American Football Database
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James Street
College Texas
Conference Southwest Conference
Sport Football, Baseball
Position QB, Pitcher
Jersey # 16, 5
Class 1970
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight 175 lb (79 kg)
Born (1948-08-02)August 2, 1948
Longview, Texas
Died September 30, 2013(2013-09-30) (aged 65)
Austin, Texas
High school Longview High School
Career highlights
Awards
  • 1969 Cotton Bowl "Offensive Outstanding Player"
Honors
Records
  • Longest pass by Longhorn in a bowl game, (79)
  • Longhorn Winning percentage, career (20-0)
  • Most yards per attempt in a Cotton Bowl (15.4)
  • Most yards on touchdown passes in a Cotton Bowl (157)
Championships
  • 1968 Southwest Conference Baseball Champions
  • 1968 Southwest Conference Football Champions
  • 1969 Southwest Conference Baseball Champions
  • 1969 Southwest Conference Football Champions
  • 1969 National Football Champions
  • 1970 Southwest Conference Baseball Champions
Bowl games
Tournaments
  • 1968 College World Series
  • 1969 College World Series
  • 1970 College World Series

James Lowell Street (August 2, 1948 – September 30, 2013) was a two-sport star athlete at the University of Texas. As quarterback, he led the team to the 1969 National Championship in football and posted a perfect 20-0 record, the most wins without a loss in Texas history. As a pitcher he was a two time All-American who threw the last perfect game in Longhorn history.

Early life[]

James Street was born in Longview, Texas in 1948 to Helen and Grover Street. He had a hardscrabble childhood that became more difficult at 12 when his parents divorced and his father moved back to Oklahoma. James worked odd jobs in junior high and high school to help feed him and his twin sister.[1] At Longview High School he lettered in football, baseball, basketball and track; but was not heavily recruited.[2]

Football career[]

Street arrived at Texas as a seventh-string quarterback in 1966.[3]

After playing only a handful of plays in two blowout games in 1967, Street came into the 1968 season as the backup to Bill Bradley. That year, Darrell Royal and assistant Emory Bellard introduced the wishbone. After tying #11 Houston in the first game and a slow start in the second against Texas Tech, Street took over at quarterback. "Hell, you can’t do any worse. Get in there," Royal reportedly said when replacing Bradly with Street. Despite running up 22 points in the 3rd quarter, Texas would lose that game, but Street would never find himself on the losing side again. He engineered the Longhorns' offense from that game to the 1970 Cotton Bowl Classic, reeling off 20 straight wins without a loss. He ended his junior year playing what may have been the best game of his career in the 1969 Cotton Bowl against Tennessee. In that game he twice broke the school record for longest touchdown pass in a bowl game, first with a 78 yard TD pass to Cotton Spreyer in the 1st quarter and then with a 79 yard TD pass in the 3rd. He threw for 200 yards and was named one of the game's three "Outstanding Players."

As a starting quarterback in his senior campaign, he led the Longhorns to a perfect season, beating Arkansas in "The Game of the Century" for one half of the National Championship and Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl Classic for the other half. The Arkansas game is the one for which he is best known. In that game he ran for a crucial 42-yard touchdown and hit Randy Peschel on a game-saving fourth-and-3 to set up the winning touchdown. The Longhorns were declared National Champions by President Richard Nixon who had attended the game. In the 1970 Cotton Bowl, Street led the Longhorns to a come-from-behind win after Notre Dame took a 10 point lead. In the 4th quarter, down by 3, he initiated a game-winning touchdown drive that featured two fourth down conversions. The last was converted on a Street pass, thrown under duress and short, that was caught by a diving Spreyer just before it hit the ground. Texas scored the game-winning touchdown with 1:08 on the clock.[4] After the game he was congratulated by former President Lyndon Johnson who had attended the game.[3]

Records[]

  • UT Record - Longest pass in a bowl game, (79), broke his own record set earlier in the game
  • UT Record - Longest touchdown pass in a bowl game, (79), broke his own record set earlier in the game
  • UT Record - Most wins without a loss, career (20-0)
  • Cotton Bowl - Most yards per attempt, game (15.4)
  • Cotton Bowl - Most yards on touchdown passes, game (157)
  • Cotton Bowl - Passing yards, career (307), surpassed by Joe Theismann in 1971

Baseball career[]

Street was a 2nd Team All-American baseball player who posted a 29-8 record on the mound. He made the All-Southwest Conference Team 3 years in a row and was the team's MVP every year. He is the last Longhorn to throw a perfect game, in 1970 versus Texas Tech, and also threw a no-hitter in 1969 versus SMU.[3] He helped Texas win three Southwest Conference titles and go to three straight College World Series, finishing as high as 3rd in 1970.

Later life[]

Street was drafted in the 31st Round of the 1970 Major League Baseball Draft by the Cleveland Indians, but after suffering an injury at the 1970 College World Series he chose not to play in the Cleveland Indians' farm system, thereby ending his career.[1]

After struggling with alcohol, Street gave up drinking and in 1991 started a successful career as a structured settlement financial adviser, owning his own business, the James Street Group.[5] He had five sons, including three who won National Championships playing baseball for Texas. His oldest son, from his first marriage, became an architect. From his second marriage to Janie Street he had four sons, San Diego Padres pitcher Huston Street,[1] former Longhorn and minor league pitcher Juston Street,[6] former Longhorn pitcher Jordan Street and Pepperdine infielder Hanson Street. Juston Street went into acting, and one of his first film appearances will be playing his father, James Street, in the film My All American.

James Street died of a heart attack at his home in Austin, Texas, on September 30, 2013.[7]

References[]

External links[]

Preceded by
Bill Bradley
University of Texas Quarterback
1968-1969
Succeeded by
Eddie Phillips


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