Sonny Jurgensen, Hall of Fame quarterback with Washington and Philadelphia, dies at 91
He was number 356 on the list.
Sonny Jurgensen, a 1983 Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee and one of the purest passers of the 1960s, died at at the age of 91, his family announced Friday.
"It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of our husband, father, and grandfather, Sonny Jurgensen," the Jurgensen family said in a statement released by the Washington Commanders. "We are enormously proud of his amazing life and accomplishments on the field, marked not only by a golden arm, but also a fearless spirit and intellect that earned him a place among the legends in Canton. But to those of us who knew him beyond the stadium lights, he was the steady, humorous, and deeply loving heart of our family.
"He lived with deep appreciation for the teammates, colleagues, and friends he met along the way. While he has taken his final snap, his legacy will remain an indelible part of the city he loved and the family he built.
"We are comforted by the knowledge that he brought joy to so many. This weekend as we enjoy the game that he loved so much, join us and raise a glass, share a story and a smile, as we celebrate the extraordinary life of a man who was, to us, the greatest of all time."
With an 18-year career that spanned from 1957 to 1974, Jurgensen sparkled as a thrower during an era when offenses more commonly operated in a cloud of dust. He led the league in passing yards five separate times, earning five Pro Bowl nominations and one All-Pro nod, which came in his first season as the Philadelphia Eagles' starter in 1961.
The Philadelphia and Washington quarterback was named to the NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1960s alongside Green Bay Packers QB Bart Starr and Baltimore Colts QB Johnny Unitas.
"Few players could rival Sonny Jurgensen's genuine love of the game that continued long after his playing days," Pro Football Hall of Fame president Jim Porter said in a statement. "Whether he was standing tall in the face of an opposing lineman as a quarterback for the Eagles and Redskins for 18 seasons or later as a beloved broadcaster in Washington for several more decades, Sonny captivated audiences and introduced generations of fans to the sport. Watching Sonny throw a football was like watching a master craftsman create a work of art."
Jurgensen's prolific career spawned from humble, unexpected beginnings as a college athlete at Duke University. The future record-holder for passing yards in a single season -- he set the NFL's high-water mark first in 1961 (3,723 yards), and then broke his own record again in 1967 (3,747) -- made his biggest impact for the Blue Devils as a defensive back.
He spent his sophomore season at Duke as a full-time defender before transitioning to being a two-way player for his final two years in school. By the end of his collegiate career, Jurgensen had 77 completions for 1,119 yards and six touchdowns. He bested his QB scoring tally by hauling in 10 interceptions on the other side of the ball throughout his time in Durham.
Regardless, Jurgensen passed the eye test. The Eagles selected him with the No. 43 overall pick in the 1957 NFL Draft. Jurgensen would sit behind another Hall of Famer, Norm Van Brocklin, for four years, and he did not assume the starting role until The Dutchman retired following Philly's 1960 NFL Championship.
The small snapshot Jurgensen provided in his relief appearances for Van Brocklin during the 1960 season proved a picture-perfect microcosm of his career-to-be. The starter in waiting threw for five scores and 486 yards on just 24 completions, good for 20.3 yards per connection.
Finally at the helm the following year, Jurgensen was a revelation. The pocket-passing gunslinger immediately brought the wow factor to Philly, putting on a show for better and for worse. He not only set the single-season record for passing yards, but he also led the NFL in both touchdowns (32) and interceptions (24).
Philadelphia won 10 games but missed the playoffs despite Jurgensen's exploits, then cratered in the next two seasons, introducing a theme of teamwide futility that would plague Jurgensen's individually spectacular career.
The Eagles managed just five wins combined across their 1962
and 1963 campaigns, fired head coach Nick Skorich and completed their face lift
by trading Jurgensen to Washington ahead of the 1964 season.
It was in the nation's capital that Jurgensen would cement himself as the foremost pocket passer of his time. The QB compiled 19,693 passing yards, 160 TDs and 100 interceptions during a seven-year stretch as the club's unquestioned starter.
His record 3,747 passing yards in 1967, which he coupled with a league-leading 31 TD passes, stood until Dan Fouts eclipsed it with the NFL's first 4,000-yard passing season in 1979 (Joe Namath had the first 4,000-yard season in the more pass-happy American Football League during the '60s).
In the 10 years following Jurgensen's record-setting feat, the NFL witnessed a 3,000-yard passer only six other times -- one of those being Jurgensen accomplishing the mark again.
Jurgensen's only winning season as Washington's starter came in 1969 with Vince Lombardi, the QB's third head coach in six years. Following Lombardi's death from cancer in September 1970, Jurgensen spent one more year as the team's signal-caller, under interim head coach Bill Austin.
Jurgensen's fifth and final head coach in D.C., George Allen, installed Billy Kilmer as the team's new QB in 1971 to usher in a conservative, run-first offense.
Jurgensen stayed on for four more years, backing up Kilmer as the team's fortunes finally turned around to the tune of 40 wins and four consecutive playoff trips. The final snaps of Jurgensen's career came in relief of Kilmer during a Divisional Round loss to the Los Angeles Rams. He was 40 years old, and it was the only postseason action of his storied NFL journey.
Jurgensen retired with 32,224 passing yards, 255 touchdowns and 189 interceptions. He remains Washington's single-season record holder for passing TDs even today, and his career high of 32 in 1961 still ranks second on the list in Philadelphia.
Although he never attained the individual accolades and championship pedigree of his All-Decade Team counterparts, Starr and Unitas, those who saw him play recognized his brilliance.
During his one-year opportunity to work with Jurgensen, the legendary coach Lombardi put it simply: "He may be the best the league has ever seen. He is the best I have seen."
Personal information
Born August 23, 1934
Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S.
Died February 6,
2026 (aged 91)
Listed height 5 ft 11
in (1.80 m)
Listed weight 202 lb
(92 kg)
Career information
High school New
Hanover (Wilmington)
College Duke
(1953–1956)
NFL draft 1957:
4th round, 43rd overall pick
Career history
Philadelphia Eagles (1957–1963)
Washington Redskins (1964–1974)
Awards and highlights
NFL champion (1960)
2× First-team All-Pro (1961, 1969)
2× Second-team All-Pro (1964, 1967)
5× Pro Bowl (1961, 1964, 1966, 1967, 1969)
5× NFL passing yards leader (1961, 1962, 1966, 1967, 1969)
2× NFL passing touchdowns leader (1961, 1967)
NFL passer rating leader (1967)
NFL completion percentage leader (1970)
NFL 1960s All-Decade Team
Philadelphia Eagles Hall of Fame
Washington Commanders Ring of Fame
Washington Commanders No. 9 retired
2× first-team All-ACC (1955, 1956)
NFL record
99-yard pass play (tied)
Career NFL statistics
Passing attempts 4,262
Passing completions 2,433
Completion percentage 57.1%
TD–INT 255–189
Passing yards 32,224
Passer rating 82.6











