Jerame Tuman

Jerame Dean Tuman (born March 24, 1976) is a former American football tight end. He was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the fifth round of the 1999 NFL Draft. He won Super Bowl XL with the Steelers, defeating the Seattle Seahawks. He played college football at Michigan.

Jerame Tuman
Tuman in August 2005
No. 84
Position:Tight end
Personal information
Born: (1976-03-24) March 24, 1976
Liberal, Kansas
Height:6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight:253 lb (115 kg)
Career information
High school:Liberal (KS)
College:Michigan
NFL Draft:1999 / Round: 5 / Pick: 136
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Receptions:46
Receiving yards:541
Touchdowns:7
Player stats at NFL.com

He also has played for the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League.

Early years

Tuman played both tight end and defensive end at Liberal High School. He was a Prep Football Report All-America and All-Midlands selection and rated the fifth-best tight end prospect in the nation by Blue Chip Illustrated. He also earned a state championship during his junior. Tuman also lettered in track while competing in the discus, triple jump and sprint relays.

College career

Tuman played college football for the University of Michigan, playing tight end. He joined the team in 1995, and graduated after the 1998 season, earning First Team All-Big Ten honors in 1996, 1997, and 1998. He was also named an All-American by several news outlets in 1997.

Tuman was the starting tight end for the 1997 undefeated team named National Champions by the Associated Press, and scored the decisive touchdown in the 1998 Rose Bowl victory over Washington State which secured their undefeated season.

During his time at Michigan, Tuman was part of an offensive bread and butter play with quarterback Brian Griese, in which Griese rolled out on a play-action bootleg to find an open Tuman. The play was run successfully throughout the 1997 season, including 4 times against Colorado and for a go-ahead score in the 1998 Rose Bowl.[1]

Professional career

Pittsburgh Steelers

He was selected with the third pick of the fifth round of the 1999 NFL Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers. He spent 9 years with the Steelers, primarily as the second-string tight end. Most of his playing time was during two tight end sets and on special teams. On February 22, 2008, he was released by the Steelers.

Arizona Cardinals

On March 3, 2008 the Arizona Cardinals signed Tuman to a two-year contract. Ken Whisenhunt, the head coach of the Cardinals, had previously served as tight ends coach and offensive coordinator for the Steelers during Tuman's time with the team.

Tuman was released by the Cardinals on December 24 after the team signed linebacker Victor Hobson. Tuman had appeared in three games for the Cardinals including two starts, catching three passes for 41 yards. On January 13, the Cardinals re-signed Tuman during the playoffs after tight end Stephen Spach was placed on injured reserve with a torn ACL.[2]

Personal

Jerame is married to Molly Tuman, sister of Tuman's former college teammate at Michigan, Scott Dreisbach. They have four children: one son, Canyon, and three daughters, Avery, Makenna and Mia.

He shares birthdays with Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning and former NFL quarterback Aaron Brooks.

In 2017, Tuman served as an assistant football coach at North Allegheny Senior High School in Wexford, Pennsylvania.

gollark: How do I assembler properly? I want "label" support in my "assembler", but I don't know how to have labels for stuff *after* the current place it's assembling work.
gollark: `MNZ FF 07 24` you?!
gollark: When the power button is pressed, automatic contrafelinous robots engage.
gollark: How insufficiently creative of you.
gollark: I am working on an unironic esolang.

See also

  • Lists of Michigan Wolverines football receiving leaders

References

  1. Griese fools Colorado 4 times on play-action passes to Tuman Archived August 24, 2007, at the Wayback Machine The Michigan Daily Online
  2. Arizona Re-Signs TE Tuman SI.com, January 13, 2009
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.