Ronnie Cahill
No. 63 | |
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Position: | Tailback/Quarterback |
Personal information | |
Born: | (1915-04-24)April 24, 1915 Leominster, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died: | September 6, 1992(1992-09-06) (aged 77) Morristown, Vermont, U.S. |
Career information | |
College: | Holy Cross |
Career history | |
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Career highlights and awards | |
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Player stats at PFR | |
Ronald Maurice Cahill (1915-1992) was a National Football League quarterback for the Chicago Cardinals.
He was signed by the Cardinals as a replacement for Bud Schwenk, who had joined the armed forces.[1] In his only National Football League season, Cahill led the league in interceptions but did not win any of the ten games in which he played.[2]
In 1946, Cahill signed with the Buffalo Bisons of the newly formed All-America Football Conference, but did not appear in any games.[3]
References
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- Timothy F. Larkin
- Charley Donnelly
- Mark Devlin
- Ronnie Cahill
- Frank Matrango (1949)
- Charlie Maloy (1950–1952)
- Bill Haley (1953)
- Jack Stephans (1954–1955)
- Bill Smithers (1956)
- Tom Greene (1956–1958)
- Ken Komodzinski (1959)
- Pat McCarthy (1960–1962)
- Fran Coughlin (1963)
- Mike Cunnion (1964)
- Tom Tyler (1965)
- Jack Lentz (1966)
- Phil O'Neil (1967–1968)
- Howie Burke (1969)
- Jerry Lamb (1970)
- Mickey Connolly (1971)
- Peter Vaas (1971–1973)
- Bob Morton (1974–1976)
- Peter Colombo (1977–1978)
- Neil Solomon (1979)
- Dave Boisture (1980–1981)
- Peter Muldoon (1982–1984)
- Jeff Wiley (1985–1988)
- Tom Ciaccio (1989–1991)
- Andy Fitzpatrick (1992)
- Dave Harrington (1993)
- Rob Callahan (1994)
- Brion Stapp (1995–1997)
- Matt Kives (1998)
- Ryan Collar (1999)
- Erreick Stewart (2000)
- Brian Hall (2001–2002)
- John O'Neil (2003–2005)
- Dominic Randolph (2006–2009)
- Brian McSharry (2006)
- Ryan Taggart (2010–2011)
- Kevin Watson (2012)
- Ryan Laughlin (2012–2013)
- Steven Elder (2012–2013)
- Peter Pujals (2013–2017)
- Geoff Wade (2016, 2018)
- Blaise Bell (2016)
- Emmett Clifford (2018)
- Connor Degenhardt (2019–2020)
- Matthew Sluka (2020–2023)
This biographical article relating to an American football quarterback born in the 1910s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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