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Matthew Leinart (born May 11, 1983 in Santa Ana, California) is an American football quarterback (QB) who played for the University of Southern California Trojans, leading them to two national titles. Leinart played QB at Mater Dei High School, Santa Ana. In 2004, his junior year at USC, he won the Heisman Trophy. He also won the inaugural Manning Award for college quarterbacks in the same season. Anticipating his entry into the NFL, he signed with Creative Artists Agency to handle endorsements, and Leigh Steinberg to be his agent in January 2006. Leinart is expected to be drafted third overall in the 2006 NFL Draft in most projections.YouthHe was born with strabismus ("crossed eyes"), as his left eye was not aligned correctly with his right. He underwent surgery when he was 3 years old and was fitted with glasses, correcting the problem.College careerIn his redshirt freshman year, he backed up then-quarterback Carson Palmer, who also won the Heisman and is now with the Cincinnati Bengals. In the following offseason, Leinart beat out Matt Cassel and former Purdue transfer Brandon Hance for the Trojan starting job at QB. Since taking over as USC's starter, Leinart has accumulated a 37-2 record, was named Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year twice, and has won the prestigious Heisman Trophy. Leinart presently is the all-time Pac-10 conference leader in touchdowns with 98. Leinart is expected to pass Palmer in 2005 as USC's all-time passing leader, and was one of only five players to go into a season with the possibilty of winning two Heisman Trophies, joining Archie Griffin in 1975, Billy Sims in 1978, Ty Detmer in 1991, and Jason White in 2004; Griffin went on to win the other Heisman, while Sims, Detmer, White, and now Leinart, failed to do so.HeismanOn December 7 2005, Leinart was selected as a Heisman Trophy finalist for a second consecutive year, set to appear again at the award ceremony in New York City with teammate Reggie Bush and University of Texas at Austin quarterback Vince Young. Having won the Heisman Trophy in 2004, he was able to cast a vote for the 2005 Heisman; Leinart voted for Bush over himself, and Bush went on to win the Heisman by the 17th-largest point margin in the award's history. After numerous accolades and 34 straight wins as a starter, Leinart's college career ended on a slightly sour note as he and his USC Trojans fell to Young and the Texas Longhorns in the 2006 Rose Bowl, 41-38. Leinart himself had a typically spectacular game, completing 29 of 40 passes for 365 yards and a touchdown against a Longhorn defense that was statistically among the best in the country, but his performance was overshadowed by Young's own sensational effort in leading Texas to the victory. In a postgame interview, Leinart said that despite the Trojans' loss to Texas, "I still think we're a better team. They just made the plays in the end."In the classroomOn a personal note, Leinart majors in sociology at USC. He returned to USC for the 2005 season despite the lure of millions in the NFL. He only needed to take one class to graduate and chose ballroom dancing, a class which filled to capacity shortly thereafter, a choice for which he received light-hearted ribbing from many people across the nation.Player profileLeinart is considered one of the top NFL prospects of the 2006 draft class. Standing 6'5" (1.96 m) and weighing 225 pounds (100 kg), this left-handed thrower has the prototypical size for a quarterback. And while much of his success has been predicated on the high level of talent that USC head coach Pete Carroll has surrounded Leinart with (as well as the schemes of former Trojans offensive coordinator Norm Chow), Leinart has a very accurate arm, and, perhaps more importantly, he possesses rare football intelligence along with outstanding decision-making and leadership skills.Leinart's vaunted poise, accuracy, and decision-making were epitomized in one play when the Trojans played at Notre Dame in October 2005. With USC trailing 31-28 and time running out, Leinart audibled to a fade route on 4th and 9 -- an unheard-of action by a quarterback in such a situation -- and lobbed the ball perfectly into the hands of teammate Dwayne Jarrett, who beat the man-to-man coverage and raced for a 61-yard gain. A few plays later, Leinart scored the game-winning touchdown on a quarterback sneak (which some observers claim was illegally aided by a push from teammate Reggie Bush, a running back) as time expired. Leinart and Jarrett's clutch connection was one of the defining plays of the 2005 season, and it remains one of the most famous plays in the history of the Notre Dame-Southern California series. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Matt Leinart ] Some related entries: Tim James | Eddie Aikau | Jonathan Tisdall | Justin Green | Dave Odom | Tony Sanneh | Roman Phifer | Ron Hassey | Roy Foster | Cindy Nelson | Ken Williams This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Matt Leinart; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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