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Steve Young

Steve Young

1961-10-11 Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

Biography

Steve Young is a Hall of Fame quarterback who revolutionized the position with his dual-threat abilities. Born October 11, 1961, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Young attended Greenwich High School in Connecticut before playing at BYU, where he set NCAA records in his senior season, leading the nation in passing yards (3,902), touchdowns (33), and completion percentage (71.3%). He won the Davey O'Brien Award and finished second in Heisman Trophy voting. After two seasons in the USFL with the Los Angeles Express, Young joined the NFL with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1985-1986), struggling through two difficult seasons before being traded to the San Francisco 49ers in 1987. Young spent four years backing up Joe Montana, finally becoming the full-time starter in 1991. Young's combination of pinpoint accuracy and explosive mobility made him one of the most efficient quarterbacks in NFL history. He led the league in passer rating a record six times and completion percentage five times, demonstrating exceptional passing precision while also rushing for 4,239 yards and 43 touchdowns in his career. His 96.8 career passer rating ranks fourth among retired players. Young won two NFL MVP awards (1992, 1994) and three Super Bowl championships. His crowning achievement came in Super Bowl XXIX, where he threw a record six touchdown passes while adding 49 rushing yards, earning Super Bowl MVP honors. Another signature moment was "The Catch II" in the 1998 Wild Card playoff against Green Bay, when Young threw a game-winning touchdown to Terrell Owens with three seconds remaining. After retiring due to concussion concerns in 1999, Young earned his J.D. from BYU and became a successful businessman, co-founding private equity firm Huntsman Gay Global Capital in 2007. He also worked as an NFL analyst for ESPN for over two decades. Young was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005 as the first left-handed quarterback to receive the honor. The 49ers retired his No. 8 jersey in 2008.