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Sonny Sixkiller

Sonny Sixkiller
No. 28, 6, 11
Position: Quarterback
Personal information
Date of birth: (1951-09-06) September 6, 1951 (age 65)
Place of birth: Tahlequah, Oklahoma, U.S.
Height: 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight: 190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High school: Ashland (OR)
College: Washington
Undrafted: 1973
Career history

Alex L. "Sonny" Sixkiller (born September 6, 1951) is a former American football player and current sports commentator.

Born in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, and a member of the Cherokee Nation, Sixkiller's family moved to Ashland in southern Oregon when he was a year old, where his father worked in a lumber mill. He attended Ashland High School and was a good student and a letterman in football, basketball, and baseball. In football, Sixkiller was an All-Southern Oregon Conference selection and a second team All-State selection. He was a back-up at quarterback as a sophomore to senior Gene Willis, who later played at Washington. In basketball, he was an all-conference selection. In baseball, he was a pitcher and an all-conference selection. Sonny Sixkiller graduated from Ashland High School in 1969. He had hoped to stay in-state and play for Oregon State in Corvallis, but head coach Dee Andros declined to offer him a scholarship, wary of his lack of size (5'11", 171 lb.)

On the advice of Willis, head coach Jim Owens recruited Sixkiller and offered him a scholarship to the University of Washington in Seattle. Due to his name, he was given uniform number 6. He became the starting quarterback for the Huskies as a sophomore in 1970 and led the Huskies to a 6-4 record, a vast improvement over the 1-9 record in 1969. He completed 186 passes for 2303 yards and 15 touchdowns in what many called the Year of The Quarterback, in which Jim Plunkett passed for 2,715 yards on the year and broke his own conference record. Plunkett won the Heisman Trophy, given annually to the top college football player in the country, beating out Notre Dame's Joe Theismann and Archie Manning of Ole Miss. Sixkiller missed four games as a senior in 1972 finished his college career with 385 completions for 5496 yards and 35 touchdowns, and held fifteen school records. The Huskies posted consecutive 8-3 records in 1971 and 1972.


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Wikipedia

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