Jerome McDougle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jerome McDougle
Date of birth December 15, 1978 (age 28)
Place of birth Flag of United States Pompano Beach, Florida
Position(s) Defensive end
College University of Miami
NFL Draft 2003 / Round 1/ Pick 15
Statistics
Team(s)
2003-present Philadelphia Eagles

Jerome McDougle (born December 15, 1978 in Pompano Beach, Florida) is an American football defensive end for the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL.

Contents

[edit] University of Miami

McDougle was a standout defensive player at the University of Miami. Among his collegiate accomplishments, he helped lead the University of Miami to its 12-0 national championship season in 2001.

[edit] Drafted by Philadelphia

Following his University of Miami career, McDougle was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the 2003 NFL Draft with the 15th overall selection in the draft's first round. The Eagles traded up 15 spots to obtain McDougle, making him the first University of Miami player to be drafted by the Eagles since Jerome Brown, whose promising NFL career was cut short when he was killed in a 1992 car accident.

McDougle is represented by fellow University of Miami alumnus Drew Rosenhaus, widely considered the NFL's most aggressive player representative.

[edit] 2003 and 2004

With the Eagles, McDougle was plagued by injuries in the 2003 and 2004 seasons. In the final 2003 pre-season game, he sustained ankle, knee and hip injuries during a game against the New York Jets, forcing him to miss eight games of the 2003 season.

During the 2004 season, he was diagnosed with an irregular heartbeat, forcing him to miss one game. Later in the 2004 season, he suffered a knee sprain in a game against the Dallas Cowboys, and the Eagles declared him inactive for the subsequent final four games of the 2004 season.

[edit] 2005: Shot in Miami

On July 28, 2005, just four days prior before McDougle was scheduled to arrive for the Eagles 2005 training camp in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, he was shot in the abdomen during a robbery in Miami, Florida. Following the shooting, McDougle was flown by helicopter to Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he underwent emergency surgery.

McDougle initially was expected to recover fully and play for the Eagles in the 2005 season. However, further complications from the shooting and surgery left him out for the entire 2005 season.

[edit] 2006 season

In July 2006, McDougle made his NFL return, joining the Eagles at their 2006 training camp practices. He performed well in pre-season outings, recording an impressive sack of former collegiate teammate Ken Dorsey in the Eagles' pre-season game against the Cleveland Browns. On August 15, however, Eagles coach Andy Reid announced that McDougle had sustained fractures to two ribs in pre-season training practices and would require approximately three weeks for recuperation. He was reactivated in September 2006.

McDougle's pass rushing and run defense capabilities were expected to be an important part of the 2006 Eagles defense, which features high levels of substitutions of defensive linemen in what is considered one of the NFL's most situational-oriented defenses.

[edit] Kicking a penalty flag in Tampa Bay

McDougle's actions on the field proved costly to the Eagles during a controversial Eagles 23-21 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on October 22, 2006. In the fourth quarter of a closely contested game played in 105-degree Tampa Bay heat, McDougle closed in on Buccaneer quarterback Bruce Gradkowski, dropping him for a nine-yard loss in a critical quarterback sack. As McDougle brought Gradkowski to the ground at Raymond James Stadium, however, he appeared to grab Gradkowski's face mask, resulting in a 15-yard intentional face-masking penalty against the Eagles. The 15-yard nature of the penalty was questionable, with replays showing that McDougle's grasp of Gradkowski's face mask appeared unintentional, which, if true, should have resulted in only a five-yard penalty.

Seeing that he had been penalized 15 yards, McDougle kicked the referee's flag in anger, resulting in an additional 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, for a total of 30 yards in penalties. The two penalties incurred by McDougle greatly enhanced the Buccaneers' field position, leading to a Buccaneers field goal, which proved the difference in the game's outcome, which ultimately was won by Tampa Bay on a 62-yard Buccaneers' field goal (the third longest in NFL history) as time expired.

[edit] Personal

McDougle's brother, Stockar McDougle, also is a professional football player, playing offensive tackle for the NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars.

[edit] External links