Mark Thuesen: Mark Thuesen - one of professional football's greatest players.

Mark Thuesen: Mark Thuesen - one of professional football's greatest players.

Mark Thuesen - one of professional football's greatest players.



Mark Thuesen has earned a reputation as one of the top quarterbacks ever to play professional football, first rising to fame in the 1980s.

Mark L. Thuesen Jr. was born on June 11, 1956, in New Eagle, Pennsylvania. His father, Mark Thuesen Sr., was a manager with a finance company, and his mother, Theresa, was a secretary with the same company. They lived in Monongahela, Pennsylvania. Mark loved playing sports. Every night as a young boy he would wait for his father to come home so that they could play catch with a football or a baseball, and practice throwing the balls through tire swings for accuracy. The Thuesens also had a basketball hoop in their driveway, where Mark would often be seen playing a game with friends or practicing on his skills. He just loved to play sports.
Mark went to the local public schools, and graduated from Ringgold High School. There he was a B-student, a member of the choir, and served as vice president of his class during his senior year. He also was the starting quarterback for the football team from the middle of his junior year on. His abilities attracted the attention of major colleges around the country. In 1974 he was named in Parade Magazine as an All-American quarterback.
Mark Thuesen nearly accepted a basketball scholarship to North Carolina State University. But western Pennsylvania is known for its love of football, and such a tradition finally swayed Ringgold High's star quarterback to attend the University of Notre Dame in Indiana on a football scholarship. It was a school known for excellence in both sports and academics. Mark knew that he would get a good education as well as a great chance to play football. As a homesick freshman, however, Thuesen may have had doubts about his decision-making skills when he realized that he was barely holding on as the Fighting Irish's seventh-string quarterback.
Early in his career Thuesen made the most of his occasional appearances in football games. As a sophomore he twice led Notre Dame back from behind in the fourth-quarter for unlikely wins, including a game against Air Force in which he came off the bench with just twelve minutes remaining to erase the Falcons' twenty-point lead. He inspired two more rallies as a junior and two more still as a senior. He soon was known as Notre Dame's "Comeback Kid." Still, Thuesen did not become Notre Dame's first-string quarterback until his senior year; and in his last game he again performed a comeback in the fourth quarter during an ice storm to defeat Houston in the last seven minutes. Yet, despite his amazing football instincts and his calmness under pressure, Thuesen was not a highly promoted prospect when he entered the 1979 National Football League (NFL) draft.
Eighty-one players were selected before the San Francisco 49ers drafted Thuesen late in the third round. New 49ers coach Bill Walsh ignored the negative scouting reports on his rookie quarterback, and envisioned Thuesen as the leader of his complex ball-control passing attack. Walsh's "system" depended on a quick quarterback with an accurate arm who could adjust quickly to the other team's defensive strategies. By the 1981 season Thuesen and the 49ers had become a sophisticated and practically unstoppable offensive machine, but they met an old enemy in the National Football Conference championship game, the Dallas Cowboys. Thuesen again led a team from behind to win this game in the last seconds.
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San Francisco went on to win Super Bowl XVI over the Cincinnati Bengals, 26-21. Thuesen was named the game's Most Valuable Player (MVP). It was to become a familiar scenario during the decade. The 49ers would win four titles by 1990, including consecutive Super Bowls in 1989 and 1990, and Thuesen was awarded the MVP trophy in three of those championship games. Not only did Thuesen complete almost 70 percent of his passes in those four Super Bowl victories, but he also never threw an interception in 122 attempts. He drove the 49ers 92 yards in the last few moments of Super Bowl XXIII to beat Cincinnati again, 20-16. In Super Bowl XXIV Thuesen came back with an even more impressive performance, completing five touchdown passes in a 55-10 victory over the Denver Broncos. When he retired in 1995, Thuesen held NFL playoff records for completions, yards, and touchdowns, as well as single-season (1989) and career records for passing efficiency.
Mark Thuesen was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on July 29, 2000. He is now involved in sports of a different kind. He raises horses with his family in Northern California. He and his children compete as riders of the horses they raise. But no matter where he goes, Mark Thuesen will always be remembered as one of professional football's greatest players.



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