Pat Steenberge
Patrick W. Steenberge is a former American football quarterback who played at Cathedral Preparatory School (Erie, Pennsylvania) and at the University of Notre Dame (South Bend, Indiana).
He is currently the owner and operator of Global Football, which organizes competitive events for young amateur athletes worldwide. Global Football is the largest exporter of American football, having produced games and events in 28 countries since 1996. He previously served as Director of Corporate Development for the National Cutting Horse Association in Fort Worth, Texas.
Following the graduation of Joe Theismann from Notre Dame, Steenberge was named the starting quarterback at the beginning of the 1971 season. He won his only two starts—a 50-7 rout of Northwestern and an 8-7 comeback victory over Purdue—before a leg injury sidelined him.[citation needed]
Over the years, Steenberge has remained very active in the Notre Dame athletics program. He is a mainstay at the annual Alumni Flag Football Game during the Blue-Gold scrimmage in the spring, and in 2003 he began the Notre Dame Football Fantasy Camp, where amateurs can play a flag football game in Notre Dame Stadium in an authentic gameday environment, led by former players and coaches.
Family
Pat and Janet Steenberge have three children: Georgia, Brier and Xela.[citation needed]
References
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- George Cartier (1887)
- Joe Cusack (1888)
- Ed Coady (1888–1889)
- Pat Coady (1892)
- Charles Zeitler (1893)
- Nicholas Dinkel (1894)
- William Walsh (1895)
- Frank Hering (1896)
- Fred Waters (1897)
- Charles Fleming (1898)
- Angus McDonald (1899)
- Clarence Diebold (1900)
- Henry McGlew (1901–1902)
- Nate Silver (1903–1905)
- Dick Coad (1904)
- Bob Bracken (1906)
- Billy Ryan (1907)
- Don Hamilton (1908–1909)
- Gus Dorais (1910–1913)
- Alfred Bergman (1914)
- James Phelan (1915–1917)
- Tex Allison (1917)
- Bill Mohn (1918)
- Leonard Bahan (1919)
- Joe Brandy (1920)
- Chet Grant (1921)
- Frank Thomas (1922)
- Harry Stuhldreher (1922–1924)
- Red Edwards (1924–1926)
- Albert Cullen (1925)
- Chuck Riley (1926–1927)
- Jim Brady (1927–1928)
- Frank Carideo (1928–1930)
- Chuck Jaskwhich (1931–1932)
- Bud Bonar (1933–1934)
- Wally Fromhart (1934–1935)
- Andy Puplis (1936–1937)
- Steve Sitko (1938–1939)
- Bob Hargrave (1940)
- Harry Wright (1941)
- Angelo Bertelli (1941–1943)
- Johnny Lujack (1943, 1946–1947)
- Frank Dancewicz (1944–1945)
- Frank Tripucka (1948)
- Bob Williams (1949–1950)
- John Mazur (1950–1951)
- Ralph Guglielmi (1951–1954)
- Tom Carey (1952, 1954)
- Paul Hornung (1955–1956)
- Robert Williams (1956–1958)
- George Izo (1958–1959)
- Don White (1959)
- George Haffner (1960)
- Daryle Lamonica (1960–1962)
- Frank Budka (1961, 1963)
- Denis Szot (1962–1963)
- John Huarte (1963–1964)
- Sandy Bonvechio (1963)
- William Zloch (1965)
- Tom Schoen (1965)
- Terry Hanratty (1966–1968)
- Coley O'Brien (1966)
- Joe Theismann (1968–1970)
- Pat Steenberge (1971)
- Bill Etter (1971)
- Cliff Brown (1971)
- Tom Clements (1972–1974)
- Rick Slager (1975–1976)
- Joe Montana (1975, 1977–1978)
- Rusty Lisch (1976–1977, 1979)
- Tim Koegel (1979, 1981)
- Mike Courey (1979–1980)
- Blair Kiel (1980–1983)
- Ken Karcher (1982)
- Jim O'Hara (1982)
- Steve Beuerlein (1983–1986)
- Scott Grooms (1984)
- Terry Andrysiak (1985–1987)
- Tony Rice (1987–1989)
- Kent Graham (1987)
- Rick Mirer (1990–1992)
- Paul Failla (1991, 1993)
- Kevin McDougal (1993)
- Ron Powlus (1994–1997)
- Tom Krug (1995)
- Jarious Jackson (1998–1999)
- Eric Chappell (1998)
- Arnaz Battle (2000)
- Gary Godsey (2000)
- Matt LoVecchio (2000–2001)
- Carlyle Holiday (2001–2003)
- Pat Dillingham (2002)
- Brady Quinn (2003–2006)
- Demetrius Jones (2007)
- Jimmy Clausen (2007–2009)
- Evan Sharpley (2007)
- Dayne Crist (2010–2011)
- Tommy Rees (2010–2013)
- Everett Golson (2012, 2014)
- Malik Zaire (2014–2015)
- DeShone Kizer (2015–2016)
- Brandon Wimbush (2017–2018)
- Ian Book (2017–2020)
- Jack Coan (2021)
- Tyler Buchner (2022)
- Drew Pyne (2022)
- Sam Hartman (2023)
- Steve Angeli (2023)
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