Dave Dickenson
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Dave Dickenson | |
---|---|
Date of birth | January 11, 1973 |
Place of birth | Great Falls, Montana |
Position(s) | Quarterback |
College | Montana |
Career Highlights | |
Awards | 1995 Walter Payton Award 2000 CFL MOP 2006 Grey Cup MVP |
Team(s) | |
1997–2000 2001–2002 2003–present |
Calgary Stampeders (CFL) San Diego Chargers (NFL) BC Lions (CFL) |
David Dickenson (born January 11, 1973 in Great Falls, Montana) is a professional Canadian football player. He is the current starting quarterback for the Canadian Football League British Columbia Lions and wears number 12. Dickenson also played quarterback collegiately at the University of Montana, where he led the Montana Grizzlies to the 1995 NCAA I-AA college football championship.
Contents |
[edit] High School Years
Dickenson attended C.M. Russell High School in Great Falls, Montana, was an excellent student, and lettered in football, basketball, and golf. In football, he led his teams to two State Championships. Dickenson graduated from C.M Russell High School in 1991 with a 4.0 grade-point average.
[edit] College Career
Dickenson is considered by many to be the greatest quarterback ever to play for the University of Montana. He owns numerous Big Sky Conference and Montana records. By the time he graduated in 1995, Dickenson had the highest completion percentage, highest percentage of passes for a touchdown, and fewest interceptions per pass in NCAA Division I-AA history. In his college career (including playoff games) he completed 1,015 of 1,477 passes (68.7%) for 13,486 yards, with 116 touchdowns and only 26 interceptions, and was responsible for 137 total touchdowns (116 passing and 21 rushing).
In 1995, Dickenson's senior season, he threw for 5,676 yards in fifteen games, including 1,500 in four playoff games. After leading the Grizzlies to the I-AA national championship in 1995, Dickenson won the 1995 Walter Payton Award as the outstanding offensive player in Division I-AA.
In Montana, he is known as "Super Dave" and "The Legend of the Fall." His college jersey number, #15, was retired by the University of Montana. He is one of only two players so honored. In 2004, he was voted the most popular athlete from Montana in a Sports Illustrated poll.[1]
[edit] Professional Career
[edit] Calgary Stampeders
Dickenson began his professional career with the CFL Calgary Stampeders in 1997. His best year with the Stampeders was 2000, when Dickenson led the CFL in passing efficiency (114.1) and completion percentage (64.3%). During the 2000 season, Dickenson earned Player of the Week honors once, was named a CFL All-Star, and won the CFL Most Outstanding Player Award. He won a Grey Cup championship with Calgary in 1998.
[edit] San Diego Chargers
After generating interest from the NFL following his outstanding 2000 CFL season, Dickenson spent two seasons (2001-2002) with the NFL San Diego Chargers. Following a disappointing 2002 NFL season with the Chargers, where he did not play a game, Dickenson returned to the CFL.
[edit] British Columbia Lions
Dickenson signed as a free agent with his current team, the British Columbia Lions in 2003. During the 2003 season, in which he led the Lions to an 11-7, fourth place finish in the CFL West Division, Dickenson's 36 touchdown passes and 5,496 yards were the second-highest single season marks in Lions' history behind Doug Flutie. Dickenson was named Offensive Player of the Month for August 2003, was the CFL Player of the Week in Week 5, and was awarded the Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy as the CFL West Division's Most Outstanding Player.
In 2004, Dickenson began the season as the Lions' starting quarterback, but gave way to backup Casey Printers after suffering a knee injury. Printers put on a dominating performance for the rest of the season, but in the West Division Final against the Saskatchewan Roughriders, was forced to leave the game with a shoulder injury in the fourth quarter, with the score tied 14-14. Dickenson, having recovered from knee surgery and shared quarterbacking duties with Printers late in the season, played the rest of the game and threw a touchdown pass in the Lions' 27-24 overtime victory.[2] Dickenson would start and play the entire Grey Cup game against the Toronto Argonauts, which the Lions lost by a score of 27-19.
Dickenson began the 2005 season embroiled in a quarterback controversy with Printers, who was named the 2004 CFL Most Outstanding Player. Dickenson emerged as the starter, and was instrumental in leading the Lions to an 11-0 start (where he played in 9 of the 11 games), en route to a 12-6 season finish. Dickenson set an all-time CFL record with a passing efficiency mark of 118.8. He fell just short of the attempts required to set a further mark with a 74.0% completion rate, due to 4 games missed because of a concussion. Dickenson was named CFL Player of the Month for both July and September, and was Player of the Week twice.
In 2006 Dave threw for 3032 yards and 22 Touchdowns while only playing 13 games. He led the Lions to franchise's 5th Grey Cup title on November 19, 2006 with a 25-14 win over the Montreal Alouettes. Dave was named Grey Cup MVP.
[edit] CFL Statistics
[edit] Passing
GP Year Team Att Comp % Yards Long TD % Int % Rating 6 1997 CAL 49 36 73.5 407 31 2 4.1 1 2.0 103.0 9 1998 CAL 113 79 69.9 1170 89 10 8.8 4 3.5 118.2 13 1999 CAL 343 219 63.8 3048 76 16 4.7 10 2.9 95.7 16 2000 CAL 493 317 64.3 4636 71 36 7.3 6 1.2 114.1 17 2003 BC 549 370 67.4 5496 103 36 6.6 12 2.2 112.7 6 2004 BC 98 62 63.3 967 68 8 8.2 2 2.0 114.6 12 2005 BC 342 253 74.0 3338 83 21 6.1 5 1.5 118.8 13 2006 BC 338 238 70.4 3032 92 22 6.5 7 2.1 111.2 97 2325 1574 67.7 22094 103 151 6.5 47 2.0 111.3
[edit] Rushing
GP Year Team Att Yards Avg Long TD Fum 6 1997 CAL 4 11 2.8 5 0 2 9 1998 CAL 15 66 4.4 24 3 1 13 1999 CAL 30 236 7.9 25 1 5 16 2000 CAL 56 309 5.5 36 5 8 17 2003 BC 44 311 7.1 21 2 7 6 2004 BC 12 78 6.5 16 0 1 12 2005 BC 49 299 6.1 24 3 1 13 2006 BC 32 195 6.1 0 0 1 97 242 1505 6.2 36 14 26
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Eric Francis (2004-11-22). T.O. in sorry state. SLAM! Sports. Retrieved on December 2, 2006.
- ^ Canadian Press (2004-11-14). O'Mahony kicks Lions into Grey Cup. TSN.ca. Retrieved on December 2, 2006.
[edit] External links
Preceded by Steve McNair |
Walter Payton Award 1995 |
Succeeded by Archie Amerson |
Preceded by Danny McManus |
CFL MOP 2000 |
Succeeded by Khari Jones |
Preceded by Ricky Ray |
Grey Cup MVP 2006 |
Succeeded by incumbent |
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Categories: 1973 births | American players of Canadian football | American football quarterbacks | British Columbia Lions players | Calgary Stampeders players | Canadian Football League quarterbacks | CFL MOP Award winners | Grey Cup champions | Montana Grizzlies football players | San Diego Chargers players | People from Great Falls, Montana | Living people | Canadian football stubs