Difference between revisions of "Warren Stephens"

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{{Cleared|[[User:Jeffie43|Jeffie43]] ([[User talk:Jeffie43|talk]]) 12:08, 31 January 2020 (UTC)}}
 
{{Infobox NSFL biography
 
{{Infobox NSFL biography
 
| name                = Warren Stephens
 
| name                = Warren Stephens

Revision as of 08:08, 31 January 2020

Warren Stephens
No. 18 – Myrtle Beach
Position:Safety
Personal information
Height:6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight:188 lb (85 kg)
Career information
ISFL Draft:S20 / Round: 2 / Pick: 3
Career history
Roster status:Active
Career DSFL statistics
Total tackles:26
Pass deflections:3
Interceptions:1
Total touchdowns:1
Defensive touchdowns:1

"Warren Stephens (born August 4, 1997) is an American football safety for the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers of the Developmental Simulation Football League (DSFL). He played college football for Baylor University (BU)."

Early years

Warren Stephens was born in Hillcrest Hospital on August 4, 1997 to Ronald and Kassidy Stephens. The weather that afternoon was unusually hot, even for a summer day in central Texas. Stephens grew up enjoying playing outside, especially in the mud following rain storms, with his younger brother and border collie (who was disappointingly not fluffy but still dearly loved). It was in these muddy play times that Stephens discovered his love for football. One of his fondest early memories was receiving a Troy Aikman jersey for Christmas, then immediately staining it when he "tackled" the candle on top of the coffee table, spilling red ink all over the brand new jersey. He was immensely disappointed when he discovered that he did not possess Aikman's ability to throw the football. He did, though, discover an innate ability to be in the way. In time, he learned to use this awkward superpower to deflect and disrupt passes instead of throwing them himself. This ability would eventually lead to a record setting high school season that earned him a scholarship at his hometown college, Baylor University.

College career

At Baylor, Stephens initially struggled to learn the defense of Phil Snow and Coach Matt Rhule. The voodie that Rhule wore was especially confusing to the young Warren and lead to many profound revalations on the sideline that grew Stephens into the defensive guru he is today. After red-shirting his freshman year to learn the system, Stephens took to the field in his college debut against SMU and recorded his first interception. He promptly lost the game ball the same evening after being introduced to rum at a frat party the same night and consuming it by the bottle. He was eventually thrown out of the party for drinking literally all of the rum and depriving everyone else of the sacred beverage. Warren barely remembers the rest of his college career, likely due to his newfound enjoyment of rum. We're told, though, that he had a prolific senior campaign that garnered interest in the NSFL and that scouts were willing to look past some of his drunken antics from the interviews.

College career statistics

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

Professional career

DSFL career

Warren was undrafted, but claimed on waivers by Myrtle Beach immediately following the draft. He was immediately made the starting Strong Safety in Myrtle Beach's second campaign. Through his first 12 games, he has recorded 48 tackles, forced and recovered a fumble, recorded four sacks, and picked off one pass. In one author's opinion, he was projected to go as high as 17th in the upcoming draft and was described as "quietly doing his job." Whoever the author was has clearly never seen Warren actually doing his job, as he is usually very loud and boisterous due to the fact that a bottle of rum is never far from his reach. In fact, the bottle is usually in his hands. Following his rookie season, Warren Stephens was drafted in the second round by the Philadelphia Liberty.

Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt 40‑yd dash 20‑ss 3‑cone Vert jump Broad
6 ft 0 in
(1.83 m)
188 lb
(85 kg)

Professional career statistics

Come back to this later

Achievements and records

Come back to this later

"" ""