American football player and coach (born 1974)
American football player
Raymond 'Ray' Philyaw (born July 30, 1974) is a former arena football quarterback who was most recently the offensive coordinator of the Jacksonville Sharks of the Arena Football League (AFL). He also played for the Cleveland Gladiators , Chicago Rush , Kansas City Brigade , Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings and the Albany/Indiana Firebirds , leading the former to the American Conference championship game in 2004 and 2005 . Prior to his Arena Football career, he played for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League (CFL) and the Madison Mad Dogs of the Indoor Football League (IFL). After leaving to coach with the New Orleans VooDoo in 2011, he attempted a return as a player in 2012 with the San Jose SaberCats , but later became OC for the San Antonio Talons . He holds the record for the highest career TD -to-INT ratio in AFL history and threw a school record 52 TDs while attending Northeast Louisiana .
Early life
Philyaw attended Southwood High School in Caddo Parish, Louisiana . While there, he participated in football, basketball and track & field , winning a district championship his senior year in both football and basketball.[ 1]
College career
Philyaw attended Northeast Louisiana University , where he continued his football career. Philyaw started his sophomore through senior seasons for the Indians. At the completion of his career in 1996, Philyaw's 52 career touchdown passes stood as a school record until Steven Jyles broke his record in 2005.[ 2] In 2009, Philyaw was inducted into the ULM Athletics Hall of Fame.[ 3]
Statistics
Philyaw's college stats at the completion of the 1996 season. Source:[ 4]
NCAA collegiate career statistics
Northeast Louisiana Indians
Year
Team
Passing
Rushing
Receiving
Att
Yds
TD
Yds
TD
1993
Northeast Louisiana
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
1994
Northeast Louisiana
131
243
53.9
1,893
13
7
131.2
64
95
2
1
25
0
1995
Northeast Louisiana
167
320
52.2
2,627
22
7
139.5
49
-43
0
0
0
0
1996
Northeast Louisiana
173
351
49.3
2,445
16
8
118.3
68
-86
3
0
0
0
Totals
471
914
51.5
6,965
52
22
129.1
181
-34
5
1
25
0
Professional career
Winnipeg Blue Bombers
Madison Mad Dogs
Shreveport Knights
Philyaw was backup quarterback for the Shreveport Knights of the short-lived Regional Football League in 1999.[ 5]
Albany/Indiana Firebirds
Chicago Rush
With the Chicago Rush in 2004, Philyaw lead the Rush to the conference semi-finals, but when he suffered an ACL injury , the Rush lost momentum and fell to the San Jose SaberCats .[ 6]
Kansas City Brigade
In 2006, Philyaw signed with expansion Kansas City Brigade , after the Brigade released veteran Andy Kelly .[ 7]
Cleveland Gladiators
In 2008, Philyaw lead the Cleveland Gladiators to the National Conference finals.[ 8] The Gladiators lost the game 35–70 to the champion Philadelphia Soul .
Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings
San Jose SaberCats
In 2012, Philyaw attempted a comeback with the San Jose SaberCats , but was put on IR.[ 9]
Coaching career
New Orleans VooDoo
In 2011, Philyaw was hired by the New Orleans VooDoo as the team's offensive coordinator .[ 10]
San Antonio Talons
In 2013, Philyaw as hired as the San Antonio Talons ' offensive coordinator. Philyaw dealt with injuries during the year, starting five different quarterbacks in the first seven weeks of the season.[ 11] The Talons did not find an ownership group for the 2015 season, and the franchise was placed on suspension, leaving Philyaw jobless.
References
^ "AFL Q&A: Raymond Philyaw" . www.oursportscentral.com . OurSports Central. February 19, 2004. Retrieved May 20, 2013 .
^ "ULM Warhawks football records" (PDF) . www.ulmathletics.com . ULM. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 20, 2013 .
^ "Hall of Fame Inductee Raymond Philyaw – One of ULM's Great Quarterbacks" . www.ulmwarhawks.com . ULM Athletics. April 20, 2009. Retrieved May 20, 2013 .
^ "Raymond Philyaw Statistics" . www.sports-reference.com . Sports Reference. Retrieved May 20, 2013 .
^ McCloskey, John (May 17, 1999). "Philyaw, Knights struggle early but finish strong" . The Times . Shreveport, Louisiana . p. 15. Retrieved January 24, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
^ Dave Payne (June 13, 2004). "QB injury seals Rush's fate" . Chicago Tribune . Retrieved May 19, 2013 .
^ "Brigade Signs AFL Veteran QB Raymond Philyaw" . www.oursportscentral.com . OurSports Central. April 6, 2006. Retrieved May 19, 2013 .
^ "Former ULM Quarterback Raymond Philyaw Leads Cleveland Gladiators into AFL Conference Title Game" . www.ulmwarhawks.com . University of Louisiana-Monroe. July 11, 2008. Retrieved May 19, 2013 .
^ Eric R. Ivie (February 22, 2012). "Raymond Philyaw Returns to Arena Football with SaberCats: Fan Take" . Yahoo!. Retrieved March 1, 2012 .
^ "New Orleans VooDoo hires Raymond Philyaw as offensive coordinator" . www.nola.com . NOLA Media Group. March 31, 2011. Retrieved May 19, 2013 .
^ Richard Oliver (May 11, 2013). "Talons' Hill ready to tough out injury" . www.expressnews.com . San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved May 19, 2013 .
External links
Lloyd Ray (1951)
Mark Boatright (1953)
Pete Chambless (1954)
Everett Reynolds (1956–1958)
Nathan Zametto (1957)
Bob Randel (1959)
Don Wattigny (1960)
Ronnie Myrick (1961–1962)
Bookie Shillcutt (1963)
Johnny Garrison (1964)
Steve Mansur (1965–1968)
Terry Reisig (1967)
Mike Audirsch (1969)
Allen Taylor (1970)
Don Smith (1971–1972)
Scotty Dyer (1973–1974)
Joe Bruner (1975)
Mike Howell (1976)
Bud Cespiva (1977)
Kirby Arceneaux (1978)
John Holman (1979–1982)
Bob Lane (1981)
Rodney Horn (1983–1984)
Bubby Brister (1984–1985)
Stan Humphries (1986–1987)
Doug Pederson (1987–1990)
Wendal Lowrey (1991–1992)
Robert Cobb (1993)
Raymond Philyaw (1993–1996)
Daniel Jeremiah (1997)
Andre Vige (1998)
Andy Chance (1999–2001)
Steven Jyles (2002–2005)
Kinsmon Lancaster (2006–2008)
Trey Revell (2007–2009)
Cody Wells (2009, 2012)
Kolton Browning (2010–2013)
Brayle Brown (2013)
Pete Thomas (2014)
Garrett Smith (2015–2017)
Earnest Carrington (2015)
Will Collins (2016)
Caleb Evans (2016–2019)
Colby Suits (2020)
Jeremy Hunt (2020)
Rhett Rodriguez (2021)
Chandler Rogers (2021–2022)
Jiya Wright (2023)
Hunter Herring (2023)
Blake Murphy (2023)
General Booty (2024)
Aidan Armenta (2024)