Ray Buivid

Raymond Vincent Buivid (August 15, 1915 – July 5, 1972) was an American football player who played quarterback in the National Football League (NFL) for the Chicago Bears.

Ray Buivid
Buivid from the 1937 Hilltop
Position:Quarterback, halfback
Personal information
Born:(1915-08-15)August 15, 1915
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Died:July 5, 1972(1972-07-05) (aged 56)
Cherry Hill, New Jersey
Career information
High school:Port Washington (WI)
College:Marquette
NFL Draft:1937 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • First quarterback to throw five touchdowns in a game in NFL
  • Third in Heisman Trophy voting (1936)
Career NFL statistics
TDINT:11–4
Yards:500
Passer rating:80.8
Player stats at NFL.com
Player stats at PFR

A versatile player, Buivid played quarterback, halfback, and defensive back for the Marquette Golden Avalanche football team. He threw 13 touchdowns his junior year (1935). In 1936, he finished third in the voting for the Heisman Trophy and was a consensus All-American as a halfback, though he completed over 50% of his passes as quarterback as well. Marquette finished 20th in the country, and played in their first ever bowl game, the first Cotton Bowl Classic.[1] They lost 16–6 to TCU led by Sammy Baugh.

Buivid signed with the Chicago Bears on October 11, 1937 after missing the first three games of the season.[2] In the season finale against the cross-town rival Chicago Cardinals, he became the first player to throw five touchdowns in a single game, and also caught one.[3] Despite this performance, he appeared in just six games that season, all behind starting quarterback Bernie Masterson, attempting just 35 passes. The 9–1 Bears won the Western division, and played in the 1937 NFL Championship Game against the Washington Redskins, led by fellow rookie Sammy Baugh (who was drafted after Buivid, despite defeating him in the Cotton Bowl). Buivid was just 3 for 12 passing and 3 for -6 yards rushing with three turnovers, including a muffed punt late in the fourth quarter to seal the defeat.[4]

The next season, he appeared in 11 games but attempted just 48 passes for 295 yards, along with 32 rushes for 65 yards. He retired after just two seasons at age 23 to serve in World War II as a lieutenant in the navy.[5][6]

Statistics

Source:[7]PassingRushingReceiving
YearAgeTmGGSCmpAttYdsTDIntRateRushYdsTDRecYdsTD
193722CHI6017352056282.719240141
193823CHI11617482955274.632650180
Career176348350011480.8518902121
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gollark: Some of them are just weird for reasons other than that, though.
gollark: 4703 somehow *does things* just because the law says it can, even though the law is just a human concept and only affects what humans do.
gollark: Really, one of the main things which makes (some) SCPs weird is that they take convenient abstractions/concepts and turn them into immutable physical laws, while our real universe just runs on... well, physics. 173 is affected by line of sight, even though this is just a thing humans do to reason about... looking at things. 005 is just a magic item which unlocks things, 048 is just a label we assign to things which somehow affects them.
gollark: Alternatively, the machine breaks, if it prefers simple changes - so I guess make it STUPIDLY redundant.

References

  1. "Marquette Hall of Fame". Marquette Official Athletic Site.
  2. "Ray Buivid to Join Bears for Cardinals Game". Chicago Tribune. October 12, 1937.
  3. "Bucs QB Jameis Winston ties NFL rookie record with 5 TD passes". ESPN.go.com. November 22, 2015. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
  4. Page, Joseph S. Pro Football Championships Before the Super Bowl: A Year-by-Year History, 1926-1965. McFarland. pp. 41–44. ISBN 9780786457854.
  5. Anton, Todd; Nowlin, Bill. When Football Went to War. Triumph Books. p. 243. ISBN 9781600788451.
  6. "Death Takes All-American". Arizona Republic. July 7, 1972.
  7. "Ray Buivid Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved December 10, 2019.


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