Background
Season 13 had been the best in San Jose SaberCats history. The team San Jose retained for their Season 14 campaign was largely identical to the one that put on a 12-2 record and yet still did not make the Ultimus after a heartbreaking loss to their in-state rivals, the Orange County Otters. The most notable departure was Ben Horne, former member of the feared Three Amigos - him, Kolby Deringer, and Chad Pennington, a trio of some of the best linebackers in the league who anchored the defense. At the same time, they brought a backup QB to Joliet Christ, Rose Jenkins, and retained a lot of the talent who powered them to the best regular season record in club history. They had the ability to make another serious run at the franchise's first championship. A new season was starting. For better or for worse, the Cats were gearing up to make another run at it, though now with some renewed hope. They had the ability to go all the way. The window was still well open with much of the core not even in regression yet.
Still leading this team was QB Joliet Christ, the top-rated passer from the previous regular season. His 94.3 for the entire Season 13 campaign became a franchise record. His backfield partner, still Jerrod Canton, was third in rushing yards and touchdowns and tied for third in yards per attempt among rushers with at least 100 carries. In the receiving corps, Kazimir Oles, sixth in receiving yards, second in yards per catch, and league leader in receiving touchdowns, returned with a newly-signed contract in hand. Xavier Flash, Ty Justice, and Zapp Brannigan also remained at the forefront of the receiver corps. Chris Orosz returned in the RB committee as well. On defense, the Cats still boasted the brothers Pennington - Chad and Thad, the brothers Tuck - Jorel and Ja'Brill - as well as, Deringer, Xandra Troyski, D'Pez Poopsie, Danny Methane, Freezer Riposte and Trey Staley, plus new addition Footballer Sackerman at defensive tackle. While they would miss Horne, this was still a complete enough defensive unit to keep hold like they did the previous season, when they dominated the league leaderboards.
The stage was set for the Cats to continue their contention. Their young enough core could last a few seasons, even. The window was still open, and after an alright preseason, the true test was underway...
Week 1 - Colorado at San Jose
This was the breakout opener the SaberCats needed, the kind of game you put on to put the league on notice and shout "Hey, we're still competitive, we're still as good as ever, and this season, we're still coming to kick all your asses." The defense made their opening statement seven plays into the Yeti's first possession, when Troyski snatched an interception and took it back 25 yards to COL's 27. With an excellent turnover and a short field to work with, Canton put them closer, then Christ found Oles on the second play of the drive for the opening touchdown. Things would remain relatively quiet for the rest of the first quarter, though Poopsie would get a critical sack on third down when the Yeti had crossed over into SJS territory. They would punt from the SJS 46, stranded in the maroon zone - too long for a field goal, and too early to go for it. A short punt from Kyle Corbett that only went 36 yards would mostly be neutralized by Oles on a 23-yard return and set up yet another short field for the Cats to again capitalize on. Christ would make it most of this brief way on a scramble, then Orosz pushed the line further up before Christ dropped his second passing TD, this one to Justice. Micycle McCormick would finally get Colorado on the board with a touchdown pass to Heath Miller with the first half winding down. Neo Donaldson would sink a 25-yarder to make the halftime score 17-7 in San Jose's favor.
The SaberCats, to open the second half, would march all the way down from their own 28 to score a touchdown in five plays. Canton ran for 10, Brannigan caught one for 20, then Christ to Oles for 24, Orosz would cover another six, then Oles would nab his second TD catch from 12 yards out. 23-7 San Jose (the extra point was no good), and Colorado needed to score fast or the rout would be on. Despite a return setting them up on their own 41 to start, penalties and defensive stifles would stall them out. They would trade punts for three possessions before the Cats went on the march again. Despite opening this drive with a sack which set them back to their own 22, Christ would hit Justice for 15 to turn the tide right around. They would again gain in medium to large chunks each play, with Christ on a deadly accurate roll. He would punch his fourth TD through the air on a 17-yard hookup with Brannigan for his first scoring reception to push the lead to 30-7.
The rout was on. After the Yeti again went nowhere from the end of the third to the opening of the fourth, Christ picked up his fifth TD when he threw to Oles and let Oles loose for a 52-yard score to go 37-7. After more back-and-forth punting, Christ would continue showing no mercy when he capped off the final SJS offensive drive with a 28-yard dime to Justice. With a final of 44-7, the SaberCats firmly declared "We're still here." Christ was the clear Player of the Game, as his line of 17/20, 252 yards, 6 TD, 0 INT was enough for the first-ever perfect passer rating in an ISFL game - 158.3. It would hold wire-to-wire to win him Performance of the Year.
Week 2 - San Jose at Arizona
Their next game would also be one they would dominate in, although again, it would be against an opponent who would later be in the running for draft picks sooner than playoff spots. Still, it was important to get another result, this time on the road, to solidify their place from Week 1. And they did so in spectacular fashion. Oles set the table to start with a return into AZ territory, to their 45. Christ orchestrated a march on the short field ending in a touchdown, briefly held up on the AZ 5 and needing to deliver on third and goal. He did so when Brannigan went up in the end zone and got enough vertical to reel it in. Donaldson pinging off the post meant the first scoreline would hold at 6-0 Cats. The defense would still need to do their part, and they would continue where they left off from the week prior. Five plays in, and the Outlaws were out of options. They had advanced to SJS's 44 but moved nowhere from it, so they punted, like the Yeti did in the Maroon Zone the week before. After four rushes from Canton and Orosz, Christ heaved one up for Oles, and the wideout would win a footrace with the Arizona secondary to score a 59-yard TD. Another XP miss would hold the score at 12-0. The Outlaws would finally get on the board late in the first quarter with a 56-yard field goal from Dean Jackson.
The game would blow wide open in the second quarter. After a few punt exchanges, San Jose would again march on medium gains plus an unnecessary roughness penalty. On 2nd and 6 from the AZ 20, Christ took off from the pocket and had daylight all the way for his first rushing touchdown of the season to gain a 19-3 edge. The defense held up the Outlaws to the point where they would not get into SJS territory the rest of the first half. Another drive starting in AZ territory would result in yet another TD. Christ capped it off with a 10-yard TD to Ty Justice. 26-3 San Jose, and another blowout was in the works. The Outlaws' woes would continue to accumulate in the second half. Their opening drive stalled on the SJS 40, and they opted to punt. The offense turned that right around into yet another scoring drive, ending with a 35-yard pass from Christ to Jerrod Canton to go 33-3. The Cats caused a three-and-out when Chad Pennington, Troyski, and Jorel Tuck stuffed the Outlaws' attempts to make the line to gain. The next drive would come to a halt at the AZ 26, though they were close enough that Donaldson sank a relatively comfortable 40-yard field goal to make it 36-3.
Most of the rest of the game would be a defensive struggle and accompanying puntfest. Ja'Brill Tuck would nab Defensive Player of the Game honors with six key tackles, including two behind the line and a sack he ended the third quarter with to drop Andrew Reese 11 yards behind the line of scrimmage. Troyski and Chad Pennington continued to be everywhere, and Spencer Castle got a few good swats in. The Outlaws would finally find the end zone with 11 seconds to go, though it was cold comfort for a thoroughly-beaten side. Christ's 22/40 for 261 yards and 4 TDs to 0 INT would earn his second OPotG award.
Week 3 - Orange County at San Jose
We could call this the first true test of the season for the SaberCats, the first big rivalry showdown in California. Leg 1 was set by the Bay, and oh, boy, was it a satisfying beatdown for the side who, to this point, had traditionally been in OCO's shadow, the Cats' postseason white whale. The pent-up frustrations from the Otters once again denying the SaberCats came out in this contest, and would be the next building block of the stage they would set for round 2, and eventually, round 3.
The Otters would take the ball first, start on their own 10, and punt from their own 10 after three passes fell to the ground. The Cats would stall on their first drive in a different manner and make things hard on their defense from the get-go when they were so bold to attempt a fourth-down conversion...and failed when Christ was dropped for a two-yard loss on a designed QB run. The old song felt like it would start up again. One big mishap, the door wide open for the league powerhouse OCO starting on the SJS 35. And the defense answered in a major way. Riposte flew into the backfield and sacked Gus Showbiz for a six-yard loss. Seer Zephyrous would only make up four on second down, Glen McPoyal would cost them five more on a false start, and facing 3rd and 17, Showbiz meant a pass for Johnny Blaze to spark a conversion. His old DSFL teammate from the Kansas City Coyotes, Kolby Deringer, swatted the pass down and stranded the Otters in the Maroon Zone, the common thread in every tilt the Cats had been in thus far. And like the other teams before, the Otters opted to punt. And like the other follow-up drives before, the SaberCats marched to the opposite goal line. Invigorated from a 41-yard connection to Xavier Flash on 3rd and 11, the Cats would take five plays after before Flash finished what he started on a 12-yard TD catch. San Jose struck first in the Golden State Showdown.
After stalling the Otters on a three-and-out, the next drive had the makings of one that could start to crack the game open. Seven plays in, unfortunately, Christ lost the ball on a rush that, if he had held on, would have pushed them to OCO's 27 for 2nd and 3. Johnathan Rice jarred the ball free, and David Ginsberg picked it up, advancing it 5 more yards before he was downed in turn. Maybe this would start the Otters' turnaround - oh, no, they went three-and-out again. The Cats now were driving on what would surely split the game open - oh, no, they held up at the OCO 26 and settled for 3. A 10-0 start was good, though nothing they could sit on for too long. OCO getting the ball back in a situation turning against them has often been a catalyst for the Otters to bring normalcy back to the game. It had the makings of such a stabilizing drive when Jaylon Broxton returned the kick to the OCO 41. Chaos would continue to reign, however. After a short first down run, Showbiz had to fall on his own fumble when Footballer Sackerman infiltrated the backfield and the Tuck Rule couldn't prevent the ensuing seven-yard loss. Better that than lose possession on their side. Deringer reared his head again on another third-and-long to foreclose on another drive. And again, the Cats would flip the field. It would take nine plays in a span of about four and a half minutes, capped off with Chris Orosz diving for his first TD of the season. Despite a long drive after and finally getting a few first downs, the Otters would sputter once they dipped their toe in SaberCats territory. It would go into halftime 17-0 in San Jose's favor.
The Otters had not been shut out in a game since Week 12 in Season 10, when the Yellowknife Wraiths blanked them in Canada. It was the only time going into this game the Otters had not scored. Were the SaberCats about to continue the insanity and blank one of the strongest offenses in the league?
San Jose's own offense would capitulate to open the second half, though their defense would once again suffocate the Otters. A three-and-out where they netted a three-yard loss after former KCC teammates Showbiz and Deringer hugged it out in the backfield sank the Otters' hopes and morale lower. SJS took almost six minutes off the clock to settle for three more and notch a 20-0 lead. On the third play of the next drive, just as the Otters were starting to get a rhythm again and picked up a first down, Trey Staley disrupted it when he flew in from the top rope and dropped Showbiz seven yards back. The Otters would only make up that loss and nothing more. The Otters' next chance to get something, anything, was surely when Rice forced another fumble from Christ's hands and Broxton fell on it. But once again, a 7-yard sack - this time from Thad Pennington - would prove costly enough. They punted on 4th and 1. The Cats chewed up more than five more minutes to kick another field goal and go up 23-0.
Orange County marched at a decent pace this time around. Even if they weren't going to win, they could not go down scoreless without one last great effort. They advanced into SJS territory seven plays in and with less than five minutes remaining. They would press in further, even inside SJS's 30. The desire to get something gave way to needing to score a touchdown to hang on to any slim chance they had at winning. A field goal would not get them any closer. On 4th and 6 on the SJS 28, the Otters went for it. Showbiz slung the rock to Carlito Crush, but Spencer Castle intervened and, as smart defenders do on 4th down, spiked it like a volleyball. A steady stream of firsts would run out the rest of the clock.
This team was for real. They looked as though they were here to dominate the league if they could choke out the Otters. Christ would again be OPotG despite not racking up the scores he did before. The offense worked well enough, the defense gave plenty of leeway, the special teams was working often enough. The league would have to gear up to go after the SaberCats.
Next time: they did gear up, and introduced a couple of bumps in the road that would start to turn the tide of confidence.
Season 13 had been the best in San Jose SaberCats history. The team San Jose retained for their Season 14 campaign was largely identical to the one that put on a 12-2 record and yet still did not make the Ultimus after a heartbreaking loss to their in-state rivals, the Orange County Otters. The most notable departure was Ben Horne, former member of the feared Three Amigos - him, Kolby Deringer, and Chad Pennington, a trio of some of the best linebackers in the league who anchored the defense. At the same time, they brought a backup QB to Joliet Christ, Rose Jenkins, and retained a lot of the talent who powered them to the best regular season record in club history. They had the ability to make another serious run at the franchise's first championship. A new season was starting. For better or for worse, the Cats were gearing up to make another run at it, though now with some renewed hope. They had the ability to go all the way. The window was still well open with much of the core not even in regression yet.
Still leading this team was QB Joliet Christ, the top-rated passer from the previous regular season. His 94.3 for the entire Season 13 campaign became a franchise record. His backfield partner, still Jerrod Canton, was third in rushing yards and touchdowns and tied for third in yards per attempt among rushers with at least 100 carries. In the receiving corps, Kazimir Oles, sixth in receiving yards, second in yards per catch, and league leader in receiving touchdowns, returned with a newly-signed contract in hand. Xavier Flash, Ty Justice, and Zapp Brannigan also remained at the forefront of the receiver corps. Chris Orosz returned in the RB committee as well. On defense, the Cats still boasted the brothers Pennington - Chad and Thad, the brothers Tuck - Jorel and Ja'Brill - as well as, Deringer, Xandra Troyski, D'Pez Poopsie, Danny Methane, Freezer Riposte and Trey Staley, plus new addition Footballer Sackerman at defensive tackle. While they would miss Horne, this was still a complete enough defensive unit to keep hold like they did the previous season, when they dominated the league leaderboards.
The stage was set for the Cats to continue their contention. Their young enough core could last a few seasons, even. The window was still open, and after an alright preseason, the true test was underway...
Week 1 - Colorado at San Jose
This was the breakout opener the SaberCats needed, the kind of game you put on to put the league on notice and shout "Hey, we're still competitive, we're still as good as ever, and this season, we're still coming to kick all your asses." The defense made their opening statement seven plays into the Yeti's first possession, when Troyski snatched an interception and took it back 25 yards to COL's 27. With an excellent turnover and a short field to work with, Canton put them closer, then Christ found Oles on the second play of the drive for the opening touchdown. Things would remain relatively quiet for the rest of the first quarter, though Poopsie would get a critical sack on third down when the Yeti had crossed over into SJS territory. They would punt from the SJS 46, stranded in the maroon zone - too long for a field goal, and too early to go for it. A short punt from Kyle Corbett that only went 36 yards would mostly be neutralized by Oles on a 23-yard return and set up yet another short field for the Cats to again capitalize on. Christ would make it most of this brief way on a scramble, then Orosz pushed the line further up before Christ dropped his second passing TD, this one to Justice. Micycle McCormick would finally get Colorado on the board with a touchdown pass to Heath Miller with the first half winding down. Neo Donaldson would sink a 25-yarder to make the halftime score 17-7 in San Jose's favor.
The SaberCats, to open the second half, would march all the way down from their own 28 to score a touchdown in five plays. Canton ran for 10, Brannigan caught one for 20, then Christ to Oles for 24, Orosz would cover another six, then Oles would nab his second TD catch from 12 yards out. 23-7 San Jose (the extra point was no good), and Colorado needed to score fast or the rout would be on. Despite a return setting them up on their own 41 to start, penalties and defensive stifles would stall them out. They would trade punts for three possessions before the Cats went on the march again. Despite opening this drive with a sack which set them back to their own 22, Christ would hit Justice for 15 to turn the tide right around. They would again gain in medium to large chunks each play, with Christ on a deadly accurate roll. He would punch his fourth TD through the air on a 17-yard hookup with Brannigan for his first scoring reception to push the lead to 30-7.
The rout was on. After the Yeti again went nowhere from the end of the third to the opening of the fourth, Christ picked up his fifth TD when he threw to Oles and let Oles loose for a 52-yard score to go 37-7. After more back-and-forth punting, Christ would continue showing no mercy when he capped off the final SJS offensive drive with a 28-yard dime to Justice. With a final of 44-7, the SaberCats firmly declared "We're still here." Christ was the clear Player of the Game, as his line of 17/20, 252 yards, 6 TD, 0 INT was enough for the first-ever perfect passer rating in an ISFL game - 158.3. It would hold wire-to-wire to win him Performance of the Year.
Week 2 - San Jose at Arizona
Their next game would also be one they would dominate in, although again, it would be against an opponent who would later be in the running for draft picks sooner than playoff spots. Still, it was important to get another result, this time on the road, to solidify their place from Week 1. And they did so in spectacular fashion. Oles set the table to start with a return into AZ territory, to their 45. Christ orchestrated a march on the short field ending in a touchdown, briefly held up on the AZ 5 and needing to deliver on third and goal. He did so when Brannigan went up in the end zone and got enough vertical to reel it in. Donaldson pinging off the post meant the first scoreline would hold at 6-0 Cats. The defense would still need to do their part, and they would continue where they left off from the week prior. Five plays in, and the Outlaws were out of options. They had advanced to SJS's 44 but moved nowhere from it, so they punted, like the Yeti did in the Maroon Zone the week before. After four rushes from Canton and Orosz, Christ heaved one up for Oles, and the wideout would win a footrace with the Arizona secondary to score a 59-yard TD. Another XP miss would hold the score at 12-0. The Outlaws would finally get on the board late in the first quarter with a 56-yard field goal from Dean Jackson.
The game would blow wide open in the second quarter. After a few punt exchanges, San Jose would again march on medium gains plus an unnecessary roughness penalty. On 2nd and 6 from the AZ 20, Christ took off from the pocket and had daylight all the way for his first rushing touchdown of the season to gain a 19-3 edge. The defense held up the Outlaws to the point where they would not get into SJS territory the rest of the first half. Another drive starting in AZ territory would result in yet another TD. Christ capped it off with a 10-yard TD to Ty Justice. 26-3 San Jose, and another blowout was in the works. The Outlaws' woes would continue to accumulate in the second half. Their opening drive stalled on the SJS 40, and they opted to punt. The offense turned that right around into yet another scoring drive, ending with a 35-yard pass from Christ to Jerrod Canton to go 33-3. The Cats caused a three-and-out when Chad Pennington, Troyski, and Jorel Tuck stuffed the Outlaws' attempts to make the line to gain. The next drive would come to a halt at the AZ 26, though they were close enough that Donaldson sank a relatively comfortable 40-yard field goal to make it 36-3.
Most of the rest of the game would be a defensive struggle and accompanying puntfest. Ja'Brill Tuck would nab Defensive Player of the Game honors with six key tackles, including two behind the line and a sack he ended the third quarter with to drop Andrew Reese 11 yards behind the line of scrimmage. Troyski and Chad Pennington continued to be everywhere, and Spencer Castle got a few good swats in. The Outlaws would finally find the end zone with 11 seconds to go, though it was cold comfort for a thoroughly-beaten side. Christ's 22/40 for 261 yards and 4 TDs to 0 INT would earn his second OPotG award.
Week 3 - Orange County at San Jose
We could call this the first true test of the season for the SaberCats, the first big rivalry showdown in California. Leg 1 was set by the Bay, and oh, boy, was it a satisfying beatdown for the side who, to this point, had traditionally been in OCO's shadow, the Cats' postseason white whale. The pent-up frustrations from the Otters once again denying the SaberCats came out in this contest, and would be the next building block of the stage they would set for round 2, and eventually, round 3.
The Otters would take the ball first, start on their own 10, and punt from their own 10 after three passes fell to the ground. The Cats would stall on their first drive in a different manner and make things hard on their defense from the get-go when they were so bold to attempt a fourth-down conversion...and failed when Christ was dropped for a two-yard loss on a designed QB run. The old song felt like it would start up again. One big mishap, the door wide open for the league powerhouse OCO starting on the SJS 35. And the defense answered in a major way. Riposte flew into the backfield and sacked Gus Showbiz for a six-yard loss. Seer Zephyrous would only make up four on second down, Glen McPoyal would cost them five more on a false start, and facing 3rd and 17, Showbiz meant a pass for Johnny Blaze to spark a conversion. His old DSFL teammate from the Kansas City Coyotes, Kolby Deringer, swatted the pass down and stranded the Otters in the Maroon Zone, the common thread in every tilt the Cats had been in thus far. And like the other teams before, the Otters opted to punt. And like the other follow-up drives before, the SaberCats marched to the opposite goal line. Invigorated from a 41-yard connection to Xavier Flash on 3rd and 11, the Cats would take five plays after before Flash finished what he started on a 12-yard TD catch. San Jose struck first in the Golden State Showdown.
After stalling the Otters on a three-and-out, the next drive had the makings of one that could start to crack the game open. Seven plays in, unfortunately, Christ lost the ball on a rush that, if he had held on, would have pushed them to OCO's 27 for 2nd and 3. Johnathan Rice jarred the ball free, and David Ginsberg picked it up, advancing it 5 more yards before he was downed in turn. Maybe this would start the Otters' turnaround - oh, no, they went three-and-out again. The Cats now were driving on what would surely split the game open - oh, no, they held up at the OCO 26 and settled for 3. A 10-0 start was good, though nothing they could sit on for too long. OCO getting the ball back in a situation turning against them has often been a catalyst for the Otters to bring normalcy back to the game. It had the makings of such a stabilizing drive when Jaylon Broxton returned the kick to the OCO 41. Chaos would continue to reign, however. After a short first down run, Showbiz had to fall on his own fumble when Footballer Sackerman infiltrated the backfield and the Tuck Rule couldn't prevent the ensuing seven-yard loss. Better that than lose possession on their side. Deringer reared his head again on another third-and-long to foreclose on another drive. And again, the Cats would flip the field. It would take nine plays in a span of about four and a half minutes, capped off with Chris Orosz diving for his first TD of the season. Despite a long drive after and finally getting a few first downs, the Otters would sputter once they dipped their toe in SaberCats territory. It would go into halftime 17-0 in San Jose's favor.
The Otters had not been shut out in a game since Week 12 in Season 10, when the Yellowknife Wraiths blanked them in Canada. It was the only time going into this game the Otters had not scored. Were the SaberCats about to continue the insanity and blank one of the strongest offenses in the league?
San Jose's own offense would capitulate to open the second half, though their defense would once again suffocate the Otters. A three-and-out where they netted a three-yard loss after former KCC teammates Showbiz and Deringer hugged it out in the backfield sank the Otters' hopes and morale lower. SJS took almost six minutes off the clock to settle for three more and notch a 20-0 lead. On the third play of the next drive, just as the Otters were starting to get a rhythm again and picked up a first down, Trey Staley disrupted it when he flew in from the top rope and dropped Showbiz seven yards back. The Otters would only make up that loss and nothing more. The Otters' next chance to get something, anything, was surely when Rice forced another fumble from Christ's hands and Broxton fell on it. But once again, a 7-yard sack - this time from Thad Pennington - would prove costly enough. They punted on 4th and 1. The Cats chewed up more than five more minutes to kick another field goal and go up 23-0.
Orange County marched at a decent pace this time around. Even if they weren't going to win, they could not go down scoreless without one last great effort. They advanced into SJS territory seven plays in and with less than five minutes remaining. They would press in further, even inside SJS's 30. The desire to get something gave way to needing to score a touchdown to hang on to any slim chance they had at winning. A field goal would not get them any closer. On 4th and 6 on the SJS 28, the Otters went for it. Showbiz slung the rock to Carlito Crush, but Spencer Castle intervened and, as smart defenders do on 4th down, spiked it like a volleyball. A steady stream of firsts would run out the rest of the clock.
This team was for real. They looked as though they were here to dominate the league if they could choke out the Otters. Christ would again be OPotG despite not racking up the scores he did before. The offense worked well enough, the defense gave plenty of leeway, the special teams was working often enough. The league would have to gear up to go after the SaberCats.
Next time: they did gear up, and introduced a couple of bumps in the road that would start to turn the tide of confidence.
[OPTION]S27: 16 GP | 164 Att, 675 Yds, 8 TD | 35 Rec, 234 Yds, | 22 PC, 3 SA
[OPTION]S28: 16 GP | 176 Att, 743 Yds, 6 TD | 38 Rec, 311 Yds, 1 TD | 34 PC, 1 SA
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]ISFL Postseason Stats
[OPTION]S24: 2 GP | 28 Att, 103 Yds, 1 TD | 4 Rec, 16 Yds, 1 TD | 3 PC
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]ISFL Postseason Stats
[OPTION]S24: 2 GP | 28 Att, 103 Yds, 1 TD | 4 Rec, 16 Yds, 1 TD | 3 PC
[OPTION]S25: 3 GP | 56 Att, 225 Yds, 1 TD | 3 Rec, 39 Yds | 3 PC
[OPTION]S28: 3 GP | 44 Att, 222 Yds, 3 TD | 9 Rec, 72 Yds | 6 PC
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]DSFL Regular Season Stats
[OPTION]S20: 14 GP | 241 Att, 1176 Yds, 14 TD | 9 Rec, 62 Yds | 10 PC, 3 SA
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]DSFL Postseason Stats
[OPTION]S20: 1 GP | 14 Att, 74 Yds, 1 TD
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]Awards and Honors:
[OPTION]Ultimus Champion: S24, S25, S28
[OPTION]ASFC Champion: S24, S25
[OPTION]DSFL Regular Season Stats
[OPTION]S20: 14 GP | 241 Att, 1176 Yds, 14 TD | 9 Rec, 62 Yds | 10 PC, 3 SA
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]DSFL Postseason Stats
[OPTION]S20: 1 GP | 14 Att, 74 Yds, 1 TD
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]Awards and Honors:
[OPTION]Ultimus Champion: S24, S25, S28
[OPTION]ASFC Champion: S24, S25
[OPTION]Ultimus Offensive Player of the Game: S28
[OPTION]NSFC Champion: S28
[OPTION]DSFL Offensive Rookie of the Year: S20
[OPTION]DSFL Pro Bowl: S20
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]Career Events
[OPTION]S20: Selected 38th overall by the Kansas City Coyotes
[OPTION]S21: Selected 32nd overall by the San Jose SaberCats
[OPTION]NSFC Champion: S28
[OPTION]DSFL Offensive Rookie of the Year: S20
[OPTION]DSFL Pro Bowl: S20
[OPTION]=======================================
[OPTION]Career Events
[OPTION]S20: Selected 38th overall by the Kansas City Coyotes
[OPTION]S21: Selected 32nd overall by the San Jose SaberCats
[OPTION]S28: Announced retirement, traded to Yellowknife Wraiths