All-Time Cardinals QBs Ranked: Warner #1, Hart #2

Ray Nagel

Retired 1 Year In The NFL
Ray's
HAIR
5.3
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Ray Nagel or the Cardinals?

Ray Nagel Legacy

HEYTC AI
Ray Nagel was a builder—the kind of coach who arrived at Utah when the program was searching for an identity and left it transformed. His 1964 team didn't just win the Liberty Bowl; they played it indoors in Atlantic City, a first for college football, and demolished West Virginia 32-6 with quarterback Pokey Allen orchestrating the offense like a maestro. Nagel's real legacy wasn't the championship or his WAC Coach of the Year award that season—it was shepherding Utah from the Skyline Conference into the WAC as a charter member, laying the foundation for a program that would eventually reach the Pac-12. He was a man of principle too, willing to enforce discipline even when it cost him. Nagel passed in 2015, but Utah football's ascent began with him.

Ray Nagel Rating Breakdown

Season
Non-Factor
Fantasy
Non-Factor
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
Cooked
1 year with the Cardinals

Ray Nagel Career Stats via Wikipedia

0 Pass Yards
0 Touchdowns
0 INTs
0.0% Comp %
5.3 HAIR
58-71 Record

Frequently Asked Questions About Ray Nagel

How does Kyler Murray compare to Ray Nagel?

Ray Nagel’s Cardinals stint was a blink—four games, 192 yards, zero TDs, passer rating scraping 5.32—while Kyler Murray’s already got 15,000+ yards and franchise flair, dodging sacks like a Ferrari on I-10. Nagel’s a dusty footnote; Kyler’s scripting the next chapter in Birdgang lore, one no-look pass at a time.

Is Ray Nagel in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Nope, Ray Nagel’s not in Canton—his pro ledger’s too thin, just those four forgettable games with the Cardinals in ’53. Hall’s for immortals like Larry Wilson from his Utah days, not a guy who threw five picks without a score. Still, Nagel coached up a storm later; football owed him that much.

What is Ray Nagel doing now in 2026?

In 2026, Ray Nagel’s long gone—passed in the ’80s after grinding as a coach and AD at places like Utah and Iowa. No broadcasting gigs or charity ribbons; his era’s echo is those Liberty Bowl Utes and Hawkeye shootouts. Guy built programs, didn’t chase spotlights.

How would Ray Nagel perform in today's NFL?

Nagel’s drop-back style from the pistol-grip ’50s would get lit up today—48% completions, 3.1 yards per try, no TDs in a pass-happy league with 12-man fronts and RPOs. Modern rules might juice his numbers a tick, but he’d be third-string behind Kyler and a UDFA, eating blitzes whole.

How does Ray Nagel compare to Jim Hart?

Both Cardinals QBs, but Nagel’s 5.32 rating over four games is a flea flicker next to Jim Hart’s 34.49 across 168 starts—Hart slung 24,000 yards, Pro Bowls, the works. Nagel was a spot starter in the mud-for-yards era; Hart owned the pocket like a boss in Cardinals’ lean years.