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Edd Hargett

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Place of birth
  
Marietta, Texas

Name
  
Edd Hargett

College
  
Texas A&M

Role
  
American football player


1969–1972
  
New Orleans Saints

Education
  
Texas A&M University

1973
  
Houston Oilers

Positions
  
Quarterback

Edd Hargett WFL World Football League PlayersEdd Hargett


Date of birth
  
(1947-06-26) June 26, 1947 (age 68)

NFL draft
  
1969 / Round: 16 / Pick 397

Edward Eugene Hargett (born June 26, 1947 in Marietta, Texas) is a former American football quarterback for Texas A&M University who went on to play professionally for the NFL's New Orleans Saints and Houston Oilers. He later played for the Shreveport Steamer of the World Football League.

Edd Hargett WFL World Football League PlayersEdd Hargett

Edd passed for 5379 yards in his 3-year career (1966–68) at Texas A&M. This was a Texas A&M passing record at the time, eclipsed first by Kevin Murray in 1986. He at one time held the A&M all-time record for most total yards in one game (418 against SMU in 1968), a record currently held (as of 2012) by Johnny Manziel . He directed the Aggies to the Southwest Conference championships in 1967 and a win in the Cotton Bowl over Alabama and former Texas A&M coach Bear Bryant.

Hargett was an honor student in electrical engineering at Texas A&M and later served as the manager of the Houston County Electric Co-op in Crockett, Texas.

In 1985, Hargett ran unsuccessfully as a Republican in a special election for the United States House of Representatives, having secured the support of such party leaders as former state Republican chairman Chet Upham. Hargett lost the race to the Democrat Jim Chapman of Sulphur Springs. The vacancy occurred when U.S. Representative Sam B. Hall, Jr., of Marshall resigned to accept a federal judicial appointment from U.S. President Ronald W. Reagan. In 1986, the Republican Party again picked Hargett to run in another special election, this time for a recently vacated seat in the Texas Senate. This time, Hargett lost to Harrison County Judge Richard Anderson, who won 14 out of 15 counties in the Senate district, including Hargett's home county, Cass.

References

Edd Hargett Wikipedia