Marty Domres
Martin Francis Domres (/ˈdɒmrɛs/ DOM-rehs;[1] born April 17, 1947) is an American former professional football player in the American Football League (AFL) and National Football League (NFL). Domres played quarterback in the AFL and NFL for nine seasons with the San Diego Chargers, Baltimore Colts, San Francisco 49ers, and the New York Jets. Domres played college football at Columbia. Early lifeMarty Domres was born on April 17, 1947 in Ithaca, New York. He and his family moved to Binghamton, New York before settling in Syracuse, New York where he attended Christian Brothers Academy.[2] Domres played baseball, basketball, and football at Christian Brothers. Domres received several football scholarship offers, but and chose to attend Columbia University in New York City.[3] College careerAt Columbia, Domres joined a football team in the midst of a down period. The Lions went 2-7 in each of Domres' seasons, despite his record-breaking play. In 1966, he made his first start at quarterback as a sophomore against Ivy League opponents Yale. Domres set an Ivy League passing record in the game with 326 passing yards and went 18 for 31 with three touchdowns. However, his performance was overshadowed by the 44-21 loss and Yale's Pete Doherty throwing for five touchdowns.[4] In 1967, Domres earned All-Eastern Honorable Mention and set Columbia school records in total offensive yards (1,752), number of plays on offense (404), and total pass completions (121).[5] He finished seventh overall in offensive yards and eighth overall in completions in NCAA Division I. His stats for the season were 121 completions on 229 attempts for 1,378 yards.[6] As a senior in 1968, Domres led the Ivy League in passing yards with 1,868 and finished his collegiate career as the league's career passing yards leader with 4,492 yards from 1966-1968.[7] He was named to the 1968 All-Eastern Second Team and was seen as one of the top quarterbacks available in that year's professional draft. Professional careerDomres was drafted with the ninth overall selection in the first round of the 1969 NFL/AFL draft by the San Diego Chargers of the AFL. He was the second quarterback taken in the draft after the Cincinnati Bengals selected Greg Cook fifth overall. In his lone season in the AFL with San Diego, Domres served as the backup to established quarterback John Hadl. Domres replaced Hadl in fourth quarter the opening game of the season, a 27-9 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs, where he completed six of 14 passes.[8] Domres earned his first professional start in a rematch with the Chiefs later that season after Hadl went down with an arm injury. He and the Chargers lost 27-3, with Domres throwing five interceptions.[9] He earned a second career start two weeks later, winning 45-24 against the Denver Broncos. Domres threw his first career touchdown, going 11-20 on passes with 235 yards and one touchdown.[10] He split time with Hadl the rest of the season, and the Chargers missed the AFL playoffs with an 8-6 record. In 1970, the AFL–NFL merger became official and the Chargers joined the newly formed American Football Conference in the NFL. Domres continued to backup Hadl, and in two starts he went 28-55 with 491 yards and two touchdowns. The Chargers went 5-6-3 and again missed the playoffs. The following season Domres only appeared in four games, with no starts, and threw one touchdown. [11] With limited playing time Hadl, Domres requested a trade and was acquired by the Baltimore Colts for John Andrews and a 1973 first-round pick (25th overall–Johnny Rodgers) on August 7, 1972.[12][13] In Baltimore, Domres replaced Johnny Unitas as the Colts starting quarterback beginning in week six of the 1972 season. John Sandusky had succeeded Don McCafferty as head coach and was ordered by general manager Joe Thomas to bench the veterans in favor of the younger players.[14][15] Domres compiled his best professional season, with nine starts going 115-222 with 1,392 yards and 11 touchdown passes, adding 30 rushes for 137 yards and one touchdown.[11] Domres left the week 12 game of the 1972 season against the Buffalo Bills, appearing to be injured, but later claimed it was to allow Unitas to make his final appearance as a Colt. Unitas threw a 63-yard touchdown pass to Eddie Hinton, his final scoring throw with the team. The Colts won 35-7, and despite Unitas's brief return, Domres was named the NFL Offensive Player of the Week with three passing touchdowns and one rushing touchdown in the game.[16][17] Baltimore drafted Bert Jones in the first round of the 1973 NFL draft, leading to an offseason quarterback controversy. Jones was named the starter for the season opener against the Cleveland Browns and remained at the helm for the first four weeks of the season.[18] After a poor start, Colts' head coach Howard Schnellenberger made the switch to Domres, who led the team for the remainder of the season. The Colts finished 4-10 on the season, and Domres went 93-191 with 1,153 yards and nine touchdowns.[11][19] Domres spent the next two seasons as the backup to Jones. In the weeks before the 1976 season began, the Colts traded Domres to the San Francisco 49ers for a 1978 draft choice (which became Ernie Hughes).[20] In San Francisco, Domres served as the third-choice quarterback behind Jim Plunkett and Scott Bull. Joe Thomas, the former Colts general manager who had traded away Domres, took over in the same role for the 49ers prior to the 1977 season. Thomas cut Domres from the 49ers roster in June 1977 and he subsequently signed with the New York Jets the next month.[21] Domres played with the Jets for one season where he served as the back up to Richard Todd.[11] Personal lifeDomres settled in the Baltimore, Maryland area after his NFL career where he became a financial advisor. Despite only playing together for one year, he maintained a close relationship with Unitas until Unitas's death in 2002.[16] Domres was inducted into the Greater Syracuse Sports Hall of Fame in 1995 and the Christian Brothers Academy LaSallian Athletic Hall of Fame in 2004.[22] He was inducted into the Columbia University Athletic Hall of Fame in 2008.[23] See alsoReferences
External links
|