Stan Yagiello
Stan Yagiello is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys. He also was a member of the Pittsburgh Gladiators and the New York Knights in the Arena Football League. He played college football for the William & Mary Tribe.
Early years
Yagiello grew up in Livingston, New Jersey and attended Livingston High School. He was a member of the state champion baseball and football teams where he was first-team All-State in 1979 and 1980. He was selected by the Cleveland Indians in the 16th round of the 1981 MLB draft.College career
Yagiello chose to pass on professional baseball and accepted a football scholarship from The College of William & Mary. As a true freshman, he appeared in 3 games as a backup behind Chris Garrity, before being redshirted.As a redshirt freshman in his first college start against Miami of Ohio Stan threw for 414 yards with 2 TD passes. After an injury in week 3 he platooned at quarterback until the sixth game of the season against Dartmouth College, when he took over the regular starting role.
As a sophomore, he had 18 out of 28 completions for 236 yards, 3 touchdown passes and one rushing touchdown, in a 28–12 win against the Virginia Military Institute.
As a junior, he had 261 completions out of 428 pass attempts for 2,801 passing yards.
As a fifth year senior, he had 240 completions out of 413 pass attempts for 2,962 passing yards, 23 touchdown passes and was ranked 11th nationally in passing efficiency. He made 24 completions for 405 yards and 2 touchdowns, in a 31–14 win against James Madison University. He had 345 passing yards against Norfolk State University.
He finished his college football career as the first four-year starter in school history. He also set career school records with 737 completions out of 1,246 pass attempts for 8,249 passing yards, 51 touchdown passes and twenty 200-yard passing games.
Yagiello also played college baseball, leading his team with a.437 batting average and a.470 on-base percentage as a junior in 1984.
In 1997, he was inducted into the William and Mary Athletics Hall of Fame.