Dustin Long (American football)

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Dustin Long
Date of birth: November 30, 1981 (1981-11-30) (age 26)
Place of birth: Flag of the United States Beaumont, TX
Career information
Position(s): Quarterback
Height: 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Weight: 210 lb (95 kg)
Jersey №: 17
College: Texas A&M
Sam Houston State
Organizations
 As player:
2005
2006
Dallas Cowboys
Hamburg Sea Devils (NFL Europa)

Dustin Dakota Long (born November 30, 1981 in Beaumont, Texas) is a former American football quarterback for Texas A&M University and Sam Houston State University. He played briefly for the NFL's Dallas Cowboys. Long is the son of Kim and Mike Long of Groves, Texas. His father, Mike, played quarterback at Lamar University.

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[edit] High school career

As a senior, led Port Neches-Groves High School to the 1999 4A Division II State Championship game while throwing for 3,130 yards and 28 touchdowns. Was named Houston Chronicle Offensive Player of the Year. Received the Willie Ray Smith Award, given to the South-east Texas Offensive MVP. Played in the Oil Bowl and the THSCA North-South All-Star game. Passed for 6173 yards and 56 TDs in his high school career.

[edit] College career

[edit] 2000 season

Redshirted

[edit] 2001 season

Did not see any action during the regular season. Entered the Galleryfurniture.com Bowl in the fourth quarter, but did not attempt a pass.

[edit] 2002 season

Had a record-breaking season as a sophomore after not attempting a pass as a freshman. Won the starting spot from 2-year incumbent starter Mark Farris with a solid performance against the Pitt Pathers in the second game of the season and started his first career game the following week against Virginia Tech. Long passed for 2,509 yards and 19 touchdowns on 177-of-333 passing, his 2,509 season passing yards putting him at No. 2 in school history for a single season. Started the last nine games of the season and played in all 12. Posted 300-yard passing games against Kansas (399), Texas Tech (367) and Oklahoma State (332). Shared Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week honors with Texas Tech’s Kliff Kingsbury after passing for 367 yards and 7 touchdowns against the Red Raiders, his 7 touchdowns shattering a Big 12 record. His 19 passing touchdowns tied him with Gary Kubiak for the most in one season at A&M.

[edit] 2003 season

Was supplanted by Reggie McNeal as the starting QB, although he did see action in all 12 games. In his lone start against Mizzou (after an injury to McNeal), Long passed for 252 yards and a TD on 23-of-29 passing. Finished the season with 709 passing yards and 4 TDs on 63-of-104 attempts.

[edit] 2004 season

Unhappy with his lack of playing time, Long decided to transfer to Sam Houston State University following the 2003 season. During his senior season, Long passed for 3,408 yards and 31 touchdowns and led the SHSU to an 11-3 record and helped propel them into the NCAA Division I-AA playoff semifinals. He was named the Southland Conference Offensive Player of the Year and led the Bearkats to a share of the Southland title and an NCAA playoff berth.

In the first round of the playoffs, Long led his team to victory against Western Kentucky. He threw for 323 yards and four touchdowns, leading Sam Houston State to a 54-24 win.

In the second round, Long passed for 478 yards and 3 TDs to rally the Bearkats from a 20-point fourth quarter deficit, leading them on a 75-yard drive which culminated with a 7-yard touchdown pass to Jason Mathenia as time expired for a thrilling 35-34 win.

In the semifinals against Montana, Long was 35-of-53 for 375 yards, but was erratic throwing two interceptions without a touchdown. He was sacked six times, matching his total for the entire season up to that point. Ironically, Montana QB Craig Ochs was a transfer from Texas A&M's Big 12 rival Colorado Buffaloes.

[edit] Professional Career

Although Long went undrafted in the 2005 NFL Draft, he participated in workouts and a team mini-camp with the Dallas Cowboys, who allocated him to the Hamburg Sea Devils of NFL Europe, where he did not see any regular-season action. He helps his father, Mike Long, with coaching football at Monsignor Kelly Catholic High School in Beaumont, Texas.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Mark Farris
Texas A&M Starting Quarterbacks
2002
Succeeded by
Reggie McNeal