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Quiz about NFL by the Jersey Numbers
Quiz about NFL by the Jersey Numbers

NFL by the (Jersey) Numbers Trivia Quiz


A challenging and fun look at some of the most famous jersey numbers in NFL history.

A multiple-choice quiz by d2407. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
d2407
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
247,449
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
4413
Awards
Top 5% quiz!
Last 3 plays: Guest 156 (9/10), Guest 50 (5/10), Guest 69 (8/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. #32 was considered the premier number for running backs due to the success of many who wore it, especially during the 1960s and 1970s. Of the following backs, who was the only one to not wear #32? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. I was a Pro Bowl defensive player, won a Super Bowl ring, and was known for my outrageous talk and behavior, and the number 99 I wore. Who was I? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Bearing in mind that this question is about jersey numbers, which list of names below properly completes this sequence: Drew Bledsoe, Emmitt Smith, Sammy Baugh, John Riggins. Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. This number has a lot of firsts associated with it. It was worn by the first black player-coach in NFL history. The first true wizard of the forward pass wore it. So did the first black quarterback selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. That player's selection made the number the first to have been worn by seven Hall of Famers for most of their careers. Which number is it? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. One player had an impressive 21 sacks during the 1987 season. The other player managed 22.5 sacks during the 2001 season. Besides their ability to get to the quarterback, what was the jersey number the two players had in common? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. The New York Giants retired #56. By what two-letter nickname was this defensive standout also known? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. LaDainian Tomlinson's amazing 2006 campaign saw him shatter Shaun Alexander's one-year-old record for most touchdowns in a season, and Paul Hornung's 46-year-old record for most points. Tomlinson's number 21 was previously made famous by what earlier San Diego Charger standout? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Number 80 is a deep and rich one for NFL receivers. Steve Largent, the one-time record holder for career receptions, wore 80, and later saw the number retired by the Seattle Seahawks. Jerry Rice, who eventually became an all-time leader, also wore 80. When Rice joined the Seahawks for the 2004 season, what number did he wear? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. What was the jersey number made famous by Oakland Raider center Jim Otto? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Numerous quarterbacks have made #12 famous. Which of the following statements about the number and the quarterbacks who wore it is false? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 15 2024 : Guest 156: 9/10
Apr 04 2024 : Guest 50: 5/10
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quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. #32 was considered the premier number for running backs due to the success of many who wore it, especially during the 1960s and 1970s. Of the following backs, who was the only one to not wear #32?

Answer: Tony Dorsett

Tony Dorsett, the standout running back for the Dallas Cowboys of the late 1970s and early 1980s, wore 33. Jim Brown, still considered by many to be the standard against whom all running backs are measured, retired in 1965 holding virtually all NFL season, career, and game rushing records.

Many of those season and game records were later broken by Simpson. Harris came close to passing Brown as the NFLs all-time rushing leader, but was passed late in his career by Walter Payton and finished less than 200 yards behind Brown. Oddly, in the two decades following the retirements of Harris and Dorsett, Marcus Allen was the only Hall of Fame caliber back to wear 32.
2. I was a Pro Bowl defensive player, won a Super Bowl ring, and was known for my outrageous talk and behavior, and the number 99 I wore. Who was I?

Answer: Warren Sapp

Warren Sapp, the ever-quotable and visible defensive lineman, played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1995 to 2003, making the Pro Bowl seven of those years, and helping the team to the NFL title in 2002. Gastineau was a standout defensive player for the New York Jets of the 1980s, but never won a Super Bowl.

Henderson and Siragusa both were on Super Bowl winners, but neither wore 99 (although Siragusa wore 98).
3. Bearing in mind that this question is about jersey numbers, which list of names below properly completes this sequence: Drew Bledsoe, Emmitt Smith, Sammy Baugh, John Riggins.

Answer: Junior Seau, Ray Nitschke, Red Grange, Lynn Swann

The players named in the question wore multiples of 11 - Bledsoe (11), Smith (22), Baugh (33), Riggins (44), so the sequence would logically continue with Seau (55), Nitschke (66), Grange (77), and Swann (88).
4. This number has a lot of firsts associated with it. It was worn by the first black player-coach in NFL history. The first true wizard of the forward pass wore it. So did the first black quarterback selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. That player's selection made the number the first to have been worn by seven Hall of Famers for most of their careers. Which number is it?

Answer: 1

Really, with so many firsts mentioned in the question, what number could it be, other than 1? Fritz Pollard was one of the NFLs first black players (after the 1920s, the NFL instituted a ban on black players and remained all-white until Kenny Washington joined the Los Angeles Rams in 1946) and was a player coach for the 1921 Akron Pros.

Benny Friedman was one of the first players to frequently use the forward pass, an adventurous feat when he played, as the neither the ball of the era, nor the rules, favored passing. Warren Moon had a stellar career in Canada before joining the NFL in 1984, becoming a nine-time Pro Bowler, and amassing almost 50,000 yards passing. Besides Pollard, Friedman, and Moon, early NFL pioneers Jimmy Conzelman, Paddy Driscoll, Ray Flaherty, and Curly Lambeau all wore #1, and thus made it the first jersey number to have been worn by seven Hall of Famers when they were in the prime of their careers.
5. One player had an impressive 21 sacks during the 1987 season. The other player managed 22.5 sacks during the 2001 season. Besides their ability to get to the quarterback, what was the jersey number the two players had in common?

Answer: 92

The two players would of course be Reggie "Minister of Defense" White, and Michael Strahan. For White, the number 92 has other significance: after the '92 season, he left the Eagles for the Packers, helping Green Bay return to being a league-leading team again for the first time since the 1960s.
6. The New York Giants retired #56. By what two-letter nickname was this defensive standout also known?

Answer: LT

In honor of Lawrence "LT" Taylor.
7. LaDainian Tomlinson's amazing 2006 campaign saw him shatter Shaun Alexander's one-year-old record for most touchdowns in a season, and Paul Hornung's 46-year-old record for most points. Tomlinson's number 21 was previously made famous by what earlier San Diego Charger standout?

Answer: John Hadl

Before the NFL instituted rules strictly limiting quarterbacks to wearing numbers from 1-19, John Hadl wore 21 for the San Diego Chargers from 1962 to 1972. He finished his career with the Rams, Packers, and Oilers, and eventually switched to a more conventional #12. Alworth, Fouts, and Joiner all had Hall of Fame careers for the Chargers, but wore Numbers 19, 14, and 18, respectively.
8. Number 80 is a deep and rich one for NFL receivers. Steve Largent, the one-time record holder for career receptions, wore 80, and later saw the number retired by the Seattle Seahawks. Jerry Rice, who eventually became an all-time leader, also wore 80. When Rice joined the Seahawks for the 2004 season, what number did he wear?

Answer: 80 - with Largent's blessing, the number was "unretired" for Rice

Out of respect for Rice, who had already smashed Largent's receiving records, Largent allowed his 80 to be "unretired" for Rice to wear for the 2004 season. Rice caught 25 passes for three touchdowns in 13 games, all well below his earlier career production, for the Seahawks that year, before briefly rejoining San Francisco to retire as a 49er.
9. What was the jersey number made famous by Oakland Raider center Jim Otto?

Answer: double zero

Another AFL "free spirit" who disregarded football jersey number conventions, Otto chose the double-zero because it was the same as his last name ("ott-oh" as he said). Otto played for the Oakland Raiders from 1960 to 1974, making the Pro Bowl 12 of those 15 seasons, and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. Ken Burroughs, a receiver for the Houston Oilers in the 1970s, also wore 00.
10. Numerous quarterbacks have made #12 famous. Which of the following statements about the number and the quarterbacks who wore it is false?

Answer: Until 1984, the NFL record for most touchdown passes in a season had always been held by quarterbacks who wore #12

When Dan Marino (who of course wore #13) broke the NFL record for touchdown passes in 1984, it had been held by George Blanda (#16 of the Houston Oilers) and YA Tittle (#14 of the New York Giants). From 1971 to 1979, all Super Bowls were won by quarterbacks wearing #12 (Terry Bradshaw four times, Bob Griese and Roger Staubach twice, Ken Stabler once), but not until Tom Brady in the 2001 season did another quarterback win a Super Bowl while wearing that number.

Despite OJ Simpson and other legends playing for the team, the Buffalo Bills had never retired a player number until Kelly's was retired in 2001. Joe Namath and Roger Staubach, both members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Class of 1985, became the first #12 quarterbacks inducted into the Hall.
Source: Author d2407

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