Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jay Jones, football player [6] Akeem Jordan, football player for the Washington Redskins [7] Delvin Joyce, football player; Christina Julien, professional soccer player, member of 2011 Canadian women's world cup team; Curtis Keaton, football player; Kevin Kelly, baseball player for the Tampa Bay Rays; Rodney Landers, football player; Vad Lee ...
This category is for American football players at James Madison University. Pages in category "James Madison Dukes football players" The following 68 pages are in this category, out of 68 total.
1 By name. 2 By team. Toggle By team subsection. ... This page was last edited on 18 February 2025, ... List of NFL players.
Player name Position Debut NFL/AFL team Notes 1982 Scott Norwood * K Atlanta Falcons: Pro Bowl 1994 Dion Foxx: LB Miami Dolphins — 2002 Delvin Joyce: RB New York Giants — 2007 Akeem Jordan: LB Philadelphia Eagles — 2010 Mike Caussin: TE Jacksonville Jaguars — 2015 Dean Marlowe: DB Carolina Panthers — 2018 Raven Greene: DB Green Bay ...
Also: Ireland: People: By occupation: Sportspeople by sport: Players of American football This category is for Irish sportspeople who play American football . Pages in category "Irish players of American football"
This is a list of players who have appeared in at least one regular season or postseason game in the National Football League (NFL) or American Football League (AFL) and have a last name that starts with "A". [a] This list is accurate through the end of the 2024 NFL season.
Charlie Smyth (born 26 June 2001) is an Irish multi-sport athlete who plays as a placekicker for the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL). He has previously played Gaelic football as a goalkeeper at senior level for the Down county team, before joining the NFL's International Player Pathway Program (IPPP) in 2024.
Just five years after (then) Madison College had become a coeducational institution, the Dukes fielded their first football team. Football was the brainchild of Dr. Ronald Carrier, Madison's president at the time, who was attempting to change the psychology of the campus away from an all-women's teachers college. [3]