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Allan AdamiModerators: PonyPride, SmooPower
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Allan AdamiNEW! NEED A DIVISION I-A SPRING PROSPECTUS? CHECK OUT OUR SPRING FOOTBALL AREA
NEWS • AWARDS MEMBER LOGIN • THE 5th DOWN • STORE JOIN US • HOME June 28, 2004 For Immediate Release Contact: Steve Richardson 972-713-6198 57 players selected for preseason consideration 2004 OUTLAND TROPHY WATCH LIST DALLAS (FWAA) – The FWAA has announced the 2004 Outland Trophy Watch List for college football's top linemen. The Outland Trophy annually is presented to the top interior lineman in college football on either side of the ball – tackles, centers, guards – in a vote of the FWAA All-America Team Committee in late November. Presented since 1946, the Outland Trophy is the third oldest award in college football behind the Heisman Trophy and Maxwell Award. It is named after the late John Outland, an All-America lineman at the University of Pennsylvania at the turn of the century. Last season's Outland Trophy winner, offensive tackle Robert Gallery of Iowa, was selected by the Oakland Raiders as the No. 2 pick of the NFL draft. Gallery was the third Iowa player to win the Outland Trophy. The 2004 Outland Trophy winner will be announced on Dec. 9 on the ESPN College Football Awards Show from Orlando, Fla. The Outland Trophy will be presented to the winner by the Omaha Sports Committee on Jan. 13 at a banquet in Omaha, Neb. Below is the Outland Trophy Watch List, which includes the only returning 2003 FWAA All-America lineman, Alex Barron of Florida State. 2004 OUTLAND TROPHY PRESEASON WATCH LIST Allan Adami DT SMU 6-4 276 Sr. Corpus Christi, Texas Anthony Alabi OT TCU 6-6 323 Sr. San Antonio, Texas Alex Barron OT Florida State 6-6 308 Sr. Orangeburg, S.C. David Bass OG Michigan 6-5 307 Sr. Sarasota, Fla. Jermaine Berry OT Kansas State 6-0 295 Sr. Wichita, Kan. Wesley Britt OT Alabama 6-8 313 Sr. Cullman, Ala. Matt Brock C Oregon State 6-2 306 Sr. Roseburg, Ore. C.J. Brooks OG Maryland 6-6 318 Sr. Rex, Ga. Elton Brown OG Virginia 6-6 333 Sr. Hampton, Va. Jammal Brown OT Oklahoma 6-6 313 Sr. Lawton, Okla. Jason Brown C North Carolina 6-3 328 Sr. Henderson, N.C. Dan Buenning OG Wisconsin 6-4 313 Sr. Green Bay, Wis. Vince Carter C Oklahoma 6-3 289 Sr. Waco, Texas David Castillo C Florida State 6-2 304 Jr. Pam Beach, Fla. Shaun Cody DT USC 6-4 285 Sr. Hacienda Heights, Calif. Harvey Dahl OL Nevada 6-5 305 Sr. Fallon, Nev. Mike Degory C Florida 6-5 314 Jr. Palm Bay, Fla. Dusty Dvoracek DT Oklahoma 6-3 287 Sr. Lake Dallas, Texas Greg Eslinger C Minnesota 6-3 285 Jr. Bismarck, N.D. Trenton Franz C Wyoming 6-2 282 Sr. Fort Collins, Colo. Keoki Fraser C Arizona 6-3 295 Sr. Kaimanalo, Hawaii Justin Geisinger OT Vanderbilt 6-4 330 Sr. Pittsburgh, Pa. Max Jean-Gilles OT Georgia 6-4 340 Jr. Miami, Fla. Adrian Gonzalez OT Louisiana Tech 6-6 317 Sr. Dallas, Texas Geoff Hangartner C Texas A&M 6-5 310 Sr. New Braunfels, Texas Orien Harris DT Miami 6-4 300 Jr. Newark, Del. Anttaj Hawthorne DT Wisconsin 6-3 312 Sr. Hamden, Conn. Jeremy Hines C West Virginia 6-2 285 So. Westlake, Ohio Richie Incognito C Nebraska 6-3 290 Jr. Glendale, Ariz. Nick Kaczur OT Toledo 6-5 305 Sr. Brantford, Ontario Chris Kemoeatu OG Utah 6-4 334 Sr. Kahuku, Hawaii Mike Kracalik OT San Diego State 6-9 325 Sr. Oceanside, Calif. Ryan Krug OT Connecticut 6-4 302 Sr. Pine Beach, N.J. Blake Lingruen C Wake Forest 6-4 282 Sr. Liberty Center, Ohio Todd Londot OT Miami (Ohio) 6-7 300 Sr. Utica, Ohio Zach Morris NG Wyoming 6-2 281 Sr. Denver, Colo. Dan Mozes OT West Virginia 6-3 290 So. Washington, Pa. Scott Mruczkowski C Bowling Green 6-4 315 Sr. Garfield Heights, Ohio Michael Munoz OT Tennessee 6-6 315 Sr. Mason, Ohio Chris Myers OG Miami 6-5 300 Sr. Miami, Fla. Mike Patterson DT USC 6-0 285 Sr. Los Alamitos, Calif. Erik Pears OT Colorado State 6-8 315 Sr. Denver, Colo. Rob Petitti OT Pittsburgh 6-6 330 Sr. Rumson, N.J. Donovan Raiola C Wisconsin 6-3 280 Jr. Honolulu, Hawaii Samson Satele OG Hawaii 6-3 289 So. Kaneohe, Hawaii Dartagnon Shack OG Fresno State 6-2 300 Jr. Riverside, Calif. Adam Snyder OT Oregon 6-6 320 Sr. Whitter, Calif. Steve Subia OG New Mexico State 6-1 328 Sr. Midland, Texas Matt Tarullo C Syracuse 6-5 322 Sr. Albany, N.Y. Adam Terry OT Syracuse 6-8 312 Sr. Queensbury, N.Y. Jeremy Trueblood OT Boston College 6-8 315 Jr. Indianapolis, Ind. Joe Vaughn C Kansas 6-1 285 Sr. Del City, Okla. Jake VerStraete OT Northern Illinois 6-7 311 Sr. Atkinson, Ill. Andrew Whitworth OT LSU 6-5 325 Jr. West Monroe, La. Ray Willis OT Florida State 6-6 320 Sr. Angleton, Texas Eric Winston OT Miami 6-7 310 Jr. Midland, Texas Rodrique Wright DT Texas 6-5 315 Jr. Houston, Texas Related Link: • Outland Trophy official site (outlandtrophy.com) 2004 FWAA All-America Committee Jack Bogaczyk Charleston (W. Va.) Daily Mail Big East Charles Durrenberger Arizona Daily Star, Tuscon Pac-10 Chad Hartley Reno (Nev.) Gazette Journal WAC Todd Jones Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch National, C-USA Rich Kaipust Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald Big 12 Steve Kiggins Casper (Wyo.) Star-Tribune Mountain West Joe Person The State, Columbia, S.C. SEC, Sun Belt Chip Scoggins Minneapolis (Minn.) Star-Tribune Big Ten, MAC Bob Thomas Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville ACC Copyright 1999-2004, HiTEX! Enterprises | www.sportswriters.net | Contact Us
I watched Adami when he was in Corpus Christi, he's a great player and deserves to be ranked in the Outland Trophy watchlist.
Congratulations to Allan for getting recognized for his performance - I've never seen a player get more out of his physical gifts. If the Outland was awarded on heart alone, they could start engraving Allan's name on there now. Here's to a great senior year.
Well deserved! If only we got the national exposure needed to give Allan a legitimate shot at receiving a fair number of cotes. I don't necessarily think he should win it, but he's better than some of the more well-known guys on that list.
I believe he's also the "smallest ugly" on that list of big ones. I'd love to see him have himself a monster year. Kudos to Mr. Adami.
We all know Adami won't get the recognition he deserves, because of where he plays (including the lack of TV exposure, the limited respect garnered to the WAC, etc.)
So, given the national image of the team and the perception of the competition we play, what kind of numbers would Adami have to put up to receive All-America consideration? He wouldn't make first-team All-America without absolutely revolutionizing the sport, so we must include a touch of reality here. But to be considered for Honorable Mentional All-America status? I'll say he'll need 100-plus tackles, 12 sacks and at least two takeaways for touchdowns. And we'll need to win at least a couple of games just to get him even that much consideration. Thoughts?
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