Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Merril Hoge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Place of birth:
  
Pocatello, Idaho

Height
  
1.88 m

College:
  
Idaho State

Weight
  
96 kg


Name
  
Merril Hoge

Position
  
Running back

Role
  
American football player

Children
  
Kori Hoge, Beau Hoge

Merril Hoge Video Johnny Manziel Trolls Merril Hoge on His Big

Date of birth:
  
(1965-01-26) January 26, 1965 (age 50)

NFL draft:
  
1987 / Round: 10 / Pick: 261

Education
  
Highland High School, Idaho State University

Parents
  
George M. Hoge, Sharon Hoge

Profiles

Former NFL Player, Merril Hoge, On The Bad Science Behind CTE


Merril DuAine Hoge (; born January 26, 1965) is a former professional American football player. He played eight seasons at running back for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers and Chicago Bears, retiring after the 1994 season. Since 1996 he has been a football analyst for ESPN television.

Contents

Merril Hoge ESPN39s Merril Hoge Drops the 39Bust39 Label on NFL Draft

Hoge clowney a very average football player


Early years

Merril Hoge httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages4528316942743

Hoge was born and raised in Pocatello, Idaho. After graduating from Highland High School in 1983, he stayed in town to play college football for the Idaho State University in the Big Sky Conference. Hoge was a three-time all-conference selection at running back.

Professional football career

Merril Hoge Merril Hoge Mile High City Evening

The Pittsburgh Steelers selected Hoge in the 10th round of the 1987 NFL Draft with the 261st pick overall. After seven seasons with the Steelers, Hoge signed with the Chicago Bears in 1994, but played in only five games with six carries and 13 receptions.

Merril Hoge Hoge understands importance of youth football

During a road game in 1994 against the Kansas City Chiefs, Hoge suffered a concussion and, five days later, the team doctor approved him to resume playing during a telephone call without examining him to determine if he had recovered; he was still suffering post-concussion symptoms.

Merril Hoge Merril Hoge steelers 33 Merril Hoge Pinterest Steelers stuff

Hoge sustained another concussion several weeks later, and had to be resuscitated after he stopped breathing. He spent 48 hours in the intensive-care unit and was forced to retire due to brain injury. Hoge had to learn to read again and experienced memory loss, confusion and headaches. He later sued the Bears team doctor and won a $1.55 million judgment. Steelers team physician, neurosurgeon Joseph Maroon, had established a baseline for evaluating cognitive effects of concussions, so when Hoge continued to experience impairment after several weeks, he returned to Dr. Maroon for a new evaluation. Maroon's team found a "marked disparency", informing Hoge that further concussions would risk permanent brain damage. Upon receiving this information, Hoge retired.

Merril Hoge Merril Hoge steelers 33 Merril Hoge Pinterest Steeler nation

In his career, Hoge gained 3,139 rushing yards and 2,133 receiving yards, scoring 34 touchdowns. While playing fullback in the Steelers offense, he scored 10 touchdowns in 1990.

Broadcast career

Merril Hoge How former Steelers RB Merril Hoge realized in one practice play

In 1996, Hoge was hired as an on-air analyst for ESPN. Hoge is a well-known short-tie aficionado.

Surgery

Hoge injured his shoulder in an automobile accident in June 2002 and had an operation to repair a torn ligament. During an examination six months after surgery, Hoge told his doctor, Jim Bradley, also the Steelers' team physician, about a recurring back pain. Bradley began ordering tests to determine the cause. On February 14, 2003, Hoge was diagnosed with stage II Non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He had the first of six chemotherapy treatments on February 28.

It is destroyable, it is beatable. You have everything in you to do it. The mind is a powerful thing. There is no doubt, come May, I'll be cancer free; five years after that, I'll be cured. Fifty years or whatever time I have left after that, it will be the platform I stand for. I'll be a better man. This has been a blessing.

Soon after treatment began, Stanley Marks, Hoge's oncologist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, gave him a 75-80% chance of prolonged remission.

On October 31, 2015, one month after he had surgery to repair an enlarged aorta, Merril Hoge returned at work at ESPN on NFL Matchup.

Family

Hoge lives in Fort Thomas, Kentucky with his son Beau (born 1997) and daughter Kori (born 1993). Fort Thomas is a suburb of Campbell County, Kentucky, across the river from Cincinnati, Ohio where Cris Collinsworth also calls home. When Hoge was playing for the Pittsburgh Steelers, his wife Toni, who had previously resided there, did not want to live in Pittsburgh. Accordingly, he deferred to her choice and Fort Thomas became their home. Toni and Merril are now divorced. Beau is a freshman quarterback at Brigham Young University while Hoge's nephew, Tristen Hoge, is a freshman on the Notre Dame football team.

His mother died when he was 19.

Philanthropy

Hoge has served on the board of directors of the Highmark Caring Foundation since the early 1990s. He also ran the Hoge-Bruener-Ward Celebrity Golf Classic for over ten years.

References

Merril Hoge Wikipedia