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    • CLASS of 2008
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      • Jan Stenerud
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    • CLASS OF 2009
      • Ray Guy
      • Pete Gogolak
      • Ben Agajanian
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      • Doak Walker
      • Leroy Mills
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  • Home
  • CLASS of 2008
    • Sammy Baugh
    • Lou Groza
    • Jan Stenerud
    • Jim Thorpe
    • George Blanda
  • CLASS OF 2009
    • Ray Guy
    • Pete Gogolak
    • Ben Agajanian
  • CLASS OF 2010
    • Tom Dempsey
    • Yale Lary
  • CLASS OF 2011
    • Doak Walker
    • Leroy Mills
    • George Allen
  • CLASS OF 2012
    • Kevin Butler
    • Jerrel Wilson
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    • Fred Mitchell
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    • Reggie Roby
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    • Tommy Davis
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    • George Gipp
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    • John "Paddy"Driscoll
    • Glenn Presnell
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    • Horace Gillom
  • CLASS OF 2021
    • Alex Moffat

American Football Kicking Hall of Fame

American Football Kicking Hall of FameAmerican Football Kicking Hall of FameAmerican Football Kicking Hall of Fame

John "Paddy" Driscoll

Franchise player of the rarest kind

The term “franchise player” is used to describe a star who, by the excellence of his play on the field, plays a major role in his team’s success or, in some cases, its very existence. John “Paddy” Driscoll, who excelled as a quarterback and halfback, proved himself to be a franchise player of the rarest kind.


The Chicago Cardinals, a charter member of the National Football League were challenged in the Windy City by another league team, the Tigers. The Cardinals hired Driscoll, for the then-princely sum of $300 a game in an effort to bolster the team’s performance on the field and in the box office. In a mid-season game against the Tigers, Driscoll scored the game’s only touchdown to lead the Cardinals to a 6-0 victory, giving them bragging rights as Chicago’s best.


The Tigers folded following the 1920 season. Driscoll at just 5-11 and 160 pounds was not very big. But size didn’t prevent him from excelling on both offense and defense, and he was particularly skilled in punting and dropkicking. After the Bears moved to Chicago in 1921, they quickly became the Cardinals archrivals. Driscoll seemed always to be at his peak when the two teams played. In 1922, he scored all the points on dropkicked field goals as the Cardinals beat the Bears, 6-0 and 9-0.


When the famed Red Grange made his pro debut against the Cardinals in 1925, Driscoll angered the large crowd by continually punting away from the “Galloping Ghost.” “I decided if one of us was going to look bad, it wasn’t going to be me. Punting to Grange is like grooving a pitch to Babe Ruth,” he explained. The possibility that Driscoll might defect to a new league being formed in 1926 prompted his trade to the Bears, where he continued to subdue the opposition single-handed through the remainder of his career that ended following the 1929 season.


BIO INFO


John “Paddy” Driscoll

Quarterback, Halfback, Kicker, Punter

Personal information

Date of birth:January 11, 1896

Place of birth:Evanston, Illinois

Height:5 ft 11 inWeight:160 lbs

Career information

College:Northwestern

Last played:Chicago Bears (1929

)Career highlights and awards

  • NFL champion (1925)
  • 6× First-team All-Pro (1920, 1922, 1923, 1925–1927)
  • 2× Second-team All-Pro (1924, 1928)
  • NFL 1920s All-Decade Team


—Driscoll on Wikipedia


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