Hometown: Valrico, FL
Career: 2001-2005
Record: 39-22, Bowl Record: 1-3 including a BCS win
Jahmile Addae was one of the hardest hitting safeties to
play for the old gold and blue. Addae was excited about the possibility to play
in Coach Casteel’s 3-3-5 odd stack defense. He knew that with three safeties on
the field at all times, his chances of early playing time were exceptional.
Following a freshman season of special teams play, Addae earned a starting
safety spot for the Mountaineers. He provided solid deep pass coverage but
really excelled in run support. Things looked bright for Addae coming into the
2003 season. Unfortunately, Addae would suffer a season-ending shoulder injury
that forced him to take a medical redshirt. Many were skeptical that Addae
would still be the same punishing hitter that he was prior to his shoulder
injury. He silenced the doubters with one massive hit against the Hokies. Addae
would have a successful 2004 campaign, stacking up 59 tackles, 4 pass break
ups, and two interceptions. Addae‘s senior season was great not just for him,
but also for the Mountaineers defense. The WVU defense was loaded with talent
(Wiley, Gyorko, Lorello, McLee, Addae, etc) and primed to make it to a BCS
game. Addae would quarterback the WVU defense to a 10-1 regular season. Addae
culminated his college career with a solid performance in the 2006 Sugar Bowl
win over Georgia (5 tackles). Addae’s career totals are 253 tackles, 27 pass
break ups, 8 interceptions, and two touchdowns. While Addae was a really
talented safety that was named All-Big East twice (2004, 2005, it still remains
to be seen if he will make the WVU Sports Hall of Fame. He is certainly not a
lock for selection, but he should at least be on the bubble.
Memorable Game: Addae showed off his big play potential in
his last home game at Milan Puskar Stadium, in the 2005 edition of the Backyard
Brawl. The Mountaineers were looking for revenge against a Pitt squad that
narrowly beat them year before. West Virginia was pursuing their first ever BCS
berth and were not going to let the Panthers stand in their way. The
Thanksgiving time game was frigid, with temperatures reported near 7-degrees
Fahrenheit. Both teams surprisingly started hot, trading scores en route to a
14-13 Mountaineers lead late in the second quarter. West Virginia’s defense
then put a strangle-hold on the Panthers offense, keeping Pitt scoreless the
rest of the game. Slaton and White piled on points to give WVU a big lead late
in the game. Addae would put the final nail in Pitt’s coffin with a 40
interception return for a touchdown. WVU cruised by Pitt 45-13.
Competition: Other players that were under consideration for
this selection included Steve Grant, Puppy Wright (who wore #1 as a senior),
and Wes Lyons.
Teaser: The player selected at #3 hails from the West
Virginia steel town of Weirton. This player is fondly remembered by his
nickname “Weirton Steel.” He was a quick, hard-nosed runner that truly looked
like WVU’s own man of steel.
No comments:
Post a Comment