John Mobley

American football player (born 1973)


title: "John Mobley" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1973-births", "living-people", "players-of-american-football-from-delaware-county,-pennsylvania", "players-of-american-football-from-chester,-pennsylvania", "american-football-linebackers", "kutztown-golden-bears-football-players", "denver-broncos-players"] description: "American football player (born 1973)" topic_path: "law" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Mobley" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American football player (born 1973) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox NFL biography"]

FieldValue
nameJohn Mobley
number51
positionLinebacker
birth_date
birth_placeChester, Pennsylvania, U.S.
height_ft6
height_in1
weight_lb236
high_schoolChichester
(Boothwyn, Pennsylvania)
collegeKutztown (PA)
draftyear1996
draftround1
draftpick15
statlabel1Total tackles
statvalue1621
statlabel2Sacks
statvalue210.5
statlabel3Forced fumbles
statvalue35
statlabel4Fumble recoveries
statvalue47
statlabel5Interceptions
statvalue55
statlabel6Defensive touchdowns
statvalue61
pfrMoblJo20
::

| name = John Mobley | number = 51 | position = Linebacker | birth_date = | birth_place = Chester, Pennsylvania, U.S. | height_ft = 6 | height_in = 1 | weight_lb = 236 | high_school = Chichester (Boothwyn, Pennsylvania) | college = Kutztown (PA) | draftyear = 1996 | draftround = 1 | draftpick = 15 | pastteams =

John Ulysses Mobley (born October 10, 1973) is an American former professional football player who was a linebacker for eight seasons with the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL) from 1996 to 2003.

He is the cousin of former NBA player Cuttino Mobley.

Biography

One of nine children born to parents, Lee and Vera, who divorced when he was thirteen years old, Mobley lived with his father until the age of sixteen. After his father suffered a stroke, Mobley moved in with his mother, who demanded he leave high school to help support his family. Mobley spent a year living on the street in an old car before a friend's family took him in.

Lacking the academic credentials for a Division I school, Mobley went on to play college football for Kutztown University in 1991. Mobley made the starting lineup as a freshman and recorded nine tackles and a sack in his first college game, and earned an honorable mention on the All-American team as a sophomore. Mobley's college career came to a sudden halt in 1993, however, when coach Barry Fetterman was fired as a result of an NCAA investigation into academic violations at the school. The team's new coach, Al Leonzi, carried out his own investigation and ended up declaring Mobley ineligible for the upcoming season.

Mobley subsequently resolved his academic status, and returned for the 1994 and 1995 seasons, earning first-team AP Little All-American selections as a junior and senior and a Division II invitation to the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. He was drafted in the first round of the 1996 NFL draft by the Denver Broncos, making him the highest drafted player in the history of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference, and just the third player from Kutztown ever to be drafted.

Mobley's best season occurred in 1997. He had 132 tackles and four sacks and was an All-Pro that season; however, he missed most of the 1999 season because of an injury.

Mobley suffered a bruised spinal column during the 2003 season after colliding with his teammate Kelly Herndon in a game against the Baltimore Ravens. The injury was severe enough that the Broncos cut him before the 2004 season in order to allow him time for recovery. He later re-signed with the Broncos and retired because of the injury.

Mobley served seven days in prison for a DUI conviction in 2004 after being pulled over and arrested on December 28, 2002. He was found guilty by a jury in April 2004 and was sentenced to 365 days behind bars, but the judge in the case later reduced it to seven days.

In Super Bowl XXXII, Mobley deflected a Brett Favre pass on 4th and 6 from the 31-yard-line with just over 30 seconds left in the game. The deflection sealed a 31–24 victory for the Broncos and ended the NFC's run of 13 straight wins over the AFC in Super Bowl competition. In the 1998 AFC Championship game, Mobley recovered a Keith Byars fumble on the Broncos 18-yard-line in the second quarter to stop a scoring drive.

During his career, Mobley played in 105 career games, starting 102 of them, including two Super Bowls, during which he made 608 career tackles, 10.5 quarterback sacks, and five interceptions for 45 yards and a touchdown.

NFL career statistics

::data[format=table]

Legend
Bold
::

Regular season

::data[format=table]

YearTeamGamesTacklesInterceptionsFumblesGPGSCombSoloAstSckIntYdsTDLngFFFRYdsTD1996DEN1997DEN1998DEN1999DEN2000DEN2001DEN2002DEN2003DEN10510262149113010.55451175790
16166149121.518080000
161613296364.01131132100
161511293191.01-20-20100
2210730.000000000
15148770172.019092000
16169380131.01170171380
161610174271.000000210
87252230.000000000
::

Playoffs

::data[format=table]

YearTeamGamesTacklesInterceptionsFumblesGPGSCombSoloAstSckIntYdsTDLngFFFRYdsTD1996DEN1997DEN1998DEN2000DEN99383441.000000100
117610.000000000
44191720.000000000
336511.000000100
116600.000000000
::

References

References

  1. "Kutztown's John Mobley entering Division II football Hall of Fame".
  2. "1996 NFL Draft Listing".
  3. "NFL Draft - Players from Kutztown {{!".
  4. "Broncos' Mobley Leaves Game With Neck Injury". WJACTV / SportsNetwork.
  5. "Broncos Lose Mobley For Season". KTVU / SportsNetwork.
  6. (23 April 2004). "Mobley faces a fine and up to one year in jail". ESPN / Associated Press.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

1973-birthsliving-peopleplayers-of-american-football-from-delaware-county,-pennsylvaniaplayers-of-american-football-from-chester,-pennsylvaniaamerican-football-linebackerskutztown-golden-bears-football-playersdenver-broncos-players