Jerramy Ryan Stevens (born November 13, 1979) is a former tight end of American football.
He played college football in Washington and was designed by Seattle Seahawks in the first round of the 2002 NFL Draft. Stevens played for the Seahawks (2002-06) and for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2007-10).
With Washington, Stevens was one of the team's top receivers in the 1999 and 2000 seasons and won the 2001 Rose Bowl with Washington after the 11-1 season in 2000. In 2005, Stevens became a regular starter at the tight end for the Seattle Seahawks and played in the Super Bowl XL.
Video Jerramy Stevens
Senior high school
Jerramy Stevens attends River Ridge Lacey College, Washington. Graduated in 1998, Stevens is a postman in football, basketball, and tracks. In football, Stevens originally played quarterback. He graduated for 5,000 yards during his school career, including throwing for 2,000 yards as a junior. As a senior, he earned the All-Narrows League as the first team and was named the All-Area team of the Olympians as a safety.
During his senior year, he and another student were accused of beating his schoolmates over his head with a baseball bat and stepping on his face on June 2, 1998. The victim suffered a broken jaw and ate with a straw for six months. After being questioned by authorities, Stevens initially denied involvement in the fight but admitted his mistake later. Stevens was charged with a criminal offense and ordered to the detention center pending trial. Because he tested positive for using marijuana during house arrest, Stevens spent three weeks in Thurston County prison. Three football coaches at the University of Washington wrote a court judge confirming that the Stevens scholarship offer is still valid, and the judge allowed Stevens to participate in the training camp with Washington even though Stevens violated the house arrest order. As a result of the plea agreement, Stevens was convicted of minor offenses and received credit for the time served.
Maps Jerramy Stevens
College career
Stevens redshirted the 1998 season and played in the training squad as a quarterback. For the freshman seasons redshirt in 1999, Stevens converted to a tight end. In 1999, Stevens made 21 receptions for 265 yards and 4 goals.
In 2000, Stevens made 43 receptions for 600 meters and 3 goals and won the 2001 Rose Bowl with Washington. On 9 September, in Washington 34-29 upset over fourth-ranked Miami (Florida), Stevens made 7 receptions for 89 yards, including a 23-yard touchdown pass from Marques Tuiasosopo in a drive that puts Washington up 21-3 at half. The following game on September 16 against Colorado, Stevens made 7 more receptions but this time for 103 yards. In the Rose Bowl match, Stevens leads Washington with 5 catches for 51 yards.
In 2001, Stevens made 10 receptions for 88 yards and one touchdown. Stevens injured his right foot on Sept. 24 and missed until November.
Professional career
NFL Draft
Stevens was chosen by his hometown, Seattle Seahawks as their first-round choice in NFL Draft 2002; he is the 28th player taken as a whole. Seattle trades first round (No. 20) and fifth-round (No. 156) options to Green Bay for first round selection (No. 28) and second round (No. 60) Packers. Green Bay uses picks to choose Javon Walker and Aaron Kampman.
Due to Stevens' criminal history, Stevens' choice of Seahawks' designs are controversial for fans. Coach Mike Holmgren acknowledged that making the Stevens draft gave him much consideration with Stevens, Stevens' parents, Stevens coaches in Washington, and even the Holmgrens themselves.
Seattle Seahawks
Stevens played 12 games with one starting in the rookie season in 2002 and debuted in the season opener against Oakland Raiders on September 8th. Forced by Raiders Cornerback Charles Woodson, Stevens fumbled his first acceptance, a four-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck but made two other receptions of the game. On November 24, in a 39-32 win over Kansas City's Chief, Stevens made his first goal as a professional. A 6-yard touchdown from Hasselbeck marked a turning point in the game as Seattle took a 21-17 lead on the touchdown drive and never looked back. As a rookie, Stevens made 21 receptions for 252 yards and 3 goals.
In 2003, Stevens played all 16 games and started 2, with 6 receptions for 72 yards.
In 2004, Stevens returned to play all 16 games and start 5. He made 31 receptions for 349 yards and 3 goals.
In 2005, Stevens started 12 games out of 16 and made 45 receptions for 554 yards and 5 goals.
Before Super Bowl XL, Stevens said in an interview February 2, 2006, "The story of Jerome Bettis returning to his hometown (Detroit) is heartwarming, but it will be a sad day when he does not go with the cup. It attracted the anger of Pittsburgh Steelers midfielder Joey Porter. On February 5, 2006, Stevens caught 3 feeds for 25 yards at Super Bowl XL. Among the catches is the first Super Bowl touchdown in Seattle. However, he also dropped three key operands in the Seahawks' 21-10 loss to the Steelers.
On November 6, 2006 in a match against Oakland Raiders, Stevens was trampled in the crotch by the end of the Raiders defense of Tyler Brayton, who was later expelled from the game. No players were suspended, but Brayton was fined $ 25,000 by the NFL for the incident, and Stevens was fined $ 15,000 for his involvement, as well as a previous mocking incident.
Art Shell, the Raiders coach, said in an interview that Stevens was an agitator, and had tried to knee Brayton before. But Mike Holmgren, the Seahawks coach, responded by saying that Stevens was not trying to attack Brayton, but was fighting for leverage that caused his legs to ignite.
On March 20, 2007, Seattle general manager Tim Ruskell confirmed that Stevens' days with the Seahawks were completed. "I would say this might be time for a change of scenery and to continue," Ruskell said. The move is desirable, as it is only hours after Stevens' arrest on March 13, Seahawks signed veteran Marcus Pollard, giving them four tight ends.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
On April 29, 2007, he signed a contract with Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He captured his first touchdown pass as Buccaneer on December 2 (Week 13) against New Orleans Saints, a four-yard reception from Luke McCown with 14 seconds remaining in the game on a 27-23 winning drive for the Buccaneers and the team's fourth winning streak. However, the NFL suspended Stevens for one game without paying on December 11 for a violation of league substance abuse policy.
On May 30, 2008, Stevens was re-signed by Buccaneers after the team quit quarterback Bruce Gradkowski. On 4 June 2008, Stevens was suspended for two games and fined three game checks after violating the NFL substance abuse policy. In the 14 games played, Stevens made three starts and made 36 receptions for 397 yards and 2 touchdowns.
In 2009, Stevens played all 16 regular season games with eight starts for the Buccaneers. Stevens made 15 receptions for 130 yards and touchdowns.
The Buccaneers freed Stevens on October 25, 2010, two days after Stevens was arrested for possessing marijuana. Stevens played in five games with one starting in 2010 for Tampa and making three receptions for 43 yards.
NFL stats
Personal life
Stevens was born in Boise, Idaho, a black father and a white mother and is one of their four children. Her mother Fran worked as a police officer and school administrator, and her father Bob was a high school gym teacher and coach. Bob Stevens died on September 4, 2012, at the age of 62 years, due to cancer. Stevens grew up in Lacey, Washington.
Source of the article : Wikipedia