Cory Schlesinger

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Cory Schlesinger
Date of birth June 23, 1972 (age 34)
Place of birth Flag of United States Columbus, Nebraska
Height ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight 247 lb (112 kg)
Position(s) Fullback
College Nebraska
NFL Draft 1995 / Round 6 / Pick 192
Stats
Statistics
Team(s)
1995-2006
2007-present
Detroit Lions
Miami Dolphins

Cory Schlesinger (born June 23, 1972 in Columbus, Nebraska) is an American football fullback for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League. He played collegiately at Nebraska.

Contents

[edit] High school career

Schlesinger was a two-time all-state selection at linebacker at Columbus High School in Columbus, Nebraska, leading the team in tackles as a junior and senior. He also played fullback as a senior in 1990, rushing for 1,514 yards and 23 touchdowns (including nine 100-yard games). He was named the Nebraska Defensive Player of the Year as a prep senior and played with a group of Nebraska football all-stars in the Down Under Bowl in Sydney, Australia following his senior campaign.

He also won the 189-pound wrestling state championship twice during his prep career.

[edit] College career

Schlesinger was a two-year starter for the Nebraska Cornhuskers. As a junior, he was the 1993 Husker Co-Lifter-of-the-Year with linebacker Donta Jones. During that season he finished as the team’s fifth-leading rusher with 48 carries for 193 yards and one touchdown.

He earned All-Big Eight Conference honorable mention honors in 1994 in a coaches poll and a Phillips 66 Academic All-Big Eight pick the same year with a 3.44 grade point average in industrial technology. Schlesinger will forever be endeared by Nebraska Cornhuskers fans for scoring two fourth-quarter touchdowns in the 1995 Orange Bowl in a 24-17 win over the Miami Hurricanes as a senior to secure Nebraska's first national title under then-head coach Tom Osborne.

[edit] Professional career

[edit] 1995

Schlesinger was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the sixth round (192nd overall) of the 1995 NFL Draft. He started two of the team’s first three games during his rookie season at fullback blocking for Barry Sanders, but playing time in backfield diminished soon thereafter when offense began employing three-receiver sets on almost every play from scrimmage. He finished second on the team with 15 special teams tackles

[edit] 1996

Schlesinger was used primarily used on special teams in 1996, leading club in with 13 special teams stops on the year. He started only one game at fullback - at the [[Chicago Bears on November 24 - but did not record a carry or reception.

[edit] 1997

Splitting time at fullback with Tommy Vardell (two starts) in 1997, Schlesinger saw more action there than in previous years with Lions with the team moving to a predominantly two-back set. He again played role as one of the team’s most valuable special teams members, finishing second on team with 27 tackles. He caught career-long 33-yard pass at the Green Bay Packers on November 2 on fourth-and-one on a misdirection route, advancing Lions to the Packers’ one-yard line with a touchdown occurring on the next play. He also made several key blocks against the Minnesota Vikings on November 16, helping spring Vardell for three one-yard touchdown runs and a 41-yard run. Schlesinger scored his first career touchdown (one yard) at the Minnesota Vikings on December 14 on play-action pass on goal line.

[edit] 1998

Schlesinger was the backup fullback to Tommy Vardell at most times during 1998 (two starts), but saw significant action in the backfield. He served as one of squad’s most productive special teams players for fourth consecutive season, with his 18 tackles ranking fifth on the Lions. On offense, he was part of team’s “jumbo” package at goal-line and in short-yardage with he and Vardell sharing the backfield.

[edit] 1999

In 1999, Schlesinger became the Lions' full-time starting fullback. In the season opener at the Seattle Seahawks on September 12, he set career highs in rushes (10) and rushing yards (50). His third career touchdown reception (three yards) came on a play-action pass on fourth-and-one against the St. Louis Rams on November 7. He also finished third on the team with 15 special teams tackles. Schlesinger was named as a member of the 1999 All-Madden team and filmed a sketch for the show in a Lincoln, Nebraska grocery store where he repeatedly crashed into other shoppers with his cart.

[edit] 2000

Schlesinger played in all 16 games for fifth time in six NFL seasons and second year as Lions’ starting fullback. His 15 special teams tackles tied for fifth on squad as well.

[edit] 2001

Schlesinger finished the 2001 season with single-season career highs in rushing attempts (47), rushing yards (154), rushing touchdowns (three), receptions (60) and receiving yards (466). He reeled in career highs with five receptions for 37 yards at the Cleveland Browns on September 23. The first rushing touchdown of his career came against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on November 11, as he also posted then-career highs in receptions (five) and receiving yards (54). Against the [[Green Bay Packers on November 22, he led the team with career-high six receptions (41 yards), along with five rushes for 39 yards, including a career-long 26-yard run off a fake punt. He set career-highs with 11 receptions for 67 yards against the Chicago Bears on December 30. On the year Schlesinger rushed for 16 first downs - the only season of his career he has accumulated a double-digit total in the category.

For his efforts during the season, he was voted the Chuck Hughes Most Improved Player by teammates and was also voted onto Howie Long's Tough Guy team. He was also named to the 2001 All-Pro Team by Sports Illustrated’s Paul Zimmerman (‘Dr. Z’) and to the College and Pro Football Newsweekly 2001 All-Pro Second Team squad.

[edit] 2002

In 2002 Schlesinger helped pave the way for running back James Stewart, who ran for a career-high 172 rushing yards against the Chicago Bears on October 20. He finished the year with 139 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns along with 35 receptions for 263 yards. He was an alternate in the 2003 Pro Bowl.

[edit] 2003

In 2003, Schlesinger was voted by his teammates as the Bobby Layne Offensive MVP Award winner and as the Mike Utley Spirit Award winner. He was named an alternate to the 2004 Pro Bowl for the second consecutive season. Schlesinger played his best all-around game of the season against the Oakland Raiders on November 2, highlighted by a 33-yard touchdown reception from Joey Harrington - the longest touchdown catch of his career. He led the team with four catches for 53 yards, opened lanes for the Lions’ second 100-yard rushing effort of the season and made a key block on Reggie Swinton’s 61-yard kickoff return.

[edit] 2004

Schlesinger was named as an alternate to the 2005 Pro Bowl for the third-straight season. He finished the season with a career-high three receiving touchdowns. He had a key 30-yard reception on the Lions winning touchdown drive against the Chicago Bears on September 12 which put the Lions on the Bears’ 4-yard line. During Schlesinger's 150th NFL game at the Minnesota Vikings on November 21, he helped running back Kevin Jones to his first 100-yard game. He cleared the path for Jones to rush for 196 yards against the Arizona Cardinals on December 5 and 156 yards at the Green Bay Packers on December 12. On December 26 against the Chicago Bears, Schlesinger cleared the path for Kevin Jones to record his fourth 100-yard game of the season and become the third rookie in Lions history to surpass the 1,000-yard rushing mark. Schlesinger missed three games due to a hamstring injury during the season.

[edit] 2005

Schlesinger missed the first portion of the 2005 season after suffering a fractured fibula to left leg in preseason opener at New York Jets on August 12. He made his season debut at the Cleveland Browns on October 23, appearing on special teams and recording two receptions for 10 yards. His lone touchdown of the season came at the Pittsburgh Steelers on January 1, 2006 - a one-yard pass from quarterback Joey Harrington.

[edit] 2006

In 2006, Schlesinger played in 14 games with four starts to record eight catches for 36 yards (4.5 avg). He made key blocks on special teams, including one to break open kick returner Eddie Drummond for a season-high 65-yard gain at the St. Louis Rams on October 1. He was inactive with a hamstring injury at the New York Jets on October 22 and against the Atlanta Falcons on November 5. He returned to the lineup against the San Francisco 49ers on November 12 to play in his 174th career game, which moved him into a tie for seventh with placekicker Eddie Murray (1980-91) on the team’s all-time games played list.

[edit] 2007

The arrival of offensive coordinator Mike Martz prior to the 2006 season inevitably spelled the end for Schlesinger's tenure in Detroit. With the team adopting Martz's wide open offensive philosophy, the Lions predictably showed little interest in retaining Schlesinger as an unrestricted free agent during the 2007 off-season. He signed with the Miami Dolphins on March 11, 2007 and will likely be the lead blocker for running back Ronnie Brown.

[edit] Personal

He and wife, Karen, have two daughters – Natalie Rae (May 15, 1998) and Leah Kate (May 3, 2000).

[edit] Trivia

  • He is well known for frequently breaking his face masks through his hard nosed playing style, earning the nickname "Anvil Head". He has broken over 200 face masks to date, which works out to more than one per game. Despite playing just 13 games due to injury in 2004, he broke 20 face masks on the season.[1]
  • Was a Pro Bowl alternate in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
  • Holds a degree in industrial technology education and is currently pursuing his Masters degree in vocational education at Nebraska. Once his football career is over, he plans to go into teaching high school and coaching football.
  • Is a muscle car enthusiast.
  • Spent parts of the 1995-97 off-seasons as a student teacher at Park Middle School in Lincoln, Nebraska and taught at his alma mater during the 1998-99 off-seasons.
  • Drove in demolition derbies for three years during high school.

[edit] External links