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Todd Boeckman (born June 8, 1984) is a former American football quarterback. Boeckman was signed by the Jaguars as an undrafted free agent on June 17, 2009. He played college football at Ohio State University .
Ray Small 26-yard touchdown reception from Todd Boeckman, Ryan Pretorius kick good 7 0 1 4:48 5 43 2:18 Ohio St Brian Hartline 6-yard touchdown reception from Todd Boeckman, Ryan Pretorius kick good 14 0 2 10:21 8 34 4:25 Ohio St 44-yard field goal by Ryan Pretorius 17 0 3 7:43 4 7 0:53 Ohio St 39-yard field goal by Ryan Pretorius 20 0 4 14:56 6 56
Six minutes into the 3rd quarter quarterback Todd Boeckman fumbled a snap in the Buckeyes end zone which was recovered by Ohio for a touchdown to increase their lead to 14–6. The Buckeyes quickly responded with a Dan Herron 1-yd TD with 2:51 left in the 3rd capped by a missed point-after kick. The Bobcats then began to falter.
5. Terrelle Pryor, 2008. After a humbling loss at USC, Pryor replaced Todd Boeckman as the Buckeyes’ starting quarterback. As a dual threat, Pryor threw for 1,311 yards and 12 touchdowns and ran ...
Despite playing his senior year as a wide receiver, Braxton Miller became the Buckeyes' career leader in total offense yards (surpassed since by J.T. Barrett) The Ohio State Buckeyes football statistical leaders are individual statistical leaders of the Ohio State Buckeyes football program in various categories, [1] including passing, rushing, receiving, total offense, defensive stats, and ...
Justin Zwick entered the game at quarterback and effectively led a scoring drive, and late in the game 3rd and 4th string quarterbacks Todd Boeckman and Rob Schoenhoft took snaps. For the game Ohio State outgained UC 444 yards to 212, made 22 first downs to UC's 11, and scored all four times it had the ball in the red zone.
The 2004 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented Ohio State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head football coach was Jim Tressel. The Buckeyes played their home games at Ohio Stadium. The team finished the season with a record of 8–4 and a Big Ten Conference record of 4–4.
Pro Football Reference (PFR) is a statistics database for professional American football maintained by Sports Reference. The site provides career statistics for players, teams, and games, as well as records and NFL draft history. [1] [2] The company also publishes similar statistics websites for basketball, baseball, and hockey.