Difference between revisions of "Drip Dad"

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(Drip Dad is a 22 year old pass catching running back in the upcoming draft class. He played his college football at Golden West College in Huntington Beach, CA.)
 
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| current_team        = Prospect
 
| current_team        = Prospect
 
| position            = Runningback
 
| position            = Runningback
| birth_date          = {{birth date and age2|{{CurrentDate/yy}}|{{CurrentDate/mm}}|{{CurrentDate/dd}}|1998|11|4}}
+
| birth_date          = {{birth date and age2|{{CurrentDate/yy}}|{{CurrentDate/mm}}|{{CurrentDate/dd}}|2018|11|4}}
 
| birth_place        = Portland, [[wp:Oregon (U.S. state)|Oregon]], [[wp:USA|U.S.]]
 
| birth_place        = Portland, [[wp:Oregon (U.S. state)|Oregon]], [[wp:USA|U.S.]]
 
| death_date          = <!-- not needed unless the player is actually dead -->
 
| death_date          = <!-- not needed unless the player is actually dead -->

Revision as of 15:13, 13 November 2020


Drip Dad
No. 8 – Prospect
Position:Runningback
Personal information
Born: (2018-11-04)November 4, 2018 (aged 44)
Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Height:6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight:202 lb (92 kg)
Username:Commish Drip
Career information
High school:Gig Harbor High School
College:Golden West College
Career history
Roster status:Active

Drip Dad (born November 4, 1998) is an American football runningback who is currently preparing to enter the professional ranks.He played college football for Golden West College (GWC) and has declared his intent to enter the professional ranks next season.

Early years

Was born in Portland, Oregon. Father was a professional indoor soccer player, mother was a ballerina. His parents split at an early age, and he would regularly find himself home alone. Was offered his first scholarship at the age of 12 by Montana State University, which was later recalled. First gained national attention while at an elite high school running back camp hosted by Shonn Greene. Moved to Washington to play for coach Aaron Chantler at Gig Harbor High School. Played varsity all 4 years of high school, leading the team to 3 straight state playoof appearances. Broke multiple school records, all-time leader in receptions and recieving yards. Heavily recruited out of high school. Offers included Georgia, Ole Miss, Clemson, and LSU. Committed to University of Central Florida. Attended spring training but eventually dropped out of college due to family issues. Would later skip the first year of college to travel, and tore his rotator cuff while surfing in the Bahamas. Committed to Golden West College on February 20, 2018

College career

As an older freshman, Drip saw the field as the starter immediately, posting a school record 18 receptions in his first game. Freshman year he went on to set the CCCAA record for all purpose yards by a freshman (2,287) and receptions by a freshman (108). Posted school records in both categories as well as the running back record for most recieving yards in a season by a running back (1,089). Sustained the same rotator cuff injury in the state semi finals, which the team went on to lose. Sophomore season he set single game records of rushing yards (304), rushing attempts (29), and rushing touchdowns (8) in a blowout week 3 win vs rivals Riverside City College. He left Golden West College on March 1, 2020 with school records in all purpose yards (4,712), receptions (210), and recieving TD's (31). Committed to continue his college football career at the University of Texas, but due to the Covid-19 pandemic, had his scholarship removed. He declared intent to play in the ISFL on November 12, 2020.

College career statistics

Use this page to get the stats table template.

Professional career

Sam Mercury's first professional season with the Baltimore Hawks was underwhelming to say the least. It was always going to be difficult for him to put up any meaningful stats as he was playing behind two of the league's best receivers but it was still disappointing nonetheless. Mercury would play in all 16 games for the Hawks and offer a safety valve over the middle for his quarterback. He would finish second among rookie receivers in receptions during the regular season but it only amount to an average of 7.1 yards per reception. This can be chalked up to a red shirt season essentially as Mercury did not get to line up on the outside for his routes so he could not put his elite speed to use. Despite the lack of explosive plays he still had some memorable games and helped the Hawks to a 12-4 regular season record. In the two playoff games the Hawks would appear in Mercury did a bit more with the ball in his hands as he combined for 8 receptions for 99 yards. They would lose in heartbreaking fashion and fall one game short of the Ultimus. Now, headed into year two, it is likely Mercury remains in the same role he filled in his rookie season so expecting a sophomore leap will likely not come to fruition.

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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