Difference between revisions of "Jake Endson"
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{{Infobox NSFL biography | {{Infobox NSFL biography | ||
| name = Jake Endson | | name = Jake Endson | ||
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Endson received collegiate offers to many mediocre FBS programs but ended up choosing to stay home in Boise. Wanting to stay close to his ISFL-champion father, Endson wanted the opportunity to work with Dropson to polish his receiving game to blossom into a vertical threat. After spending his freshman season on the bench, Endson would go on to be a three-year starter for Boise State. Though never consistently putting up fantastic stats, Endson had an impressively low drop rate and very high YAC numbers. Continually being let down by subpar quarterbacks for multiple years did not stop Endson from receiving the John Mackey award in his final season. Endson had over 1400 receiving yards on just 82 catches to lead the nation with a staggering 18 yards per catch. Pro scouts noted that Endson was a raw prospect who had proven himself in just one facet of the tight end game. | Endson received collegiate offers to many mediocre FBS programs but ended up choosing to stay home in Boise. Wanting to stay close to his ISFL-champion father, Endson wanted the opportunity to work with Dropson to polish his receiving game to blossom into a vertical threat. After spending his freshman season on the bench, Endson would go on to be a three-year starter for Boise State. Though never consistently putting up fantastic stats, Endson had an impressively low drop rate and very high YAC numbers. Continually being let down by subpar quarterbacks for multiple years did not stop Endson from receiving the John Mackey award in his final season. Endson had over 1400 receiving yards on just 82 catches to lead the nation with a staggering 18 yards per catch. Pro scouts noted that Endson was a raw prospect who had proven himself in just one facet of the tight end game. | ||
===College career statistics=== | ===College career statistics=== | ||
− | + | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
+ | |- <!-- Your player might have stats in areas not included on this template. If that's the case, review the "All Stats" section found in the wiki template page: https://wiki.sim-football.com/index.php?title=Blank:StatsTables --> | ||
+ | ! colspan="2" |Career statistics <!-- Career Statistics --> | ||
+ | ! colspan="5" | Receiving <!-- Receiving Statistics --> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | ! Season !! Games <!-- Career Statistics --> | ||
+ | ! Rec !! Yards !! Avg !! Lg !! TD <!-- Receiving Statistics --> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | {{dsfly|227}} <!-- Change nsfly to dsfly if this season was played in the DSFL, change number to season played in --> | ||
+ | | 12 <!-- Games Played --> | ||
+ | | 82|| 1453|| 17.7 || 75 || 9 <!-- Receiving Statistics --> | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
==Professional career== | ==Professional career== | ||
===DSFL career=== | ===DSFL career=== |
Latest revision as of 00:47, 15 September 2021
No. 88 – Norfolk Seawolves | |
---|---|
Position: | Tight End |
Personal information | |
Born: | Boise, Idaho, U.S. | February 22, 2222 (aged -158)
Height: | 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) |
Weight: | 250 lb (113 kg) |
Username: | Goodvsevil1275 |
Career information | |
College: | Boise State University |
Career history | |
Roster status: | Active |
Jake Endson (born February 22, 2222) is an American football tight end for the Norfolk Seawolves of the Developmental Simulation Football League (DSFL).
Contents
Early years
Jake Endson was born in Boise, Idaho to parents Jake Dropson and Katy Perry II. It is important to note that the family name is Jake and new children are given different last names, contrary to the typical American naming system. Endson was raised in Idaho on Dropson's potato farm. While his father was a rather small ISFL wide receiver, Endson grew up on homegrown potatoes which could indicate why Endson grew to be seventy-six inches tall and weigh substantionally more than his father. Going to a local school in Boise, Jake Endson used his size to dominate as the running back position before transitioning to a tight end role in high school. Despite superior size, it took Endson two years to develop satisfactory blocking and receiving skills and he only played two seasons in varsity football. Quickly Endson was a force and began showing potential to be a top tight end in the collegiate game.
College career
Endson received collegiate offers to many mediocre FBS programs but ended up choosing to stay home in Boise. Wanting to stay close to his ISFL-champion father, Endson wanted the opportunity to work with Dropson to polish his receiving game to blossom into a vertical threat. After spending his freshman season on the bench, Endson would go on to be a three-year starter for Boise State. Though never consistently putting up fantastic stats, Endson had an impressively low drop rate and very high YAC numbers. Continually being let down by subpar quarterbacks for multiple years did not stop Endson from receiving the John Mackey award in his final season. Endson had over 1400 receiving yards on just 82 catches to lead the nation with a staggering 18 yards per catch. Pro scouts noted that Endson was a raw prospect who had proven himself in just one facet of the tight end game.
College career statistics
Career statistics | Receiving | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season | Games | Rec | Yards | Avg | Lg | TD |
2242 (S227) | 12 | 82 | 1453 | 17.7 | 75 | 9 |
Professional career
DSFL career
Jake Endson came onto the season after the DSFL S31 draft and was selected off of waivers by the Norfolk Seawolves where he hopes to turn enough heads to be drafted in the upcoming S32 ISFL Draft.
Ht | Wt | 40‑yd dash | 20‑ss | 3‑cone | Vert jump | Broad |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) |
250 lb (113 kg) |
Professional career statistics
Use this page to get the stats table template.
Achievements and records
Use this section as an example.
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