Difference between revisions of "Tony Gabagool"

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'''Tony "The Big Salami" Gabagool''' (born June 9, 2006) is an [[wp:American football|American football]] [[wp:Linebacker|linebacker]]  for the [[NONE]] of the [[National Simulation Football League]] (X). He played college football for University of Oregon (Oregon) and has declared his intent to enter the professional ranks next season.
 
'''Tony "The Big Salami" Gabagool''' (born June 9, 2006) is an [[wp:American football|American football]] [[wp:Linebacker|linebacker]]  for the [[NONE]] of the [[National Simulation Football League]] (X). He played college football for University of Oregon (Oregon) and has declared his intent to enter the professional ranks next season.

Revision as of 22:08, 8 March 2019

Tony Gabagool
Image of Tony Gabagool
No. 52 – NONE
Position:Linebacker
Personal information
Born: (2006-06-09)June 9, 2006 (aged 54)
Newark, New Jersey
Height:6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Weight:230 lb (104 kg)
Career information
High school:GISS
College:University of Oregon
Career history
Roster status:Active

Tony "The Big Salami" Gabagool (born June 9, 2006) is an American football linebacker for the NONE of the National Simulation Football League (X). He played college football for University of Oregon (Oregon) and has declared his intent to enter the professional ranks next season.

Early years

Tony Gabgool was born in Newark, New Jersey in the spring of '06. His family fled to a small island off the coast of British Columbia when he was only 6 years old, running from both the law and organized crime. His family settled into a small town, sure that their past would never catch up with them. After a couple years there, his father disappeared without a trace. His family's background luckily never caught up to them there.

Tony quickly became the star quarterback of his high school team. He lead GISS to the provincials every year he started, quickly earning the eye of scouts from all over North America. He was personally mentored by local legend Steve Nash, Steve always encouraged him to take his skills into basketball or soccer, both which was much more popular than football in his home town. He loved the contact of football, so he quickly declared to Oregon once they offered him a football scholarship. Aside from football, basketball, and soccer, he was also a junior national level rugby player, leading Canada to the semi finals of Rugby 7s in New Zealand.

College career

Scouted as a QB, the University of Oregon saw him as a better fit as linebacker. He was redshirted his freshman year as he learned his new position. He was happy to make the move to linebacker, a position he considered to be the "quarterback" of the defense. When at Oregon, he finally reached out to some of his fathers former associates on a road trip where Oregon visited Rutgers. They assured him that his father's disappearance had nothing to do with them, and that Tony had nothing to fear from them.

His first year he lead the Pac 12 in tackles, tackles for loss, and sacks. Oregon had a record of 8-2 that year, just missing out on the playoffs. Going into year 2, Oregon was heavily favored to win the Pac 12. Unfortuntaley his second year was cut short due to a torn ACL, dashing the hopes of the Oregon team.

His junior year however, was impressive as he earned Pac 12 DPOY, college comeback player of the year, and was runner up for the Butkus award for the nations best linebacker as he helped lead Oregon to a Rose Bowl win over Ohio State. He once again led the Pac 12 in tackles and sacks, and had 5 INTs leading all linebackers in the FBS. He declared for the draft after his junior year, leaving Oregon without winning a national championship, and promising to win one at the next level.

College career statistics

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

Professional career

Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt 40‑yd dash 20‑ss 3‑cone Vert jump Broad
6 ft 2 in
(1.88 m)
230 lb
(104 kg)

Professional career statistics

Come back to this later

Achievements and records

Come back to this later