Connecticut Post

Super Bowl backup QBs have shined from Hostetler to Foles

- By Josh Dubow

Brock Purdy’s bid to join the select group of quarterbac­ks to go from a backup for most of the season to a Super Bowl starter got derailed when he suffered his own injury in the NFC championsh­ip game.

Purdy’s elbow injury helped contribute to San Francisco’s 31-7 loss to the Philadelph­ia Eagles that set the stage for a Super Bowl matchup of first and second team All-Pro quarterbac­ks Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts instead of another improbable story.

There have been several examples of backups leading a team to the big game with the most recent coming in the 2017 season when Nick Foles took over in Philadelph­ia for the final three games of the regular season after Carson Wentz got hurt.

Foles struggled at first before a storybook finish, becoming the only QB ever to throw for at least 350 yards and three TDs in the conference title game and Super Bowl in the same season to outduel Tom Brady for the championsh­ip with a 41-33 win.

Foles was the 14th quarterbac­k to start the

Super Bowl after not holding that role for the season opener, including Brady (2016) and Ben Roethlisbe­rger (2010), who were suspended to start those seasons. The others fall into a few categories.

There were those who seized the job early in the season such as Jake Delhomme did for Carolina when he replaced Rodney Peete at halftime of the 2003 season opener; Brady when he stepped in for an injured Drew Bledsoe in Week 3 in 2001; and Joe Kapp, who replaced Gary Cuozzo for Minnesota in the second game in 1969.

Then there were teams looking for a midseason jolt that turned into Super Bowl wins. Roger Staubach shared time with Craig Morton in 1971 before taking over for good midway through the year to launch a Hall of Fame career with his first Super Bowl win.

Three years later, Terry Bradshaw began the season on the bench behind Joe Gilliam before taking over as starter in Week 7, then winning the first of four Super Bowl titles. Trent Dilfer then stepped in for Tony Banks midway through the 2000 season for Baltimore, lost his first start and then won 11 in a row behind a dominant defense.

There were two other cases of injuries leading to changes before the stretch run, with Jim Plunkett stepping in for Dan Pastorini in 1980 in Oakland; and Colin Kaepernick doing the same in San Francisco after Alex Smith had a concussion in 2012.

Purdy was trying to join the group to make the Super Bowl after starting five or fewer games in the regular season alongside the Rams’ Vince Ferragamo (1979), Washington’s Doug Williams (1987), the Giants’ Jeff Hostetler (1990) and Foles (2017).

Hostetler had started just two games in almost seven full seasons for the Giants when Phil Simms injured his foot in Week 14. After starting that season with 10 straight wins, the Giants lost three out of four and were mostly written off as a contender when Simms got hurt.

“Everyone had jumped off the bandwagon,” Hostetler recalled in 2018. “We were completely shot as a team. That was the outside looking in. Inside where we were at, we just rallied the wagons. It was us versus the world. We just rallied around each other and it showed.”

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