A former professional quarterback in the Canadian Football League, Steve Taylor is an American (CFL). When Steve’s senior year at the University of Nebraska ended, he signed a four-year deal with the Edmonton Eskimos in only one month. Taylor had already decided to play in the CFL when the Indianapolis Colts selected the dual-threat QB in the twelfth round of the 1989 NFL Draft.
Taylor played for four CFL teams starting in the summer of 1989: the Ottawa Rough Riders, Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Calgary Stampeders, and Edmonton Eskimos. He backed up notable CFL starters like Tracy Haim and Doug Flutie for the entirety of his eight-season career.
Steve Taylor Nebraska Wife
We only know that he has a wife; we don’t know much about her. Currently, there is no information on the internet regarding his wife; as soon as we learn more, we’ll let you know.
Steve’s career passing stats include four thousand nine hundred forty-seven yards, 35 touchdowns, and 26 interceptions. Throughout his CFL career, 366 of his 652 pass attempts were successful.
Steve Taylor Nebraska Married
He is wed and has a wife, albeit not much is known about her. Steve, his wife, and their three girls currently reside in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he works as a real estate sales associate for Lincoln First Realty.
Steve had a very different collegiate football career. The scary option offence run by head coach Dr Tom Osborne was ideal for the 6-foot, 205-pound quarterback. Taylor started for Nebraska from 1986 through 1988 and had a 31-6 record with one conference championship. (Big Eight Champions – 1988). With a score of 27–23, the Wolverines triumphed.
Family & Siblings
His parents are. Coral Taylor is his mother, while Mark Taylor is his father.
James Cox Chambers and Katharine Rayner are the names of his two siblings.
Collegiate career
Taylor played a very different brand of collegiate football at Nebraska. The 205-pound (93 kg), 6-foot option quarterback was ideal for the option offence under head coach Tom Osborne. His three-year starting record (1986–88) was 31-6 (.838), and his senior year saw him win the Big 8 championship. He had Clete Blakeman, a current NFL official, as a backup.
Taylor played a very different brand of collegiate football at Nebraska. The 205-pound (93 kg), 6-foot option quarterback was ideal for the option offence under head coach Tom Osborne. His three-year starting record (1986–88) was 31-6 (.838), and his senior year saw him win the Big 8 championship. He had Clete Blakeman, a current NFL official, as a backup.
With the help of outstanding Husker running backs like Keith “End Zone” Jones, Doug DuBose, Tom Rathman, and Ken Clark, Taylor threw for 2,815 yards and ran for 2,125 yards in a tailback-based option offence. He scored 30 touchdowns with the air and 32 through running. His finest single season was as a senior in 1988, when he ran for 826 yards on 157 tries and passed for 1,067 yards on 72 of 151 attempts while scoring 11 touchdowns and throwing seven interceptions. Despite leading the Huskers to an 11-1 record during the regular season and scoring 13 rushing touchdowns, he lost the Orange Bowl and was ranked ninth in the AP poll.
Steve Taylor Nebraska Net worth
Even though we don’t know much about his salary or net worth, we assume it to be $1 million.
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