Rex Grossman

Player

Birthday August 23, 1980

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Bloomington, Indiana, U.S.

Age 43 years old

Nationality United States

Height 185 cm

#35164 Most Popular

1980

Rex Daniel Grossman III (born August 23, 1980) is an American former football quarterback who played in the National Football League (NFL) for 11 seasons, most notably with the Chicago Bears.

Grossman was born in Bloomington, Indiana in 1980, the son of Rex Daniel Grossman II and Maureen Grossman.

Under the motivation and guidance of his father, he began playing football at an early age in grade school.

He originally started his football career as a running back, and played for a team that was coached by his father.

His mother convinced his father to convert him to a quarterback while he was in the sixth grade.

Grossman attended Bloomington High School South, where he played high school football for the Bloomington South Panthers.

In three seasons as the Panthers' quarterback, he threw for 7,518 yards and 97 touchdowns.

1998

He threw for 3,080 yards and forty-four touchdowns as a senior in 1998, including a game where he threw six touchdowns.

His senior season culminated when he led the Panthers to a 35–14 victory over the Homestead High School Spartans in the Indiana Class 5A state championship game.

Grossman completed seventeen of twenty-six pass attempts for 216 yards and five touchdowns, setting an Indiana record for the most touchdowns thrown in a championship game.

Grossman was recognized as the 1998 Indiana Player of the Year by USA Today, was ranked among the top fifteen players in the nation by the National Recruiting Advisor, and Parade magazine named him to its high school All-America team.

He received statewide honors when he was named Indiana's Mr. Football later that year.

1999

Grossman accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he played for coach Steve Spurrier and coach Ron Zook's Florida Gators from 1999 to 2002.

After redshirting his freshman year in 1999, Grossman competed for playing time with returning starter Jesse Palmer and the top high school recruit in the country Brock Berlin, in 2000.

2000

Grossman started his first game as a Florida Gator on October 7, 2000, against LSU.

Grossman had gotten the opportunity to start after completing 13 of 16 pass attempts for 232 yards and two touchdowns against Mississippi State the week before in the Gators' only SEC conference loss of the season.

Grossman solidified his position as Florida's starting quarterback during the next two games by throwing for over 500 yards, eight touchdowns and no interceptions in lopsided wins over LSU and Auburn.

He led the Gators to the SEC championship and was named Most Valuable Player of the SEC Championship Game.

For the season, Grossman completed 61.8 percent of his passes for 1,866 yards, 21 touchdowns, and only seven interceptions.

His passer efficiency rating of 161.8 was the third best in NCAA Division I football.

2001

Grossman passed for over 300 yards in nine consecutive games during his sophomore season in 2001.

He led the nation in passing efficiency, passing completion percentage and yards per attempt.

Grossman was recognized as a consensus first-team All-American, was voted the Associated Press Player of the Year, and came in second in the balloting for the 2001 Heisman Trophy in one of the closest Heisman votes in the history of the award.

At the time, his 55 touchdown passes through his sophomore season were the most in NCAA history.

On October 6, 2001, Grossman passed for 464 yards and five touchdowns as No. 2 Florida defeated the No. 18 LSU Tigers 44–15.

2002

Grossman played college football for the Florida Gators, where he was named AP College Football Player of the Year and won the 2002 Orange Bowl as a sophomore.

He ended his sophomore season with a 56–23 victory over the Maryland Terrapins in the 2002 Orange Bowl.

As a junior team captain in 2002, Grossman led the Gators in the famed "Slingin' in the Rain" game against the Tennessee Volunteers, in which he threw three touchdowns and 22 completions in 32 attempts en route to a 30–13 victory over the Vols.

2003

He was selected by the Bears in the first round of the 2003 NFL Draft.

Grossman led the Gators to the 2003 Outback Bowl, where they lost to the Michigan Wolverines 38–30 despite his completing 21 of 41 passes for 323 yards and two touchdowns.

After the season was over, Grossman decided to forgo his final year of college eligibility and declared for the NFL Draft.

In his three-season college career, Grossman threw for 9,164 yards and seventy-seven touchdowns.

He earned a 146.77 passer rating, becoming the third most efficient passer in the Southeastern Conference's history.

2006

Grossman's most successful season was in 2006 when he helped lead the Bears to a conference title and an appearance in Super Bowl XLI.

Due to inconsistent play, Grossman lost his starting position the following season.

In a 2006 interview with the Chicago Tribune, Grossman cited the victory as his most memorable game as a Gator.

He finished second to University of Nebraska quarterback Eric Crouch in one of the closest votes in Heisman Trophy history, losing by only 62 votes.

He earned accolades as a consensus first-team All-American, the AP National Player-of-the-Year, and finalist for other awards, including the Walter Camp National Player-of-the-Year Award, the Maxwell College Player-of-the-Year Award, and the Davey O'Brien National Quarterback-of-the-Year Award.

2007

Bloomington High School South retired his jersey in the summer of 2007 to commemorate his success during the Chicago Bears' 2006 season.

2011

He spent the remainder of his career mostly as a backup, last playing as a starter with the Washington Redskins in 2011.