Jonathan Smith (running back)

Jonathan McKenzi Smith (born October 19, 1981) was an American football player for the Amsterdam Admirals. Lives in Cypress, CA.

Jonathan Smith
Smith in 2007
Position:Running back
Personal information
Born: (1981-10-19) October 19, 1981
Pasadena, California
Height:5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight:195 lb (88 kg)
Career information
High school:Narbonne
(Harbor City, California)
College:Washington State
Undrafted:2004
Career history
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Career highlights and awards
Pasadena City College
  • Mission Conference Champion (2001)
  • South County Bowl Champion (2001)
  • South County Bowl MVP (2001)
  • Player Of The Year (2001)
  • 1st Team All-American (2001)
  • 1st Team All-State (2001)
  • 1st Team All-Conference (2001)
  • Pasadena City College Team MVP (2001)
  • Most Inspirational Offensive Player (2001)
  • Pasadena City College Hall of Fame (2011)

Washington State

  • Pacific-10 co-champion (2002)
  • Rose Bowl (2002)
  • Holiday Bowl champions (2003)
  • 2nd Team All-Pacific-10 (2003)
  • Washington State Offensive MVP (2003)

NFL Europe

High school career

He rushed 142 times for 1646 yards and 22 touchdowns. Earned All-Los Angeles City and league MVP honors as a senior at Narbonne High School in Harbor City, CA.

College career

After attending Pasadena Community College, he transferred to Washington State University, where he played 25 games (starting eight) and scored 15 touchdowns.[1]

He rushed for 1,245 yards on 296 carries (4.2-yard average) with 15 touchdowns. He also caught 48 passes for 525 yards with 3 touchdowns and 15 kickoff returns for 250 yards. Earned All-Pac-10 second-team honors after seeing duty in all 13 games as a senior. Rushed for 961 yards and 10 touchdowns in 2003. Added 33 receptions for 349 yards and 1 score. Appeared in 12 games as a reserve running back in 2002 and carried the ball 72 times for 284 yards and 5 touchdowns. Caught 15 passes for 176 yards and 2 scores. Enjoyed a standout 2001 season while smashing every rushing record at Pasadena Community College in 2001 before transferring to Washington State. Earned Junior College Gridware All-America and Mission Conference Player of the Year honors. Ran for 2,049 yards on 223 carries and scored 22 rushing touchdowns with a 9.7 rushing average. Added 46 catches for 533 yards and 9 touchdowns. Set a national junior college record with 515 all-purpose yards in a single game.

Pro career

After not being selected in the 2004 NFL Draft, Smith was signed by the Kansas City Chiefs.[2] He was released in September, but was signed to the practice squad in December.[3][4] In 2005, he was assigned to the Amsterdam Admirals of NFL Europe, playing in the backfield alongside Jarrett Payton, son of Pro Football Hall of Famer Walter Payton.[1] That year, the Admirals won World Bowl XIII against the Berlin Thunder; Smith scored a 22-yard touchdown in the game.[5]

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gollark: I guess so. If you need, say, ten changes to an enzyme to bring it from one state to a much better one, but it works much worse/totally breaks while it's in the middle of both, it's hard for it to evolve to the better version.
gollark: If one what is stuck?
gollark: I was going to say, though: with human eyes - the light-sensitive bit is behind some other stuff, and while a goal-directed human engineer would probably go "I'll just rotate this thing then", if you don't have a convenient series of changes which still leave everything working in each intermediate state, you can't really get it evolving into the new version.

References

  1. Preston, Michael (June 10, 2005). "Admirable Admiral hopes to catch Chiefs' attention". The Spokesman-Review.
  2. "National Football League". The Gazette (Montreal). April 28, 2004. Retrieved October 29, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  3. "Traffic". Press & Sun-Bulletin. September 1, 2004. Retrieved October 29, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  4. "Transactions". Edmonton Journal. December 30, 2004 via Newspapers.com.
  5. Kammerer, Roy (June 12, 2005). "Admirals sail to World title". Missoulian. Retrieved October 29, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
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