Difference between revisions of "Eric Weddle"
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− | [[Image:Eric_Weddle.jpg|left|frame|Eric Weddle of the NFL]] | + | [[Image:Eric_Weddle.jpg|left|300px|thumb|frame|Eric Weddle of the NFL]] |
− | '''Eric Weddle''' | + | '''Eric Weddle''' was a free safety for the U.S. National Football League. Weddle agreed to come out of a two-year retirement to help the Los Angeles Rams during the playoffs and possible Super Bowl LVI. The Rams called Weddle when safety Jordan Fuller went down with a season-ending ankle injury and another safety, Taylor Rapp, entered concussion protocol.[https://www.deseret.com/2022/1/27/22899065/why-eric-weddle-came-out-of-retirmement-to-join-los-angeles-rams-playoff-run-utah-utes] Weddle played in all four of the Rams' playoff wins, including the win against the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI. He finished the game with five total tackles and four solo tackles. After the victory, Weddle confirmed that he would be re-retiring. He would also be undergoing surgery for a ruptured pectoral muscle sustained early in the Super Bowl game. |
+ | |||
+ | Weddle is a convert to the [http://comeuntochrist.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints], having joined the Church while playing football for the University of Utah. [http://www.mormontimes.com/people_news/sports/?id=14004&preview=1] | ||
Weddle was always a pleasant, clean living kid, and a natural-born leader. He was born in Fontana, California, on January 4, 1985, to Steve and Debbie Weddle, members of the Lutheran Church. In high school, Weddle played baseball, basketball, and football, lettering in all three sports. In high school, he was already showing his versatility on the football field. He was a three-time All-League selection and a two-time All-CIF selection. He was team captain and was named the team’s Best Receiver and MVP as a senior. | Weddle was always a pleasant, clean living kid, and a natural-born leader. He was born in Fontana, California, on January 4, 1985, to Steve and Debbie Weddle, members of the Lutheran Church. In high school, Weddle played baseball, basketball, and football, lettering in all three sports. In high school, he was already showing his versatility on the football field. He was a three-time All-League selection and a two-time All-CIF selection. He was team captain and was named the team’s Best Receiver and MVP as a senior. | ||
− | While in high school, Weddle met Chanel Blaquiere. She was also an athlete, a star soccer player. He was impressed by her standards and personality. Later, he discovered that she's a Latter-day Saint. The two dated in high school, but then Chanel left on a soccer scholarship to Utah State. Weddle accepted a scholarship to the University of Utah. While at the University of Utah, Weddle felt a spiritual emptiness, and he admired the happy demeanor of his fellow teammates who were members of the Church. He expressed his admiration and consented to meet with the [[Mormon Missionaries]]. He was baptized in 2004. He and Chanel were married in the [[San Diego California Temple]] in July 2005. | + | While in high school, Weddle met Chanel Blaquiere. She was also an athlete, a star soccer player. He was impressed by her standards and personality. Later, he discovered that she's a Latter-day Saint. The two dated in high school, but then Chanel left on a soccer scholarship to Utah State. Weddle accepted a scholarship to the University of Utah. While at the University of Utah, Weddle felt a spiritual emptiness, and he admired the happy demeanor of his fellow teammates who were members of the Church. He expressed his admiration and consented to meet with the [[Mormon Missionaries]]. He was baptized in 2004. He and Chanel were married in the [[San Diego California Temple]] in July 2005. They have four children. |
In college ball Weddle began to dazzle fans his freshman year. He earned Freshman All-American first-team and All-Mountain West Conference honorable mention. In 2004, Weddle shifted to strong safety, starting eleven games. Weddle earned Mountain West Conference Defensive Player of the Year, first-team All-MWC, second-team All-American and Emerald Bowl Defensive MVP honors in 2005. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Weddle] | In college ball Weddle began to dazzle fans his freshman year. He earned Freshman All-American first-team and All-Mountain West Conference honorable mention. In 2004, Weddle shifted to strong safety, starting eleven games. Weddle earned Mountain West Conference Defensive Player of the Year, first-team All-MWC, second-team All-American and Emerald Bowl Defensive MVP honors in 2005. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Weddle] | ||
− | [[Image: | + | [[Image:Eric-Weddle-Rams-Super-Bowl-family.png|right|frame|Eric Weddle with his family after Super Bowl win, photo from KSL Sports]] |
− | In 2006 Weddle was a consensus All-American and unanimous All-MWC first-team choice. He was again named the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year. In 48 games at Utah, Weddle started 45 times (9 at right cornerback, 12 at left cornerback, 6 at nickel back, 18 at strong safety). He set the school career record with nine forced fumbles and ranks sixth with six fumble recoveries, returning two for 66 yards and a touchdown. Nearing the end of an electrifying senior year, Doug Robinson of the Deseret Morning News wrote an article championing Weddle for the Heisman Trophy based on how valuable he was to the Utah Utes. | + | In 2006 Weddle was a consensus All-American and unanimous All-MWC first-team choice. He was again named the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year. In 48 games at Utah, Weddle started 45 times (9 at right cornerback, 12 at left cornerback, 6 at nickel back, 18 at strong safety). He set the school career record with nine forced fumbles and ranks sixth with six fumble recoveries, returning two for 66 yards and a touchdown. Nearing the end of an electrifying senior year, Doug Robinson of the ''Deseret Morning News'' wrote an article championing Weddle for the Heisman Trophy based on how valuable he was to the Utah Utes. |
− | In the 2007 NFL draft,the Chargers traded the 62nd pick (2nd), 93rd pick (3rd), and a 2008 3rd rounder and 2008 5th rounder to the Chicago Bears for the right to move up to the 37th pick and select Weddle. This was a high price to pay, but Weddle was a desirable player. Again, his versatility on the field is his star quality, and his intelligence is notable. | + | In the 2007 NFL draft, the Chargers traded the 62nd pick (2nd), 93rd pick (3rd), and a 2008 3rd rounder and 2008 5th rounder to the Chicago Bears for the right to move up to the 37th pick and select Weddle. This was a high price to pay, but Weddle was a desirable player. Again, his versatility on the field is his star quality, and his intelligence is notable. |
Weddle saw plenty of action his first season, playing as the Dime safety and finished his rookie season with 48 total tackles, one sack and one interception along with 6 pass deflections while playing in one of the most talented secondaries in the NFL. At the start of the 2008 season, Weddle was officially named the starting free safety alongside Clinton Hart who was signed to a long-term contract extension in the offseason at strong safety. | Weddle saw plenty of action his first season, playing as the Dime safety and finished his rookie season with 48 total tackles, one sack and one interception along with 6 pass deflections while playing in one of the most talented secondaries in the NFL. At the start of the 2008 season, Weddle was officially named the starting free safety alongside Clinton Hart who was signed to a long-term contract extension in the offseason at strong safety. | ||
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Weddle plays at an elite level and is one of the best safeties in the NFL. He has started in every game since 2010. In 2011 and 2013 he became the Chargers defensive player of the year.In 2012, his teammates voted him the Chargers’ Most Valuable Player. In 2014, he was selected to his third professional bowl game in four seasons. He was also named first-team All-Pro. | Weddle plays at an elite level and is one of the best safeties in the NFL. He has started in every game since 2010. In 2011 and 2013 he became the Chargers defensive player of the year.In 2012, his teammates voted him the Chargers’ Most Valuable Player. In 2014, he was selected to his third professional bowl game in four seasons. He was also named first-team All-Pro. | ||
− | Weddle’s rise through the NFL was recently chronicled in the book ''No Excuses, No Regrets: The Eric Weddle Story,'' which was written by Trent Toone and published by Shadow Mountain. The book tells Weddle’s story of overcoming adversity and accomplishing impossible dreams. Weddle’s former coach at the University of Utah, [[Kyle | + | Weddle’s rise through the NFL was recently chronicled in the book ''No Excuses, No Regrets: The Eric Weddle Story,'' which was written by Trent Toone and published by Shadow Mountain. The book tells Weddle’s story of overcoming adversity and accomplishing impossible dreams. Weddle’s former coach at the University of Utah, [[Kyle Whittingham]], wrote the foreword. |
In spite of his promising career in football, Weddle's greatest happiness comes from his family and faith. | In spite of his promising career in football, Weddle's greatest happiness comes from his family and faith. | ||
==Updates== | ==Updates== | ||
− | As of June 2015, Weddle was in extension negotiations with the Chargers. He was fined for staying on the field during halftime to watch his daughter perform in a halftime routine—policy is that all players are in the locker room during halftime unless they have permission to stay on the sidelines. He was deactivated the following week due to a groin injury. After negotiating with multiple teams in March 2016, he reached a deal with the Baltimore Ravens. He | + | As of June 2015, Weddle was in extension negotiations with the Chargers. He was fined for staying on the field during halftime to watch his daughter perform in a halftime routine—policy is that all players are in the locker room during halftime unless they have permission to stay on the sidelines. He was deactivated the following week due to a groin injury. After negotiating with multiple teams in March 2016, he reached a deal with the Baltimore Ravens. He would earn $29 million over four years. On March 5, 2019, Weddle was released by the Ravens. |
+ | |||
+ | On March 8, 2019, Weddle signed a two-year contract of over $10 million with the Los Angeles Rams. On February 6, 2020, he announced his retirement from the NFL. Before retiring, he played 13 seasons and had posted career statistics of 1235 tackles, 30 interceptions, 11.5 sacks, 41 tackles for loss, 5 touchdowns, 8 forced fumbles, and seven fumble recoveries.[https://kslsports.com/479502/eric-weddle-helps-rams-win-super-bowl-despite-rupturing-pectoral/] He was named first-team All-Pro twice, second-team All-Pro three times, and was voted to the 2010s All-Decade Team while playing for the Chargers, Ravens, and Rams. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2020, several pro teams tried to coax him out of retirement, but he refused all offers. He was happy and content with his life and didn't keep up with the NFL news. "He wasn’t aware that the Rams were running out of healthy bodies at safety. He didn’t see that Jordan Fuller had suffered a season-ending right ankle injury in Week 18 or that Taylor Rapp had entered concussion protocol. When Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris dialed him just over a month ago, Weddle initially had no idea why he’d be calling."[https://sports.yahoo.com/where-was-eric-weddle-before-he-rejoined-the-rams-winning-his-first-football-championship-ever-160610521.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAMbrqO9bDFsTNn32FxgxX897aIpPljf_Ok_pmimr8pGtaGOQqS9VxBjnRX_Dgx79qEvfwjuJ_BTweKzQr8PR_1RY1AOEwU3V9SKqrBXSVSv9zl67mc6w7Lixa7esmqzGU2ta_xnmEJ5HJaE9g-iHaE8qaZ-w9EmwG5ox_2yugpK2] | ||
− | + | But when the Rams called with an offer that would require him to only commit to up to four weeks, he agreed. After his commitment to the Rams ends, he will begin his new head coaching job at Rancho Bernardo High in January 2023. | |
+ | Meanwhile, he is head coach of the Pop Warner football team the Rancho Bernardo Broncos, his son's 12-and-under team. In November 2021, the team won the 2021 Pop Warner West Coast Conference title, Weddle's first championship in all the years he has played football.[https://sports.yahoo.com/where-was-eric-weddle-before-he-rejoined-the-rams-winning-his-first-football-championship-ever-160610521.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAMbrqO9bDFsTNn32FxgxX897aIpPljf_Ok_pmimr8pGtaGOQqS9VxBjnRX_Dgx79qEvfwjuJ_BTweKzQr8PR_1RY1AOEwU3V9SKqrBXSVSv9zl67mc6w7Lixa7esmqzGU2ta_xnmEJ5HJaE9g-iHaE8qaZ-w9EmwG5ox_2yugpK2] | ||
[[Category:Famous Mormons]] | [[Category:Famous Mormons]] | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Weddle, Eric}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Weddle, Eric}} |
Latest revision as of 16:12, 14 February 2022
Eric Weddle was a free safety for the U.S. National Football League. Weddle agreed to come out of a two-year retirement to help the Los Angeles Rams during the playoffs and possible Super Bowl LVI. The Rams called Weddle when safety Jordan Fuller went down with a season-ending ankle injury and another safety, Taylor Rapp, entered concussion protocol.[1] Weddle played in all four of the Rams' playoff wins, including the win against the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI. He finished the game with five total tackles and four solo tackles. After the victory, Weddle confirmed that he would be re-retiring. He would also be undergoing surgery for a ruptured pectoral muscle sustained early in the Super Bowl game.
Weddle is a convert to the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, having joined the Church while playing football for the University of Utah. [2]
Weddle was always a pleasant, clean living kid, and a natural-born leader. He was born in Fontana, California, on January 4, 1985, to Steve and Debbie Weddle, members of the Lutheran Church. In high school, Weddle played baseball, basketball, and football, lettering in all three sports. In high school, he was already showing his versatility on the football field. He was a three-time All-League selection and a two-time All-CIF selection. He was team captain and was named the team’s Best Receiver and MVP as a senior.
While in high school, Weddle met Chanel Blaquiere. She was also an athlete, a star soccer player. He was impressed by her standards and personality. Later, he discovered that she's a Latter-day Saint. The two dated in high school, but then Chanel left on a soccer scholarship to Utah State. Weddle accepted a scholarship to the University of Utah. While at the University of Utah, Weddle felt a spiritual emptiness, and he admired the happy demeanor of his fellow teammates who were members of the Church. He expressed his admiration and consented to meet with the Mormon Missionaries. He was baptized in 2004. He and Chanel were married in the San Diego California Temple in July 2005. They have four children.
In college ball Weddle began to dazzle fans his freshman year. He earned Freshman All-American first-team and All-Mountain West Conference honorable mention. In 2004, Weddle shifted to strong safety, starting eleven games. Weddle earned Mountain West Conference Defensive Player of the Year, first-team All-MWC, second-team All-American and Emerald Bowl Defensive MVP honors in 2005. [3]
In 2006 Weddle was a consensus All-American and unanimous All-MWC first-team choice. He was again named the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year. In 48 games at Utah, Weddle started 45 times (9 at right cornerback, 12 at left cornerback, 6 at nickel back, 18 at strong safety). He set the school career record with nine forced fumbles and ranks sixth with six fumble recoveries, returning two for 66 yards and a touchdown. Nearing the end of an electrifying senior year, Doug Robinson of the Deseret Morning News wrote an article championing Weddle for the Heisman Trophy based on how valuable he was to the Utah Utes.
In the 2007 NFL draft, the Chargers traded the 62nd pick (2nd), 93rd pick (3rd), and a 2008 3rd rounder and 2008 5th rounder to the Chicago Bears for the right to move up to the 37th pick and select Weddle. This was a high price to pay, but Weddle was a desirable player. Again, his versatility on the field is his star quality, and his intelligence is notable.
Weddle saw plenty of action his first season, playing as the Dime safety and finished his rookie season with 48 total tackles, one sack and one interception along with 6 pass deflections while playing in one of the most talented secondaries in the NFL. At the start of the 2008 season, Weddle was officially named the starting free safety alongside Clinton Hart who was signed to a long-term contract extension in the offseason at strong safety.
Weddle plays at an elite level and is one of the best safeties in the NFL. He has started in every game since 2010. In 2011 and 2013 he became the Chargers defensive player of the year.In 2012, his teammates voted him the Chargers’ Most Valuable Player. In 2014, he was selected to his third professional bowl game in four seasons. He was also named first-team All-Pro.
Weddle’s rise through the NFL was recently chronicled in the book No Excuses, No Regrets: The Eric Weddle Story, which was written by Trent Toone and published by Shadow Mountain. The book tells Weddle’s story of overcoming adversity and accomplishing impossible dreams. Weddle’s former coach at the University of Utah, Kyle Whittingham, wrote the foreword.
In spite of his promising career in football, Weddle's greatest happiness comes from his family and faith.
Updates
As of June 2015, Weddle was in extension negotiations with the Chargers. He was fined for staying on the field during halftime to watch his daughter perform in a halftime routine—policy is that all players are in the locker room during halftime unless they have permission to stay on the sidelines. He was deactivated the following week due to a groin injury. After negotiating with multiple teams in March 2016, he reached a deal with the Baltimore Ravens. He would earn $29 million over four years. On March 5, 2019, Weddle was released by the Ravens.
On March 8, 2019, Weddle signed a two-year contract of over $10 million with the Los Angeles Rams. On February 6, 2020, he announced his retirement from the NFL. Before retiring, he played 13 seasons and had posted career statistics of 1235 tackles, 30 interceptions, 11.5 sacks, 41 tackles for loss, 5 touchdowns, 8 forced fumbles, and seven fumble recoveries.[4] He was named first-team All-Pro twice, second-team All-Pro three times, and was voted to the 2010s All-Decade Team while playing for the Chargers, Ravens, and Rams.
In 2020, several pro teams tried to coax him out of retirement, but he refused all offers. He was happy and content with his life and didn't keep up with the NFL news. "He wasn’t aware that the Rams were running out of healthy bodies at safety. He didn’t see that Jordan Fuller had suffered a season-ending right ankle injury in Week 18 or that Taylor Rapp had entered concussion protocol. When Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris dialed him just over a month ago, Weddle initially had no idea why he’d be calling."[5]
But when the Rams called with an offer that would require him to only commit to up to four weeks, he agreed. After his commitment to the Rams ends, he will begin his new head coaching job at Rancho Bernardo High in January 2023.
Meanwhile, he is head coach of the Pop Warner football team the Rancho Bernardo Broncos, his son's 12-and-under team. In November 2021, the team won the 2021 Pop Warner West Coast Conference title, Weddle's first championship in all the years he has played football.[6]