Author Topic: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer  (Read 711 times)

IroNat

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Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« on: September 26, 2023, 03:29:23 AM »
But did he lift...???

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charley_Johnson



Professional career

He was a late-round draft pick by both the San Diego Chargers of the AFL and St. Louis Cardinals of the NFL, opting to go to St. Louis. After just 13 attempts his 1961 rookie season, he became the Cardinal's primary starter for the next five years. He was named to the NFL Pro Bowl in 1963 after career-bests 3,280 passing yards and 28 passing touchdowns, and was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated twice, on the December 14, 1964 and November 1, 1965. In 1964, he led the league with 223 completions, 420 attempts, 3,045 passing yards, and 24 interceptions. In 1966, he had a league-leading four 4th quarter comebacks. He played back-up to Jim Hart in 1967, and despite starting just two games, again led the league with two 4th quarter comebacks in 1968. He split time with Hart in 1969 before being traded to Houston. There he started 14 games in two seasons (1970–71), before ending his career with a four-year stint in Denver. He started 9 games for the Broncos in 1972, and all 14 games for the 7–5–2 squad in 1973. In 1974, his 14th season, he led the league for the first time in yards per attempt with 8.1. He began his final year with a 90-yard touchdown pass to Rick Upchurch against the Kansas City Chiefs, the only 90+ yard pass that decade by a Bronco.[3] As of 2017, his 16.45 yards per attempt in the game remains a franchise record, and he is a member of the Denver Broncos Ring of Fame

Johnson appeared as an imposter on the February 14, 1966 episode of the CBS game show To Tell the Truth. He revealed his true identity after receiving one vote.[4]

He retired in 1975 with a 59–57–8 record as a starter, with 1,737 completions (at the time, ranked 13th all-time in professional football) on 3,392 attempts (13th), for 24,410 yards (14th), 170 touchdowns (15th), 181 interceptions (14th) and a passer rating of 69.2 (20th).[5]

Outside of football

An engineering major at NMSU, Johnson obtained his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering at NMSU with a 4.0 GPA in 1961. Johnson then continued his academic pursuits during his NFL career and obtained master's and doctoral degrees in chemical engineering from Washington University in St. Louis while concurrently playing in the NFL. While an undergraduate, Johnson was part of NMSU's Army ROTC; he used his graduate studies to delay his commission until 1967, when he was called into active duty. He was deemed unfit for combat, but was stationed with and worked for NASA as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Reserve for two years (while simultaneously still playing for the Cardinals and working on his doctoral studies).[6][7] After his football career and military service were over, he worked in industry, opening Johnson Compression Services in Houston in 1981 and working as an engineering and product development consultant until 1999.[8] In 2000, he was hired to be the head of his New Mexico State’s chemical engineering department, a position he held until 2004, then becoming a professor in the department until his retirement in May 2012.[7] Johnson was also briefly the interim head coach of the NMSU football team during the off-season, following the firing of Hal Mumme in January 2009.[8]

funk51

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #1 on: September 26, 2023, 04:13:51 AM »
Academic career
Ryan attended graduate school during the first part of his playing career, and in 1965, he earned his Ph.D. from Rice.[5] He worked for seven postgraduate years under G. R. MacLane, a leading geometric-function theorist, and produced the dissertation "Characterization of the Set of Asymptotic Values of a Function Holomorphic in the Unit Disc".[3] In 1966, Ryan published two fundamental papers on the set of asymptotic values of a function holomorphic in the unit disc in Duke Mathematical Journal.[6]

Ryan received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 1965.[7]

He started teaching at Rice during his career and, during his time with the Browns, he became an assistant professor at the Case Institute of Technology in February 1967. Ryan had a full teaching load,[8] which includes undergraduate and graduate courses, and conducting research in complex analysis.[9][10] While at training camp, Ryan taught math in the morning and went to football practice in the afternoon.[11] Ryan taught his last course at Case Western Reserve in the spring of 1971. He was promoted to associate professor that summer. After taking a leave of absence for the next three years, he resigned his faculty position in 1974.

Ryan learned computer programming and software through the Chi Corp., Case Western Reserve's then newly launched private computer company. He compiled advanced statistics to apply what he learned to football. The Browns were shown his results and liked the project but didn't offer the extra cash to move it forward.[3]

Ryan's second career was fodder for many jokes by sportswriters. Red Smith wrote that the Browns' offense consisted of a quarterback who understood Einstein's theory of relativity and ten teammates who didn't know there was one. Ryan was somewhat put off by the focus on his academic life, as he considered himself to be a regular football player.

Ryan considers Sir Edward Collingwood, an expert in meromorphic function and the theory of cluster sets, and Arthur J. Lohwater, the former editor of Mathematical Reviews, as mentors.[12] Ryan has an Erdős number of 3.[13]

Post-NFL career
Soon after his retirement from the Redskins, Ryan remained in the nation's capital when he was named director of information services for the U.S. House of Representatives. While there, he helped advance the computer age in politics by playing an integral role in establishing the body's first electronic voting system. This enabled voting procedures that usually ran for 45 minutes to be shortened to around 15 minutes. By the time he left the post, the office had an annual budget of $8 million with a staff of 225.[14]

Ryan resigned that post to become athletic director and lecturer in mathematics at Yale University on March 7, 1977. Ryan served in that position for ten years before resigning to become the school's associate vice president for institutional planning.

He was a member of the Rice board of governors from 1972 to 1976 and was recognized as a distinguished alumnus in 1987. Ryan became vice president for external affairs at Rice in August 1990, increasing annual gifts to the university to a three-year average of $32.8 million for the fiscal years 1992–94 from $21.4 million for the fiscal years 1988–90. In 1995, he resigned his post as vice president for external affairs at Rice, owing to differences with President Malcolm Gillis concerning the future course of external affairs. Ryan ended his institutional career as a professor of mathematics, and professor of computational and applied mathematics at Rice.[15]

Ryan was president and chief executive officer of Contex Electronics, which designed and manufactured cable and interconnect products for the computer and communications industries. Ryan also served as director for America West Airlines, Sequoia Voting Systems,[16] and of Danielson Holding Corporation. He was an advisory director of United Medical Care Inc.

Now retired, Ryan lives on 78 acres of heavily forested land[17] in Grafton, Vermont, with his wife, Joan, a retired sportswriter and nationally syndicated columnist for The Washington Post.[3] His wife was one of the first female sportswriters to ever grace a locker room (not to be confused with another sportswriter named Joan Ryan)[18][19] and also wrote a book on women in sports. The two Texans met in college, fell in love with Vermont while Ryan was on staff at Yale, and have been married since their senior year at Rice.[12]

In retirement, he now runs a sophisticated self-designed program that helps micro-analyze statistical behavior of the up-and-down pricing movement that underlies the pricing behavior of the futures market. He is also doing work on Oppermann's conjecture about the distribution of prime numbers.[3]  IT WAS A DIFFERENT CLASS OF PEOPLE PLAYING BACK THEN, AT LEAST AT THE QUARTERBACK POSITION.

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funk51

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #2 on: September 26, 2023, 04:19:15 AM »
of course the game was rougher back then, and not watered down by all these rules like unnecessary roughness. et al.
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IroNat

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #3 on: September 26, 2023, 04:31:29 AM »
Amazingly talented and motivated people.

Pro football payed little in the old days so a career after football was important.


G_Thang

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #4 on: September 26, 2023, 06:35:54 PM »
Amazingly talented and motivated people.

Pro football payed little in the old days so a career after football was important.

Career after is still important today since 80% or so are broke 3-5 yrs after retirement.  Somethings don't change.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #5 on: September 27, 2023, 12:39:44 AM »
A degree from NMSU is like a junior high school diploma.

IroNat

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #6 on: September 27, 2023, 04:33:22 AM »
A degree from NMSU is like a junior high school diploma.

Seems to have worked out for him.

It's not necessary to have an Ivy League or private college degree to be successful.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: Charley Johnson - NFL QB and Chemical Engineer
« Reply #7 on: September 28, 2023, 12:06:19 AM »
Seems to have worked out for him.

It's not necessary to have an Ivy League or private college degree to be successful.
True, and much cheaper.