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04-27-2008, 05:27 PM
NFL Events: Draft Player Profiles - Colt Brennan (http://www.nfl.com/draft/profiles/colt-brennan?id=196)
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Colt Brennan (QB (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-position%7Cpos-qb))
Height: 6'3"
Weight: 205
College: Hawaii (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-college%7Ccollege-110)
Conference: WAC (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-college%7Cconf-wac)
Hometown: Irvine, CA
High School: Mater Dei
View Combine Page >> (http://www.nfl.com/combine/profiles/colt-brennan?id=196)
Pick Analysis: Brennan saw his stock fall after a disappointing combine performance and is small at quarterback given the prototypical size at the position in the NFL. Was prolific in June Jones' run-and-shoot scheme at Hawaii, but needs to prove he is not a system quarterback. Lacks arm strength, but has moxie and toughness.
Overview One of the most accurate passers in the history of college football, Brennan is the owner of 21 NCAA records in just over two seasons in a Warriors' uniform.
A model of consistency, he established many Bowl Subdivision records, including 34 consecutive games with at least 200 passing yards and 20 games with at least 400 yards in total offense. His average of 387.89 yards per game in total offense and a pass completion percentage of .712 are among myriad notable national marks he set among the 31 NCAA records that he established in just 38 games at Hawaii.
On the way to shattering numerous national Western Athletic Conference and school passing and total offense records, he has drawn the praise of opposing head coaches.
"Colt is as mobile and accurate quarterback that I've seen in a while," Boise State head coach Chris Peterson stated. "He has a great feel for the game and to stop Hawaii, you have to stop Colt."
At Mater Dei High School, Brennan earned three letters in football and one in basketball. The team's MVP in 2001, he added All-League first-team gridiron honors. He led the squad to a 9-5 record his final year, completing more than 68% of his passes with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions, adding 200 yards and four scores on the ground.
The team went 11-2 his junior year and 9-1 during his sophomore campaign, when he led the team to the CIF championship with a win over powerhouse DeLaSalle High. After his senior year, he was invited to play in the County All-Star Game. He also lettered as a forward on the basketball team as a senior and the squad captured the CIF title.
Brennan turned down a scholarship offer from Utah State to enroll at Worcester Academy (Mass.) in 2002. He started seven games that season, completing 101-of-158 passes for 1,707 yards, 15 touchdowns and only four interceptions, but missed two games with a finger fracture. The All-New England Prep School choice helped the team to a 5-4 record, throwing for 287 yards and three scores on 16-of-22 attempts in an upset victory over Mount Ida and gained 390 yards with four scores in a triumph over Valley Forge.
Brennan enrolled at the University of Colorado in 2003 as a walk-on. He was listed fourth on the depth chart, but never appeared in a game at the school. His college career almost ended before it began when, on Jan. 28, 2004, he was arrested by campus police and charged with entering a co-ed's room. Uninvited, he was intoxicated at the time of the incident and the woman claimed he exposed himself and fondled her. He pleaded guilty to burglary and trespassing, but a charge of unlawful sexual contact was vacated by the court for lack of evidence. He was dismissed from the team.
Brennan transferred to Saddleback Community College, where he appeared in nine games during the 2004 season. He ranked third in the California junior college ranks with an average of 19.7 pass completions per game, seventh with an average of 253.7 yards passing and seventh in total offense (287.7 yards per game). He completed 177-of-259 passes (68.3%) for 2,532 yards, 23 touchdowns and four interceptions. He also rushed for 57 yards on 66 tries (0.9-yard average) with a score, finishing with 2,589 total yards.
When coach June Jones recruited him to Hawaii, Brennan found someone with complete confidence in his passing skills. Jones slowly brought Brennan along in the early stage of the 2005 season before turning the starting reins over for 10 games. Brennan led an offensive attack that ranked second in the nation in passing (384.25 yards per game) and led the 1-A ranks in total offense (476.17 yards per game).
He ranked ninth nationally with a 155.49 pass-efficiency rating, leading the country with an average of 371.25 yards in total offense, 358.42 aerial yards and 19.17 points responsible for per game. His 4,301 yards was the best in the nation, as he completed 350-of-515 pass attempts (68.0%), with 35 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. He finished second on the team with 154 yards and two scores on 99 carries (1.6-yard average) and totaled 4,455 yards on 614 offensive plays.
To most quarterbacks, Brennan's 2005 stats would represent an entire college career. But the 2006 season was even more impressive, and Brennan did it in record-shattering fashion. The Sammy Baugh Award winner and Davey O'Brien Award finalist finished second in the voting for Cingular National Player of the Year Award honors. He earned All-American first-team recognition from The NFL Draft Report, adding second-team accolades from Walter Camp. He was named Western Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year and finished sixth in the voting for the Heisman Trophy.
Brennan would go on to set 18 NCAA, 17 WAC and 41 school records. He led the nation in pass efficiency (185.96), total offense (422.5 yards per game), points responsible for (27.71 ppg), yards passing (5,549), completion percentage (72.6) and yards passing per game (396.36). He hit on 406-of-559 tosses for 5,549 yards, including a national-record 58 touchdowns and only 12 interceptions. He finished second on the squad with 366 yards and five scores on 86 carries (4.3-yard average). He participated in 645 plays, gaining 5,915 total yards.
Brennan continued to torch opposing defensive backs in 2007, but he suffered a right ankle sprain in the team's third game vs. Nevada-Las Vegas that forced him to leave in the third quarter. Brennan re-injured the ankle the following week vs. Idaho and was forced to sit out the Charleston Southern game. He came back vs. Utah State, but his ankle didn't cooperate, forcing Brennan out just prior to halftime.
A concussion on a head-on collision vs. Fresno State would sideline him for the final 10 minutes vs. the Bulldogs and the following week, he saw just limited action vs. Nevada. In the Sugar Bowl vs. Georgia, he was shaken up in the fourth quarter and replaced for the final 14 minutes of Hawaii's only loss for the year.
Brennan managed to rank fifth in the nation in passing efficiency (159.85), fourth in points responsible for (23 per game) and passing yards (4,343), third in total offense (364.17 yards per game) and pass completions per game (29.92 per game) and second in average yards passing per game (361.92 ypg). The Hawaii quarterback connected on 359-of-510 passes (70.4%) for 4,343 yards, 38 touchdowns and 17 interceptions. He scored eight times on 82 carries, recorded a solo tackle and amassed 4,370 yards in total offense.
In 38 games at Hawaii, Brennan started 35 times. He completed 1,292-of-1,584 passes (70.39%) for 14,193 yards, 131 touchdowns and 42 interceptions. He rushed 267 times for 547 yards (2.1-yard average) and 15 scores. On 1,851 offensive plays, he totaled 14,740 yards and 146 total touchdowns.
Including nine games at Saddleback College, Brennan participated in 47 collegiate games. He piled up 16,725 yards with 154 touchdowns and 46 interceptions on 1,292-of-1,843 throws (70.1%). He gained 604 yards with 16 scores on 333 carries (1.8-yard average). He totaled 17,329 yards on 2,176 offensive plays, an average of 368.7 yards per game.
Career Notes Brennan's average of 387.89 yards per game in total offense is an NCAA Division 1-A record, surpassing the previous mark of 382.4 yards per game by Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech (12,618 yards in 33 games, from 1997-99)...His 10,370 yards in total offense during his first two seasons at Hawaii shattered Rattay's previous NCAA record of 8,808 yards (1997-98) in a two-year span...His 14,740 yards in total offense for his entire Hawaii career rank behind Timmy Chang of Hawaii (16,910 yards, 2000-04) as the second-best average in school, Western Athletic Conference and NCAA Division 1-A history...Was responsible for 100 touchdowns over the course of the 2005-06 seasons, topping the old NCAA two-year record of 85 by David Klingler of Houston (threw for 83 TDs, ran for two more, 1990-91)...For his major college career, Brennan was responsible for 146 total touchdowns, topping the old NCAA career-record of 135 by Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (1998-2001)...His average of 3.84 touchdowns responsible per game broke Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech's previous NCAA mark of 3.55 (1997-99)...Brennan's 604 points responsible for between 2005-06 was the most by an NCAA player over a two-year span, topping David Klingler of Houston's mark of 514 (1988-91)...His major college total of 886 points responsible for shattered the NCAA three-year record of 702 points by Rattay and the four-year record of 820 points by Ty Detmer...His average of 23.32 points responsible for per game broke the old NCAA all-time record of 17.8 points by Detmer...His 63 touchdowns responsible for in 2006 broke the old NCAA 1-A season-record of 57 by B.J. Symons of Texas Tech in 2003 (threw for 52, ran for five)...Brennan's 380 points responsible for in 2006 topped Symons' NCAA season-record of 348 in 2003...His 167.91 passing efficiency rating is just shy of the NCAA Division 1-A career-record of 168.9 by Ryan Dinwiddie of Boise State (2000-03)...His 185.96 passing efficiency rating in 2006 broke the old NCAA season-record of 183.3 by Shaun King of Tulane in 1998...Completed 70.39% of his passes (1,115-of-1,584), an NCAA all-time record, topping the previous mark of 68.2% by Bruce Gradkowski of Toledo (766 of 1,123, from 2002-05)...Became the fifth player in NCAA history to throw for over 5,000 yards in a season (5,549) in 2006, joining B.J. Symons of Texas Tech (5,833 in 2003), Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (5,188 in 1990), David Klingler of Houston(5,140 in 1990) and Kliff Kingsbury of Texas Tech (5,017 in 2002)...His 9,850 yards passing from 2005-06 was the best total over a two-year span by an NCAA Division 1-A player, topping the old mark of 9,748 by Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (1989-90)...His average of 373.5 yards passing per game set an NCAA career-record, surpassing Detmer's old mark of 326.76 yards per game (1988-91)...His string of 14 consecutive games of 200-plus yards passing in 2006 tied the NCAA record first set by Ben Roethlisberger of Miami (Ohio) in 2003...His 13 games of throwing for at least 300 yards in 2006 set another NCAA single-season, surpassing Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (in both 1989 and '90)...Threw for over 300 yards in 12 straight games in 2006, tying Detmer's NCAA records set in both 1989 and '90...Threw for 58 touchdowns in 2006, breaking the NCAA season-record of 54 by David Klingler of Houston in 1990...His two-year total (2005-06) of 93 touchdown passes broke Klingler's NCAA record of 83 (1990-91)...Has averaged 3.45 touchdown passes per game during his career, ranking just behind the NCAA all-time record of 3.48 by Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech (1997-99)...Became the sixth player in NCAA Division 1-A annals to throw for over 100 touchdowns (131) during a career, joining Detmer (121), Timmy Chang of Hawaii (117, 2000-04), Rattay (115), Wuerffel (114) and Chad Pennington of Marshall (100, 1997-99)...Joined Timmy Chang (17,072 yards, 2000-04) as the only player in school history to throw for over 10,000 yards (14,193) in a career...Holds the school record with 20 games of 400 yards passing or more...His four 500-yard passing performances broke the old school record of three that was set by Nick Rolovich (2001)...His 559 yards passing vs. Arizona State in 2006 is a record and his 548 yards vs. Louisiana Tech in 2007 rank second on the Hawaii game chart, ahead of Rolovich's 543 yards vs. Brigham Young in 2001...His 5.549 yards passing in 2006 set a WAC season-record, topping Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (5,188 in 1990)...His 5,915 yards ion total offense in 2006 broke the old conference annual record of 5,022 yards by Detmer in 1990...Brennan's pass completion percentage of .726 in 2006 set school and WAC season-records...For his major college career, he set 31 NCAA, 27 conference and 72 school records.
High School Attended Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Cal.) High School, where he earned three letters in football and one in basketball...The team's MVP in 2001, Brennan added All-League first-team gridiron honors...Led the squad to a 9-5 record his final year, completing more than 68% of his passes with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions, adding 200 yards and four scores on the ground...The team went 11-2 his junior year and 9-1 during his sophomore campaign, when he led the team to the CIF championship with a win over powerhouse DeLaSalle High...After his senior year, he was invited to play in the County All-Star Game...Lettered as a forward on the basketball team as a senior, as the squad captured the CIF title.
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Colt Brennan (QB (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-position%7Cpos-qb))
Height: 6'3"
Weight: 205
College: Hawaii (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-college%7Ccollege-110)
Conference: WAC (http://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker#tab:dt-by-college%7Cconf-wac)
Hometown: Irvine, CA
High School: Mater Dei
View Combine Page >> (http://www.nfl.com/combine/profiles/colt-brennan?id=196)
Pick Analysis: Brennan saw his stock fall after a disappointing combine performance and is small at quarterback given the prototypical size at the position in the NFL. Was prolific in June Jones' run-and-shoot scheme at Hawaii, but needs to prove he is not a system quarterback. Lacks arm strength, but has moxie and toughness.
Overview One of the most accurate passers in the history of college football, Brennan is the owner of 21 NCAA records in just over two seasons in a Warriors' uniform.
A model of consistency, he established many Bowl Subdivision records, including 34 consecutive games with at least 200 passing yards and 20 games with at least 400 yards in total offense. His average of 387.89 yards per game in total offense and a pass completion percentage of .712 are among myriad notable national marks he set among the 31 NCAA records that he established in just 38 games at Hawaii.
On the way to shattering numerous national Western Athletic Conference and school passing and total offense records, he has drawn the praise of opposing head coaches.
"Colt is as mobile and accurate quarterback that I've seen in a while," Boise State head coach Chris Peterson stated. "He has a great feel for the game and to stop Hawaii, you have to stop Colt."
At Mater Dei High School, Brennan earned three letters in football and one in basketball. The team's MVP in 2001, he added All-League first-team gridiron honors. He led the squad to a 9-5 record his final year, completing more than 68% of his passes with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions, adding 200 yards and four scores on the ground.
The team went 11-2 his junior year and 9-1 during his sophomore campaign, when he led the team to the CIF championship with a win over powerhouse DeLaSalle High. After his senior year, he was invited to play in the County All-Star Game. He also lettered as a forward on the basketball team as a senior and the squad captured the CIF title.
Brennan turned down a scholarship offer from Utah State to enroll at Worcester Academy (Mass.) in 2002. He started seven games that season, completing 101-of-158 passes for 1,707 yards, 15 touchdowns and only four interceptions, but missed two games with a finger fracture. The All-New England Prep School choice helped the team to a 5-4 record, throwing for 287 yards and three scores on 16-of-22 attempts in an upset victory over Mount Ida and gained 390 yards with four scores in a triumph over Valley Forge.
Brennan enrolled at the University of Colorado in 2003 as a walk-on. He was listed fourth on the depth chart, but never appeared in a game at the school. His college career almost ended before it began when, on Jan. 28, 2004, he was arrested by campus police and charged with entering a co-ed's room. Uninvited, he was intoxicated at the time of the incident and the woman claimed he exposed himself and fondled her. He pleaded guilty to burglary and trespassing, but a charge of unlawful sexual contact was vacated by the court for lack of evidence. He was dismissed from the team.
Brennan transferred to Saddleback Community College, where he appeared in nine games during the 2004 season. He ranked third in the California junior college ranks with an average of 19.7 pass completions per game, seventh with an average of 253.7 yards passing and seventh in total offense (287.7 yards per game). He completed 177-of-259 passes (68.3%) for 2,532 yards, 23 touchdowns and four interceptions. He also rushed for 57 yards on 66 tries (0.9-yard average) with a score, finishing with 2,589 total yards.
When coach June Jones recruited him to Hawaii, Brennan found someone with complete confidence in his passing skills. Jones slowly brought Brennan along in the early stage of the 2005 season before turning the starting reins over for 10 games. Brennan led an offensive attack that ranked second in the nation in passing (384.25 yards per game) and led the 1-A ranks in total offense (476.17 yards per game).
He ranked ninth nationally with a 155.49 pass-efficiency rating, leading the country with an average of 371.25 yards in total offense, 358.42 aerial yards and 19.17 points responsible for per game. His 4,301 yards was the best in the nation, as he completed 350-of-515 pass attempts (68.0%), with 35 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. He finished second on the team with 154 yards and two scores on 99 carries (1.6-yard average) and totaled 4,455 yards on 614 offensive plays.
To most quarterbacks, Brennan's 2005 stats would represent an entire college career. But the 2006 season was even more impressive, and Brennan did it in record-shattering fashion. The Sammy Baugh Award winner and Davey O'Brien Award finalist finished second in the voting for Cingular National Player of the Year Award honors. He earned All-American first-team recognition from The NFL Draft Report, adding second-team accolades from Walter Camp. He was named Western Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year and finished sixth in the voting for the Heisman Trophy.
Brennan would go on to set 18 NCAA, 17 WAC and 41 school records. He led the nation in pass efficiency (185.96), total offense (422.5 yards per game), points responsible for (27.71 ppg), yards passing (5,549), completion percentage (72.6) and yards passing per game (396.36). He hit on 406-of-559 tosses for 5,549 yards, including a national-record 58 touchdowns and only 12 interceptions. He finished second on the squad with 366 yards and five scores on 86 carries (4.3-yard average). He participated in 645 plays, gaining 5,915 total yards.
Brennan continued to torch opposing defensive backs in 2007, but he suffered a right ankle sprain in the team's third game vs. Nevada-Las Vegas that forced him to leave in the third quarter. Brennan re-injured the ankle the following week vs. Idaho and was forced to sit out the Charleston Southern game. He came back vs. Utah State, but his ankle didn't cooperate, forcing Brennan out just prior to halftime.
A concussion on a head-on collision vs. Fresno State would sideline him for the final 10 minutes vs. the Bulldogs and the following week, he saw just limited action vs. Nevada. In the Sugar Bowl vs. Georgia, he was shaken up in the fourth quarter and replaced for the final 14 minutes of Hawaii's only loss for the year.
Brennan managed to rank fifth in the nation in passing efficiency (159.85), fourth in points responsible for (23 per game) and passing yards (4,343), third in total offense (364.17 yards per game) and pass completions per game (29.92 per game) and second in average yards passing per game (361.92 ypg). The Hawaii quarterback connected on 359-of-510 passes (70.4%) for 4,343 yards, 38 touchdowns and 17 interceptions. He scored eight times on 82 carries, recorded a solo tackle and amassed 4,370 yards in total offense.
In 38 games at Hawaii, Brennan started 35 times. He completed 1,292-of-1,584 passes (70.39%) for 14,193 yards, 131 touchdowns and 42 interceptions. He rushed 267 times for 547 yards (2.1-yard average) and 15 scores. On 1,851 offensive plays, he totaled 14,740 yards and 146 total touchdowns.
Including nine games at Saddleback College, Brennan participated in 47 collegiate games. He piled up 16,725 yards with 154 touchdowns and 46 interceptions on 1,292-of-1,843 throws (70.1%). He gained 604 yards with 16 scores on 333 carries (1.8-yard average). He totaled 17,329 yards on 2,176 offensive plays, an average of 368.7 yards per game.
Career Notes Brennan's average of 387.89 yards per game in total offense is an NCAA Division 1-A record, surpassing the previous mark of 382.4 yards per game by Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech (12,618 yards in 33 games, from 1997-99)...His 10,370 yards in total offense during his first two seasons at Hawaii shattered Rattay's previous NCAA record of 8,808 yards (1997-98) in a two-year span...His 14,740 yards in total offense for his entire Hawaii career rank behind Timmy Chang of Hawaii (16,910 yards, 2000-04) as the second-best average in school, Western Athletic Conference and NCAA Division 1-A history...Was responsible for 100 touchdowns over the course of the 2005-06 seasons, topping the old NCAA two-year record of 85 by David Klingler of Houston (threw for 83 TDs, ran for two more, 1990-91)...For his major college career, Brennan was responsible for 146 total touchdowns, topping the old NCAA career-record of 135 by Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (1998-2001)...His average of 3.84 touchdowns responsible per game broke Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech's previous NCAA mark of 3.55 (1997-99)...Brennan's 604 points responsible for between 2005-06 was the most by an NCAA player over a two-year span, topping David Klingler of Houston's mark of 514 (1988-91)...His major college total of 886 points responsible for shattered the NCAA three-year record of 702 points by Rattay and the four-year record of 820 points by Ty Detmer...His average of 23.32 points responsible for per game broke the old NCAA all-time record of 17.8 points by Detmer...His 63 touchdowns responsible for in 2006 broke the old NCAA 1-A season-record of 57 by B.J. Symons of Texas Tech in 2003 (threw for 52, ran for five)...Brennan's 380 points responsible for in 2006 topped Symons' NCAA season-record of 348 in 2003...His 167.91 passing efficiency rating is just shy of the NCAA Division 1-A career-record of 168.9 by Ryan Dinwiddie of Boise State (2000-03)...His 185.96 passing efficiency rating in 2006 broke the old NCAA season-record of 183.3 by Shaun King of Tulane in 1998...Completed 70.39% of his passes (1,115-of-1,584), an NCAA all-time record, topping the previous mark of 68.2% by Bruce Gradkowski of Toledo (766 of 1,123, from 2002-05)...Became the fifth player in NCAA history to throw for over 5,000 yards in a season (5,549) in 2006, joining B.J. Symons of Texas Tech (5,833 in 2003), Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (5,188 in 1990), David Klingler of Houston(5,140 in 1990) and Kliff Kingsbury of Texas Tech (5,017 in 2002)...His 9,850 yards passing from 2005-06 was the best total over a two-year span by an NCAA Division 1-A player, topping the old mark of 9,748 by Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (1989-90)...His average of 373.5 yards passing per game set an NCAA career-record, surpassing Detmer's old mark of 326.76 yards per game (1988-91)...His string of 14 consecutive games of 200-plus yards passing in 2006 tied the NCAA record first set by Ben Roethlisberger of Miami (Ohio) in 2003...His 13 games of throwing for at least 300 yards in 2006 set another NCAA single-season, surpassing Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (in both 1989 and '90)...Threw for over 300 yards in 12 straight games in 2006, tying Detmer's NCAA records set in both 1989 and '90...Threw for 58 touchdowns in 2006, breaking the NCAA season-record of 54 by David Klingler of Houston in 1990...His two-year total (2005-06) of 93 touchdown passes broke Klingler's NCAA record of 83 (1990-91)...Has averaged 3.45 touchdown passes per game during his career, ranking just behind the NCAA all-time record of 3.48 by Tim Rattay of Louisiana Tech (1997-99)...Became the sixth player in NCAA Division 1-A annals to throw for over 100 touchdowns (131) during a career, joining Detmer (121), Timmy Chang of Hawaii (117, 2000-04), Rattay (115), Wuerffel (114) and Chad Pennington of Marshall (100, 1997-99)...Joined Timmy Chang (17,072 yards, 2000-04) as the only player in school history to throw for over 10,000 yards (14,193) in a career...Holds the school record with 20 games of 400 yards passing or more...His four 500-yard passing performances broke the old school record of three that was set by Nick Rolovich (2001)...His 559 yards passing vs. Arizona State in 2006 is a record and his 548 yards vs. Louisiana Tech in 2007 rank second on the Hawaii game chart, ahead of Rolovich's 543 yards vs. Brigham Young in 2001...His 5.549 yards passing in 2006 set a WAC season-record, topping Ty Detmer of Brigham Young (5,188 in 1990)...His 5,915 yards ion total offense in 2006 broke the old conference annual record of 5,022 yards by Detmer in 1990...Brennan's pass completion percentage of .726 in 2006 set school and WAC season-records...For his major college career, he set 31 NCAA, 27 conference and 72 school records.
High School Attended Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Cal.) High School, where he earned three letters in football and one in basketball...The team's MVP in 2001, Brennan added All-League first-team gridiron honors...Led the squad to a 9-5 record his final year, completing more than 68% of his passes with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions, adding 200 yards and four scores on the ground...The team went 11-2 his junior year and 9-1 during his sophomore campaign, when he led the team to the CIF championship with a win over powerhouse DeLaSalle High...After his senior year, he was invited to play in the County All-Star Game...Lettered as a forward on the basketball team as a senior, as the squad captured the CIF title.
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