- Eddie McAshan
Edward 'Eddie' McAshan, III was born the son of a mortician in
Gainesville, Florida . He was a successful collegequarterback forGeorgia Tech and became one of the most famous athletes in college football history for being the firstAfrican American to start at quarterback for a major Southeasternuniversity . cite news | title = Georgia Tech's McAshan helped pave the way | work = ESPN Black History Month | publisher = ESPN| date = 2007-02-05| accessdate = 2007-05-15 | url = http://mobileapp.espn.go.com/ncf/mp/redesign/clubhouse?markupType=XHTML&action=story&team=2&story=2755075&page=1 | last = Lapchick| first = Richard]High school
Eddie began his football career as the first African American quarterback to play for predominantly white Gainesville High School. Over the years of 1966-1968, he threw for 61 touchdowns (top 20 all-time Florida career touchdowns). His high school quarterbacking was good enough to be noticed by Georgia Tech head coach
Bud Carson .College
McAshan would become the first African American football player to start for Georgia Tech. Carson started McAshan in 1970 as a sophomore and McAshan would go on to set several career records for Georgia Tech (which have since been broken by
Shawn Jones and Joe Hamilton). McAshan's first career start was on September 12, 1970 against South Carolina.cite news
title = GA. Tech Beats South Carolina
work =New York Times
pages = S9
first = | last =
date =1970-09-13 ] His start marked the first time that an African American had ever started at quarterback for a major Southeastern university and McAshan did not disappoint. He rallied Tech with a fourth quarter deficit, defeating the Gamecocks 23-20 with two late touchdown drives.Over McAshan's career, he passed for 32 touchdowns. His most notable single game performance came against Rice in 1972 when he threw 5 touchdown passes. Over the years of McAshan's quarterbacking, Georgia Tech would ramble and wreck off a 22-9-1 record. cite news | title = 1970-1974 Georgia Tech Game by Game Results | work = College Football Data Warehouse | publisher = | date = | accessdate = 2007-05-15 | url = http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/acc/georgia_tech/yearly_results.php?year=1970 | last = | first = ]
McAshan was the first scholarship African-American for Tech while the first walk-on African-American football player at Tech was
defensive back /returner Karl "PeeWee" Barnes who lettered in 1971-72. The second scholarship player wasrunning back Greg Horne fromMobile, AL and the third was linebacker Joe Harris, an eventual NFL career player. Harris still holds the single season record for tackles in a season at 188.McAshan was noted for feats of great athleticism and composure. In 1972, Georgia Tech played Tennessee in Atlanta. McAshan had suffered a poor outing with 5 interceptions but one moment stood out in the game for Tech fans. Tech had finally put a drive together and made it to the UT 20 yard line. McAshan took the snap from center and dropped back to pass. As he was preparing to throw, a Tennessee defender pressed his throwing arm into his chest so McAshan switched the ball to his other hand and threw to an open tailback in the end zone. The tailback, who had given up on the play after seeing the almost sack, dropped the wide open touchdown.
McAshan was also notorious for throwing intereceptions setting a GT record of 51 career interceptions, which was not broken until 2006 by
Reggie Ball .In 1972, Bud Carson was fired from Georgia Tech and McAshan's relationship with new head coach
Bill Fulcher was strained. The week before the 1972 Georgia game, McAshan asked Fulcher for four additional tickets so his family could attend the game in Athens. Fulcher denied the request so McAshan skipped the next practice in protest. Fulcher suspended McAshan for the next two games, which were the Georgia loss and theLiberty Bowl victory overIowa State .cite news
title = Black Star Suspended by Georgia Tech
work =New York Times
pages =
first = | last =
date =1972-12-02 ] cite news
title = Personalities: McAshan To Miss Liberty Bowl
work =New York Times
pages =
first = | last =
date =1972-12-08 ] During the Georgia game, McAshan sat in a whitelimousine withJesse Jackson right outside the stadium. McAshan was eventually kicked off the team by Fulcher and declared for theNational Football League draft as a junior in 1972. Eddie McAshan finished his Georgia Tech career with 4,262 yards of offense, 35 total touchdowns, a 68% winning percentage, two bowl game appearances, and a 1970 victory over archrival UGA.Professional
Eddie went on to be drafted by the 1973
New England Patriots in the 17th round as the 420th pick overall. cite news | title = Q is for Quarterback | work = Pro Football | publisher = | date = 1976 | accessdate = 2007-05-15 | url = http://www.beckys-place.com/2006az/q.html | last = | first = ] He was eventually cut and attempted a stint with theJacksonville Sharks of theWorld Football League and saw action in the 1974-1975 seasons until the WFL collapsed. cite news | title = 1974 World Football League Summary | work = | publisher = | date = | accessdate = 2007-05-15 | url = http://www.angelfire.com/tn/pkholling03/wfl/wfl_summary.html | last = | first = ]Eddie returned to Georgia Tech and completed his degree in industrial management in 1979. cite news | title = Sports Briefs | work = Tech Topics | publisher = Georgia Tech Alumni Association | date = Summer 1995 | accessdate = 2007-05-15 | url = http://gtalumni.org/StayInformed/techtopics/sum95/sports.html | last = | first = ]
References
External links
* [http://ramblinwreck.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/ School records]
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