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DAVE TE-3 MORE STREET FA SIGNINGS BY GIANTS

nflscouting : 4/22/2017 1:36 pm
NOTE-these are college reports only. None will be on the Giants site yet, so BBI readers, you get them first;


RAHIM SHAHEED MOORE
Free Safety
University of California, Los Angeles Bruins
#3
5:11.6-202
Los Angeles, California
Susan Miller Dorsey High School

OVERVIEW
The Bruins have exported some of the National Football League’s greatest safeties and, at times, Rahim Moore appeared to be well on his way to joining a group that included Kenny Easley, Eric Turner and Carnell Lake. After arriving on campus as a heralded prep recruit, he became a staple in the UCLA secondary and went on to start all 37 games of his three-year collegiate career, twice earning All-Pacific 10 Conference first-team accolades.

As a true freshman in 2008, Moore entered the starting lineup for one of the nation’s elite secondary units. The Bruins ranked second in the conference and eighth in the country in pass defense, surrendering just 167.67 aerial yards per game. The young safety was rarely overwhelmed, showing flashes of his potential as he tied for 10th in the Pac-10 in interceptions (0.25 per game).

Moore emerged as one of the nation’s elite safeties in 2009 while the Bruins finished second in the conference and 28th in the country in pass defense (191.23 ypg). Moore, just a sophomore, led the nation in interceptions (.77), as he picked off 10 passes to place second behind only Carlton Gray (11, 1991) on UCLA’s season record chart.

Moore is a classic free safety, showing the range and athleticism to cover centerfield. Quarterbacks around the Pac-10 have learned they must account for Moore each time they drop back, as he possesses exceptional ball skills. The junior intercepted 14 passes while donning the blue and gold, tying Eric Turner (1987-90), Marcus Turner (1985-88) and Don Rogers (1980-83) for fourth in UCLA annals behind Kenny Easley (19, 1977-80), Carlton Gray (16, 1989-92) and James Washington (15, 1984-87).

Moore’s terrific speed also allowed him to excel as a member of the track and field squad at Susan Miller Dorsey High School (Los Angeles, CA). He was a three-time league champion in the 400-meter dash and finished third in that event at the CIF City Section Finals as a senior.

On the gridiron, Moore was one of the most highly-touted prospects in the nation after lettering four years as a defensive back and wide receiver. He was given the highest rating of five-stars by Scout.com, as that recruiting service ranked him as the second-best safety prospect in the nation. Rivals.com rated him a four-star prospect while listing him as the third-best safety and 71st overall recruit in the country, as well as the ninth-best player in the state of California.

As a senior, Moore helped lead the Dorsey Dons to a 9-4 overall record and an appearance in the City Section Semifinals. He registered 112 tackles, eight interceptions, 10 pass deflections and three fumbles recoveries, adding 15 receptions for 339 yards (22.60 ypc) and six touchdowns on offense.

Moore’s efforts earned first-team All-State honors by Cal-Hi Sports. He was named to the PrepStar Dream Team and was listed fourth on the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s Best in the West squad. After his final prep season, he participated in the prestigious U.S. Army All-American Bowl as a member of the West team.

Moore could’ve attended any university of his choosing. His main suitors included Arizona, Arizona State, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina and Texas. Ultimately, the standout prep elected to sign with his hometown school and committed to the Bruins. "I feel connected to UCLA's coaches," Moore said. "They are really genuine. UCLA is the best place for me to be at.”

Moore enrolled at UCLA in 2008. By the second day of training camp, he was running with the first-team defense. "He seems like he's a calm, mature player,” said Defensive Coordinator DeWayne Walker. "He's being forced into a role but he's taking advantage of his opportunities." Moore continued to impress heading into the season and earned a role as the starting free safety.

Moore went on to start all 12 games in his first season and became the first true freshman to start a season-opener since Matt Ware (Arizona Cardinals) did so in 2001. He ranked fourth among Bruins defenders with 60 tackles (32 solos) and tied a team-high with three interceptions, gaining five yards on returns. He added two fumble recoveries and four pass deflections.

At the Bruins’ postseason banquet, Moore was honored as the defensive co-recipient of UCLA’s John Concheff, Jr. Memorial Award for Rookie of the Year. The Pac-10 coaches also took notice of the young safety’s stellar play, naming him an all-conference honorable mention choice.

Moore parlayed a successful inaugural campaign into a true breakout season in 2009. The sophomore made the nation take notice of his ability right out of the gate, earning Walter Camp Football Foundation National Defensive Player of the Week honors in the season-opener vs. San Diego State. He notched one solo tackle and deflected one pass while tying a school game record with three interceptions.

Moore started all 13 games and ranked seventh on the team with 49 tackles (36 solos), including three stops for combined losses of 13 yards. He emerged as a true ball hawk at safety, as he led the nation with 10 interceptions, gaining 79 yards on returns. He added seven pass deflections.

Moore’s performance garnered national recognition by the Associated Press and Walter Camp Foundation, as both organizations accorded him a second-team All-America performer. He was a first-team all-conference choice and, along with defensive tackle Brian Price, was the co-defensive recipient of UCLA’s Henry R. “Red” Sanders Award for Most Valuable Player. He also received honorable mention accolades for the Jim Thorpe Award (top college defensive back).

Moore entered his junior campaign with increased expectations, as he was named to Watch Lists for the Ronnie Lott Trophy (top IMPACT defender), Bronko Nagurski Trophy (top college defender), Bednarik Award (top college defender), Walter Camp Player of the Year Award and Jim Thorpe Award. He was voted a team captain and ranked third among Bruins defenders with 77 tackles (51 solos), including three stops for losses totaling seven yards. He also deflected four attempts, recovered one fumble and gain 42 yards on one interception.

Although he failed to match his production from the previous season, Moore still earned All-America first-team honors by The Sporting News and third-team accolades by the Associated Press. He was a first-team all-conference pick for the second-consecutive season and finished as a semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award.

At season’s end, Moore announced he would forgo his final season of eligibility and enter the 2011 National Football League draft. "Rahim has been a starter since the day he arrived at UCLA," said Head Coach Rick Neuheisel. "He has been a key performer in our secondary throughout his career and he never missed a start. It was a thrill to watch him lead the nation with 10 interceptions in 2009. We certainly thank him for all of his contributions to the program and support his decision to take the next step in his career."

CAREER NOTES
Moore started all games at free safety for UCLA, recording 186 tackles (119 solos) with six stops for losses totaling 20 yards…Notched 14 interceptions, gaining 126 yards (9.00 avg) on returns…Deflected 15 pass attempts and recovered three fumbles...Moore ranks fourth among the Bowl Subdivision’s (FBS) active career leaders in interceptions…Tied Eric Turner (1987-90), Marcus Turner (1985-88) and Don Rogers (1980-83) for fourth in UCLA annals with 14 career interceptions, as that mark is surpassed only by Kenny Easley (19, 1977-80), Carlton Gray (16, 1989-92) and James Washington (15, 1984-87)…Recorded 10 interceptions in 2009, as that mark is topped only by Carlton Gray (11, 1991) on the Bruins’ season record chart…Tied a school game record with three interceptions vs. San Diego State in 2009.

2010 SEASON
All-America first-team selection by The Sporting News and third-team choice by The NFL Draft Report and the Associated Press…All-Pacific 10 Conference first-team honoree… Semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award, presented annually to college football’s top defensive back…Member of the watch lists for the Ronnie Lott Trophy (top IMPACT defender), Bronko Nagurski Trophy (top college defender), Bednarik Award (top college defender) and Walter Camp Player of the Year Award…Earned Special Recognition at the team’s postseason awards banquet…The team captain started all 12 games at free safety and ranked third among Bruins defenders with 77 tackles (51 solos), including three stops for combined losses of seven yards…Recovered one fumble…Led a secondary that finished fifth in the conference and 53rd in the nation in pass defense (214.58 ypg)…Made 37 stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 502 yards (13.57 ypc) and 23 first downs on those receptions, as he made three third-down stops and another on fourth-down… Deflected four pass attempts, all of which came on third-down attempts…Intercepted one third-down pass, gaining 42 yards on returns…Made 40 stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 367 yards (9.18 ypc) and 20 first downs, as he made seven third-down stops and took down five ball carriers at the line of scrimmage for no gain…Delivered 10 of his hits inside the red zone, including four on goal-line plays.

2010 GAME ANALYSIS
Kansas State…Moore opened the season with seven tackles (four solos)…During the opponent’s first drive, the safety hit Tramaine Thompson at the line of scrimmage after a reception, dropping the receiver for no gain…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted three stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 17 yards and two first downs on those receptions, as he made one third-down stop…Made four stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 62 yards and one first down, as he made one third-down stop…
Part of a defense that allowed 64 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions on 12-of-17 passing, and 377 yards in total offense on 71 plays (5.3 avg).

Stanford…Moore forced a second quarter punt by the opposition, as he deflected a third-& -11 pass by Andrew Luck intended for Doug Baldwin…During a third quarter drive, he stopped Stepfan Taylor at the line of scrimmage twice for no gain…He finished with seven tackles (four solos) and a pass deflection…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted three stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 34 yards and two first downs on those receptions, as he made one third-down stop and deflected one third-down pass…
Made four stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 14 yards and one first down, as he made one third-down stop and took down two ball carriers at the line of scrimmage for no gain…Part of a defense that allowed 151 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions on 11-of-24 passing, and 362 yards in total offense on 73 plays (5.0 avg).

Houston…The safety notched his first interception of the season, as he picked off Case Keenum on a third-& -6 attempt and returned the ball to the opponent’s 42. UCLA converted the turnover into a touchdown on the ensuing possession…Moore finished with three tackles (two solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted three stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 31 yards and two first downs on those receptions, as he intercepted one third-down pass…Part of a defense that allowed 252 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions on 23-of-38 passing, and 360 yards in total offense on 68 plays (5.3 avg).

Texas…Moore registered eight tackles (seven solos), including a one-yard stop for loss on Foswhitt Whittaker after a first quarter reception…The safety forced the opposition to punt during a second quarter drive, as he deflected a third-& -3 pass attempt by Garrett Gilbert intended for tight end Barrett Matthews…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted seven stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 88 yards and four first downs on those receptions, as he deflected one third-down pass…Made one stop vs. the ground game, holding the runner to one yard…Part of a defense that allowed 264 yards, one touchdown and one interception on 30-of-45 passing, and 349 yards in total offense on 68 plays (5.1 avg).

Washington State…Moore notched two tackles (one solo)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted two stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 30 yards and one first down on those receptions, as he made one third-down stop…Part of a defense that allowed 311 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions on 20-of-37 passing, and 384 yards in total offense on 68 plays (6.8 avg).

California…Moore racked up nine tackles (six solos), including a stop for no gain on Shane Vereen during a second quarter goal-line carry…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted one stop vs. the aerial attack, limiting the receiver to no gain on that reception…Made eight stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 82 yards and six first downs, as he took down one ball carrier at the line of scrimmage for no gain…Part of a defense that allowed 83 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions on 9-of-16 passing, and 387 yards in total offense on 71 plays (5.5 avg).

Oregon…Moore hit LaMichael James in the backfield for a five-yard loss inside the red zone during a second quarter drive, as he finished with eight tackles (seven solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted five stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 85 yards and three first downs on those receptions, as he made one fourth-down stop…
Made three stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 18 yards and one first down…
Part of a defense that allowed 312 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions on 24-of-33 passing, and 582 yards in total offense on 73 plays (8.0 avg).

Arizona…During a second quarter drive, David Carter hit Matt Scott and forced the quarterback to fumble. Moore recovered the loose ball inside the red zone to keep the opposition from scoring…The safety stopped David Roberts behind the line of scrimmage for a one-yard loss in the fourth quarter and finished with nine tackles (five solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted four stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 47 yards and two first downs on those receptions…Made five stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 68 yards and four first downs, as he made one third-down stop and took down one ball carrier at the line of scrimmage for no gain…Part of a defense that allowed 319 yards, one touchdown and one interception on 24-of-36 passing, and 583 yards in total offense on 88 plays (6.6 avg).

Oregon State…Moore delivered four solo tackles…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted one stop vs. the aerial attack, limiting that receiver to 11 yards and one first down on that reception…Made three stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 35 yards and two first downs…Part of a defense that allowed 164 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions on 18-of-26 passing, and 267 yards in total offense on 52 plays (5.1 avg).

Washington…Moore forced a punt in the second quarter when he tackled Jake Locker short of a conversion on a third-& -12 attempt…The junior finished with eight tackles (five solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted two stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 28 yards on those receptions…Made six stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 45 yards…Part of a defense that allowed 68 yards, no touchdowns and one interception on 10-of-21 passing, and 321 yards in total offense on 62 plays (5.2 avg).

Arizona State…Moore deflected a first quarter pass intended for Gerell Robinson on a third-& -2 attempt, leading to a turnover on downs…In the fourth quarter, he forced the opposition to settle for a field goal, as he broke up a third-& -7 pass intended for Robinson inside the red zone…The safety finished with four tackles (three solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted four stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 101 yards and two first downs on those receptions, as he deflected two third-down attempts…Part of a defense that allowed 384 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions on 28-of-39 passing, and 595 yards in total offense on 71 plays (8.4 avg).

Southern California…Moore stopped Marc Tyler at the line of scrimmage for no gain on a third quarter third-& -4 attempt, leading to a turnover on downs…The junior closed out the season with eight tackles (three solos)…Moore Defensive Impact-The defender posted two stops vs. the aerial attack, limiting receivers to 30 yards and two first downs on those receptions…Made six stops vs. the ground game, holding runners to 42 yards and three first downs, as he made two third-down stops and took down one ball carrier at the line of scrimmage for no gain…Part of a defense that allowed 203 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions on 16-of-28 passing, and 474 yards in total offense on 68 plays (7.0 avg).

2009 SEASON
All-America second-team selection by the Walter Camp Football Foundation and the Associated Press, and third-team choice by The Sporting News…All-Pacific 10 Conference first-team honoree…Earned Walter Camp Football Foundation National Defensive Player of the Week honors vs. San Diego State…Received honorable mention accolades for the Jim Thorpe Award (top college defensive back)…Co-Defensive recipient of UCLA’s Henry R. “Red” Sanders Award for Most Valuable Player…Started all 13 games at free safety and ranked seventh among Bruins defenders with 49 tackles (36 solos) including three stops for combined losses of 13 yards…Led a secondary that finished second in the conference and 28th in the nation in pass defense (191.23 ypg)…Led the nation in interceptions (0.77 per game), as he intercepted 10 passes, gaining 79 yards on returns (7.90 avg)…Deflected seven other pass attempts, as he ranked second in the country in passes defended (1.31 per game)…His 10 interceptions are topped only by Carlton Gray (11, 1991) on the Bruins’ season record chart…Tied a school game record with three interceptions vs. San Diego State.

2009 GAME ANALYSIS
San Diego State…On the first play of a second quarter drive, Moore picked off Ryan Lindley and returned the ball 22 yards to the opponent’s 35…He deflected a pass intended for Vincent Brown in the third frame and picked off Lindley for a second time early in the fourth, as he gained four yards on the return…A series later, the safety notched his third interception of the game, as he picked off Lindley with just under five minutes remaining in the game…Moore’s three interceptions tied a school game record, as he finished with one solo tackle and a pass deflection.



Tennessee…On a second quarter third-& -8 attempt, Moore picked off Jonathan Crompton at the opponent’s 27…He added a second interception on the first play from scrimmage of the second half, as he returned the ball four yards to the opponent’s 26 to set up a field goal on the ensuing drive…The safety helped bring down Bryce Brown on a third-& -goal carry during the Volunteers’ final possession, leading to a turnover on downs, as he finished with six tackles (four solos).

Arizona…Moore notched his third multi-interception game of the season, beginning in the first quarter when he picked off Nick Foles at the UCLA seven-yard line and gained three yards on the return…On an early second quarter third-& -9 attempt, he intercepted Foles again inside the red zone and returned the ball 37 yards to set up a field goal on the ensuing drive…He added one solo tackle.

Washington…During a fourth quarter drive, Moore deflected a pass by Jake Locker intended for Jermaine Kearse and then stopped Chris Polk in the backfield for a seven-yard loss…At series later, the safety intercepted Locker and returned it six yards to seal the victory, as he finished with two solo tackles.

Washington State…The sophomore intercepted Marshall Lobbestael on a first quarter third-& -6 attempt...Moore tackled Jeffrey Soloman at the line of scrimmage no gain in the third quarter deflected a pass intended for the wide receiver in the final frame…He finished with three tackles (two solos).

Temple (EagleBank Bowl)…Moore intercepted Vaughn Charlton at the UCLA seven-yard line during a third quarter possession and finished with four tackles (three solos).

Other Notable Performances…Posted four tackles (three solos) vs. Kansas State and added three pass deflections, including on one a fourth quarter fourth-& -14 that caused a turnover on downs…Assisted on one stop vs. Stanford…Had a solo stop on Ed Dickson after a five-yard reception vs. Oregon…Caused a first quarter punt by deflecting a third-& -10 pass attempt by Kevin Riley and finished with nine tackles (six solos) vs. California, including a three-yard stop for loss on Jahvid Best in the second frame…Notched seven tackles (four solos) vs. Oregon State…Recorded three tackles (two solos) vs. Arizona State…Registered seven solo tackles vs. Southern California, including a three-yard stop for loss on Joe McKnight.

2008 SEASON
All-Pacific 10 Conference honorable mention…Defensive Co-Recipient of UCLA’s John Concheff, Jr. Memorial Award for Rookie of the Year…Started all 12 games at free safety and became the first true freshman to start a season-opener since Matt Ware (2001)…
Recovered two fumbles…Ranked fourth among Bruins defenders with 60 tackles (32 solos)…Led a secondary that finished second in the conference and eighth in the nation in pass defense (167.67 ypg)…Deflected four pass attempts…Tied for 10th in the conference and 96th in the country in interceptions, as he intercepted three passes, gaining five yards on returns (1.67 avg).

2008 GAME HIGHLIGHTS
Brigham Young…During the opening drive of the second half, Moore intercepted Max Hall and returned the ball five yards…He held the opposition to a field goal in the third quarter by tackling Fui Vakapuna short of a conversion on a third-& -goal reception, as he finished with eight tackles (four solos).

Oregon State…Moore held the opposition to a field goal during their first possession, as he stopped James Rogers short of a conversion on a third-& -10 reception inside the red zone…Brigham Harwell caused a second quarter fumble by Sean Canfield on a goal-line snap and Moore recovered the loose ball to keep the opposition out of the end zone…The safety intercepted Canfield at the goal-line a series later and finished with four tackles (three solos).

Washington…On a second quarter third-& -10 attempt, Moore picked off Ronnie Fouch in the end zone…He forced a punt in the final frame by deflecting a third-& -24 pass intended for D’Andre Goodwin and finished with six tackles (four solos).

Other Notable Performances…Made his collegiate debut vs. Tennessee and registered two solo tackles with a fumble recovery on the goal-line…Posted six tackles (three solos) vs. Arizona…Notched two tackles (one solo) vs. Fresno State…Deflected a first quarter pass intended for Jeshua Anderson and finished with four solo stops vs. Washington State… Had two solo tackles vs. Oregon…Tallied five tackles (two solos) vs. Stanford…Led the team with nine tackles (five solos) vs. California and deflected a first quarter goal-line pass intended for LaReylle Cunningham…Assisted on four stops vs. Arizona State…Led the Bruins with eight tackles (two solos) vs. Southern California, including a third-& -17 stop short of a conversion on Joe McKnight that led to a fourth quarter turnover on downs.

INJURY REPORT
2008 Season…Suffered a leg injury vs. Stanford (10/18) and had to leave the game… Returned the following week vs. California (10/25).
2009 Season…Suffered a concussion in the second quarter vs. Stanford (10/3) and did not return to the game…Returned the following week vs. Oregon (10/10).

AGILITY TESTS
4.66 in the 40-yard dash…1.65 10-yard dash…2.73 20-yard dash…3.96 20-yard shuttle…
6.98 three-cone drill…35-inch vertical jump…9’7” broad jump…Bench pressed 225 pounds 11 times…30 ¼-inch arm length…9 5/8-inch hands…74 ½-inch wingspan.

HIGH SCHOOL
Attended Susan Miller Dorsey High School (Los Angeles, Cal.), playing football for head coach Paul Knox…Lettered four years as a defensive back and wide receiver (wore jersey #5)…Named to the PrepStar Dream Team…All-State first-team selection by Cal-Hi Sports… Ranked fourth on the Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West squad…Played in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl as a member of the West team…Led Dorsey to a 9-4 overall record and the City Section semifinals as a senior while recording 112 tackles, eight interceptions, 10 pass deflections and three fumble recoveries…Added 15 receptions for 339 yards (22.60 ypc) and six touchdown on offense…Helped Dorsey to a 8-4 overall record as a junior while posting 122 tackles and seven interceptions…Led the Dons to a 10-3 overall record as a sophomore while registering 99 tackles and eight interceptions… Given the highest rating of five-stars by Scout.com, as that recruiting service ranked him as the second-best safety prospect in the nation…Rated a four-star recruit by Rivals.com, who listed him as the third-best safety and 71st overall prospect in the nation, as well as the ninth-best player in the state of California…Chose to attend UCLA over scholarship offers from Arizona, Arizona State, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina and Texas…Also lettered as a sprinter on the Dorsey track and field squad, where he was a three-time league champion in the 400-meters…Finished third in the 400-meters at the CIF City Section Finals as a senior.

PERSONAL
Sociology major…Director’s Honor Roll in Fall of 2009…Parents are Rodney Moore and Nowana Buchanan…Has one sister, Duraisha, and one brother, Rasheed…Born 2/11/90 in Los Angeles, California…Resides in Los Angeles, California.




PLAYER STATISTICS
DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
STATS GP GS TK SO AS FR FC INT TFL PBU SACK BK PRES
2008 12 12 60 32 28 2 0 3 0.0-0 4 0.0-0 0 0
2009 13 13 49 36 13 0 0 10 3.0-13 7 0.0-0 0 0
2010 12 12 77 51 26 1 0 1 3.0-7 4 0.0-0 0 0
TOTAL 37 37 186 119 67 3 0 14 6.0-20 15 0.0-0 0 0

INTERCEPTION RETURNS
STATS NO YARDS AVG TD LONG
2008 3 5 1.67 0 5
2009 10 79 7.90 0 37
2010 1 42 42.00 0 42
TOTAL 14 126 9.00 0 42

THE PRODUCTION LINE
RAHIM MOORE 2010 SEASON STATISTICAL PERFORMANCE CHART
Opponents SO AS TK SCK TFL FUM PR RUN PASS ST 1st 3rd 4th RZ
Kansas St. 4 3 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 4 3 0/0 1/2 1/1 0/0 0/0
Stanford 4 3 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 4 4 0/0 1/2 1/2 0/0 1/1
Houston 2 1 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 0 4 0/0 0/2 0/1 0/0 0/0
Texas 7 1 8 0.0-0 1.0-1 0/0 0 1 8 0/0 0/4 0/1 0/0 1/0
Washington St. 1 1 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 0 2 0/0 0/1 0/1 0/0 0/0
California 6 3 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 8 1 0/0 6/0 0/0 0/0 4/2
Oregon 7 1 8 0.0-0 1.0-5 0/0 0 3 5 0/0 1/3 0/0 0/1 2/0
Arizona 5 4 9 0.0-0 1.0-1 1/0 0 6 4 0/0 4/3 1/0 0/0 1/1
Oregon St. 4 0 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 3 1 0/0 2/1 0/0 0/0 0/0
Washington 5 3 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 6 2 0/0 2/1 2/0 0/0 1/0
Arizona St. 3 1 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 0 6 0/0 0/2 0/2 0/0 0/0
Southern Cal 3 5 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0/0 0 6 2 0/0 3/2 2/0 0/0 0/0
TOTAL 51 26 77 0.0-0 3.0-7 1/0 0 41 42 0/0 20/23 7/8 0/1 10/4

READING THE CHART-SO indicates solo tackles…AS indicates assisted tackles…TK indicates total tackles…SCK indicates sacks/yards…TFL indicates tackles for losses/ yards…FUM indicates fumbles recovered/caused…INT indicates interceptions/yards…PR indicates QB pressures…RUN indicates plays made vs. the run …PASS indicates plays made vs. the pass…ST indicates tackles made on the kickoff/punt coverage units…1st indicates opponent’s total of first-downs made vs. the defender (run/pass)…3RD indicates third-down stops (run/pass) made by the defender…4TH indicates fourth-down tackles (run/pass)…RZ indicates red zone/goal line tackles.

RUSH/PASS DEFENSE PLAY BREAKDOWN CHART
Opponents RUN YDS TD LG TFL NG PASS PB INT IC CT YDS TD LG
Kansas St. 4 62 0 44 0.0-0 0 0 0 0/0 0 3 17 0 13
Stanford 4 14 0 11 0.0-0 2 0 1 0/0 0 3 34 0 19
Houston 0 0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 0 1/42 0 3 31 0 14
Texas 1 1 0 1 0.0-0 0 0 1 0/0 0 7 88 0 30
Washington St. 0 0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0/0 0 2 30 0 23
California 8 82 0 24 0.0-0 1 0 0 0/0 0 1 0 0 0
Oregon 3 18 0 15 1.0-5 0 0 0 0/0 0 5 85 0 42
Arizona 5 68 0 25 1.0-1 1 0 0 0/0 0 4 47 0 23
Oregon St. 3 35 0 24 0.0-0 0 0 0 0/0 0 1 11 0 11
Washington 6 45 0 16 0.0-0 0 0 0 0/0 0 2 28 0 22
Arizona St. 0 0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 2 0/0 0 4 101 0 70
Southern Cal 6 42 0 14 0.0-0 1 0 0 0/0 0 2 30 0 16
TOTAL 40 367 0 44 2.0-6 5 0 4 1/42 0 37 502 0 70

READING THE CHART-RUN indicates plays made vs. the run…YDS indicates yards opposition gained on those running plays…TD indicates touchdowns scored by running back assigned to defend…LG indicates long run allowed…TFL indicates tackles for losses/ yards… NG indicates tackles made that resulted in no gain rushing by the opposition…PASS indicates amount of passes thrown into defender’s area…PB indicates passes defended…INT indicates interceptions/yards gained…IC indicates pass attempts defender prevented receiver from getting to…CT indicates passes caught by coverage assignment…YDS indicates yards gained by defending receivers…TD indicates touchdown receptions allowed…LG indicates longest pass completion allowed.

MOORE GAME BY GAME LOG
2010 Season Date Opponent Score Played Int. Ret. Tackles PBU
No Yds TD Ast Solo Asst
Loss Solo
Loss Loss
Yds
Kansas St.
09/04/10 at Kansas St. 22-31 Yes 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 0
Stanford
09/11/10 Stanford 0-35 Yes 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 1
Houston
09/18/10 Houston 31-13 Yes 1 42 0 1 2 0 0 0 0
Texas
09/25/10 at Texas 34-12 Yes 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 1 1
Washington St.
10/02/10 Washington St. 42-28 Yes 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
California
10/09/10 at California 7-35 Yes 0 0 0 3 6 0 0 0 0
Oregon
10/21/10 at Oregon 13-60 Yes 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 5 0
Arizona
10/30/10 Arizona 21-29 Yes 0 0 0 4 5 0 1 1 0
Oregon St.
11/06/10 Oregon St. 17-14 Yes 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0
Washington
11/18/10 at Washington 7-24 Yes 0 0 0 3 5 0 0 0 0
Arizona St.
11/26/10 at Arizona St. 34-55 Yes 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 2
Southern California
12/04/10 Southern California 14-28 Yes 0 0 0 5 3 0 0 0 0
Season Totals 1 42 0 26 51 0 3 7 4

2009 Season Date Opponent Score Played Int. Ret. Tackles PBU
No Yds TD Ast Solo Asst
Loss Solo
Loss Loss
Yds
San Diego St.
09/05/09 San Diego St. 33-14 Yes 3 29 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
Tennessee
09/12/09 at Tennessee 19-15 Yes 2 4 0 2 4 0 0 0 0
Kansas St.
09/19/09 Kansas St. 23-9 Yes 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 3
Stanford
10/03/09 at Stanford 16-24 Yes 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Oregon
10/10/09 Oregon 10-24 Yes 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
California
10/17/09 California 26-45 Yes 0 0 0 3 6 0 1 3 1
Arizona
10/24/09 at Arizona 13-27 Yes 2 40 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
Oregon St.
10/31/09 at Oregon St. 19-26 Yes 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 0
Washington
11/07/09 Washington 24-23 Yes 1 6 0 0 2 0 1 7 1
Washington St.
11/14/09 at Washington St. 43-7 Yes 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1
Arizona St.
11/21/09 Arizona St. 23-13 Yes 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0
Southern California
11/28/09 at Southern California 7-28 Yes 0 0 0 0 7 0 1 3 0
Temple
12/29/09 at Temple 30-21 Yes 1 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0
Season Totals 10 79 0 13 36 0 3 13 7

2008 Season Date Opponent Score Played Int. Ret. Tackles PBU
No Yds TD Ast Solo Asst
Loss Solo
Loss Loss
Yds
Tennessee
09/01/08 Tennessee 27-24 Yes 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0
BYU
09/13/08 at BYU 0-59 Yes 1 5 0 4 4 0 0 0 0
Arizona
09/20/08 Arizona 10-31 Yes 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0
Fresno St.
09/27/08 Fresno St. 31-36 Yes 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
Washington St.
10/04/08 Washington St. 28-3 Yes 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1
Oregon
10/11/08 at Oregon 24-31 Yes 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0
Stanford
10/18/08 Stanford 23-20 Yes 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0
California
10/25/08 at California 20-41 Yes 0 0 0 4 5 0 0 0 1
Oregon St.
11/08/08 Oregon St. 6-34 Yes 1 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0
Washington
11/15/08 at Washington 27-7 Yes 1 0 0 2 4 0 0 0 1
Arizona St.
11/28/08 at Arizona St. 9-34 Yes 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 1
Southern California
12/06/08 Southern California 7-28 Yes 0 0 0 6 2 0 0 0 0
Season Totals 3 5 0 28 32 0 0 0 4





CURTIS GRANT Ohio State BIO


Class:
Senior
Hometown:
Richmond, Va.
High School:
Hermitage

Ohio State Overview: Curtis Grant, a physically imposing young man, is a true senior and one of the most experienced players on Ohio State's defense with 30 games played and 13 starts ... he has worked long and hard at his game and his efforts paid off with starting assignments in 12 games in 2013 ... he enters his senior campaign with 62 career tackles and four tackles-for-loss ... he is majoring in sociology.

2014 Season:
Co-captain
• Butkus Award preseason watch list
• Recorded his first career INT vs. Illinois
• Career-high 13 tackles and 2.0 TFL vs. Virginia Tech
• Has 115 career tackles, 9.0 TFL and 3.5 sacks
• One of the most experienced defenders with 25 career
starts at linebacker, 12 of those coming in 2013
• 10 tackles in the Sugar Bowl win over Alabama

2013 Season: Grant was slowed late in the season with ankle and back issues, but the junior managed to play in 12 of the team's 14 games with 12 starts ... after starting in the first nine games of the season, he missed a start at Illinois, but he was in the starting lineup the next two games vs. Indiana and Michigan, and again vs. Michigan State the next week in the Big Ten championship game ... Grant had 52 tackles with four tackles-for-loss, including 2.5 sacks, on the season ... he recorded career highs with 10 tackles and six solo tackles in the win over Northwestern ... the following week his father, Curtis R. Grant, passed away after an illness ... after taking some time off that coincided with a team "off" week, Grant came back for Ohio State's next game vs. Iowa and recorded eight tackles.

2012 Season: Grant started the first three games of the season and came off the bench in five of the team's final nine games ... he recorded a then-personal best of three tackles against both Miami and Central Florida.

2011 Season: Grant was considered the top-rated prospect in the Ohio State Class of 2011 recruits, and he played in 10 games as a true freshman in 2011, mostly on special teams, and recorded two tackles ... he had a huge special teams play in the 33-29 win over Wisconsin: recovering a blocked punt by Ryan Shazier at the 1 that set up a Jordan Hall touchdown.

More on Curtis: Grant was a three-year all-Richmond metro defender while playing for coach Patrick Kane at Hermitage H.S. ... he totalled 134 tackles, 15 TFL and six sacks as a senior and was named to the prestigious Parade All-America and USA Today all-USA teams ... he was the leading tackler for the East in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl ... Curits is the son of Gloria Grant and the late Curtis R. Grant.

CURTIS GRANT'S DEFENSIVE STATS
YEAR G-GS UA A TOT TFL YD SCK PBU
2011 10-0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0
2012 8-3 2 6 8 0 0 0 0
2013 12-10 24 28 52 4.0 18 2.5 2
TOT 30-13 28 34 62 4.0 18 2.5 2





MARTIN WALLACE
Offensive Guard/Tackle
Temple University Owls
#73
6:05.7-306
New York, New York
Northwestern University
Beacon School

Transferred to Temple after two years at Northeastern which discontinued its football program ... eligible to play for the Owls immediately.

Honors: RAYCOM College Football All-Star Classic participant … 2012 BIG EAST All-Academic Team honoree … 2012 second-team All-BIG EAST … 2012 third-team All-BIG EAST by College Sports Madness … 2012, 2011, and 2010 Philadelphia Inquirer Academic All-Area Football Team ... 2012 Midseason second-team All-BIG EAST by Phil Steele … 2012 preseason fourth-team All-BIG EAST selection by Phil Steele’s College Football … 2012 College Sports Madness third-team All-BIG EAST selection … 2011-12 Mid-American Conference Honor Roll 2012 and 2011 Athletic Director’s Honor Roll … 2010 Academic All-MAC Honorable Mention selection.

2012: Team captain … started all 11 games at right tackle … the only returning starter to the O-Line … also played on the field goal unit … led the young O-Line in the win over Villanova with no sacks allowed … lettered.

2011: Started all 13 games at right tackle … one of nine Owls to start every game … also played on the field goal unit … o-line combined for 147 starting appearances … providing great protection, the o-line gave up no sacks against Wyoming, Ohio, Buffalo, and Akron … lettered.

2010: Played in all 12 games with two starts at left tackle … also played on the punt and field goal units … started at left tackle against Ohio and Miami … saw action at right tackle … lettered.

College: Started every game on the offensive line in 2009 … played right and left tackle … as a true freshman in 2008.

High School: Team captain … 2008 graduate of the Beacon School … played two seasons of varsity football for the Harlem Hellfighters under head coach Duke Ferguson ... named first-team All-City as a senior .. .named to the All-Combine team by Scout.com in 2007 ... team was runner-up in the PSAL Cup Division Championship.

Personal: Martin Gordon Wallace … born April 22, 1990, in New York City ... parents are Ted Wallace and Susan Gordon-Clark … criminal justice major.



PRO DAY
Dates: 03/21/13
Hand: 10 3/8 Arm: 34 1/4
Wingspan: 81 3/4
Height: 6057
Weight: 306
40 Yard Dash (HH): 5.34
20 Yard (HH): 2.98
10 Yard (HH): 1.77
225 Lb. Bench Reps: 25
Vertical Jump: 29
Broad Jump:
20 Yrd Shuttle: 4.60
3-Cone Drill: 7.57
40 Time Range: 5.34-5.50


Dammit, Dave  
Montreal Man : 4/22/2017 1:51 pm : link
Can't you keep this stuff secret so other teams won't jump on these guys before the Giants. Sheeeeeesh.
No, wait.  
Montreal Man : 4/22/2017 1:51 pm : link
My bad. They're signed.

You're off the hook.
Whats the scoop with Rahim Moore?  
PatersonPlank : 4/22/2017 1:53 pm : link
Why wasn't he successful in the NFL?
MOORE  
nflscouting : 4/22/2017 2:45 pm : link
Serious neck issues-surprised he passed physical

MONTREAL MAN  
nflscouting : 4/22/2017 2:48 pm : link
Saw you corrected yourself after jumping the gun. As for "secrets," everybody knows everybody's business these days. GMs might remain tight-lipped, but trust me, get a few scouts in a bar and they spill more beans that a drunk sever at a Mexican restaurant. Remember these reports are PR use only
Was the 40 time expected, or a surprise - Moore?  
Bob in Newburgh : 4/22/2017 2:49 pm : link
Barely adequate for a SS, and not adequate for a FS unless he has truly phenomenal reaction times to compensate.

Certainly other aspects of writeup indicate this is a FS.
To Bob-Newburgh  
nflscouting : 4/22/2017 3:03 pm : link
Neither position will matter if that neck goes out again
RE: MONTREAL MAN  
Montreal Man : 4/22/2017 4:03 pm : link
In comment 13438448 nflscouting said:
Quote:
Saw you corrected yourself after jumping the gun. As for "secrets," everybody knows everybody's business these days. GMs might remain tight-lipped, but trust me, get a few scouts in a bar and they spill more beans that a drunk sever at a Mexican restaurant. Remember these reports are PR use only


Thanks. You're too kind. I was just stupid and didn't read carefully.
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