Jaylon Broxton

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Jaylon Broxton
No. 20 – Orange County Otters
Position:Cornerback
Personal information
Born: (1992-01-01)January 1, 1992 (aged 71)
Manassas, Virginia
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:215 lb (98 kg)
Career information
High school:Manassas High School
College:University of Virginia
ISFL Draft:2021  / Round: 1 / Pick: 5
DSFL Draft:2020  / Round: 8 / Pick: 28
Career history
"* Kansas City Coyotes (2020 (S5)-2020 (S5)
Roster status:Active
Career highlights and awards

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Career NSFL statistics as of Week 17, 2023 "
Total tackles:193
Pass deflections:19
Interceptions:4
Forced fumbles:1
Fumble recoveries:1
Total touchdowns:1"

Player stats at ISFL.net

Jaylon Marcellus Broxton (born December 1, 1992) is an American football cornerback for the Orange County Otters of the Simulation Football League (NSFL). He played college football for University of Virginia (UVA) before being selected by the New Orleans Second Line in the 2021 ISFL Draft (S6).Prior to this, he had been selected by the Kansas City Coyotes in the 2020 DSFL Draft (S5).


Early years

Jaylon Broxton was actually born Poopyface Tomatonose, named after the star of the now defunct cartoon series "Handy Quacks". For the first year or so of his life he was a media sensation, paraded around before an eventual and precipitous fall from stardom. The controversy surrounding his name was the genesis for the Supreme Court ruling that parents could not sell the rights to any aspect of their child, a rule that astoundingly had never previously existed. Tomatonose faced a brutal childhood, frequently the target of bullying from his classmates. The bullying, however, helped him form a toughness that got him noticed by his high school football team and he found his way on the gridiron, becoming a star tight end at Manassas High School while doubling as a defensive back.



College career

While Broxton (then Tomatonose) faced his share of difficulties off the field, dealing with the renewed stardom that came with his excellence on the Virginia Cavalier's football team, he excelled on the field from the moment he stepped on campus. Starting as a true freshman, Tomatonose put up numbers in line with the top tight ends in the ACC and made the NCAA's Freshman All-American team at the conclusion of the season. He stepped away from the game during his Sophomore year, finding himself unable to cope with the challenges of trying to take himself seriously with the name he had. As he later admitted in an interview, the reason he returned to football was because running away or going into hiding was never going to change his name. He had to embrace it and own it, and own it he did. In his triumphant return to the Cavaliers' offense in his junior year, Tomatonose set school records in receiving yardage and touchdowns, leading the Cavaliers to a rare appearance in a New Year's Day bowl game. He decalred for the DSFL draft following his junior year with Virginia.



College career statistics

Come back to this bit. Not sure how to generate the table yet

Professional career

Try to include a paragraph per season or so



Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt 40‑yd dash 20‑ss 3‑cone Vert jump Broad BP Wonderlic
6 ft 1 in
(1.85 m)
215 lb
(98 kg)
4.46 s 4.32 s 7.27 s 29.9 in
(0.76 m)
10 ft 0.8 in
(3.07 m)
28 reps 17
NSFL S6 Draft Combine

After playing a season with the DSFL's Kansas City Coyotes, Tomatonose was drafted to the newly rebranded New Orleans Second Line. He operated as a safety valve for Borkus Maximus III, a player with whom he was familiar from their time with the Coyotes. Although the Second Line struggled, Tomatonose was the cream of a relatively disappointing offensive class of rookies and earned Rookie of the Year Honors in Season 6. Following that season, he finally decided to legally change his name from Poopyface Tomatonose to what would have been his name if his parents weren't morons. As a part of his fresh start, Broxton transitioned to safety for a New Orleans defense starved for secondary help. He flourished as a hybrid safety/linebacker, totalling 96 tackles, 10 sacks, and 2 interceptions in his inaugural season at the position. Following the Season 7 Ultimus, Broxton was traded to the Orange County Otters for a Season 8 1st round pick and cornerback Vladimir Fyodorovich. Reports later came out of New Orleans that fellow safety Blackford Oakes was growing jealous of Broxton's relationship to the team's management, who have a somewhat cultlike presence, and orchestrated a plan to get Broxton off the team.



Professional career statistics

Come back to this later

Achievements and records

Come back to this later