Pellom McDaniels

Pellom McDaniels
Date of birth: February 21, 1968
Place of birth: San Jose, California
Career information
Position(s): Defensive End
Height: 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight: 295 lb (134 kg)
College: Oregon State
NFL Draft: 1990 (not drafted) / Round:
Organizations
As player:
19911992
1993-1998
1999-2000
Birmingham Fire
Kansas City Chiefs
Atlanta Falcons
Career stats
Playing stats at DatabaseFootball.com

Pellom McDaniels III (born February 21, 1968) is a professor, librarian and former World League of American Football and NFL defensive lineman.

Early life

McDaniels was the first child of Pellom and Mary McDaniels. Raised by his working class maternal grandparents, he learned his work ethic and drive for success. He displayed an early interest in the fine and applied arts, as well as athletics while attending Silver Creek High School in San Jose.

Collegiate career

McDaniels began his undergraduate studies in Fine Arts at Oregon State University where he experienced success as a student-athlete. He played defensive end for the Oregon State Beavers. In his junior season, he had 42 tackles and a team high 6.5 sacks. McDaniels earned 2nd team All-Pac-10 honors his senior year after finishing the season with 46 tackles and 4.5 sacks.

Professional career

Following his collegiate career, McDaniels worked for Procter & Gamble as a Health and Beauty Care representative in the Portland, Oregon area before pursuing a professional football career in the World League of American Football with the Birmingham Fire. In 1991, McDaniels signed his first contract in the National Football League with the Philadelphia Eagles. In 1992, the Kansas City Chiefs asked McDaniels to join the team’s practice roster, and from 1993 to 1998, he was a part of the heralded defense that countered NFL offenses throughout the 90's.

While a member of the Kansas City Chiefs Football organization, McDaniels become a voice for Kansas City’s children and contributed the resources needed to begin the Arts for Smarts foundation. Programs like "Pellom and I Like Art", Wee Art, the "Fish Out Water" Writing program, and Smart Starts were designed to help children and young adults recognize and realize the possibilities for their futures. After spending two seasons with the Atlanta Falcons, McDaniels retired from the NFL and began his pursuit of a graduate degree at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia where he received both a Master of Arts and a PhD in American Studies. He was an assistant professor in history at the University of Missouri–Kansas City. He is currently an assistant professor of African American studies and faculty curator of the African American collection in the Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library at Emory University.[1] In February 2009, McDaniels was a key factor in the creation of an exhibit at the William T. Kemper Foundation Art Gallery commemorating African Americans who had fought in the First World War.[2]

His publications include: My Own Harlem (1998); So, You Want to be Pro (2000), "We're American Too: The Negro Leagues and the Philosophy of Resistance" in Baseball and Philosophy: Thinking Outside the Batter's Box (2004); reviews in Hampton University's International Review of African American Art related to the work of artists Kadir Nelson and Hale Woodruff.

In December 2014, McDaniels was announced as one of the six recipients of the 2015 Silver Anniversary Awards, presented annually by the NCAA to outstanding former student-athletes on the 25th anniversary of the end of their college sports careers. The award is based on both athletic and professional success.[3]

External links

References

  1. http://www.aas.emory.edu/core/pmcdaniels.html Pellom McDaniels faculty page
  2. http://kstatecollegian.com/1.1449123-1.1449123 UMKC professor, former NFL player to give lecture on art exhibit
  3. "NCAA honors six former athletes with Silver Anniversary Awards" (Press release). NCAA. December 4, 2014. Retrieved December 20, 2014.

2. http://www.aas.emory.edu/core/McDanielsCV.pdf