Kyle Orton

Kyle Orton

refer to caption

Orton with the Chicago Bears
No. 18, 8
Position: Quarterback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1982-11-14) November 14, 1982
Place of birth: Altoona, Iowa
Height: 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight: 228 lb (103 kg)
Career information
High school: Runnels (IA) Southeast Polk
College: Purdue
NFL draft: 2005 / Round: 4 / Pick: 106
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Week (7, 2005)
  • NFC Champion (2006)
  • AFC Offensive Player of the Week (Week 5, 2009)
  • FedEx Air Player of the Week (Week 4, 2010)
  • GMC Never Say Never Moment (Week 7, 2014)
  • Honorable mention All-Big Ten (2003)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (2004)
Career NFL statistics
TDINT: 101–69
Passing yards: 18,037
QB Rating: 81.2
Player stats at NFL.com

Kyle Raymond Orton (born November 14, 1982) is a former American football quarterback. He played college football for Purdue, where he started four straight bowl games. He was drafted by the Chicago Bears in the fourth round of the 2005 NFL Draft. After an injury to Bears starter Rex Grossman, Orton was pressed into service as the starting quarterback during his rookie year, starting the first 14 games of the 2005 season, but was replaced by Grossman for the playoffs that year. Orton did not play at all in 2006, and sparingly in 2007. Orton regained his starting job from Grossman in 2008, but the team finished a disappointing 9–7 and out of the playoffs. In the offseason of that year, he was traded to the Denver Broncos.

Orton started his Broncos career by winning his first six games in the 2009 season, but injuries hobbled him in the second half of the season. Though Orton threw 21 touchdowns and only 12 interceptions, the team finished 8–8 and out of the playoffs. Orton started 2010 season as the starting quarterback, though the team was not competitive most of the season, finishing 4–12. After throwing 3 interceptions versus the Arizona Cardinals on December 12 and with the Broncos eliminated from the playoffs, Orton was replaced by Tim Tebow for the final three games of the 2010 season. In 2011 he again began the season as a starter, but he was replaced by Tebow again after a disappointing start to the season. Following several weeks on the bench, in which he did not take a snap for the Broncos, he was released by the Broncos on November 22, and claimed off of waivers by the Kansas City Chiefs the next day. His contract expired and the Dallas Cowboys signed him on March 14, 2012 off of free agency. After the 2013 NFL Season, the Cowboys released Orton as he would not show up for training camp. He signed with the Buffalo Bills just prior to the 2014 season. On September 29, 2014, Bills head coach Doug Marrone named Orton starting quarterback of the then 2–2 Bills. Orton led the Buffalo Bills to a 9–7 record in 2014 and announced his retirement shortly after the conclusion of the season.

Early years

Orton attended Southeast Polk High School in Pleasant Hill, Iowa, where he was a four-sport star in football, basketball, tennis, and track & field.

At the end of his high school career, Orton was the No. 2 ranked quarterback in the nation by SuperPrep and No. 7 by Rivals.com. His career passing statistics were 208 for 450 (46.2%), 3,176 yards with 24 touchdowns, and 18 interceptions. He earned honorable mention all-state and first team all-conference his senior year, after completing 95 of 192 attempts (49.5%), 1,366 yards with 12 touchdowns, and 5 interceptions.[1]

Orton wore uniform No. 18 in honor of former Nebraska Cornhuskers' quarterback Brook Berringer who died in a plane crash in 1996.[2]

College career

Orton grew up a Husker fan, but chose to attend a program with a stronger passing attack. He committed to Purdue, but considered attending Colorado before ultimately deciding on the former.[3] Orton tied former Purdue quarterback Drew Brees' record for number of passing yards in a game (522 vs. Indiana Hoosiers), and is the only Purdue quarterback to start four consecutive bowl games (Brees and Mark Herrmann started three straight). Orton started in the 2001, '02 and '04 Sun Bowl, and the 2003 Capital One Bowl. During his undergrad years at Purdue, Orton was a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.

In 2004, Orton was the preseason third-team All-American quarterback, behind USC's Matt Leinart and Oklahoma's Jason White. Orton had a nice start to the season, having led Purdue to a 5–0 start with 18 touchdowns and no interceptions. He was a Heisman Trophy hopeful until a late 4th quarter Orton fumble was run back for a Wisconsin touchdown against the undefeated 12th ranked Wisconsin Badgers, giving the 5th ranked Purdue its first of several losses that season. Later that season, he received multiple injuries, in consecutive games against Michigan and Northwestern forcing him to lose his starting position for a month. Brandon Kirsch then replaced him during that time.

Orton makes a cameo in NCAA Football 2006, where he says, "EA Sports, it's in the game", along with Derek Anderson in the game's introduction.

Statistics

Passing Rushing
Season Team GP Rating Att Comp Pct Yds TD INT Sack Att Yds TD
2001 Purdue 6 92.1 142 69 49 686 2 3 -- 27 −63 0
2002 Purdue 13 128.2 317 192 61 2,257 13 9 -- 43 47 0
2003 Purdue 13 127.7 414 251 61 2,885 15 7 -- 112 237 3
2004 Purdue 11 151.1 389 236 61 3,090 31 5 -- 80 112 3
Totals 43 128.9 1,262 748 59 8,918 61 24 -- 262 333 6

[4]

Professional career

Chicago Bears

2005

Orton was drafted by the Chicago Bears in the fourth round of the 2005 NFL Draft. In the 2005 NFL season, he was rushed into the Bears starting lineup as a rookie after a preseason injury to starter Rex Grossman, and the poor play of back-up Chad Hutchinson. Orton started 15 games of the season, however was replaced by Grossman after halftime during the Bears' Week 15 victory against the Atlanta Falcons. After sitting for Week 16, Orton started the regular season finale, Week 17, against the Minnesota Vikings. The outcome of this game, for the Chicago Bears, did not have any effect on their post-season hopes. The Bears had already clinched the NFC North championship and a first-round bye in the 2005–06 playoffs with their Week 16 victory over the Green Bay Packers. Grossman then started for the Bears in their only post-season game. They lost to the Carolina Panthers.[5]

Overall, the Bears had a record of 10–5 in games that Orton started, including an eight-game winning streak after a 1–3 start. Despite the team's success, Orton finished with the lowest quarterback rating in the NFL (59.7) among all "qualified" quarterbacks (those with 224+ pass attempts).[6] Despite the low rating, the Bears coaches repeatedly insisted that they were pleased with Orton's performance. The coaching staff asked Orton to minimize mistakes and to let the rushing attack and the defense win ballgames rather than employing an aggressive passing attack.

Measuring Orton's victories, his rookie season was successful. His 15 starts and 10 victories are both rookie records for Bears quarterbacks, and the 10 victories are the fourth most in the NFL, since 1970, behind Ben Roethlisberger's 14 victories in '04, Joe Flacco's and Matt Ryan's 11 victories in '08 and Russell Wilson's 11 victories in '12.

2006

Following the 2005 season, the Bears signed veteran Brian Griese as the team’s second string quarterback. Orton, now demoted, became the Bears’ third-string quarterback, and did not see any action throughout the entire 2006 season.

Orton throws a pass to Garrett Wolfe.

2007

The following off-season, the Bears acquired Chris Leak, who had previously led the Florida Gators to a BCS Championship, shortly after the 2007 NFL Draft. Leak struggled in training camp, while Orton, who had trained in the off season, excelled but was placed at third string.[7] According to the Chicago Tribune, Orton was en route to overtake Griese's (then) second string position.[8] Orton continued to show signs of improvement in the preseason. He completed sixteen of twenty-five passes for 151 yards and one touchdown en route to leading the Bears to a comeback victory over the Houston Texans.[9]

After the Bears lost their chances of making a post-season berth, Lovie Smith chose to start Orton over Griese.[10] Orton made his first start in nearly two seasons on December 17, 2007 against the Minnesota Vikings. The Bears lost the game 20–13. Orton finished with 22 completions on 38 attempts, 184 yards, and 1 interception.[11] He improved in the final two games of the season, leading the Bears to two consecutive victories, passing for 294 yards, 3 touchdowns and an interception.[12]

2008

On February 25, 2008 the Bears and Orton agreed to a one-year contract extension running through the 2009 season. Competition for the starting quarterback job was expected to be fierce with Rex Grossman, during training camp.

On August 18, after deadlock against Grossman in games with the Kansas City Chiefs and Seattle Seahawks, Bears head coach Lovie Smith named Orton the team's starting QB for the 2008 season in Week 3 of the preseason, despite not throwing a pass over 17 yards or for a touchdown in the first two preseason games.[13]

On September 7, 2008, Orton led the Bears to a 29–13 victory over the Indianapolis Colts in the first regular season game of the season. He threw for a career high 334 yards and two touchdowns, while completing 24 of 34 passes in a 34–7 victory over the Detroit Lions.[14] He finished the game with a career high, at that time, passer rating of 121.4.

From the start of November 2008, Kyle Orton passed for ten touchdowns, and four interceptions, leading the Bears to a 4–3 record. Orton sustained an ankle injury against the Detroit Lions in Week 9 of the NFL season,[15] and did not start the next week. He rushed himself back into the starting lineup a week after Grossman had a solid outing coming off the bench against the Titans. After his return, Orton threw eight touchdowns, and eight interceptions while averaging a quarterback rating of 66.9, including ratings of 39.1 against Minnesota, 49.2 against New Orleans, and 48.7 against Green Bay.[12]

The Bears finished the season with a 9–7 record, while missing the playoffs by one game.[16] Coach Lovie Smith was pleased with Orton's performance and believed he would be the team's starting quarterback for the following season.[17] However, Jerry Angelo, the team's general manager, stated he wished to further solidify the quarterback position in the long run.[18]

Orton walking onto the field.

Denver Broncos

2009

On April 2, 2009, the Bears traded Orton (along with their first and third-round draft picks in 2009 and their first-round pick in '10) to the Denver Broncos for Pro Bowl quarterback Jay Cutler and the Broncos' fifth round pick in '09.[19]

On June 13, Broncos head coach Josh McDaniels declared Orton the starting quarterback for the season. Orton led the Broncos to a 12–7 victory in the 2009 season opener against the Cincinnati Bengals. The game was won on a deflected pass that landed in the arms of Brandon Stokley who took it 87 yards for a touchdown.[20] This play has been called "The Immaculate Deflection" in many media sources.

Over the next five weeks, Orton led the Broncos to a surprising 6–0 record to begin the season. His most impressive effort in that streak came against the New England Patriots, when he completed 35–48 passes for 330 yards and orchestrated a 98-yard drive to tie the game and send it into overtime. He threw his first interception of the season to Randy Moss, who came in to help on the attempted Hail Mary pass, at the end of the first half. It was his first in 173 pass attempts which dated back to 2008 when he was with the Chicago Bears. He led another drive for the game-winning field goal in overtime.[21] On October 13, 2009, Kyle Orton was named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week, for that effort.[22]

On Nov. 15, Orton suffered an ankle injury on the road against the Washington Redskins. He came out of the game at halftime with a career high passer rating of 134.7. The injury kept him from starting the next game against the Chargers. He did return partway through that game, replacing Chris Simms.

For the 2009 season (playing in 16 games with 15 starts), Orton threw 21 touchdown passes and 12 interceptions with an 86.8 QB rating.

2010

Orton was named the Broncos starting quarterback for 2010. He signed a one-year contract extension (through the 2011 season), on August 19, 2010. On September 26, 2010, Orton threw for 476 yards against the Indianapolis Colts, a career-high. Less than two months later, November 14, Orton threw a career-high four touchdown passes against the Kansas City Chiefs. Later in the season, with the Broncos eliminated from playoff contention, Orton played poorly against the Arizona Cardinals on December 12, 2010. Tim Tebow was named the starter the following week by interim coach Eric Studesville and played the last three games of the season.[23] Orton finished the season with 3,653 yards, 20 touchdowns, and nine interceptions

2011

Orton entered the 2011 season as the Broncos starting quarterback. The team had a 1–4 start with Orton throwing 8 touchdowns and 7 interceptions as the starter, accumulating 979 yards and completing 58.7% of his passes.[24] He was replaced as the starter by Tim Tebow during the week 5 contest against the San Diego Chargers, and Orton never took another snap for the Broncos. Orton was waived on November 22, 2011, officially ending his tenure with the Denver Broncos. He had a record of 12–21 as a starter during his time with the Broncos, throwing for 8,434 yards, 49 touchdowns, and 28 interceptions.

Kansas City Chiefs

He was claimed off waivers by the Kansas City Chiefs on November 23, 2011, after a season-ending injury to starting quarterback Matt Cassel.[25] Kansas City paid $2.5 million remaining on Orton's nearly $8.9 million salary for the year. Chicago (looking to replace injured Jay Cutler) and the Dallas Cowboys (because of concerns of injuries to backup quarterback Jon Kitna) also made claims on him. However, since Kansas City had a worse record than the other two teams it was given priority in claiming him per the NFL's inverse order of the standings rule on the waiver priority list.[26]

On December 4, 2011, in a game against his former team, the Chicago Bears, Orton came in to the second quarter to relieve Tyler Palko, but was injured on his first pass attempt.[27] Palko led the Chiefs to a 10–3 win over the Bears, but struggled the following week in a 37–10 loss to the Jets.[28]

Palko's struggles and Orton's recovery from injury paved way for a quarterback change, and on December 18, Orton was named the starting Chiefs' quarterback by new interim coach Romeo Crennel. In his first game as their starter, he led the Chiefs to a 19–14 upset of the previously undefeated Green Bay Packers ending the defending 2011 Super Bowl champions winning streak at 19 games, dating back to the previous season.[29] He had completions of 23 for 31 for 299 yards with no interceptions and no passing touchdowns.

In the final two games of the season Orton lost 16–13 in overtime against the Raiders before returning to Denver to defeat the Broncos in the season finale.

Dallas Cowboys

2012

On March 14, 2012, Orton signed a three-year contract with the Dallas Cowboys to replace former backup quarterback Jon Kitna, who retired after the Cowboys' 2011 season. In week 4 against the Bears, his former team, Orton replaced Tony Romo late in the game and threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Jason Witten, though the Bears still won the contest 34–18. The Cowboys went on to finish the season 8–8, losing to the Washington Redskins in a do-or-die week 17 contest.[30]

2013

In the 2013 season, Orton had seen minimal time on the field with a total of 40 passing yards which all came during week 14 against the Chicago Bears.

On December 27, 2013, head coach Jason Garrett announced that Orton would be the starting quarterback for the week 17 game against the Philadelphia Eagles after Tony Romo underwent back surgery.[31] He threw for 30 completions and 358 yards on 46 attempts (65.2%) and two touchdowns. He threw an early interception by Mychal Kendricks which was dropped by his tight end Jason Witten, and another interception by Brandon Boykin on the Cowboys' last drive which secured a 24–22 victory for the Eagles.

Buffalo Bills

Orton during the 2014 season.

2014

Prior to the 2014 NFL season, Orton threatened the Cowboys with a possible retirement and did not report to any of the team's organized team activities or workouts. Besides accumulating $70,000 in fines, quarterback coach Wade Wilson reported that Orton did not maintain any communications with the Cowboys during this period.[32] Orton, who risked losing part of his signing bonus by holding out, eventually showed up to training camp. The team released him on July 15 and promoted Brandon Weeden to the backup quarterback position.[33] The Cowboys were relieved of Orton's $3.25 million salary in 2014, but will still have to pay him a signing bonus.[34] He would follow Jeremiah Ratliff as the second player in two straight years to force the Cowboys to waive him.

On August 29, 2014, Orton agreed on a two-year deal with the Buffalo Bills, with the team paying him $5 million in the first year alone, making him the highest paid backup quarterback in the league.[35] On September 29, 2014, at the beginning of week 5, Bills head coach Doug Marrone announced that Kyle Orton would become the new starting quarterback for the Bills in relief of EJ Manuel.[36] Taking over with the team at 2–2, Orton led the Bills to a 9–7 finish. Though they missed the playoffs, the 2014 season marked the first time since 2004 that the Bills had finished with a winning record.[37] Orton finished the season with 3,018 passing yards, 18 touchdowns, 10 interceptions and an 87.8 quarterback rating.

On December 29, 2014, Orton announced his retirement from the NFL.[38]

Personal life

After retiring from the NFL in 2014, Orton and his wife moved to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to raise their daughter. Orton intends to mentor high school and college-level football players in Louisiana.[39]

Orton's father, Byron Orton, served on the Iowa Labor Commission. Orton said that running for the United States Congress "is definitely something that I want to do when I get older."[40]

NFL statistics

Season Team Games Passing Sacks Rushing
GPGS CompAttPctYdsY/AttTDINTRating #Yds AttYdsAvgTD
2005CHI 1515 19036851.61,8695.191359.7 30190 24441.80
2006 00 00-0-00- 00 00-0
2007 33 438053.84786.03273.9 212 5−1−0.20
2008 1515 27246558.52,9726.4181279.6 27160 24492.03
2009 DEN 1615 33654162.13,8027.0211286.8 29159 24713.00
2010 1313 29349858.83,6537.320987.5 34243 22984.40
2011 55 9115558.79796.38775.7 949 5173.40
KC 43 599760.87798.01281.1 15 6−4−0.70
2012 DAL 10 91090.0898.910137.1 00 00-0
2013 31 335164.73987.82285.3 00 188.00
2014 BUF 1212 28744764.23,0186.8181087.8 33198 15140.91
Total 8782 1,6132,71259.518,0376.71016981.2 132818 1262962.34

See also

References

  1. "Player Bio: Kyle Orton". Purduesports.com. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  2. "Orton Profile – Chicago Roster". Chi.scout.com. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  3. "Alumni Game". Purdue Boilermakers. 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  4. "NCAA College football statistics". Web1.ncaa.org. 1999-03-20. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  5. "Yahoo Sports: Chicago Bears 2005 Season". Sports.yahoo.com. 2011-04-20. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  6. "NFL Player Passing Statistics – 2005". Espn.go.com. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  7. Mayer, Larry, Slimmed-down Orton turning heads in camp (August 1, 2007), chicagobears.com. Retrieved on August 5, 2007.
  8. Mullin, John (August 11, 2007). "Veterans relive exhibition but some Bears have things to prove". Chicago Tribune. pp. 1; 8.
  9. NFL.com, Texans fall to Bears in Schaub's debut, (August 11, 2007). Retrieved on August 13, 2007.
  10. ChicagoBears.com, Excited Bears quarterback settling in under center. Retrieved on December 17, 2007.
  11. Yahoo! Sports, Minnesota 20, Chicago 13, Retrieved on December 17, 2007.
  12. 1 2 NFL.com, Kyle Orton: Game Logs, Retrieved on February 9, 2008.
  13. ChicagoBears.com, Bears name Orton their starting quarterback, Retrieved on August 18, 2008
  14. Yahoo!Sports,Chicago 34, Detroit 7, Retrieved on October 15, 2008.
  15. Seligman, Andrew (2008-11-02). "Grossman comes off bench to help Bears beat Lions". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved 2008-11-02.
  16. Biggs, Brad (2008-12-19). "Bears have no one to blame but themselves after loss". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
  17. Crist, John (2008-12-31). "If Not Orton, then Who Under Center?". Scout.com. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
  18. Mayer, Larry (2008-12-30). "Solidifying QB position remains one of Angelo's top priorities". chicagobears.com. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
  19. "New home Chicago: Broncos ship disgruntled QB Cutler to Bears". Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  20. Stokley catches tipped pass, runs 87 yards for winning TD ESPN.com, 13 September 2009. Retrieved 13 September 2009.
  21. "Orton orchestrates game-tying drive as Broncos finish off Patriots in OT". Scores.espn.go.com. 2009-10-11. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  22. Denver, The (October 13, 2009). "Denver Post". Denver Post. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  23. Kiszla, Mark (2011-01-16). "Suspicious minds believe Tebow the only choice". Denver Post. Retrieved 2011-01-16.
  24. Klis, Mike (October 11, 2011). "Tim Tebow named Broncos' starting quarterback". denverpost.com. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
  25. "Chiefs claim Kyle Orton". ESPN.com. November 24, 2011. Retrieved 2012-03-06.
  26. "Kansas City Chiefs claim QB Kyle Orton on waivers – ESPN". Espn.go.com. 2008-01-01. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  27. http://web.archive.org/web/20140426221515/https://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=AmjbSr3dZQEHMGrbxvXptu5DubYF?slug=ap-chiefs-orton. Archived from the original on April 26, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  28. New Jersey. "Jets vs. Chiefs: Jets defeat Kansas City, 37–10, in romp to move into second wild-card spot in playoff race". NJ.com. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  29. "Most Popular E-mail Newsletter". USA Today. December 18, 2011.
  30. "Tony Romo Throws 5 Interceptions In Cowboys' 34–18 Loss To Bears (VIDEO)". Huffingtonpost.com. October 2, 2012. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  31. Kavner, Rowan. "Tony Romo Out For Rest Of Year After Back Surgery". DallasCowboys.com. Dallas Cowboys. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  32. "Shedding light on Kyle Orton divorce: Cowboys backup QB met with club officials in Dallas a few weeks ago, looked in ‘great’ shape". The Dallas Morning News. 2014-07-25. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  33. Hanzus, Dan (July 15, 2014). "Kyle Orton released by Dallas Cowboys". NFL.com. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  34. Wilkening, Mike (2014-07-23). "Jerry Jones: Kyle Orton doesn’t intend to retire". Profootballtalk.com (NBC Sports). Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  35. Rosenthal, Gregg (August 30, 2014). "Kyle Orton signs with Buffalo Bills". NFL.com. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  36. Gantt, Darwin (September 29, 2014). "Bills bench E.J. Manuel, go with Kyle Orton at QB". NBCSports.com. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  37. Smith, Michael (2014-12-28). "Bills get to 9–7 with win over coasting Patriots". Profootballtalk.com. Retrieved 2014-12-30.
  38. http://www.buffalobills.com/news/article-1/Kyle-Orton-announces-retirement/d237d2a4-ee85-44a5-8b7e-7d2ce7aa0153?campaign=tw_buf_article
  39. Carmin, Mike (2015-06-11). "Former Purdue, NFL QB Kyle Orton satisfied with career". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 2015-09-08.
  40. "Politics Insider: Kyle Orton for Congress?". The Des Moines Register. November 1, 2014. Retrieved March 29, 2015.

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