Danny O'Brien (gridiron football)

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Danny O'Brien
refer to caption
O'Brien before a Lions game in 2019.
Penn State Nittany Lions
Position:Quarterbacks coach
Personal information
Born: (1990-09-26) September 26, 1990 (age 33)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Height:6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Weight:220 lb (100 kg)
Career information
High school:Kernersville (NC) East Forsyth
College:Catawba
Wisconsin
Maryland
Undrafted:2014
Career history
As a player:
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
As a coach:
Roster status:Active
CFL status:International
Career highlights and awards
Career CFL statistics
Passing completions:100
Passing attempts:175
Passing yards:1045
TDINT:3-10
Player stats at CFL.ca

Daniel Matthew O'Brien (born September 26, 1990) is a Gridiron football coach and former player. He is currently an offensive graduate assistant at Penn State. As a professional quarterback, he was a member of the Columbus Lions, Ottawa Redblacks, Edmonton Eskimos, and BC Lions. He played college football for the University of Maryland, University of Wisconsin and Catawba College.

Early years[edit]

O'Brien was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and at the age of 12, moved to Kernersville, North Carolina, where he attended East Forsyth High School.[1] During his interscholastic career, he played basketball and football as a quarterback.[1] As a junior in 2007, he completed 151 of 248 pass attempts for 1,905 yards and 15 touchdowns and rushed for 290 yards and seven touchdowns.[1] As a senior, he completed 117 of 235 pass attempts for 1,640 yards and 16 touchdowns and six interceptions and had 160 rushing attempts for 780 yards and 11 touchdowns.[1] That season, he led his team to the Metro 4A conference championship and the third round of the state playoffs.[1]

Rivals.com rated him a three-star college prospect and ranked him the 36th best quarterback in the nation and 35th best player in the state of North Carolina.[2] Scout.com also rated him a three-star prospect.[3] Miami, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, Wake Forest, and Virginia Tech showed interest in O'Brien, and Duke, East Carolina, and Maryland offered him an athletic scholarship.[2][3]

College career[edit]

Maryland[edit]

O'Brien enrolled at the University of Maryland in the fall of 2009 but was redshirted and did not see playing time that year. O'Brien entered the 2010 season as the backup quarterback behind Jamarr Robinson. He saw his first action in the season opener against Navy, losing a fumble on his only play of the game. In the second game of the season, O'Brien saw his first serious action against Morgan State. Up 24–0 in the second quarter, O'Brien capitalized by throwing 3 touchdowns in his first four passes before giving way to third string Quarterback, C.J. Brown in the 62–3 win. Against West Virginia, O'Brien again only saw one play of action, getting sacked for a five-yard loss. Robinson's sore arm moved O'Brien into the starting role against Florida International. In the first start of his college career, O'Brien passed for 250 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions. O'Brien shattered all significant Freshman quarterback records at the University of Maryland, passing for 2,438 yards and 22 touchdowns. In addition, he rushed for a twelve-yard touchdown against Virginia and collected a four-yard touchdown reception against Clemson. During the 2010 season, the Atlantic Coast Conference named O'Brien the ACC Rookie of the Week a total of five times. Upon the conclusion of the season, he was named the ACC Rookie of the Year.[4] O'Brien was the first Maryland player to ever receive the honor.[4] The Football Writers Association of America named O'Brien to its Freshman All-America team.[5]

Wisconsin[edit]

On February 13, 2012, O'Brien announced he would be transferring from the University of Maryland.[6] O'Brien announced on March 28 that he would transfer to the University of Wisconsin, and on August 20 he was named the starter for Wisconsin's season opener against the Northern Iowa Panthers.[7] On September 20, Wisconsin head coach Bret Bielema replaced O'Brien with redshirt freshman Joel Stave, citing problems with turnovers.[8] After Stave suffered a season-ending injury during the October 27 game against the Michigan State Spartans, O'Brien remained the backup behind fifth-year senior Curt Phillips.[9]

Catawba College[edit]

On June 10, 2013, it was announced that O'Brien would not be returning to Wisconsin and would instead seek another school for his remaining year of eligibility.[10] It was later announced that O'Brien transferred to Catawba College.[11] During his 2013 season with Catawba, O'Brien started ten games while passing for 2,490 yards with 15 touchdowns and six interceptions. The team finished with a 6–5 record.[12] O'Brien also played in the 2014 Medal of Honor Bowl, a postseason all-star game, passing for 87 yards (5-for-11) and rushing for a touchdown.[13]

Statistics[edit]

Statistics
  Passing   Rushing
Season Team GP Comp Att % Yds Avg TDs Long Int Rating Att Yards Avg Long TDs
2010 Maryland 13 192 337 57.0 2,438 7.2 22 71 8 134.5 31 -48 -1.6 12 1
2011 Maryland 9 150 266 56.4 1,648 6.2 7 69 10 109.6 33 57 1.7 30 2
2012 Wisconsin 7 52 86 60.5 523 6.1 3 53 1 120.7 15 -82 -5.5 7 0
2013 Catawba 10 248 365 67.9 2,490 6.8 15 50 6 135.5 70 35 0.5 15 3
Career
Career 39 642 1,054 60.9 7,099 6.7 47 71 25 127.5 149 -38 -0.3 30 6

Sources: [14][15]

Professional career[edit]

After being undrafted in 2014, he was offered a tryout at rookie minicamp with the Atlanta Falcons.[16] However, O'Brien was not signed.

Columbus Lions[edit]

On May 27, 2014, O'Brien signed with the Columbus Lions of the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL).[17]

Ottawa Redblacks[edit]

On the day before his first game for the Lions, O'Brien signed with the Ottawa Redblacks of the CFL on May 31, 2014.[18][19] O'Brien was placed on the exempt list for the PIFL, and began the season as the third QB on the Redblacks depth chart. A season-ending injury to second-string quarterback Thomas DeMarco allowed O'Brien to see action during the 2014 CFL season. Danny O'Brien played in eight games in his first season in the CFL, receiving significant playing time in two of those games. He would finish the season completing 29 of 54 passing attempts for 421 yards, with 2 touchdowns and 5 interceptions (53.1 passer rating).

Edmonton Eskimos[edit]

After winning the Grey Cup with the Redblacks in 2016, O'Brien signed with Edmonton Eskimos for the 2017 CFL season, reuniting him with former offensive coordinator and Edmonton Head Coach Jason Maas, and replacing the retired Jordan Lynch as the third quarterback, as well as holder for convert kicks and field goals.[20] On August 11, 2018, O'Brien completed his first pass in nearly two years, on a fake field goal to defensive tackle Almondo Sewell.[21] By the season's end he had completed four out of five passes for 44 yards; his one incompletion was an intercepted Hail Mary pass in at the end of a game. After going 15 of 26 for 93 yards in two preseason games to begin the 2019 season, and failing to produce a scoring drive, Logan Kilgore won the backup job and O'Brien was released.[22] When asked about O'Brien's release, Edmonton kicker, Sean Whyte simply replied, "It sucks".[23] O'Brien was the final member of the previous season's quarterback room to leave the team in 2019.[24]

BC Lions[edit]

Following the preseason, O'Brien was reunited with Mike Reilly as his backup when he signed with the BC Lions.[25] After Reilly suffered a season ending injury near the end of the regular season O'Brien made his starting debut for the Lions in Week 19 in a losing effort against the Saskatchewan Roughriders. In the game O'Brien completed 16 of 25 pass attempts for 171 yards with one touchdown and one interception.[26] He retired during the following off-season.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Player Bio: Danny O'Brien, University of Maryland, retrieved November 27, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Danny O'Brien, Rivals.com, Yahoo! Sports, retrieved November 27, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Danny O'Brien Profile, Scout.com, retrieved November 27, 2010.
  4. ^ a b Friedgen, O'Brien Honored by the ACC Friedgen earns league's coach of the year award for the second time; O'Brien first-ever Terp rookie of the year Archived 2012-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, University of Maryland, November 30, 2010.
  5. ^ FWAA NAMES 2010 FRESHMAN ALL-AMERICA TEAM, Football Writers Association of America, January 10, 2010.
  6. ^ Terps' Danny O'Brien transferring
  7. ^ "Wisconsin tabs transfer O'Brien as starting QB".
  8. ^ "After benching O'Brien, Bielema coy about Badgers' QB situation heading into game against UTEP". 18 September 2012.
  9. ^ "Bielema: Wisconsin to start Phillips vs. Indiana".
  10. ^ Barker, Jeff. "Former Terp Danny O'Brien says he won't return to Wisconsin".
  11. ^ "Report: Danny O'Brien transfers to D-II Catawba College".
  12. ^ "2013–14 Football Schedule". gocatawbaindians.com. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  13. ^ "Scoring Summary (Final)" (PDF). mohbowl.com. January 11, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  14. ^ Danny O'Brien Stats, ESPN, retrieved 01 April 1, 2012.
  15. ^ "Edsall disappointed by QB O'Brien's departure".
  16. ^ "Falcons to Have 24 Players in For Tryout".
  17. ^ "Columbus Lions sign former ACC Rookie of the Year Danny O'Brien". www.ledger-enquirer.com. Ledger-Enquirer. May 28, 2014. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  18. ^ "Brandon Bialkowski is out, Danny O'Brien is in as quarterback at Redblacks camp". 31 May 2014.
  19. ^ "QB finds his way to Ottawa". 1 June 2014.
  20. ^ "The Life of O'Brien: Backup quarterback finding familiarity with Eskimos". 12 July 2017.
  21. ^ Sun, Edmonton (11 August 2018). "5 Things: Exploring the Edmonton Eskimos' 31–23 loss to the B.C. Lions – Edmonton Sun".
  22. ^ "Eskimos Release O'Brien". 2 June 2019.
  23. ^ Sun, Edmonton (4 June 2019). "CFL: Edmonton Eskimos' recently cut QB was part of elite kicking team – Edmonton Sun".
  24. ^ Staff, 3Down. "Eskimos release QB Danny O'Brien – 3DownNation".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ "BC Lions add O'Brien, Thompson, Simonise; set PR". 9 June 2019.
  26. ^ "2019-10-18 Game Tracker - Saskatchewan Roughriders vs. BC Lions (2631)". CFL.ca. Retrieved 2019-10-21.

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