Justin Herbert

Player

Birthday March 10, 1998

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Eugene, Oregon, U.S.

Age 26 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6′ 6″

Weight 236 lbs

#14867 Most Popular

1930

In addition to his on-field success, Herbert was named the 30th recipient of the William V. Campbell Trophy, also referred to as the "Academic Heisman".

1998

Justin Patrick Herbert (born March 10, 1998) is an American football quarterback for the Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL).

Herbert was born in Eugene, Oregon, on March 10, 1998, and attended Sheldon High School, where he played football, basketball, and baseball.

During the third football game of his junior season, he suffered a broken leg, complicating his recruitment process.

As a senior, Herbert passed for 3,130 yards and 37 touchdowns, and rushed for 543 yards and 10 touchdowns.

He was named 1st Team All-State and the Southwest Conference Offensive Player of the Year.

Northern Arizona, Portland State, and Montana State extended offers before Nevada and Oregon followed up with his only NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision offers.

2015

Herbert committed to Oregon in October 2015.

Herbert also co-founded the Sheldon High School Fishing Club while in high school and served as their president.

2016

Entering his true freshman season listed as QB2 on the depth chart behind Dakota Prukop, Herbert became the first true freshman at Oregon to start at Quarterback since Chris Miller in 1983 when the Ducks took on arch-rivals Washington on October 8, 2016.

Despite Herbert setting or equaling Oregon's single-game records for total offensive yards (512), passing yards (489), and touchdown passes (6), the Ducks finished with their worst season in 25 years, going 4–8 and failing to make a bowl game for the first time in over a decade.

After the fifth game of the season, Herbert became the starting quarterback.

He showcased his talents by throwing for 1,936 yards including 19 touchdowns with just four interceptions in eight starts.

He led a come-from-behind upset when playing the ranked No. 11 Utah Utes.

The team scored four touchdowns in the final 15:27 of the game to overcome a 14–3 deficit.

On the final drive, Herbert completed 6-of-9 passes for 63 yards, including a 17-yard game-winning touchdown pass with two seconds left.

2017

The Ducks entered the 2017 season with new head coach Willie Taggart.

Leading the Ducks to a 4–1 start, Herbert's transition from the Chip Kelly/Mark Helfrich-era's “Blur Offense” to Taggart's “Gulf Coast Offense” was successful before he fractured his collarbone against Cal on September 30, 2017.

Without Herbert in the lineup, the Ducks dropped four of their next five games, and the offense went from averaging 49.2 points per game to just 15.0 points per game.

Herbert returned to help the Ducks win their last two regular season games to become bowl eligible.

The Ducks were selected to play Boise State in the Las Vegas Bowl but their performance fell flat and the Ducks lost 38–28 after head coach Willie Taggart left the team to become the head coach at Florida State a week before their bowl game.

In eight starts, Herbert had a 6–2 record and threw for 1,983 yards on 139-of-206 passing attempts (67.5%), including 15 touchdowns against only five interceptions.

He also rushed the ball 44 times for 183 yards and five touchdowns.

Herbert was named first-team CoSIDA Academic All-American with a 4.08 grade-point average in biology.

Herbert entered his third collegiate season as an early Heisman Trophy candidate despite being coached by a third different head coach.

He also learned a third different offensive scheme with new head coach Mario Cristobal, transitioning from the spread offense to the pistol offense.

Herbert led the Ducks to a 9–4 record and a victory in the Redbox Bowl.

He finished the year with 3,151 passing yards, 29 passing touchdowns, and two rushing touchdowns.

His 31 total touchdowns were good for second in the Pac-12 Conference behind Washington State's Gardner Minshew.

He was named to the Pac-12 All-Academic first-team.

Despite projecting as a high draft pick, Herbert announced that he would return to Oregon for his senior season.

He led the Ducks to a 12–2 record, including a win in the Rose Bowl where he ran for three touchdowns and was named Offensive MVP.

In his best statistical collegiate season, Herbert totaled 3,471 passing yards, 32 passing touchdowns, and four rushing touchdowns.

2019

He played college football at Oregon, where he won the 2019 Pac-12 Championship and was named MVP of the 2020 Rose Bowl.

2020

Herbert was selected by the Chargers as the sixth overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.

Herbert became the Chargers starting quarterback in the second game of his rookie year.

Herbert remained as the starter for the rest of the season, and set several rookie statistical records, including the most touchdown passes and the most 300-yard games.

Herbert was named the AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Herbert was selected sixth overall by the Los Angeles Chargers in the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

He was the third quarterback taken, behind Joe Burrow and Tua Tagovailoa.