Daryle Pat Lamonica (born
July 17, 1941 in
Fresno
, California
) is a former American collegiate and Professional Football quarterback who played in the American Football League, and later
in the NFL.
Lamonica
lettered in four sports and was an All-State Quarterback at Clovis
High School in Clovis,
California
. Clovis High School renamed its football
stadium
Lamonica Stadium in 1970. After high
school, he turned down a professional baseball contract with the
Chicago Cubs.
Lamonica spent his
collegiate career at the University of Notre Dame
, and was the team's starting quarterback for three
seasons.
After a
20-for-28, 349-yard performance in the 1962 East-West Shrine Game at Kezar Stadium
in San
Francisco
, Lamonica
was named the game's Most Valuable
Player. He was drafted by the
Buffalo Bills in the 24th round of the 1963
AFL draft. He was also drafted by the
Green Bay Packers in the 12th round of the
1963 NFL draft. Lamonica played with Buffalo for four seasons,
backing up
Jack Kemp on a team that won
back-to-back AFL championships in 1964 and 1965. He was known as
"The Fireman", coming into games if Kemp was hurt or ineffective,
and pulling out victories.
In 1967, Lamonica was traded to the
Oakland Raiders with Glenn Bass for
Art Powell and
Tom
Flores. In his first year with the Raiders, he threw for 30
touchdowns and ran for four more. In 1969, he threw for 34
touchdowns and more than 3,300 yards. It was in Oakland that
Lamonica's passing acumen earned him the nickname "The Mad
Bomber."
With Lamonica, the Raiders won three straight Western Division
titles and one American Football League Championship. The Raiders
made one
World
Championship Game appearance with Lamonica as quarterback,
losing to the
Green Bay Packers,
33-14, in
Super Bowl II. Lamonica
threw for two touchdowns in the game. Lamonica quarterbacked the
Raiders during the
Heidi Game.
Lamonica was a three-time
American Football League
All-Star and twice was selected as the
American Football
League's Most Valuable Player, in 1967 and 1969. Lamonica's
last season in the NFL was 1974. Lamonica played for one season
(1975) in the short-lived
World
Football League as quarterback of the
Southern California Sun where in
limited time he went 9 for 19 and gained 90 yards for 1
touchdown.
In recent years, he hosted a national
fishing show on
Fox Sports
Net called
Outdoors with the Pros.
Daryle Lamonica went 66-16-4 as a starter, good for a 78.4% winning
percentage, second best in NFL history (
Otto
Graham is the highest at 81.0%). In the American Football
League, Lamonica's winning percentage as a starter was 90.0%, on 40
wins, 4 losses and 1 tie in 45 games, the best ever in the
AFL.
See also
External links