Jeff Van Camp

Jeff Van Camp (born September 9, 1987) is a former American football quarterback. He played college football at Florida Atlantic University, under head coach Howard Schnellenberger, as well as high school football at Navarre High School in Navarre, Florida.

Jeff Van Camp
PositionQuarterback
Career history
College
High schoolNavarre (FL)
Personal information
Born: (1987-09-09) September 9, 1987
Pensacola, Florida
Height6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Weight215 lb (98 kg)

High school

Van Camp's junior year campaign was halted by the effect that Hurricane Ivan had on the Navarre community. Forced to assist with his family's needs, his football season would be cut short. During his senior year, Van Camp lead the Navarre Raiders to a 4-8 team record that was plagued by inconsistency from a young core. In a pro-style double-wing formation offense, Van Camp was able to put together a 997 yards, 5 TDs season over 10 games in which earned him an invitation to the local area's highschool all-star game. Van Camp was also able to lead Navarre's two-senior member basketball team in points, rebounds, and blocks, numbers.[1] As a two-sport athlete, Van Camp was awarded the Santa Rosa County Athlete of the Year honor.[2]

College career

Initially offered a scholarship to Quincy University, Van Camp had a change of heart when he received a phone call from FAU staff members the morning of signing day offering him the prospect of a full scholarship close to home. In a quarterback class that included himself and Rusty Smith, Van Camp was redshirted his freshman year. Over the course of the 2007 & 2008 seasons, Van Camp would serve as Smith's backup, accumulating statistics of 10/25, 74 yards, 0 TDs, 2 INT, 1 rushing TD, 2 sacks [3] in mop-up duties, as Smith would lead the Owls to a Sun Belt Conference Championship and 2007 New Orleans Bowl & 2008 Motor City Bowl wins.

Junior year

Van Camp began the 2009 season behind senior Rusty Smith again. During a game against Middle Tennessee, Van Camp was thrust into action after Smith went down with a shoulder injury. With Smith sidelined for the remainder of the season, Van Camp received his first collegiate start the next week against University of Alabama-Birmingham. Van Camp finished the season 3-2 as a starter, accumulating statistics of 109/184, 1372 yards, 12 TDs, 2 INTs, 3 rushing TDs, 13 sacks, earning a QB rating of 141.23.[3]

Senior year

Van Camp's senior season began with much excitement and enthusiasm as many expected FAU to compete for the Sun Belt Conference championship after Van Camp's breakout junior season. After leading the team to a come-from-behind 32-31 win against UAB and competing in a 30-17 losing effort against Michigan State, FAU embarked on a 5-game losing streak. Out of conference contention, Van Camp lead to Owls to a three-game win streak, including a 3 touchdown effort against Louisiana-Lafayette. The Owls then finished the season on a three-game losing streak, including a season ending loss to rival Troy. Plagued with having to replace eight offensive starters, Van Camp was still able to put up the fourth best conference numbers, accumulating statistics of 192/335, 2459 yards, 17 TDs, 13 INTs, 34 sacks, earning a QB rating of 127.95.[3]

Statistics

 PassingRushing
SeasonTeamGPRatingAttCompPctYdsTDIntAttYdsTD
2007FAU-71.925240.019005-171
2008FAU-53.1020840.055013100
2009FAU6141.2318410959.2137212235193
2010FAU12127.9533519257.32459171355-1890

Personal life

Born to Bridgette and Jeff Van Camp Sr. in Pensacola, Florida, Van Camp grew up in the small beachfront community of Tiger Point, between Gulf Breeze and Navarre. He has a younger brother named Brandon. Van Camp completed his studies at Florida Atlantic University in December 2010, majoring in political science and interdisciplinary studies.[2]

gollark: No, kind of seriously. If they run around randomly, then radiation will still be greatest near the reactor, but spread reasonably.
gollark: What if you make radiation be carried by invisible goblins which run around instead?
gollark: No, the idea is that instead of having radiation movement be blocked by shielding, radiation emitters detect it nearby.
gollark: Not sure if this is practical, but shielding would be quite useful sometimes, though admittedly that implementation would work oddly.
gollark: Also, for shielding-type stuff, could you not make it so that radiation-emitting blocks have radiation output reduced by lead or something nearby?

References

  1. Archived 2018-03-12 at the Wayback Machine, Player Bio: Jeff VanCamp - FLORIDA ATLANTIC OWLS.
  2. , Navarre grad Van Camp closer to the NFL.
  3. , Jeff Van Camp Stats, Splits, News, Photos - Florida Atlantic Owls - NCAA College Football ESPN.com
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