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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ty_DetmerTy Detmer - Wikipedia

    Ty Hubert Detmer (born October 30, 1967) is an American former professional football quarterback who played in the National Football League (NFL). He won the Heisman Trophy in 1990 while playing college football for the BYU Cougars. Detmer broke numerous NCAA records with BYU, and was twice recognized as a consensus All-American.

  2. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ty_DetmerTy Detmer - Wikipedia

    Ty Hubert Detmer (San Marcos, 30 ottobre 1967) è un ex giocatore di football americano statunitense che ha giocato nel ruolo di quarterback per dodici stagioni nella National Football League (NFL). Fu scelto nel corso del nono giro (230º assoluto) del Draft NFL 1992 dai Green Bay Packers.

    Nazionalità
    Stati Uniti
    Altezza
    183 cm
    Peso
    Ruolo
    Termine carriera
    2005
    • 25
    • 34
    • 54
    • 6.351
  3. www.heisman.com › heisman-winners › ty-detmerTy Detmer - Heisman

    Ty Detmer. QB | RS Junior | Brigham Young University. Detmer won BYU’s first Heisman by producing the most passing yards and total offense in the history of the award. He is the last Heisman winner to come from a school that does not play in a major FBS conference.

  4. 20 apr 2024 · BYU's Ty Detmer is the only 2-time consensus 1st team All-American QB in CFB history. 1990 & 91. @BYUfootball pic.twitter.com/fB77oubkXA — Vintage LSU Football (@vintagelsuftb) October 14, 2020

  5. Checkout the latest stats for Ty Detmer. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, college, draft, and more on Pro-football-reference.com.

    • October 30, 1967
  6. A three-time First Team All-WAC performer, Detmer led College Football Hall of Fame coach LaVell Edwards’ teams to three conference championships, four bowl games, three AP top 25 finishes, a 28-21 win over top-ranked and defending national champion Miami on Sept. 8, 1990 and a 37-13-2 overall record.

  7. 25 set 2015 · Detmer—the NCAA's 1991 Heisman Trophy winnerreflects on 13 often-turbulent years playing for six NFL teams, largely in a backup or third-string capacity.