Yelberton Abraham Tittle Jr. Yelberton Abraham TittleY.A. TittleY. A. Tittle
Y.A. Tittle
Acting
Biography
Yelberton Abraham Tittle Jr. revolutionized quarterback play through seventeen professional seasons, becoming one of football's most cerebral field generals despite an unconventional sidearm throwing motion that captivated fans and confounded defenses. Born October 24, 1926 in Marshall, Texas, Tittle spent hours as a youth throwing footballs through a tire swing in his backyard, emulating fellow Texan Sammy Baugh. At Marshall High School, he quarterbacked the team to an undefeated senior season and state finals appearance.
Tittle attended Louisiana State University (1944-1947), where he earned two-time All-Southeastern Conference honors as the Tigers' quarterback. Playing both offense and defense in the iron man era, he set school passing records with 162 completions for 2,525 yards and 23 touchdowns—marks standing until Bert Jones surpassed them in the 1970s. His defining collegiate moment came in the infamous 1947 Cotton Bowl Classic, known as the "Ice Bowl," when LSU and Arkansas battled to a scoreless tie on an ice-covered field in sub-freezing temperatures. Despite neither team scoring, Tittle shared game MVP honors with Arkansas end Alton Baldwin.
Drafted sixth overall by Detroit Lions in 1948, the 6-foot-0, 192-pound Tittle instead signed with Cleveland Browns of the All-America Football Conference before Commissioner Jonas Ingram redistributed him to Baltimore Colts to increase league balance. Named unanimous AAFC Rookie of the Year after passing for 2,739 yards, he…