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Brian Collins Westbrook (Born on September 2, 1979 in Fort Washington, MD) is an American football player who currently plays running back for the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL. He is considered one of the most consistent players, in terms of yardage, in the NFL. He is one of the most elusive backs in the NFL. He also is excellent at catching passes out of the backfield or as a slot receiver. For this reason, he is often compared to Marshall Faulk.CollegeHe was a standout running back at Villanova University from 1997-2001. Though he battled through several injuries, he holds the all-time NCAA record with 9,885 all-purpose yards, breaking the 9,301 yards accumulated by Brian Shay of Emporia State. In 46 career games, he scored 542 points with 84 TDs, carried the ball 725 times for 4,499 yards (6.2 avg.), caught 219 passes for 2,639 yards and gained 2,433 yards and 4 TDs on kickoff returns. Along the way, he established 41 school, 13 Atlantic Ten Conference and 5 NCAA records.He became the only player in I-AA history to score 160 or more points twice in a career and the first player in the history of college football at any level with 1,000 rushing and 1,000 receiving yards in one season (1998). He is one of only two players in Villanova history to rush for over 1,000 yards in a season and he accomplished that feat three times. He was a consensus All-America and two-time A-10 offensive player of the year and was the 2001 recipient of the Walter Payton Award (as the top player in NCAA Division 1-AA). As a senior, he amassed 2,823 combined net yards and scored 29 touchdowns. CareerDespite his dominance in college, NFL teams were hesitant to draft him in the 2002 NFL Draft for three reasons: his small size (he listed at only 5'8", 200 lb (91 kg)), his injury history, and his NCAA Division I-AA experience.The Eagles took a risk, and picked the hometown favorite in the third round of that draft, and he has since blossomed into one of the NFL's most elusive players. Westbrook made his mark in the NFL in the 2003 season with a 4th quarter punt return against the Giants, a play which managed to turn the Eagles season around as they went to the NFC Championship Game. In the 2004 season he netted nearly as many receiving yards as rushing yards, creating numerous problems with opposing teams' defenses and helping to propel the Eagles to a 13-3 season. He was added to his first Pro Bowl after the 2004 season. Westbrook signed a 5-year contract extension with the Eagles in November 2005, after Brian held out of training camp and months of hectic negotiations. It was announced on December 6, 2005, that Westbrook would miss the rest of the 2005 season due to a mid-foot injury suffered the night before against the Seattle Seahawks. This announcement put more strain on an Eagles' team that was struggling to find its identity after the loss of Pro-Bowl players Donovan McNabb, Terrell Owens, Hank Fraley and Tra Thomas. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Brian Westbrook ] Some related entries: Ned Hanlon | Claiborne Farm | Colin Winkelmann | John Madden | Bobby Martin | Mike Richardson | Trev Faulk | David Grey | Amy Acuff | Pie Traynor | Alexandra Stevenson This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Brian Westbrook; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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