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Brandon Lloyd
File:Brandon Lloyd.JPG
At a game in Denver in September, 2010.
No. -     Free Agent
Wide receiver
Personal information
Date of birth: (1981-07-05) July 5, 1981 (age 42)
Place of birth: Kansas City, Missouri
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 200 lb (91 kg)
Career information
College: Illinois
NFL Draft: 2003 / Round: 4 / Pick: 124
Debuted in 2003 for the San Francisco 49ers
Career history
* San Francisco 49ers ( 2003 2005)
Career highlights and awards
* Pro Bowl (2010)
Career NFL statistics as of 2012
Receptions     385
Receiving yards     5,695
Receiving TDs     35
Stats at NFL.com

Brandon Matthew Lloyd (born July 5, 1981) is an American football wide receiver who is currently a free agent. He played college football at University of Illinois, and was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the Fourth round, 124th overall of the 2003 NFL Draft. Lloyd has also played for the Washington Redskins, Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos, St. Louis Rams, and New England Patriots.

Early years

Lloyd attended Blue Springs High School in Blue Springs, Missouri and was a letterman in football, basketball, and track. Lloyd grew up in a large family with three brothers and three sisters. His parents were both teachers and stressed education from a very young age.[1] In track he still holds a school record 7'4 high jump. In football, he was a three-time All-Suburban Big Eight honoree, and as a senior, he was also awarded All-Region by the Mo-Kan Magazine and was named an All-State honoree by the St.Louis Post-Dispatch.

College career

Lloyd attended the University of Illinois beginning in 1999. After a promising freshman season, Lloyd missed all of the 2000 season with a broken femur. He returned healthy and had outstanding seasons in both 2001 and 2002. He was a consensus First-Team All-Big Ten performer after his sophomore season in 2001, helping lead the Fighting Illini to a 10-2 record and a BCS berth in the Sugar Bowl.

After his junior season in 2002, Lloyd declared his eligibility for the NFL Draft. Of the seven children in the Lloyd family, he was the only one who started a career without finishing college. According to Brandon, "I saw [my mom] cry was when I told her I wasn't going back to school. She just thought that was the end of everything."[1]

Lloyd finished his college career having the second-most receiving yards (2,835) and touchdown catches (31) in Illinois history, and ranking third in all-time receptions (160).

Professional career

San Francisco 49ers

Lloyd was drafted in the Second round of the 2003 NFL Draft by the San Francisco 49ers. In his first game he blocked a punt against the Chicago Bears on September 7, 2003. On November 2, 2003, he caught his first touchdown pass against the St. Louis Rams. He finished the season with 14 receptions for 212 yards and 2 touchdowns. In 2004, Lloyd started and appeared in 13 games and finished the season with 43 catches for 565 yards and 6 touchdowns. During the 2005 season Lloyd started 15 games and had 48 receptions 733 yards receiving and had 5 touchdown catches. In Week 3 vs. the Dallas Cowboys, he recorded four catches for 142 yards and two touchdowns, including a 89-yard touchdown catch.

Washington Redskins

On Saturday March 11, 2006, the San Francisco 49ers traded Lloyd to Washington Redskins in exchange for a third-round draft pick in the 2006 NFL Draft and a fourth-round pick in the 2007 NFL Draft. His first season is widely considered a failure, as he caught 23 passes for no touchdowns. According to Howard Bryant of the Washington Post, citing NFL.com, "Lloyd suffered through the worst season for a starting receiver in the Super Bowl era... No starting No. 2 wide receiver in the NFL started more games (12) while producing less (23 catches, 365 yards)."

Lloyd never made it out of Joe Gibbs' doghouse, due to a questionable attitude and alleged poor work ethic. On Sunday, November 4, 2007, Lloyd was listed among Redskins inactives as the team traveled to play against the New York Jets. Citing the reason behind the move, Gibbs said that Lloyd had been told to remain behind in Washington as disciplinary action for missing important team meetings. Lloyd would spend the latter part of the 2007 season on injured reserve after having snapped his collar bone while making a diving touchdown catch during team practice.

On February 26, 2008, the Redskins released Lloyd, who caught only 21 passes for 315 yards for the 2007 season.

Chicago Bears

On March 7, 2008, Lloyd signed a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears after the release of Muhsin Muhammad and the loss of Bernard Berrian to free agency. The move reunited him with Bears offensive coordinator Ron Turner, who was Lloyd's head coach at Illinois. Lloyd had a successful start to his career in Chicago, establishing himself as a favorite target of quarterback Rex Grossman, with 15 catches in his first four games. An injury forced him to miss several weeks, and he fell out of favor with the coaching staff as a result.[2] He returned to the field in week 11, though did not approach his early-season productivity until the Bears' final game of the season, where he caught 4 passes from Grossmen for 64 yards.[3]

Denver Broncos

File:Brandonlloyd.jpg

Lloyd catching a pass for a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs on 11-14-2010.

Lloyd's contract with the Chicago Bears expired after the end of the 2008 season. In early April, Bears quarterback Kyle Orton was traded to the Denver Broncos in a deal involving Jay Cutler. As the offseason progressed, the Bears did not make any efforts to resign Lloyd. LLoyd signed with the Denver Broncos on June 15, 2009. Lloyd re-signed with the Broncos on March 15, 2010.[4]

During the Broncos' 24-20 loss to the Jets on 17 October, Lloyd was subjected to a helmet-to-helmet tackle/hit by New York safety Jim Leonhard, resulting in a 15-yard penalty. This hit, along with several other helmet-to-helmet hits during NFL games that weekend, led the league to announce such future 'devastating hits' or 'head shots' will be met with possible suspensions even for first-time offenders, a significant change in league policy, especially during an on-going season.[5]

He led the NFL in receiving yards with 1,448 yards for the 2010 season.[6] and was named 2nd Team All-Pro and was invited to the 2011 Pro Bowl.

St. Louis Rams

On October 17, 2011, Lloyd was traded to the St. Louis Rams, where he caught 71 passes. The Rams gave up a conditional sixth-round pick that was upgraded to a fifth-round pick because Lloyd had over 30 receptions.

New England Patriots

On March 17, 2012, Lloyd signed a three-year deal with the New England Patriots for $20 million with incentives to escalate it to $26.5 million. This deal reunited Lloyd with Josh McDaniels, his coach in Denver and Offensive Coordinator with the Rams. In week 3 he scored his first touchdown as a Patriot in arguably the most famous catch of his career. In week 8 he faced the St.Louis Rams his former team in London. He finished the game with 2 receptions, both for touchdowns. He finished the season with 74 catches for 911 yards and 4 touchdowns. He was released by the Patriots on March 16, 2013.[7]

Career statistics

Year Team G GS Rec Yards AVG LG TD
2003 SF 16 1 14 212 15.1 44 2
2004 SF 13 13 43 565 13.1 52 6
2005 SF 16 15 48 733 15.3 89 5
2006 WAS 15 12 23 365 15.9 52 0
2007 WAS 8 1 2 14 7.0 9 0
2008 CHI 11 5 26 364 14.0 32 2
2009 DEN 2 1 8 117 14.6 44 0
2010 DEN 16 11 77 1,448 18.8 71 11
2011 STL 11 10 51 683 13.4 37 5
2012 NE 16 15 74 911 12.3 53 4
Tot. N/A 128 88 385 5695 14.8 89 35

Music career

In addition to his football career, Lloyd has recorded music and attempted to launch a career as a rapper. In 2008 his single "She All Mine" made the Billboard R&B chart, and his song "Heavy" was featured on the Spike TV show Blue Mountain State.[8] Lloyd has received criticism for trying to balance careers in football and rap, but he says that making music is important to expressing who he really is. Quoted in a 2011 article, Lloyd said, "I have the guts to stand out and do something I'm passionate about, go against the grain and go against the conventional wisdom that the athlete-rap thing is unsuccessful. Yet I'm going to do it. People will say: 'Oh, you're doing hip-hop music? Who does he think he is, a rapper? He's trying to be someone he's not.' When in reality, I'd be someone I'm not by not expressing myself in music." [9]

References

External links

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