Fran Tarkenton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fran Tarkenton
Tarkenton in January 2010 after a speech by General David Petraeus in Atlanta, Georgia
Tarkenton in January 2010
No. 10
Position:Quarterback
Personal information
Born: (1940-02-03) February 3, 1940 (age 81)
Richmond, Virginia
Height:6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight:190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High school:Athens (GA)
College:Georgia
NFL Draft:1961 / Round: 3 / Pick: 29
AFL Draft:1961 / Round: 5 / Pick: 34
Career history
  • Minnesota Vikings (19611966)
  • New York Giants (19671971)
  • Minnesota Vikings (19721978)
Career highlights and awards
  • NFL Most Valuable Player (1975)
  • NFL Offensive Player of the Year (1975)
  • 3× NFC champion (1973, 1974, 1976)
  • First-team All-Pro (1975)
  • Second-team All-Pro (1973)
  • Pro Bowl (1964, 1965, 19671970, 19741976)
  • NFL passing yards leader (1978)
  • NFL passing touchdowns leader (1975)
  • Bert Bell Award (1975)
  • Minnesota Vikings No. 10 retired
  • 50 Greatest Vikings
  • Minnesota Vikings 25th Anniversary Team
  • Minnesota Vikings 40th Anniversary Team
  • 2× First-team All-SEC (1959, 1960)
Career NFL statistics
TDINT:342–266
Passing yards:47,003
Completion percentage:57.0
Passer rating:80.4
Rushing yards:3,674
Rushing touchdowns:32
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR

Francis Asbury Tarkenton (born February 3, 1940) is a former American football quarterback who played in the National Football League (NFL) for 18 seasons, primarily with the Minnesota Vikings. He played college football for the University of Georgia, where he was recognized as a two-time first-team All-SEC, and was selected by the Vikings in the third round of the 1961 NFL Draft. After retiring from football, he became a television personality and computer software executive.

Tarkenton's tenure with the Vikings spanned 13 non-consecutive seasons, playing with the team for six seasons from 1961 to 1966, then for seven seasons from 1972 to 1978. In between his years in Minnesota, Tarkenton was a member of the New York Giants for five seasons. At the time of his retirement, Tarkenton owned every major quarterback record. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986 and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987.

In addition to his football career, Tarkenton served as a commentator on Monday Night Football and a co-host of That's Incredible!. He also founded Tarkenton Software, a computer-program generator company, and he toured the U.S. promoting CASE (computer-aided software engineering) with Albert F. Case Jr. of Nastec Corporation. Tarkenton Software later merged with KnowledgeWare (with Tarkenton as president), until selling the company to Sterling Software in 1994.

Early life and education[]

Fran Tarkenton was born on February 3, 1940, in Richmond, Virginia. His father, Dallas Tarkenton, was a Methodist minister.[1][2] Tarkenton went to Athens High School in Athens, Georgia, and later attended the University of Georgia, where he was the quarterback on the Bulldog football team and a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.[3]

Under Coach Wally Butts and with Tarkenton as quarterback, Georgia won the 1959 Southeastern Conference championship.[4] Tarkenton was a first-team All-SEC selection in both 1959 and 1960.[5][6]

Professional football career[]

The Minnesota Vikings drafted Tarkenton in the third round of the 1961 NFL Draft, and he was picked in the fifth round of the 1961 AFL draft by the Boston Patriots. He signed with the Vikings. Tarkenton, 21, played his first NFL game (and the Vikings' first game) on September 17 against the Chicago Bears, coming off the bench to lead the Vikings to a come-from-behind victory by passing for 250 yards and four touchdown passes and running for another[7] as the Vikings defeated the Bears 37–13. He was the only player in NFL history to pass for four touchdowns in his first NFL game, until the feat was repeated by Marcus Mariota in the Tennessee Titans' 2015 season opener versus the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.[8]

Tarkenton scrambling (1974)

He played for the Vikings from 1961 to 1966. His early years with the team were plagued by the trouble expected for a newly created team, with the Vikings winning a total of 10 games combined in their first three seasons, with Tarkenton winning eight of them. He threw 18 touchdowns and 17 interceptions for 1,997 yards in his first season. He rushed for 308 yards on 56 rushes for five touchdowns. The following year, he threw 22 touchdowns and 25 interceptions for 2,595 yards. He rushed for 361 yards on 41 rushes for two touchdowns.

Tarkenton was traded to the New York Giants in 1967, at which time he moved to the New York City suburb of New Rochelle, New York.[9] In the first game of the 1969 season, Tarkenton's Giants played the Vikings. After trailing 23–10 in the fourth quarter, Tarkenton threw two touchdown passes to secure a 24–23 comeback victory over his former team.[10] The 24 points allowed by Minnesota's defense were a season-worst for the unit, one more point than the Vikings allowed in losing Super Bowl IV to the Kansas City Chiefs.[11]

Tarkenton enjoyed his best season with the Giants in 1970. The club overcame an 0–3 start to win nine of the next 10 games and move into position to win the NFC East division championship in week 14. However, New York was routed 31–3 by the Los Angeles Rams at Yankee Stadium, leaving the Giants 9–5, one game behind the division champion Dallas Cowboys and the wild card Detroit Lions. The 1970 season was the closest the Giants came to making the playoffs during a 17-year drought, spanning the 1964 through 1980 seasons.

Tarkenton was traded back to the Vikings from the Giants for Norm Snead, Bob Grim, Vince Clements, a first rounder in 1972 (24th overall–Larry Jacobson) and a second rounder in 1973 (40th overall–Brad Van Pelt) on January 27, 1972.[12][13] He led the Vikings to three National Football Conference championships, but in each instance the Vikings lost the ensuing Super Bowl. In Tarkenton's first Super Bowl appearance his team lost to the Miami Dolphins 24–7 in Houston. They lost the second to the Pittsburgh Steelers 16–6 in New Orleans, and in the last Super Bowl Tarkenton played (and Minnesota's last Super Bowl to date), the Vikings lost to the Oakland Raiders 32–14 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

Tarkenton calling signals for the Vikings

In his 18 NFL seasons, Tarkenton completed 3,686 of 6,467 passes for 47,003 yards and 342 touchdowns, with 266 interceptions, all of which were NFL records at the time of his retirement. Tarkenton's 47,003 career passing yards rank him 12th all time,[14] while his 342 career passing touchdowns is 10th all time in NFL history.[15] He also is 8th on the all-time list of regular-season wins by a starting quarterback with 124 regular season victories. He used his impressive scrambling ability to rack up 3,674 rushing yards and 32 touchdowns on 675 carries. During his career, Tarkenton ran for a touchdown in 15 different seasons, an NFL record among quarterbacks. He ranks sixth in career rushing yards among quarterbacks, behind Randall Cunningham, Steve Young, Michael Vick, Cam Newton, and Russell Wilson. He is also one of four NFL quarterbacks ever to rush for at least 300 yards in seven different seasons; the others are Cam Newton, Michael Vick and Tobin Rote. When he retired, Tarkenton held NFL career records in pass attempts, completions, yardage, touchdowns, rushing yards by a quarterback, and wins by a starting quarterback.

The Vikings finished the 1975 season with an NFC-best 12–2 record and Tarkenton won the NFL Most Valuable Player Award and the NFL Offensive Player of the Year Award while capturing All-Pro honors in the process. He was also a second-team All-Pro in 1973 and earned All-NFC selections in 1972 and 1976. He was named second-team All-NFC in 1970 and 1974. Tarkenton was selected to play in nine Pro Bowls.[16]

Tarkenton was indecisive on his retirement during the last seven years of his playing career.[17][18]

Despite not winning a Super Bowl, he won six playoff games, and in 1999 he was ranked #59 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Football Players.

Tarkenton was inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame in 1977,[19] the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986,[16] the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987,[20] and the Athens, Georgia Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000.[21]

Books[]

A biography of Tarkenton titled Better Scramble than Lose was published in 1969.[22] This followed Tarkenton's 1967 autobiography No Time for Losing and preceded by several years his 1977 autobiography Tarkenton co-written with Jim Klobuchar. The autobiographies chronicle not only his football career but also his personal evolution from his early football days as a preacher's son. Tarkenton co-wrote with Brock Yates a book in 1971 titled Broken Patterns: The Education of a Quarterback, a chronicle of the 1970 New York Giants season.[23]

In 1986, Tarkenton, with author Herb Resincow, wrote a novel titled Murder at the Super Bowl, the whodunit story of a football coach killed just before his team is to participate in the championship game.[24]

Tarkenton wrote the self-help, motivational books Playing to Win in 1984,[25] and How to Motivate People: The Team Strategy for Success in 1986.[26] He also wrote the motivational self-help business book titled What Losing Taught Me About Winning,[1] and Every Day is Game Day.[27] In 1987, Tarkenton hosted a Think and Grow Rich TV infomercial that sold the book with an audio cassette version (the audio cassettes contained an introduction and conclusion by Tarkenton).[28]

Business ventures and investments[]

Mark McCormack helped Tarkenton invest, making him wealthy enough to "retire this week if [he] wanted to", as New York magazine wrote in 1971.[29] Tarkenton was a pioneer in computer software, and founder of Tarkenton Software, a program generator company. He toured the United States promoting CASE or "computer-aided software engineering" with Albert F. Case, Jr. of Nastec Corporation, but ultimately merged his software firm with James Martin's KnowledgeWare, of which Tarkenton was president until selling the company to Sterling Software in 1994.

In 1999, Tarkenton was fined by federal regulators as part of a securities fraud sweep. According to the LA Times, "In Tarkenton's case, the Hall of Fame quarterback and 10 other former executives of his computer software and consulting firm, KnowledgeWare Inc., were accused of inflating by millions of dollars the company's earnings in reports for its fiscal year ended June 30, 1994. The former Minnesota Vikings quarterback agreed to pay a $100,000 fine and $54,187 in restitution. He did not admit any wrongdoing".[30]

Since then, Tarkenton has been promoting various products and services including Tony Robbins and 1-800-BAR-NONE. He also founded GoSmallBiz, a small-business consulting website. He also operates an annuity marketing firm called Tarkenton Financial.

Politics[]

Tarkenton speaking at the 2016 Republican National Convention

During the 2016 Republican National Convention, Tarkenton gave a speech endorsing Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.[31]

NFL career statistics[]

Legend
AP NFL MVP & OPOTY
Led the league
Bold Career high
Year Team Games Passing Rushing
GP GS Comp Att Pct Yards Avg TD Int Lng Rate Att Yds Avg Lng TD
1961 MIN 14 10 157 280 56.1 1,997 7.1 18 17 71 74.7 56 308 5.5 52 5
1962 MIN 14 14 163 329 49.5 2,595 7.9 22 25 89 66.9 41 361 8.8 31 2
1963 MIN 14 13 170 297 57.2 2,311 7.8 15 15 67 78.0 28 162 5.8 24 1
1964 MIN 14 14 171 306 55.9 2,506 8.2 22 11 64 91.8 50 330 6.6 31 2
1965 MIN 14 14 171 329 52.0 2,609 7.9 19 11 72 83.8 56 356 6.4 36 1
1966 MIN 14 12 192 358 53.6 2,561 7.2 17 16 68 73.8 62 376 6.1 28 4
1967 NYG 14 14 204 377 54.1 3,088 8.2 29 19 70 85.9 44 306 7.0 22 2
1968 NYG 14 14 182 337 54.0 2,555 7.6 21 12 84 84.6 57 301 5.3 22 3
1969 NYG 14 14 220 409 53.8 2,918 7.1 23 8 65 87.2 37 172 4.6 21 0
1970 NYG 14 14 219 389 56.3 2,777 7.1 19 12 59 82.2 43 236 5.5 20 2
1971 NYG 13 13 226 386 58.5 2,567 6.7 11 21 81 65.4 30 111 3.7 16 3
1972 MIN 14 14 215 378 56.9 2,651 7.0 18 13 76 80.2 27 180 6.7 21 0
1973 MIN 14 14 169 274 61.7 2,113 7.7 15 7 54 93.2 41 202 4.9 16 1
1974 MIN 13 13 199 351 56.7 2,598 7.4 17 12 80 82.1 21 120 5.7 15 2
1975 MIN 14 14 273 425 64.2 2,994 7.0 25 13 46 91.8 16 108 6.8 21 2
1976 MIN 13 13 255 412 61.9 2,961 7.2 17 8 56 89.3 27 45 1.7 20 1
1977 MIN 9 9 155 258 60.1 1,734 6.7 9 14 59 69.2 15 6 0.4 8 0
1978 MIN 16 16 345 572 60.3 3,468 6.1 25 32 58 68.9 24 −6 −0.3 15 1
Career 246 239 3,686 6,467 57.0 47,003 7.3 342 266 89 80.4 675 3,674 5.4 52 32

Personal/Family life[]

Tarkenton has been married twice and has four children.

His first marriage was to Anna Elaine Merrell of Decatur, GA. They wed on December 22, 1960, at First Baptist Church in Decatur, Georgia, and divorced in March 1982. They had three children: daughter Angela (born 1964), son Matthew (born 1968), and daughter Melissa (born 1969).[32][33]

Tarkenton married his second wife Linda Sebastian in the mid-1980s. They have one daughter, Hayley Gray Tarkenton (born 1988), a singer-songwriter.[34]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Tarkenton Fran. What Losing Taught Me About Winning: The Ultimate Guide for Success in Small and Home-Based Businesses ; Fireside Books; 1997; ISBN 0-684-83879-6
  2. ^ "Father of Tarkenton Dies During Telecast". New York Times. December 29, 1975. Archived from the original on September 20, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  3. ^ "Sigma Alpha Epsilon". omegafi.com. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  4. ^ Bratton, Michael Wayne (July 2019). "History of all-time SEC football championships entering 2019". Saturday Down South. Archived from the original on September 20, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  5. ^ David M. Moffit (November 25, 1959). "Auburn Lands 3 Lineman On All-Star Team". The Monroe News-Star. p. 23. Archived from the original on June 12, 2015. Retrieved June 11, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. open access
  6. ^ "Gibbs and Tarkenton Named on UPI All-SEC". The Delta Democrat-Times. November 22, 1960. p. 7. Archived from the original on September 20, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  7. ^ "Countdown to the 2013 NFL Draft". National Football League. Archived from the original on April 6, 2013. Retrieved April 2, 2013.
  8. ^ "A Look at Marcus Mariota's Rookie Accomplishments Archived August 21, 2016, at the Wayback Machine" by Jim Wyatt, Titans online, December 31, 2015
  9. ^ Kriegel, Mark. Namath:A Biography; Penguin Books; 2005; ISBN 978-0143035350; p.210
  10. ^ "Minnesota Vikings at New York Giants - September 21st, 1969" Archived June 20, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Pro-Football-Reference.com
  11. ^ "1969 Minnesota Vikings" Archived July 8, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, Pro-Football-Reference.com
  12. ^ Koppett, Leonard. "Vikings Get Tarkenton For Snead and 4 Others," The New York Times, Friday, January 28, 1972. Archived October 29, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 1, 2020
  13. ^ 1972 NFL Draft Pick Transactions, February 1 (Rounds 1–7) & 2 (Rounds 8–17) – Pro Sports Transactions. Archived October 31, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 1, 2020
  14. ^ "NFL Passing Yards Career Leaders". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Archived from the original on November 6, 2018. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  15. ^ "NFL Passing Touchdowns Career Leaders". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Archived from the original on July 30, 2020. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b Tarkenton Archived August 22, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Professional Football Hall of Fame website
  17. ^ "Tarkenton Has Retired, Giants Say Archived October 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine", Chicago Tribune, Αugust 10, 1971
  18. ^ Quote Of The Day Archived November 17, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, The Ledger, March 22, 1978
  19. ^ Inductees Archived January 15, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, Georgia Hall of Fame website
  20. ^ Inductees Archived August 17, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, College Football Hall of Fame website
  21. ^ 2000 Inductees Archived August 22, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Athens Hall of Fame website
  22. ^ Olsen, Jack. Better Scramble Than Lose; Four Winds Press; 1969
  23. ^ Tarkenton, Fran & Brock W. Yates. Broken Patterns: The Education of a Quarterback; Simon and Schuster, 1971, ISBN 978-0671210533
  24. ^ Tarkenton, Fran & Herb Resincow. Murder at the Super Bowl; William Morrow & Co; 1st edition : October 1986; ISBN 978-0688067168
  25. ^ Tarkenton, Fran, Playing to Win, 1985, Bantam Books ISBN 0-553-25079-5
  26. ^ Tarkenton, Fran and Tuleja, Tad 1986, Harper and Row ISBN 0-06-015543-4
  27. ^ Tarkenton, Fran and Bruton, Jim. Every Day Is Game Day; Triumph Books; 2009; ISBN 1-60078-253-1
  28. ^ "Partners in Time : Guthy-Renker, Charles Wesley Orton Archived February 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine", Response magazine, May 2001
  29. ^ Axthelm, Pete. ""The Third Annual Permanent Retirement of Joe Namath Archived January 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine", New York magazine, July 7, 1971, pp.47-49
  30. ^ LA Times, September 29, 1999
  31. ^ Condon, Patrick (July 21, 2016). "Vikings veteran Fran Tarkenton speaks at Republican convention". Star Tribune. Archived from the original on August 9, 2016. Retrieved August 4, 2016.
  32. ^ Looney, Douglas S. (October 25, 1982). "Fran Tarkenton". People. Meredith Corporation. Archived from the original on September 21, 2019. Retrieved September 21, 2019.
  33. ^ Martin, Frank (October 4, 1976). "Ping-Pong Ace, Record-Setting Quarterback, Fran Tarkenton Battles a Runner-Up Image". People. Meredith Corporation. Archived from the original on September 21, 2019. Retrieved September 21, 2019.
  34. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 23, 2021. Retrieved October 19, 2019.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Retrieved from ""