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Paul Oliver (American football)

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Paul Oliver
Personal information
Born: (1984-03-30) March 30, 1984 (age 40)
Kennesaw, Georgia
Died:
Career information
College:Georgia
Supplemental draft:2007 / round: 4
Career history
*Offseason and/or practice squad member only
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics as of Week 17, 2011
Tackles:144
Interceptions:4
Pass deflections:11

Paul J. Oliver (born March 30, 1984 in Kennesaw, Georgia) is an American football safety of the National Football League who is currently a free agent. He was selected in the fourth round of the 2007 Supplemental NFL Draft by the Chargers.

Early years

Oliver was heavily recruited as a Parade High School All-American for the Harrison High School Hoyas.[1] He was also ranked as the #1 corner back by Rivals.com in 2003 timed unofficially with a 4.32s 40 yard dash at 185 lbs and a 37" vertical jump.[2]

College career

Oliver decided to stay close to home and committed to playing college football at the University of Georgia. After redshirting for a year, Oliver developed into a key reserve in his first two years playing, earning him preseason third-team All-SEC honors before his 3rd year. Oliver, thrust into a starting role broke out as one of the best corners in the SEC his junior year.[3] In his first game as a starter, filling in for the injured DeMario Minter, Oliver shut down University of Florida star Chad Jackson, holding him to only 2 catches for 22 yards. Oliver was awarded with Georgia's Most Improved Defensive Player Award after the 2005 season.[4]

Oliver probably had his best game as a Bulldog on November 25, 2006, against the Georgia Tech football team shutting down the #2 overall pick in the 2007 NFL Draft, Calvin Johnson, though not without some help from Georgia Tech quarterback Reggie Ball. Oliver, whose primary role was to contain Johnson, ended up frustrating the all-American by holding him to only 13 yards and 2 receptions, batting away 3 balls intended for Johnson and intercepting another. Reggie Ball threw the pass into heavy traffic on the Yellow Jackets final drive and Oliver came up with the interception sealing a 15-12 Bulldog victory.[5] Oliver finished the day with 4 solo tackles, 3 of which were on third down plays in the red zone, and also forced a fumble.[4] Oliver ended his three season career at Georgia with 7 interceptions, 8 deflected passes, 94 tackles (74 solo), 8.5 tackles for loss, 3 sacks, 5 forced fumbles, and 2 recovered fumbles.

Early departure

Oliver was ruled academically ineligible on May 17, 2007 and decided to apply for the 2007 supplemental draft held 2 months later on July 12. Oliver, who tested well in the Wonderlic Test, was seen as a player who lacked the motivation to succeed in school rather than not having the aptitude or intelligence.[6]

Professional career

2007 Supplemental Draft

Despite not having as much time to train as other prospects who go through the normal draft process, Oliver was able to garner enough interest to be the consensus #1 player in the supplemental draft. The San Diego Chargers ended up bidding their 2008 4th rounder for the rights to select Oliver making him the 1st of only two players selected in 2007's supplemental draft. The other player was University of Maryland, College Park tackle Jared Gaither selected by the Baltimore Ravens one round after Oliver.[7]

In a statement concerning Oliver, Chargers General Manager, A. J. Smith said, "We had the opportunity to get a good football player today, and we took it. Paul Oliver is a very competitive, aggressive, confident player. He's not cautious about anything he does on the field. You know how we like depth. We'll add Paul to the mix as a Charger and time will tell."[8]

Despite timing poorly at his 2007 Pro Day, Oliver displayed good footwork and also did well in cornerback drills.[9]

Pre-draft measureables
Wt 40 yd 20 ss 3-cone Vert BP Wonderlic
195 lb 4.59s X 7.33s 33.5 in[10] X X

Second stint with Chargers

On September 21, 2011, Oliver re-signed with the San Diego Chargers.

Death

Committed suicide.

References

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