Kyle Quinlan

Kyle Quinlan (born February 10, 1989) is a former college football quarterback and formerly the co-offensive coordinator for the McMaster Marauders in the Ontario University Athletics conference of U Sports football. He played collegiately with the Marauders of the OUA where he won the Ted Morris Memorial Trophy as the Most Valuable Player in the 47th Vanier Cup, en route to winning the Marauder's first football national championship.[1] In 2012, Quinlan won the Hec Crighton Trophy as the CIS football Most Valuable Player. On April 29, 2013, Quinlan was named the CIS male athlete of the year for 2013. [2]

Kyle Quinlan
Born: (1989-02-10) February 10, 1989
South Woodslee, Ontario
Career information
CFL statusNational
Position(s)QB
Height6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight205 lb (93 kg)
UniversityMcMaster
CFL draft2012 / Undrafted
HandRight
Career history
As coach
20132014McMaster Marauders (RB)
2015Holland Hurricanes (HC/OC)
2016York Lions (OC)
20172018McMaster Marauders (Co-OC)
As player
2012Montreal Alouettes*
2013Montreal Alouettes*
*Offseason and/or practice roster member only
Awards47th Vanier Cup MVP
2011 Uteck Bowl MVP
2011 Yates Cup MVP
Hec Crighton Trophy (2012)
2x Yates Cup Champion (2011, 2012)
RecordsHighest single season OUA pass completion percentage (68.9%)
Most career touchdown passes by a McMaster Marauder (60)
Career stats

Professional career

Quinlan signed with the Montreal Alouettes on May 8, 2012 after being undrafted in the 2012 CFL Draft.[3] He played in the Alouettes second pre-season game, completing two of four passes for 45 yards, before being released during the team's final training camp cuts.[4] After completing his college eligibility with McMaster, Quinlan re-signed with the Alouettes on December 21, 2012.[5] In May 2013 it was announced that Quinlan would not be joining the Alouettes for their 2013 training camp, despite having signed a 3-year contract in December.[6]

Coaching career

Quinlan decided not to pursue his CFL career, instead he joined the McMaster Marauders coaching staff as the team's running backs coach in May 2013.[7] He then joined the Holland College Hurricanes as the team's head coach and offensive coordinator on July 15, 2015.[8] He won the Moosehead Cup championship that year, but left the team after only one season.

On November 27, 2015, he was hired by the York Lions to become the offensive coordinator of their football team.[9]

On December 1, 2016, it was announced that Quinlan would be returning to the McMaster Marauders as co-offensive coordinator, sharing duties with Tom Flaxman.[10] Quinlan resigned from his position at the end of the 2018 season.

gollark: Yes, they really managed the pandemic well in China by trying to ignore it/cover it up and hoping it would go away.
gollark: I like authoritarian governments, but only if they magically make everything work better with no problems and never cause problems for me or anyone else I know.
gollark: Doesn't that demonstrate that being more authoritarian and not having democracy does NOT automatically make a place good, if you don't like Singapore?
gollark: Isn't Singapore also one of those somewhat-authoritarian not-very-democracy places?
gollark: Well, I don't know much about it and don't care very much.

References

Preceded by
Sébastien Lévesque
Vanier Cup MVP
2011
Succeeded by
Maxime Boutin
Preceded by
Billy Greene
Hec Crighton Trophy winner
2012
Succeeded by
Jordan Heather
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.