Colt Brennan

Player

Birthday August 16, 1983

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Laguna Beach, California, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2021-5-11, Newport Beach, California, U.S. (37 years old)

Nationality United States

#16681 Most Popular

1983

Colton James Brennan (August 16, 1983 – May 11, 2021) was an American football quarterback.

1990

During the regular season, Brennan passed for 53 touchdowns, falling 1 touchdown pass short of the NCAA Division I-A single-season record (set in 1990 by David Klingler of Houston).

1991

He threw the record-breaking 122nd in the first quarter, a six-yard touchdown pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen to surpass the mark set by former BYU quarterback Ty Detmer in 1991.

With the pass, Brennan also broke Detmer's record for the player responsible for the most touchdowns with 136.

2002

Brennan originally attended the University of Colorado at Boulder (Colorado) in 2002 as a walk-on.

He spent the year as a redshirt.

2004

On January 28, 2004, Brennan entered the dorm room of a female student, uninvited, and, according to the victim, "exposed himself and fondled her," a charge which Brennan denied.

Brennan, who was intoxicated at the time of the incident, was arrested and eventually convicted of charges of felony burglary and trespassing (serving one week in jail along with probation until he graduated from college), but a guilty verdict for unlawful sexual contact was vacated by the court for lack of evidence.

Brennan was court ordered to take a polygraph test about the incident and passed.

He later showed those results to Saddleback College President Richard McCullough.

After the incident, which occurred during a period of time when Colorado was experiencing accusations of sex crimes and wild recruiting parties involving several athletes, he was cut from the team for the incident.

Brennan then transferred to Saddleback College in California in 2004 and helped lead the school to a conference championship.

He was named honorable mention JUCO All-America, state offensive player of the year by the JuCal Transfer, and first-team all-conference for his performance in that season.

He repaired his image well enough for the University of Hawaii head coach June Jones to offer him a walk-on opportunity.

Looking to put some distance between himself and his past problems and interested in Jones' quarterback knowledge, Brennan accepted the offer and turned down an offer from San Jose State.

2005

Brennan transferred to University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (Hawaii) in 2005 and quickly earned the starting quarterback job.

He started 10 of 12 games, the only games he did not start being against USC and San Diego State.

He either tied or broke 11 school offensive records in what was a successful first season with the Rainbow Warriors.

He led the country in total offense yards (4,455) and touchdowns thrown (35).

His 4,301 yards passing is the eighth-most in Western Athletic Conference (WAC) history.

Against New Mexico State, he recorded career-high numbers in passing yards (515), touchdowns (7), and pass completions (38).

He also had nine 300+ yard performances on the season, including four 400+ yard games and a 515-yard performance.

2006

Brennan entered 2006 as the undisputed starter at quarterback, was named to multiple award watch lists and was voted the WAC's preseason Offensive Player of the Year.

He led the nation in scoring and passing efficiency, finishing the regular season with a 182.8 rating, and completed 72.15% of his passes, the best in Division I-A.

On December 24, 2006, at the Hawaii Bowl, Brennan threw for five touchdowns to break the record.

(Statistics accumulated during the postseason now count towards records.) The team finished the season with an 11–3 record, finishing second in the WAC behind Boise State.

Brennan finished 6th in the voting for the 2006 Heisman Trophy, behind Troy Smith, Darren McFadden, Brady Quinn, Steve Slaton, and Mike Hart.

During the season, Brennan passed for 5,549 yards and 58 touchdowns, both of which are school records, and had the highest passer efficiency rating in the nation.

According to Jones, "Colt is a money guy. Colt is what I said he is: the best college quarterback in America, and he proved it tonight."

During a press conference on January 17, Brennan announced that he was returning to the University of Hawaii for his senior season.

He didn't feel he was fully prepared for the NFL and needed another year to get ready.

He returned to Hawaii as a Heisman front runner and one of the NCAA's most prolific passers.

2007

Rivals.com named him one of the top-10 quarterbacks going into the 2007 season.

On November 23, 2007, he broke the major college career record for touchdown passes, throwing five touchdown passes against then No. 17 Boise State.

Hawaii beat Washington 35–28 in the final game of the regular season to finish with a 12–0 record, finishing the 2007 season ranked No. 10 on the AP Top 25, earning a bid to 2007 BCS Sugar Bowl against the No. 5 ranked Georgia Bulldogs.

2008

He played college football for the Colorado Buffaloes, the Saddleback Bobcats, and most notably with the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors, where he was a two-time third-team All-American before being selected by the Washington Redskins of the National Football League (NFL) in the sixth round of the 2008 NFL Draft.

Brennan attended Mater Dei High School in California.

He helped Mater Dei advance to the league championship in basketball as a senior.

While at Mater Dei, he was the backup quarterback to Matt Leinart until Leinart graduated.

After graduating from Mater Dei, Brennan attended Worcester Academy in Massachusetts for a postgraduate year, where his primary receiver was David Ball, who later would break Jerry Rice's college record for touchdown receptions in Division I-AA.