Sometimes mother does not know best. Following Arian Foster?s junior season at Tennessee his mother, Bernadette Sizemore, encouraged her son to return to Tennessee for his senior year despite gaining 1,193 yards, scoring 12 touchdowns, and receiving indications that he would be a second round pick in the 2008 NFL draft. Ultimately, Foster returned for his senior year. However, because of knee and thigh injuries he gained just 570 yards. He also developed a reputation for fumbling at the worst possible time. It started with the Outback Bowl at the end of his junior season in which Foster fumbled the football at the Penn State 12 with 10:01 left and the score tied at 10. The ball was recovered by cornerback Tony Davis and returned 88 yards for a touchdown. Penn State won 20-10. It was Foster?s second fumble of the afternoon. ?There were a couple of fumbles that were untimely that people want to remember,? said Phillip Fulmer, former Tennessee coach. ?They forget about his full career, about how special that was. He had a couple after a couple of big runs. They were costly, but we probably wouldn?t have been there without him.? Arian Foster had a game changing fumble that contributed to losses to UCLA and Auburn in 2008. ?It was almost like, and you hate to say it, but there was this black cloud following you around and if it can happen bad to you, it happens bad to that team,? Fulmer told the Houston Chronicle. ?Arian?s fumble going in (against UCLA), Arian?s fumble coming out against Auburn, I mean that doesn?t happen ? this is a college football team. He?s taken 10,000 of those handoffs, counting all the practice time. It was miserable, it was miserable for everybody including the fans.? The net result is that Foster dropped from a candidate for a second round NFL draft selection after his junior year to going undrafted after his senior year. On top of that, Arian Foster had developed a reputation amongst the media for being difficult, primarily for refusing to submit to an interview unless the reporter were willing to speak in ?pterodactyl.? Foster claimed it was a joke, but the damage was done. A pulled muscle before his pre-draft NFL combine sealed Foster?s fate. After the draft he signed with the Houston Texans as a free agent but was cut in training camp. After no one claimed him, Arian Foster was signed to Houston?s practice squad. From there, he responded well to Houston?s offensive scheme and climbed the team?s depth chart. Foster was added to the active roster on Nov. 17, 2009, scored his first touchdown on Dec. 17 and earned his first start in the team?s final game on Jan. 3. In that game Foster torched the New England Patriots for 119 yards and two touchdowns, setting the stage for this season. On opening day against the defending AFC Champion Indianapolis Colts Arian Foster ran for 231 yards and three touchdowns on 33 carries. Only O.J. Simpson ever gained more yards in an NFL opener. Through six games he leads the league in rushing with 635 yards on 115 carries for a 5.5 yard-per-carry average, highlighted by a 74 yard touchdown run against the Oakland Raiders. Suddenly, his college fumbles are forgotten and, with continued good health, true NFL riches and recognition await.
Article Source:?http://www.bharatbhasha.net
Article Url: http://www.bharatbhasha.net/sports.php/364206Article Added on Monday, April 2, 2012 LD Other Articles by Paul Hirsch | ?Evolution of Black College Quarterbacks Stars to Watch in 2010 Black college quarterbacks used to be a novelty outside of the traditional Black colleges of the southeast. Conventional wisdom before about 1975 held that Blacks could not hold leadership positions on the field, and the split second decision making required of college quarterbacks and middle linebackers was more than Blacks could handle. Since then, Black quarterbacks like Warren Moon, James Harris, Doug Williams and Randall Cunningham rendered such thinking a canard. Now, Black college... ?Where Are All the Black College Football Coaches The on-field workforce is about 50 percent African American. Middle management is about 30 percent African American. Of those one-step from the top rung, 20 percent are African American. Yet at the very top; where the apparel contracts, TV shows, courtesy cars, and alumni influence mean big, life changing money, Black college football coaches make up about three percent of the total amount of head coaches in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), which until 2008 was known as NCAA Division... ?49er Running Back Glen Coffee Quits Football May Pursue Christian Ministry Work Millions of boys, and perhaps more than a few men, dream of taking the field Sunday afternoons to compete in the National Football League. Many dedicate years of their lives to the hope of playing in the NFL, only to come up short because of injuries, bad luck, or a lack of ability. Glen Coffee is one of the 2,000 young men who lived the dream last year. As the primary backup to Pro Bowl running back Frank Gore, Coffee rushed 83 times for 226 yards and one touchdown in 14 games, two of them... ?Pioneering Black Quarterback Builds Career in Football Administration When it comes to black quarterbacks, Doug Williams was not the first and he was not the best. But in many ways he is as important a figure in the evolution of pro football quarterbacking as Jackie Robinson was in paving the way for Blacks in Major League Baseball. What Williams did was win, and win big, as quarterback for the Washington Redskins. Williams was MVP of Super Bowl XXII in 1988, beating John Elway and the Denver Broncos 42-10. Of the many Black quarterbacks, he remains the only one... ?Kimbo Takes a Slice of Ultimate Fighting Championships Americans are suckers for Horatio Alger stories. In a typical Alger tale a young boy, often an immigrant, grows up on the mean streets and overcomes seemingly insurmountable obstacles to grab his slice of the American Dream. Even Alger could not imagine the obstacles faced by Kimbo Slice as he rose from birth to a disadvantaged family in the Bahamas, to a severely underprivileged childhood in Miami where he honed his street-fighting skills, to ultimately become one of America?s most feared and... ?Legal Sports Betting The Risk Vs The Reward Four states had legal sports betting on their books in 1992 when the federal government banned states from the bookmaking business, and grandfathered in existing legal sports gambling in Nevada, Montana, Oregon, and Delaware. Of those states, Nevada has a thriving sports book business while the other three had various forms of lottery games that involved sports. In May, Delaware attempted to join Nevada and get a piece of the estimated $400 billion that is wagered annually, legally and... ?Homegrown All Star Shines For Astros Sometimes major league players are reluctant to play for their hometown teams. The added pressure of performing in front of friends and family, fulfilling ticket requests, and the complete lack of privacy can make the 162 game grind seem even longer and more difficult. Houston?s Michael Bourn, though, has thrived since his trade to the Astros from the Phillies just before the 2008 season. Relegated to pinch running duties in his first full season in the majors with the 2007 Phillies, Michael... ?Shani Davis Overcomes Long Odds to Become Olympic Speed Skating Champion Olympic speed skating is often the province of Europeans and their North American descendants. African American Shani Davis, a product of Chicago?s Southside projects, has broken that mold and brought home multiple medals. In 2006, Davis took home the Olympic gold in the men's 1,000 meters and a silver medal in the 1,500 meters long-track speed skating events. He is scheduled to participate in five individual events in Vancouver this month. Shani and his mother, Cherie Davis, who is often by... ?Black Football Players Speak Out Against Limbaugh If one were to Google ?lightning rod? a picture of conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh might appear. In 2003, Limbaugh may have made himself millions of enemies in the African American community by stating on ESPN that Philadelphia Eagles? quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated and playing largely because the media wanted to see a Black quarterback succeed. He was forced to resign his post as an NFL commentator on that network. Now, he may become the employer to dozens of Black football... ?Chris Henry s Personal Renewal Cut Short With Accidental Death Two years ago Chris Henry was the poster boy for bad personal conduct in the NFL. A series of arrests led the Cincinnati Bengals to let him go in 2007. A few months later, over the objections of head coach Marvin Lewis, Bengals owner Mike Brown re-signed Henry to a two-year contract, insisting that Henry would turn his life around. Chris Henry had stayed out of trouble since then, heeding warnings from Lewis that his next misstep would be his last as a member of the Bengals. He settled down... | Click here to see More Articles by Paul Hirsch |
| | mario manningham forgetting sarah marshall williams syndrome hoya casa de mi padre corned beef and cabbage diners drive ins and dives
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.