Darion Clark

Darion Clark (born April 9, 1994) is an American football tight end for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). He played college basketball at the University of Southern California.

Darion Clark
No. 44 – Chicago Bears
Position:Tight end
Personal information
Born: (1994-04-09) April 9, 1994
Conyers, Georgia
Height:6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
Weight:235 lb (107 kg)
Career information
High school:Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Virginia)
College:USC
Undrafted:2018
Career history
Career NFL statistics
Player stats at NFL.com

Early years

Clark attended Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Virginia. He played basketball in high school with Oak Hill Academy's basketball prep program.[1]

College career

In college, he played basketball with the Charlotte 49ers as a freshman in the 2012–13 season. Then, he transferred to USC and played two seasons, 2014–15 and 2015–16, and transferred again as a senior to Grand Canyon Antelopes men's basketball and played for them in the 2016–17 season.[2] When he was in USC, he used to hang out a lot with the USC football team and said he began to miss it, he said "I began thinking about football all the time, and then I began having dreams, where I was playing football very vividly". Before he went to Grand Canyon, he seriously considered joining the USC football team, but had shoulder surgery so he played his last season at Grand Canyon.[3]

Professional career

Before signing

Clark started football camp in January 2018 and attended USC Pro Day in March 2018, but wasn't drafted in the 2018 NFL Draft.[4] He was invited to the New York Jets rookie minicamp in April of that year, but was not signed afterwards. Clark also attended the Spring League 2019 season and later the Pacific Pro Scrimmage where he received invitations to workout with the Indianapolis Colts and the Chicago Bears.[5]

Signing

He signed an undrafted free agent reserve contract with the Chicago Bears on the 6 January 2020.[6]

gollark: Oh, is ruby still a language which exists?
gollark: It's not in the excellent heavpoot style.
gollark: For Haskell, maybe incomprehensible algorithms, weird custom operators, functional purity and not doing anything, sort of thing.
gollark: Do Haskell and some ML-family language?
gollark: Its non-strict-equality operator is *interesting*, yes.

References

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