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

Charley Trippi

Retired 9 Years In The NFL
🏆 NFL champion (1947)
Charley's
HAIR
9.0
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Charley Trippi or the Cardinals?

Charley Trippi Legacy

HEYTC AI
Charley Trippi was football's ultimate do-everything dynamo, the Pennsylvania kid who lit up Georgia as a halfback-quarterback-punter phenom, teaming with Heisman winner Frank Sinkwich for a 75-0 Gator rout and a national title, then returning from WWII duty to captain an undefeated '46 squad with a monster 544-yard explosion against Tech. Jim Thorpe dubbed him the greatest player he'd ever seen. In the pros, the No. 1 pick completed the Cardinals' "Million Dollar Backfield," slipping on basketball shoes to dazzle on ice with a 75-yard punt-return TD in the 1947 NFL Championship clincher—a Pro Hall of Famer's signature shine. Trippi passed at 100, his legend eternal.
Charley Trippi passed away on October 19, 2022 at the age of 100.

Charley Trippi Rating Breakdown

Season
Subpar
Fantasy
Subpar
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
Cooked
9 years with the Cardinals

Charley Trippi Career Stats via Wikipedia

2,547 Pass Yards
16 Touchdowns
31 INTs
0.0% Comp %
9.0 HAIR

Frequently Asked Questions About Charley Trippi

How does Kyler Murray compare to Charley Trippi?

Kyler Murray's got the arm talent and wheels to light up scoreboards in this pass-happy era, but Charley Trippi was a one-man wrecking crew who did it all—rushing for 3,506 yards, catching 1,321, throwing 2,547, and even punting 40.3 yards a pop—while dragging the '47 Cardinals to their last title on icy Comiskey slush.

Is Charley Trippi in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Nope, Charley Trippi isn't in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, despite that dream backfield magic and the '47 championship run that still haunts Eagles fans. The Hall goofed on this one—he's rightfully enshrined in the College Football Hall, but pro immortality? Not yet, even after 53 career TDs every which way.

How would Charley Trippi perform in today's NFL?

Trippi's versatility would shine brighter today—those 3,506 rushing yards and 44-yard TD scamper in the '47 title game scream dual-threat fit for modern rules sans the old leather helmets. But his 53.8 passer rating? Pocket protectors would laugh; he'd thrive as a gadget back or return ace, not a full-time QB.

How does Charley Trippi compare to Jim Hart?

Jim Hart buried Trippi in the pocket, posting a 34.49 rating to Charley's measly 9.0 over two QB seasons, but don't sleep on Trippi's total-package chaos—3,506 rush yards topped Hart's career, plus receiving TDs and that '47 ring Hart never sniffed. Franchise QBs? Hart was the volume guy; Trippi the spark plug.