NFL title game no reason to mourn on bayou
We owe a great deal of gratitude to the great state of Louisiana. The Pelican State has provided us with Britney Spears and Bourbon Street, Louis Armstrong and Mardi Gras, Harry Connick Jr. and creole.
But we all know Louisiana's No. 1 contribution to popular culture is the Super Bowl quarterback: When Carolina's Jake Delhomme takes the field Sunday he'll be the fifth out of 46 different Super Bowl starting quarterbacks who learned their craft at a Louisiana university.
Delhomme, who attended Louisiana-Lafayette, will join Terry Bradshaw (Louisiana Tech), Doug Williams (Grambling State), Stan Humphries (LSU and La.- Monroe) and David Woodley (LSU) as Louisiana-educated starting QBs in pro football's ultimate game. Only one state's colleges have produced more: California with eight.
A survey of the alma maters of all the Super Bowl starting QBs produced these fun facts:
-- Before New England's Tom Brady (University of Michigan) beat St. Louis 20-17 in Super Bowl XXXVI, the last Big Ten quarterback to win a Super Bowl was Miami's Bob Griese (Purdue) in Super Bowl VIII, a 24-7 win over the Vikings.
-- There is one other Big Ten quarterback to start and win a Super Bowl. Len Dawson (Purdue) led the Chiefs past the Vikings 23-7 in Super Bowl IV.
-- Jim Plunkett (Stanford) was the first West Coast college QB to win a Super Bowl when he and the Raiders trounced the Eagles 27-10 in Super Bowl XV.
-- Only twice in Super Bowl history have both starting QBs attended schools in the same conference. The last was an all-Pac-10 matchup: Denver's John Elway (Stanford) vs. Atlanta's Chris Chandler (Washington) in Super Bowl XXXIII which was won by Broncos 34-19.
The first was an all-SEC duel: Oakland's Kenny Stabler (Alabama) vs. Minnesota's Fran Tarkenton (Georgia) in Super Bowl XI. The Raiders won it 32- 14.
-- Cal is one of three schools to have had three different starting QBs in the Super Bowl (Vince Ferragamo, Craig Morton and Joe Kapp). The other two: Notre Dame (Joe Montana, Joe Theismann and Daryle Lamonica) and Alabama (Stabler, Bart Starr and Joe Namath).
Delhomme details: His 80.9 passer rating is relatively low for a starting QB in the Super Bowl. The last Super Bowl starter from an NFC team to have a lower rating was Phil Simms of the New York Giants in 1986 who had a 74.9 rating largely because he threw more interceptions (22) than TD passes that season (21). Little did it bother Simms as the Giants routed Denver in Super Bowl XXI 39-20. All Simms did was set the Super Bowl record for highest completion percentage (88 percent, 22-for-25). ... According to ESPN, Delhomme will be the third starting QB to wear No. 17 in SB history. The others: Williams and Billy Kilmer.
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Mark Camps
E-mail Mark Camps at mcamps@sfchronicle.com.