All-Time Steelers QBs Ranked: Bradshaw #1, Roethlisberger #2

Joe Geri

Retired 3 Years In The NFL
🏆 2× Pro Bowl (1950–1951)
Joe's
HAIR
15.1
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Joe Geri or the Steelers?

Joe Geri Legacy

HEYTC AI
Joe Geri was the ultimate gridiron Swiss Army knife—a pint-sized Georgia Bulldog who terrorized NFL defenses as a tailback, quarterback, and kicker in the league's gritty postwar era. Fresh off First-team All-SEC honors, this 5-10 sparkplug from Phoenixville, PA, exploded onto the Pittsburgh Steelers scene in 1949, reportedly snagging Rookie of the Year buzz with his legs and boot before earning back-to-back Pro Bowls and All-Pro acclaim in 1950. He embodied the single-wing magic of yesteryear, a human highlight reel who could rumble for yards, sling it deep, or pin opponents, all while moonlighting with the Chicago Cardinals. Geri passed away in 2002 at 77, leaving a legacy as football's forgotten do-it-all dynamo.
Joe Geri passed away on April 20, 2002 at the age of 77.

Joe Geri Rating Breakdown

Season
Subpar
Fantasy
Subpar
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
NPC
3 years with the Steelers

Joe Geri Career Stats via Wikipedia

1,926 Pass Yards
13 Touchdowns
27 INTs
0.0% Comp %
15.1 HAIR

Frequently Asked Questions About Joe Geri

Is Joe Geri in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Nope, Joe Geri's not in Canton—never made the cut for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The guy's a Steelers footnote from the '50s, a scrappy 5'8" runner-kicker who once carried Pittsburgh's entire scoring load in a game with 113 rush yards and three field goals, but his brief career didn't scream immortality.

How would Joe Geri perform in today's NFL?

Joe Geri in today's NFL? Forget it—those modern passing rules would bury a guy with a 15-ish passer rating and 15 picks on 866 yards. His real juice was scampering for 1,550 rushing yards as a pint-sized back, like a leather-helmet Thurston Howell dodging tacklers, but he'd be a gadget guy at best in this spread-option era.

How does Joe Geri compare to Terry Bradshaw?

Comparing Joe Geri to Terry Bradshaw is like pitting a '50s jalopy against a Super Bowl hot rod—Geri's 15.06 rating on 866 yards and 6 TDs pales next to Bradshaw's 81.63 and four rings. Both Steelers QBs in name only, but Geri was more tailback-kicker hybrid, while Terry slung it to Swann and company for glory.