No. 16 | |||||||||||
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Position: | Quarterback | ||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||
Date of birth: | May 7, 1945 | ||||||||||
Place of birth: | Savannah, Georgia | ||||||||||
Height: | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) | ||||||||||
Weight: | 205 lb (93 kg) | ||||||||||
Career information | |||||||||||
College: | Tennessee | ||||||||||
NFL Draft: | 1968 / Round: 6 / Pick: 155 | ||||||||||
Career history | |||||||||||
Career NFL statistics | |||||||||||
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Player stats at PFR |
Touchdowns: | 1 |
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Interceptions: | 4 |
Passing yards: | 506 |
QB rating: | 60.7 |
Player stats at NFL.com |
Dewey Warren (born May 7, 1945) is a former American football quarterback for the University of Tennessee football team and the American Football League's Cincinnati Bengals.
In three seasons with Warren as the starting quarterback of the Tennessee Volunteers, their record was 19-6. He was the first UT quarterback to pass for more than a 1,000 yards in a season.
During his sophomore season, he led the Vols to a win against the Rose Bowl-bound UCLA Bruins and a berth in the Bluebonnet Bowl.
Before Warren took over as quarterback, Tennessee's single-season records were 75 passing attempts, 36 completions (by Johnny Majors in the 1950s), and 552 yards. Under coach Doug Dickey's wide-open T-formation offense, in 1966, Warren threw 229 passes with 136 completions and 1,716 yards.
Warren led Tennessee to an 8-3 record in that transformational 1966 season, followed by an 18-12 win over Syracuse University in the 1966 Gator Bowl, for which he was named the game's MVP. The following year, the Vols went 9-2, won the Southeastern Conference championship and were recognized by Litkenhous as national champions before a 26-24 loss to the University of Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. He finished eighth in the voting for the 1967 Heisman Trophy.
Warren ended his UT career with 3,357 yards passing and 27 touchdowns.
Warren was selected in the sixth round (155th overall) of the 1968 NFL/AFL Draft.
He spent one season with the American Football League's Cincinnati Bengals in the team's expansion year, playing in seven games in 1968 and starting three. Sharing time with Bengals quarterbacks John Stofa and Sam Wyche, Warren completed 47 passes in 80 attempts (58.8 percent) for 506 yards and one touchdown. In 1969, Warren played for the Las Vegas Cowboys of the Continental Football League.