socaltownie;842582953 said:
MEMORIES!!! It was amazing for 1 half. Then knee gets blow out and we get J (doesn't stand for anything, just "J" Torchio who mastered the one hop pass. It was amazing. He would short hop receivers over and over and the ball would come up and hit them RIGHT in the hands in stride. You couldn't do it 1 in a hundred times. J (didn't stand for anything, just "J" did it over and over and over.
Torchio was something else. So true with the one hop pass, which he sometimes threw into the ground so hard I recall one sportswriter saying, "It looks like he's trying to kill gophers." He would then sail a pass so far out of reach it either looked like it would fly right out of the stadium or knock out an unsuspecting vendor 60 rows up in the stands. Then he would complete a 35 yard bullet to a receiver with about 5 guys hanging onto him.
Bit of trivia, he played a bit for the San Antonio Gunslingers in the old USFL in 1984. More trivia, the starting QB for the Oakland Invaders while the USFL existed (1983 - 85) was another Cal alum, Fred Besana, who was the Bears starter in 1975 before giving way to Joe Roth.