Noonan had a dominant season as a senior, registering 53 tackles and 12 sacks (led the team), on a team that ranked second in the nation in total defense, allowing 235.5 yards per game and only 2.4 yards per run.[1] He received numerous awards and honors, including the Big 8 Athlete-of-the-Year, First-team All-American (AP, UPI, FWAA, Kodak, Walter Camp, Football News), All Star Japan Bowl and Big 8 Player-of-the-Week (Florida State).[2]
In 1991, he was inducted into the Nebraska Football Hall of Fame. In 2005, he was selected by the Omaha World-Herald as one of Nebraska's Top 100 greatest athletes.[3]
Professional career
Dallas Cowboys
Noonan was selected by the Dallas Cowboys in the first round (12th overall) of the 1987 NFL draft,[4] with the intention of being the eventual successor to All-ProRandy White and to help revitalize an aging defensive line.[5] After having the longest holdout by a rookie in franchise history at the time,[6] he fell behind in learning the nuances of head coach Tom Landry's flex defense and was only a situational player. He began at defensive end, before being moved to defensive tackle in the second half of the season. White was limited with injuries, so Noonan helped in run situations, finishing with 27 tackles and one sack.
By his second season he was considered the Cowboys' strongest player, being able to bench press 505 pounds. Despite suffering hip, knee and heel injuries, his best year statistically was in 1988, when he replaced White as the starter at right tackle, recording 16 starts, 84 tackles, 7.5 sacks (tied for the team lead with Garry Cobb) and returned one interception for a touchdown. Against the Atlanta Falcons, he intercepted a pass tipped at the line of scrimmage and returned it 17 yards for a touchdown and sacked quarterbackChris Miller for a safety. In the eighth game against the Philadelphia Eagles, he had 9 tackles and 3 sacks.
In 1989, he missed 9 games with a groin injury he suffered in training camp, posting only 5 starts in 7 games, 23 tackles, 9 quarterback pressures, one sack and one pass defensed.
In 1990, he regained his starting role (15 starts), finishing fourth (first among defensive lineman) on the team in tackles (85), while also making 4.5 sacks, 16 quarterback pressures and 4 passes defensed.
After starting the first 3 games at right tackle in 1991, with the addition of Tony Casillas, plus the emergence of Russell Maryland and Jimmie Jones, he was moved to a backup role and played sparingly the rest of the season, making 20 tackles (2 for loss), one quarterback pressure, one pass defensed and one sack.[7]
He was released after starting the first 2 games of the 1992 season on September 14, to make room for Russell Maryland upon his return from a toe injury.[8] He started 41 out of 67 possible games and recorded 15 sacks in his Cowboys career.
Green Bay Packers
On September 16, 1992, he was claimed off waivers by the Green Bay Packers, played 6 games as a backup in the team's 3-4 defense and recorded 4 tackles,[9] before being waived on November 10.[10]
Denver Broncos
On April 6, 1993, he signed as a free agent with the Denver Broncos. He retired on August 17, after missing almost half of the team's training camp with a knee injury.[11]
Personal life
Noonan married his wife Julie in 2002 and they have six children (Sydney, Sam, Maverick, Alec, Branson and Marisa) and grandchildren Levi & Charles.