidoff (1942)
- Dick Nelson (1945)
- Phil Litzenberger (1945)
- Bill Williams (1946–47)
- Jim Hammond (1946–49)
- Russ Moffett (1947–48)
- Max Glaves (1949–51)
- Wayne Anderson (1951–52)
- George Eidam (1952–54)
- Howard Willis (1955–57)
- Joe Espinosa (1958–59)
- Gary Farnworth (1958–59)
- Sil Vial (1960)
- Mike Mosolf (1961)
- Gary Gagnon (1961–62)
- Mike Whiles (1962)
- Gary Mires (1962–63)
- Mike Monahan (1963–64)
- John Foruria (1965–66)
- Jerry Ahlin (1965)
- Joe Rodriguez (1965)
- Steve Garman (1966–67)
- Steve Olson (1968–70)
- John Hathaway (1969)
- Mitch Lansdell (1969)
- Tom Ponciano (1970–71)
- Bruce Cole (1971)
- Rick Seefried (1971–73)
- Ross Goddard (1972)
- Dave Comstock (1972–75)
- Dennis Ballock (1974)
- Rocky Tuttle (1976–77)
- Craig Juntunen (1976–77)
- Mike McCurdy (1978)
- Jay Goodenbour (1978–79)
- Rob Petrillo (1979)
- Ken Hobart (1980–83)
- Scott Linehan (1984–86)
- Rick Sloan (1984–85)
- John Friesz (1987–89)
- Andy Beitia (1988)
- Doug Nussmeier (1990–93)
- Steve Nolan (1990)
- Brian Brennan (1994, 1997)
- Eric Hisaw (1995)
- Ryan Fien (1996)
- John Welsh (1998–2001)
- Greg Robertson (1999)
- Brian Lindgren (2002–03)
- Michael Harrington (2004)
- Steve Wichman (2005–06)
- Nathan Enderle (2007–10)
- Brian Reader (2009–11)
- Taylor Davis (2011–13)
- Dominique Blackman (2012)
- Logan Bushnell (2012)
- Chad Chalich (2013–14)
- Matt Linehan (2014–present)
|
|