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{{Infobox NFL player
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'''Rob Gronkowski''' (born May 14, 1989) is an [[American football]] [[tight end]] for the [[New England Patriots]] of the [[National Football League]] (NFL). He was selected by the Patriots in the second round of the [[2010 NFL Draft]]. He played [[college football]] at the [[Arizona Wildcats football|University of Arizona]].
'''Justin Rappold''' (born June 29th, 1995) is an [[American football]] [[tight end]] for the [[New England Patriots]] of the [[National Football League]] (NFL). He was selected by the Patriots in the second round of the [[2010 NFL Draft]]. He played [[college football]] at the [[Arizona Wildcats football|University of Arizona]].


Gronkowski owns a number of NFL tight end scoring and receiving records, including the single-season records for tight ends for most receiving touchdowns (17), most total touchdowns (18), and most receiving yards (1,327), all set in 2011. He is also the first tight end in NFL history to lead the league in receiving touchdowns for an entire season.
Gronkowski owns a number of NFL tight end scoring and receiving records, including the single-season records for tight ends for most receiving touchdowns (17), most total touchdowns (18), and most receiving yards (1,327), all set in 2011. He is also the first tight end in NFL history to lead the league in receiving touchdowns for an entire season.

Revision as of 19:24, 20 March 2012

Justin Rappold
New England Patriots
Personal information
Born: (1989-05-14) May 14, 1989 (age 35)
Buffalo, New York
Career information
College:Arizona
NFL draft:2010 / Round: 2 / Pick: 42
Career history
Roster status:Active
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics as of Week 17, 2011
Receptions:132
Receiving yards:1,873
Average:14.2
Receiving touchdowns:27
Rushing touchdowns:1

Justin Rappold (born June 29th, 1995) is an American football tight end for the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL). He was selected by the Patriots in the second round of the 2010 NFL Draft. He played college football at the University of Arizona.

Gronkowski owns a number of NFL tight end scoring and receiving records, including the single-season records for tight ends for most receiving touchdowns (17), most total touchdowns (18), and most receiving yards (1,327), all set in 2011. He is also the first tight end in NFL history to lead the league in receiving touchdowns for an entire season.

Early years

Gronkowski, who is often called "Gronk,"[1] was born in Amherst, New York to parents Gordon Gronkowski and Diane Gronkowski.[2] His father started for three years as an offensive guard on the Syracuse University football team. His great-grandfather, Ignatius, was a member of the 1924 U.S. Olympic cycling team in Paris.[3] Gronkowski is the second-youngest of five brothers. The eldest, Gordie, Jr., played baseball at Jacksonville University and was on the professional Canadian-American league Worcester Tornadoes' 2011 roster. Chris played football for two years at University of Maryland before transferring to Arizona, and is now the starting fullback for the NFL Indianapolis Colts. Dan played as a tight end at Maryland and was selected in the 2009 NFL Draft. The youngest brother, Glenn, is attending Kansas State University.[4]

Gronkowski was raised in Williamsville, New York close to Buffalo and attended Williamsville North High School for three years. He played football as a tight end and basketball as a center. As a junior, he recorded 36 receptions for 648 yards and seven touchdowns, and 73 tackles and six sacks on defense. He was named an All-Western New York first-team and All-State second-team player.[2]

In 2006, he moved to Pennsylvania, where he attended Woodland Hills High School as a senior. He was initially ruled ineligible by the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League,[5] but that ruling was overturned and Gronkowski recorded eight receptions for 152 yards and four touchdowns at Woodland Hills. He was named a SuperPrep All-American, PrepStar All-American, Associated Press Class 4-A all-state, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Fabulous 22", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette first-team all-conference, The Patriot-News (Harrisburg, PA) "Platinum 33", and a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review "Terrific 25" player.[2] He was recruited by Arizona, Clemson, Louisville, Maryland, Ohio State, and Syracuse.[6]

College career

Following high school, Gronkowski attended the University of Arizona. As a true freshman in 2007, Gronkowski recorded 28 receptions for 525 yards and six touchdowns. His 18.8 yards per reception average was the best on the team and his receiving yards were a then school record for a tight end. He was named a The Sporting News freshman All-American, Rivals.com freshman All-American, The Sporting News freshman Pac-10, and All-Pac-10 honorable mention player.[2]

Gronkowski missed the first three games of the 2008 season, but later recorded 47 receptions for 672 yards and a team-best ten touchdowns. Five of his touchdowns were scored in his first two games. He was twice named the John Mackey National Tight End of the Week, including for his performance in a failed comeback bid against Oregon, where he caught 12 passes for 143 yards. He set the school tight end records for single-game, single-season, and career receptions, yards, and touchdowns. Gronkowski was named an Associated Press third-team All-American and All-Pac-10 first-team tight end.[2]

Prior to the 2009 season, he was named to the Lombardi Award watchlist for the most outstanding college football lineman or linebacker.[7]

Professional career

Pre-draft

Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 20-yard shuttle Three-cone drill Broad jump Bench press
6 ft 6 in
(1.98 m)
265 lb
(120 kg)
34+14 in
(0.87 m)
10+34 in
(0.27 m)
4.65 s 4.47 s 7.18 s 9 ft 11 in
(3.02 m)
23 reps
All values from NFL Scouting Combine.[8]

New England Patriots

Gronkowski was drafted by the New England Patriots in the second round (42nd overall) of the 2010 NFL Draft. He signed a four-year contract on July 25, 2010.[9] The deal was worth $4.4 million, with a $1.76 million signing bonus.

2010 season

During the preseason, Gronkowski was one of three NFL players to score four touchdowns, tying Victor Cruz, a rookie wide receiver for the New York Giants and Anthony Dixon, a running back for the San Francisco 49ers. On one of those touchdowns, a 14-yard pass from Tom Brady, Gronkowski dragged St. Louis Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis several yards before diving into the end zone. In the Week 1 game against Cincinnati, Gronkowski caught his first regular season touchdown in the fourth quarter on a one-yard pass from Brady.

In a Week 10 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers, Gronkowski caught three touchdown passes from Brady, becoming the first rookie in Patriots history, and the youngest rookie in NFL history to accomplish the feat.[10] (In honor of the feat, Madden NFL 12 has a "Rob Gronkowski Award" for players who have a tight end catch three or more touchdowns in a single game.)

Returning to his home city of Buffalo in Week 16, Gronkowski caught two touchdowns against the Buffalo Bills, giving him nine touchdown catches on the season. He added a touchdown in the season finale, giving him 10 on the season, and making him the first rookie tight end since the NFL-AFL merger to score 10 touchdowns. In 16 games played (11 starts), Gronkowski caught 42 passes for 546 yards. Despite missing his entire 2009 college season following back surgery, Gronkowski did not miss a single game or practice all season.[11]

Gronkowski was nominated three times for Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Week, in Weeks 10, 14, and 17, losing in Week 10 to Tim Tebow, and winning in Weeks 14 and 17. Gronkowski also finished fifth in fan balloting at tight end for the 2011 Pro Bowl, and fourth overall among rookies.[12] Gronkowski also received one writer's vote for the Associated Press 2010 All-Pro Team (writers only vote for one tight end).

2011 season

Gronkowski caught his first touchdown of the 2011 season on a 10-yard pass from Tom Brady in the Patriots' Week 1 victory over the Miami Dolphins; Gronkowski's 6 passes accounted for 86 of Brady's franchise record 517 yards. In Week 11, Gronkowski caught two touchdown passes, including a career-long 52-yard catch and run, to equal his 2010 TD total in just ten games; he passed his reception and yardage totals from 2010 in only eight games.

Through Week 11, Gronkowski led all tight ends with 10 touchdowns; his 20 TDs were the most ever for a TE in his first two seasons. His reception and receiving yardage totals both ranked second among TEs (after Jimmy Graham of the New Orleans Saints), and in the top ten among all receivers, though they only ranked second on the Patriots, behind Wes Welker.

Gronkowski broke the NFL record for touchdowns scored in a single season by a tight end when he had the second three-TD game of his career in the Patriots' Week 13 victory against the Indianapolis Colts. After scoring two TDs on receptions from Tom Brady, Gronkowski scored a third touchdown from 2 yards out. Initially declared a forward pass, the pass was later ruled a lateral pass,[13] which is recorded as a rushing attempt; it was the first rushing attempt of Gronkowski's career, and his first rushing touchdown. It was also the first rushing touchdown by a tight end since Bo Scaife did it in 2006,[13] and the first in Patriots history.[14] At game's end, Gronkowski had sole possession of the touchdown scoring record, with 14, and shared the record for receiving touchdowns, 13, with Antonio Gates and Vernon Davis.

Gronkowski took sole possession of the TE receiving record a week later against the Washington Redskins, in which he caught his 14th and 15th touchdown passes of the season; in total, he had six receptions for a career-high 160 yards. His performance also earned him his first AFC Offensive Player of the Week award,[15] and, for the second week in a row, NFL.com's "Hardest Working Man" award.[16] He ended the season with 1,327 receiving yards, breaking the previous NFL record for a tight end of 1,290 set by Kellen Winslow in 1980.[17] He also finished with 18 total touchdowns, 17 receiving—both NFL records for tight ends. Gronkowski's 18 touchdowns were the second-highest total in the NFL (after Philadelphia's LeSean McCoy, who had 20), and equaled the output of the entire St. Louis Rams team. His 17 receiving touchdowns were the most of any NFL player in 2011, marking the first time in NFL history a tight end had sole possession of the league lead.

Gronkowski was voted the starting tight end for the AFC at the 2012 Pro Bowl. One of eight Patriots players voted to the Pro Bowl, he finished fan voting with 936,886 votes, more than triple the number received by the number two tight end, Gronkowski's teammate Aaron Hernandez, and the third-highest total of any AFC player, behind teammates Tom Brady and Wes Welker. He was also voted the tight end for the AP All-Pro first team, receiving 44½ of the 50 votes (44 voters voted for Gronkowski; 5 voters voted for Jimmy Graham, and one voter split a vote between the two).[18]

2011 post-season

In the Patriots' first playoff game, a 45–10 rout of the Denver Broncos in the Divisional round, Gronkowski tied an NFL post-season record, catching three touchdown passes as part of a 10-catch, 145-yard effort. Gronkowski alone had more catches than the entire Broncos offense, as quarterback Tim Tebow completed just 9 of 26 passes.

For the second playoff game, a 23-20 win over the Baltimore Ravens. Gronkowski had 5 catches for 87 yards, with a long reception of 23 yards. In the second half, Gronkowski suffered a high ankle sprain on a tackle by Ravens safety Bernard Pollard; the status of his ankle was one of the major story lines in the runup to Super Bowl XLVI.

Gronkowski–Hernandez tandem

Gronkowski was one of two tight ends the Patriots drafted in 2010; in the fourth round, the Patriots drafted Florida tight end Aaron Hernandez; at the start of the 2011 season, they were the only tight ends on the Patriots' 53-man roster.

Gronkowski and Hernandez have had unparalleled production at the tight end position; according to NBC Sports, Hernandez and Gronkowski are the first pair of tight ends in NFL history to catch 5 touchdown passes in consecutive seasons with the same team. In 2011 they also set NFL records for yardage, receptions, and touchdowns by tight ends on one team, combining for 169 receptions, 2,237 yards, and 24 touchdowns. The previous records for receptions and yards by tight ends on a single team was set in 1984 by the San Diego Chargers, who had four tight ends combine for 163 receptions and 1,927 yards;[19] the 24 touchdowns eclipsed the record of 18 touchdowns caught by Gronkowski, Hernandez, and Alge Crumpler in 2010.

A poll by ESPN.com's AFC East blog nicknamed the duo "The Boston TE Party."[20]

NFL records

  • Youngest player with 3 touchdown receptions in a game: 21 years, 214 days (2010, vs. Pittsburgh Steelers)
  • Youngest player with 3 touchdown receptions in a game, playoffs: 22 years, 275 days (2011 playoffs, vs. Denver Broncos)
  • Most touchdown receptions by a tight end, season: 17 (2011)
  • Most touchdowns by a tight end, season: 18 (2011)
  • First tight end to lead the league in receiving touchdowns (2011)
  • Most receiving yards by a tight end, season: 1,327 (2011)

References

  1. ^ 04:44 (2011-12-07). "NFL Videos: Gronk keeps growing in New England". Nfl.com. Retrieved 2012-01-28. {{cite web}}: |author= has numeric name (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e "Player Bio: Rob Gronkowski". University of Arizona. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  3. ^ "Rob Gronkowski - Official New England Patriots Biography". Retrieved 2010-08-16.
  4. ^ "Player Bio: Dan Gronkowski". University of Maryland. Retrieved 2009-01-12.
  5. ^ "WPIAL benches high school football transfer". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 2006-08-26. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  6. ^ "Rob Gronkowski Profile". Scout.com. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  7. ^ "Gronkowski on Early National Radar". University of Arizona. 2009-03-02. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
  8. ^ "Rob Gronkowski Combine Profile". NFL.com. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  9. ^ Reiss, Mike (2010-07-25). "Gronkowski signs rookie deal". ESPNBoston.com. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
  10. ^ "Player Game Finder Query Results". Pro Football Reference. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  11. ^ "Like Mark Bavaro, New England Patriots TE Rob Gronkowski fits coach Bill Belichick's mold - ESPN Boston". Sports.espn.go.com. 2011-02-03. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  12. ^ Reiss, Mike (2010-12-22). "Where Pats rank in fan Pro Bowl voting". ESPNBoston.com. Retrieved 2010-12-22.
  13. ^ a b "Rob Gronkowski finds new way to reach end zone - ESPN Boston". Espn.go.com. 2011-12-04. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  14. ^ "Rob Gronkowski on track to be one of NFL's greatest - Sports". The Boston Globe. 2011-12-05. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  15. ^ Reiss, Mike. "Gronk earns AFC player of week honor - New England Patriots Blog - ESPN Boston". Espn.go.com. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  16. ^ 00:36 (2011-12-16). "NFL Videos: Week 14: Hardest Working Man winner". Nfl.com. Retrieved 2012-01-28. {{cite web}}: |author= has numeric name (help)
  17. ^ "Rob Gronkowski sets TE yardage mark". ESPNBoston.com. January 1, 2012. Archived from the original on January 3, 2012.
  18. ^ Kuharsky, Paul (2011-01-02). "All-Pro voting totals - AFC South Blog - ESPN". Espn.go.com. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  19. ^ [1]
  20. ^ "Gronk approves of 'Boston TE Party'". ESPN Boston. ESPN Boston.

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