All-Time Dolphins QBs Ranked: Griese #1, Marino #2

Rick Norton

Retired 4 Years In The NFL
🏆 Second-team All-American (1965)
Rick's
HAIR
5.3
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Rick Norton or the Dolphins?

Rick Norton Legacy

HEYTC AI
Rick Norton, the lanky Louisville gunslinger who lit up Kentucky as a second-team All-American, chased pro dreams from Miami's AFL infancy to a fleeting Packer cameo. What etched his name? Throwing the last touchdown pass ever at Wrigley Field—a 29-yard dart to John Hilton in a 1970 Bears rout—closing the book on gridiron history's windiest stage. A Wildcat hero who bridged eras without the spotlight, Norton embodied the grit of forgotten backups who made the league's wild ride possible. He passed in 2013, leaving a quiet legend.
Rick Norton passed away on July 25, 2013 at the age of 69.

Rick Norton Rating Breakdown

Season
Non-Factor
Fantasy
Non-Factor
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
Cooked
4 years with the Dolphins

Rick Norton Career Stats via Wikipedia

1,815 Pass Yards
7 Touchdowns
30 INTs
0.0% Comp %
5.3 HAIR

Frequently Asked Questions About Rick Norton

How does Quinn Ewers compare to Rick Norton?

Quinn Ewers is operating in a different universe than Rick Norton ever inhabited. Ewers has the arm talent, mobility, and coaching infrastructure Norton lacked in the AFL's Wild West days. Norton's 1,815 career yards and 7 TDs look quaint now, but comparing them directly ignores how much the game has evolved—Ewers plays in an era built for passing success.

Is Rick Norton in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Rick Norton never made Canton, and his credentials don't warrant serious Hall of Fame consideration. A 30.0 passer rating and 7-30 TD-INT ratio over five seasons tells you everything about his place in football history—a journeyman who happened to throw the last TD pass at Wrigley Field. That's his legacy, not enshrinement.

How would Rick Norton perform in today's NFL?

Norton would get destroyed in today's NFL. His 43.9 completion percentage and inability to protect the football—30 interceptions in 1,815 yards—would be career-ending in an era where precision and decision-making are non-negotiable. Modern rules favor passing, sure, but they also expose quarterbacks who can't execute fundamentals. He'd be a practice squad casualty.

How does Rick Norton compare to Bob Griese?

Bob Griese laps Norton on every meaningful metric. Griese's 58.41 rating versus Norton's 30.0 isn't just a gap; it's a chasm. Griese won Super Bowls and built a Hall of Fame resume with the Dolphins. Norton was a placeholder in the franchise's early AFL years—a cautionary tale about arm talent without accuracy or consistency.