Jan. 8, 2016
NFF Complete 2016 College Football Hall of Fame Class List
LAS VEGAS (UNLVRebels.com) - Former UNLV All-America punter, quarterback great and longtime Las Vegas resident Randall Cunningham has become the first player in school history to be voted into the prestigious College Football Hall of Fame.
The announcement of the 2016 National Football Foundation (NFF) & College Football Hall of Fame bowl subdivision inductees was made Friday live on ESPNU from the JW Marriott Camelback Inn in Scottsdale, Ariz. Cunningham, who serves as pastor at his Remnant Ministries in Las Vegas, was one of four players on hand for today's announcement, which was made in conjunction with the 2016 College Football Playoff National Championship weekend.
"I can't express enough how truly excited we are about our own Randall Cunningham earning this great honor," said UNLV Director of Athletics Tina Kunzer-Murphy. "I remember having the pleasure of watching him excel as both a punter and quarterback and it's only fitting that one of the greatest Rebels in any sport is going to be UNLV's first football player enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame."
Cunningham is part of a class of 14 players and two coaches that was selected by the NFF's Honors Court, which considers voting results from the organization's 12,000 members. The 2016 finalist ballot, released in June, consisted of 76 All-America players and five elite former coaches. This marked Cunningham's 11th time on the ballot after first being nominated by the UNLV athletic communications office in 2006. The class will be inducted as part of the NFF's Annual Awards Dinner scheduled for Dec. 6 at New York City's Waldorf Astoria.
Cunningham will join the legendary John Robinson, who became the first former UNLV head coach (1999-2004) inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2009. Randall also joins his older brother, former USC running back Sam Cunningham, who was inducted in 2010.
To be eligible for the ballot, players must have been named First Team All-America by a major/national selector as recognized and utilized by the NCAA for their consensus All-America teams, played their last year of intercollegiate football at least 10 years prior, played within the last 50 years and cannot be currently playing professional football. Of the 5.12 million individuals who have played college football since the first recognized game in 1869, only 963 players and 209 coaches have been immortalized in the Hall (two ten-thousandths of one percent -- .0002).
While an offensive force on the field, Cunningham earned All-America honors primarily as a punter. The native of Santa Barbara, Calif., did not start kicking until the middle of his sophomore season at UNLV and fell just eight career attempts short of the NCAA minimum for records for career punting statistics. If he had punted just eight more times, he would have recorded the second-best career punting average in college history at the time for 150 minimum attempts. He is also the only Rebel to post three punts of 70 yards or longer.
Still both the career passing and punting leader at UNLV, Cunningham set 18 individual school records and finished his collegiate career by leading the Rebels to their first-ever bowl-game appearance -- a 30-13 victory over Toledo in the 1984 California Bowl.
The first quarterback selected in the 1985 NFL Draft when he went No. 37 overall to the Philadelphia Eagles, Cunningham went on to turn in a hall-of-fame-level professional career. A four-time Pro Bowl invitee, he was a three-time winner of the Bert Bell Award, which annually goes to the league's top player, and was named the 1998 NFL Offensive Player of the Year while with the Minnesota Vikings.
Cunningham, who was inducted into the UNLV Athletics Hall of Fame in 1997, later returned to campus to complete his classwork and earned his bachelor's degree from UNLV's Harrah College of Hotel Administration in December of 2004. Cunningham, who wore No. 12 for the Scarlet & Gray, remains the school's only football player to have his jersey retired.
CUNNINGHAM'S UNLV CAREER PUNTING STATISTICS |
YEAR | ATT | YARDS | AVG | LONG |
1984 | 59 | 2,803 | 47.5 | 72 |
1983 | 56 | 2,435 | 43.5 | 73 |
1982 | 27 | 1,233 | 45.7 | 68 |
TOTAL | 142 | 6,471 | 45.6 | 73 |
CUNNINGHAM'S UNLV CAREER PASSING STATISTICS |
YEAR | ATT | COMP | INT | PCT | YARDS | TD |
1984 | 332 | 207 | 10 | 62.4 | 2,628 | 24 |
1983 | 316 | 189 | 8 | 59.8 | 2,545 | 18 |
1982 | 381 | 200 | 12 | 52.5 | 2,847 | 17 |
TOTAL | 1,029 | 594 | 30 58.0 | 8,020 | 59 | |
CUNNINGHAM'S HONORS |
AFCA (KODAK) First Team All-America in 1983 as a punter |
AP Second Team All-America in 1983 as a punter |
AP Second Team All-America in 1984 as a punter |
AP Honorable Mention All-America as a quarterback |
Played in 1984 Japan Bowl and East-West Shrine Classic |
1983 PCAA Offensive Player of the Year |
1984 PCAA Offensive Player of the Year |
First Team All-PCAA as both a punter and quarterback in 1983 and 1984 |
First Team All-PCAA as a punter in 1982 |
Four-time Conference Player of the Week honoree |
The single-season and career punting leader for the PCAA |
First quarterback selected in the 1985 NFL Draft (No. 37 overall to Philadelphia) |
UNLV RECORDS STILL HELD BY RANDALL CUNNINGHAM (13) |
CATEGORY | RECORD |
Career Pass Attempts | 1,029 |
Career Pass Completions | 596 |
Passing Yards in a Career | 8,020 |
Passing Yards Per Game in a Career | 243.0 |
Games Passing for 200 Yards or More in a Career | 24 |
Touchdown Passes in a Career | 59 |
Total Offensive Attempts in a Career | 1,340 |
Total Offensive Yards in a Career | 8,224 |
Consecutive Starts by a Quarterback | 34 |
Punting Average in a Game | 58.0 vs. UNR in 1983 |
Punting Average in a Season | 47.5 in 1984 |
Punting Average in a Career | 45.6 Consecutive |
Games with a 40-Yard Punting Average | 13 (tied with one other) |