Nate Ebner
No. 43 – New England Patriots | |||||||||||||
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Position: | Safety Special teamer | ||||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||||
Born: | Dublin, Ohio | December 14, 1988||||||||||||
Height: | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) | ||||||||||||
Weight: | 220 lb (100 kg) | ||||||||||||
Career information | |||||||||||||
High school: | Hilliard (OH) Davidson | ||||||||||||
College: | Ohio State | ||||||||||||
NFL draft: | 2012 / round: 6 / pick: 197 | ||||||||||||
Career history | |||||||||||||
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Roster status: | Active | ||||||||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||||||||
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Career NFL statistics as of Week 10, 2017 | |||||||||||||
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Nathan “Nate” Ebner (born December 14, 1988) is an American football safety and special teamer for the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL) and a rugby sevens player for the United States national rugby sevens team. He is the first active NFL player to compete in the Olympics.[1]
When Ebner was 17 years old, he became the youngest player ever to play on the United States national rugby sevens team. Ebner then played rugby union (15-a-side) on the US Under-19 and Under-20 national teams, and was named MVP for the teams at both the 2007 and 2008 IRB Junior World Championships. He later played rugby sevens for the US national team at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Despite not having played high school football, in his junior year of college he then walked on to and played college football for the Ohio State Buckeyes. In 36 career college games, Ebner had 30 tackles as a special teams player from 2009 to 2011.
Ebner was drafted by the Patriots in the sixth round of the 2012 NFL draft. He has played for the team since 2012, winning Super Bowl XLIX against the Seattle Seahawks in 2015, and Super Bowl LI against the Atlanta Falcons in 2017.
Early and personal life
Ebner was born in Dublin, Ohio, the son of Nancy Pritchett and Jeffrey Ebner.[2]
His father, Jeff Ebner, was a former college rugby player at the University of Minnesota and Sunday School principal at Temple Shalom in Springfield, Ohio. He was beaten to death at age 53 during an attempted robbery in November 2008 at the family business, Ebner & Sons auto reclamation in Springfield.[3][4][5][6][7] In July 2010, his father's killer was sentenced to life in prison for murder, with the possibility of parole after 15 years.[5][8] Ebner said:
My [late] dad was my only role model. Looking back on it, you had your favorite players, but they were just players. But a role model, and the way you carry yourself and how you go about your work – what hard work really means – and to be a man ... every aspect of life. To me, my dad was that role model, 100 percent. There wasn't anyone else I wanted to be like more than him.[9]
Ebner is Jewish,[2][4][10][11] and said of his father: "He taught me the importance of being Jewish with holidays like Chanukah and Passover, and I spent some time at Sunday Hebrew school. My dad stressed finishing strong in every task I did, and conduct myself always in a proper manner."[12] He said his grandparents continue to be a big influence in his life, and "make sure I keep up with Jewish events and that I remember my origins."[12]
Ebner was raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, until sixth grade, and then in Columbus, Ohio.[9][13][14][15] He attended Hilliard Davidson High School, but did not play football there.[2][13]
Junior rugby career
Ebner was a standout rugby union player on the U.S. age-group national teams.[16] At age 17, Ebner was the youngest player ever to play on the United States national rugby sevens team. He was named MVP of the USA team at both the under-19 IRB Junior World Championship in 2007, and the under-20 IRB Junior World Championship in 2008.[13][16]
College football career
Ebner attended Ohio State University, where he majored in exercise science.[13] Ebner did not play football his first two years of college, as he was competing internationally in rugby, but then in his junior year he walked-on the Buckeyes.[17] Although he had not played football in high school, by year's end he was nevertheless considered the team's best special teams player.[18][19][20] He played only a handful of plays from scrimmage at nickelback as a backup, but did record a sack. He ran the 40-yard-dash in 4.48.[21]
He was given a football scholarship his senior year, based on his special teams skills.[22][23] In 2011, during which Ebner had 11 tackles, he was voted the team’s most inspirational player, receiving the Bo Rein Award, and the team's best special teams player, earning the Ike Kelley Award.[24][25] He was a three-time Big Ten Conference All-Academic honoree.[13][16]
Ebner was nicknamed "Leonidas," after a Greek warrior-king hero of Sparta portrayed by Gerard Butler in the movie 300, because of his intense workout regimen, and his beard.[26] Paul Haynes, the Buckeyes' co-defensive coordinator and safeties coach, said: "He has a passion for being great .... He was probably the most valuable player on that whole team last year."[26] Asked which special teams unit he enjoyed playing on the most at Ohio State, Ebner's said: "Kickoff, probably. Because ... I just enjoy running down as fast as you can. It's just mayhem, it's exciting, it's crazy. It's such a rush.... It's just one big blur, and then it's over.... Maybe I got a screw loose."[27]
In his 36 career games, Ebner had 30 tackles from 2009 to 2011. Pro Football Weekly described him as a player who "races down the field like a bat out of hell, and hunts returners like a heat-seeking missile".[24]
On Ohio State's Pro Day, he had an unofficial 4.47 40-yard dash time, and 39.5-inch vertical jump.[25] Ebner also bench-pressed 225 pounds 23 times, ran the 60-yard shuttle in 10.90 seconds, recorded a broad jump of 10 feet 8 inches, and had a short-shuttle time of 3.91 seconds and a 3-cone drill time of 6.59 seconds.[3]
Professional football career
Ebner was drafted by the New England Patriots in the sixth round of the 2012 NFL Draft, 197th overall.[2][13] He signed a four-year contract with a $96,600 signing bonus.[28] He had considered playing rugby but he was not offered a contract with a professional team.[29]
During his rookie season, Ebner played in 15 regular-season games and both playoff games, and finished second on the team both in special teams tackles (17) and special teams snaps (297, or 61%).[2][13][30] He also played 36 snaps at safety.[12] In two playoff games, he had one tackle.[12] Ebner continued to play primarily on special teams for New England in 2013, playing only sparingly on defense. He played in 15 regular season games, in which he had 9 tackles and 2 fumble recoveries, and 2 playoff games.[13][31] In the Patriots' Week 12 victory over the Denver Broncos, Ebner recovered a muffed punt that hit Broncos cornerback Tony Carter to set up Stephen Gostkowski's game-winning field goal. The recovery capped a franchise-record 24-point comeback.[13]
Ebner won his first Super Bowl ring when the Patriots won Super Bowl XLIX after the 2014 season. He played 48 percent of special teams snaps, making 11 tackles (second on the team), while missing four games with a broken thumb during the 2014 season.[23][32][33] Coach Bill Belichick said:
His development has really been outstanding. I would probably put him in the, not the all-time top, but maybe in the top-five percent all time of players that I’ve coached, from where they were in college to how they grew in the NFL. [He] has adapted in a relatively short amount of time to the knowledge of our defense, to the understanding of opponents’ offenses, to instinctiveness and reading and recognition at a position that he plays right in the middle of the field, which is among the most difficult – inside linebacker and safety – where the number of things that can happen is the greatest.[21]
On December 6, 2015, against the Philadelphia Eagles, Ebner attempted a rare onside drop kick on a kickoff after a Patriots touchdown. The Eagles recovered the kick at their own 41-yard line.[34]
On March 12, 2016, Ebner agreed to terms with the Patriots on a new two-year deal for $2.4 million.[35] Ebner led the Patriots with 19 special teams tackles, forcing one fumble, through 16 games played. He was named to the 2016 AP All-Pro Second Team at the Special Teamer position; he received 12 votes, second only to teammate Matthew Slater's 14.[36]
On February 5, 2017, Ebner was part of the Patriots team that won Super Bowl LI. In the game, he recorded one tackle as the Patriots defeated the Atlanta Falcons by a score of 34–28 in overtime.[37][38] The Patriots overcame the largest deficit in Super Bowl history, overcoming a 28–3 deficit in the third quarter to tie the game and win it in the first-ever Super Bowl overtime period.[39]
In 2017-18, Ebner missed Weeks 1 and 2 with a shoulder injury.[40] On November 27, 2017, the Patriots placed Ebner on injured reserve after he tore his ACL on a successful fake punt play during a win against the Miami Dolphins in Week 12, leading to him playing in only nine games for the season, but in those games he had eight special teams tackles which was the most on the team at the time of his injury.[40][41] The Patriots still made it to Super Bowl LII without Ebner, but the team lost 41-33 to the Philadelphia Eagles. Ebner will be an unrestricted free agent in March 2018.[40][42]
On March 13, 2018, Ebner signed a two-year contract extension with the Patriots.[43]
Rugby sevens career
United States national team
Three days after Ebner signed his 2016 contract, the Patriots granted Ebner a leave of absence to try out for the United States national rugby sevens team for the 2016 Summer Olympics,[44] even though Ebner had no guarantee of making the team.[45] His transfer to rugby sevens followed in the footsteps of Sonny Bill Williams, Bryan Habana, and Quade Cooper, who are rugby union stars also attempting to qualify for the Olympics.[46]
In an April 2016 interview, USA sevens head coach Mike Friday recalled that when Ebner first approached him about trying out for the Olympic team, Friday placed Ebner's chances of making the team at "10 or 20 percent." However, after strong showings in the Hong Kong and Singapore events on the World Rugby Sevens circuit, Friday said, "He has a 50:50 chance now but if he stays on this trajectory then it's only going one way and that's up." Friday added that Ebner played a critical role in improving the team's on-field communication. According to Friday, one of Ebner's first questions upon arriving at the USA training camp was whether the team had a "comms book." Friday was unfamiliar with the term, and Ebner pointed out that the Patriots provide all players with a manual of common on-field language, with all terms tightly defined. While the sevens team had operated with a set of common words, Friday and the rest of the coaching staff analyzed the team's communications and found that many players had different definitions for the same term. In the interview, Friday indicated, "That's exactly what I wanted from Nate. From being a newbie in the environment, he'd recognised an area we could improve."[47]
Ebner's efforts proved successful: in July 2016 he was named to the 2016 US rugby sevens team.[48] While with the rugby team, the Patriots received a roster exemption for Ebner, so he did not count against the Patriots' 90-man limit for training camp.[49]
2016 Summer Olympics
Ebner became the first active NFL player to participate in the Olympics.[1] Ebner played in the team's first two matches, a 17–14 loss to Argentina and a 26–0 shutout of host Brazil. During the latter match, Ebner scored a try in the first half, and was sent to the sin bin for two minutes in the second half for an illegal tackle. Playing against Fiji in the final pool match, Ebner scored a try to make the score 24–19 in favor of Fiji with just over one minute to play, but the Eagles were unable to score the conversion. As a result, the US team fell two points (in scoring differential) short of advancing to medal play; they ultimately finished ninth.
See also
- List of players who have converted from one football code to another
- List of select Jewish football players
References
- ^ a b "NFL safety Nate Ebner makes Olympic history". NBC Olympics. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
- ^ a b c d e Reiss, Mike (January 5, 2013). "Football journey: Nate Ebner". ESPN. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ a b "Draft Prospect – Nate Ebner". Pro Football Weekly. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ a b Ron Kaplan (December 5, 2013). "Kaplan's Korner on Jews and Sports". New Jersey Jewish News. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ a b Valerie Lough (July 23, 2010). "Guilty plea ends murder trial; Willie Anderson, 43, is sentenced to 15 years to life for killing Jeff Ebner". Springfield News-Sun. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ Rich Garven (April 29, 2012). "NFL Draft: Patriots pick Tavon Wilson, Nate Ebner; Ex-rugby player way off charts". Telegram & Gazette.
- ^ "Jeffrey D. Ebner Obituary". Springfield News-Sun. November 16, 2008. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ "Surprise Plea In Springfield Murder". whio.com. July 22, 2010.
- ^ a b "Football journey: Nate Ebner". ESPN. January 5, 2013.
- ^ Friedman, Gabe (July 31, 2016). "2016 Olympics: 7 Jewish American Olympians to watch in Rio". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved August 4, 2016.
- ^ "The Jewish Federation of Columbus - Local Jewish Boy Hoping For Super Bowl Ring". jewishcolumbus.org. Archived from the original on August 21, 2016. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c d Jack Borenstein (December 8, 2014). "Patriots' coach impressed by Ebner's growth in NFL". Jewish Tribune.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "New England Patriots: Nate Ebner". Patriots.com. Archived from the original on March 15, 2014. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Rabinowitz, Bill. "Ohio State football: Former walk-on is named a captain". Buckeye Xtra Sports.
- ^ "The Evolution of Nate Ebner |". 614columbus.com. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Nate Ebner". Ohiostatebuckeyes.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ Brandon Castel. "NFL Draft: Herron, Ebner Taken as Brewster Slips Out of Draft". The-ozone.net. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ Austin Murphy (January 29, 2015). "2015 Super Bowl: Nate Ebner's unlikely rise for New England Patriots". Sports Illustrated.
- ^ Rodak, Mike (April 28, 2012). "Patriots select DB Ebner at 197". ESPN. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ Matthew Hager (September 8, 2011). "Ebner Has Gone From Walk-On To War Daddy". Ohiostate.scout.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ a b Austin Murphy. "2015 Super Bowl: Nate Ebner's unlikely rise for New England Patriots". Sports Illustrated.
- ^ "For Patriots safety Nate Ebner, rugby was an unhelmeted gateway to the NFL". Boston.com.
- ^ a b Bill Rabinowitz. "Former Ohio State walk-on Nate Ebner makes it to the Super Bowl". The Columbus Dispatch.
- ^ a b Christopher Price. "Legend of the fall: Nate Ebner's 'special' story began with a bang at Ohio State". WEEI.
- ^ a b Marcus Hartman (April 28, 2012). "Herron, Ebner Round Out OSU Draftees". Ohiostate.scout.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ a b "Nate Ebner Earns 'Leonidas' Nickname, Dubbed Ohio State's Most Valuable Player for Strong Work Ethic". NESN.
- ^ "Ebner: 'Maybe I got a screw loose'". ESPN.
- ^ "Nate Ebner Salary Cap, Contracts, Salaries, Cap Hits, & News Profile". Spotrac.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ Doug Lesmerises (April 24, 2012). "Among Buckeyes with NFL Draft dreams, Nate Ebner's is rather special". cleveland.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ "2013 NFL SNAP COUNTS". Football Outsiders. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ "Nate Ebner Stepping into Hybrid Linebacker Role for Patriots". nepatriotsdraft.com.
- ^ "Special-teams standout Nate Ebner gets hometown celebration". ESPN.
- ^ "New England Patriots safeties breakdown: Will Devin McCourty get long-term deal or franchise tag?". masslive.com.
- ^ cite web|url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/2015/12/06/patriots-attempt-unusual-drop-kick-style-kickoff/XFIH51dJek0CSQekn7W4CM/story.html
- ^ "Agent: Patriots agree to contract with special-teamer Nate Ebner - New England Patriots Blog- ESPN". espn.com. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
- ^ "Three rookies, Matt Ryan among players named to All-Pro team". NFL.com. Retrieved 2017-01-06.
- ^ "Super Bowl LI - New England Patriots vs. Atlanta Falcons - February 5th, 2017". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
- ^ "Super Bowl LI - National Football League Game Summary" (PDF). National Football League. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
- ^ "Super Bowl LI - New England Patriots vs. Atlanta Falcons - February 5, 2017". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
- ^ a b c Patriots Free Agency: Nate Ebner Another Special Teams Star Set To Hit Market | New England Patriots | NESN.com
- ^ "Patriots Place TE Martellus Bennett and DB Nate Ebner on Injured Reserve". Patriots.com. November 27, 2017.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Kyed, Doug (March 14, 2018). "NFL Rumors: Patriots Re-Sign All-Pro Special Teamer Nate Ebner In Free Agency". NESN.com.
- ^ "Patriots' Nate Ebner to chase rugby Olympic dreams". nrl.com. 15 March 2016. Retrieved March 16, 2016.
- ^ "Nate Ebner Appreciates Patriots Letting Him Chase Olympic Rugby Dream". NESN.com. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
- ^ "American football star Nate Ebner joins chase to play rugby at Rio 2016 Olympic Games". Rio 2016. 16 March 2016. Archived from the original on 18 March 2016. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Hamilton, Tom (19 April 2016). "Nate Ebner on right path for Olympics, says USA coach Mike Friday". ESPN (UK). Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ^ Pengelly, Martin. "NFL player Nate Ebner selected for US Olympic rugby sevens squad". The Guardian. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
- ^ "New England Patriots roster moves: Nate Ebner gets exemption, team adds two veterans". Retrieved August 1, 2016.
External links
- 1988 births
- American football safeties
- American rugby union players
- Footballers who switched code
- Jewish American sportspeople
- Living people
- Male rugby sevens players
- New England Patriots players
- Ohio State Buckeyes football players
- Olympic rugby sevens players of the United States
- Sportspeople from Cincinnati
- People from Dublin, Ohio
- Players of American football from Ohio
- Rugby sevens players at the 2016 Olympic Games
- Sportspeople from Columbus, Ohio
- Super Bowl champions
- United States international rugby sevens players