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Thread: Pro. Jake Delhomme

  1. UL Football Cowboys can add Delhomme as a key player in 'err' game

    Twenty years ago, Bill Parcells picked Scott Brunner as the Giants' starting quarterback. Picked him over Phil Simms.

    A rookie head coach made his first major decision, and promptly blew it.

    From that dubious beginning, Parcells' track record obviously improved immensely when it came to talent evaluation.

    A year ago, he arrived at Valley Ranch as a Hall-of-Famer in waiting.

    What Big Bill did with the Cowboys in his first season simply accelerated his Canton credentials to something along the lines of a first- ballot, unanimous choice.

    Even, however, with 10 wins and the playoff trip, let the record show Parcells' first season with the Cowboys produced yet another résumé smudge mark when it came to evaluating a quarterback.

    Now we know. The Cowboys blew it big-time on Jake Delhomme.

    But even by my normal standards, that is the cheapest of second guesses.

    Yet ...

    Here's Delhomme, quarterbacking the Carolina Panthers in the NFC Championship Game today in Philadelphia. Neither player nor team was supposed to be here.

    And a major reason both made it has, of course, been Delhomme, who just as easily could have been a Cowboy this season. In fact, those close to Delhomme say the Cowboys were his first choice as he sought to relocate from New Orleans.

    Last March, Parcells' third month on the job, Cajun Jake was at Valley Ranch, hoping to find a free-agent home after spending six years with the Saints doing basically nothing. With an emphasis on nothing.

    Delhomme had pine sores from riding so much bench.

    Hard to believe, but when Jake showed up at Valley Ranch 10 months ago, both Quincy Carter (two seasons) and Chad Hutchinson (one season) had more NFL playing experience than this 6-year "veteran."

    Right away, that was a problem, admits Jerry Jones.

    "[Delhomme] would have given us four young quarterbacks," he said, including Clint Stoerner with Hutchinson and Carter. "At the time, we really didn't have a good read on the three we had. Chad had been the starter the year before, but Bill had already said the competition would be wide open. Based on what we knew, Delhomme was like Stoerner."

    Ouch. But the comparison is basically true. Stoerner, who eventually was cut by Parcells in training camp, had hung around here on the quarterbacking fringe for three years.

    Still, the Cowboys were prepared to offer Delhomme a contract last March. But the decision was made to low-ball him on money. In Carolina, where Delhomme visited after Valley Ranch, the thinking was much different, at least on money.

    The Panthers were deemed foolish by some for giving Jake a 2-year, $4 million deal. At that price, Delhomme wisely signed with the Panthers.

    The rest of the story

    By Randy Galloway
    Star-Telegram Staff Writer


  2. UL Football When Jets passed on Delhomme

    FOXBORO - Now that he's in the Super Bowl, Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme is a nearly a household name. Years ago, before he appeared on the NFL radar screen, he almost became a member of the Jets.

    The Jets came "really, really close" to signing Delhomme during the 1997 season, Patriots coach Bill Belichick revealed yesterday. At the time, Belichick was the Jets' assistant head coach under Bill Parcells.

    Delhomme, out of work for three months after being waived by the Saints in the 1997 preseason, was flown to Hofstra to audition before the Jets' coaches and scouts. The way Belichick remembers it, the Jets, intrigued by Delhomme's potential, brought him in for a second tryout. He was a virtual unknown, a rookie free agent from Louisiana-Lafayette.

    The rest of the story


  3. UL Football Nothing to write Delhomme about

    This could have been Donovan McNabb's first Super Bowl, the final crowning of the game's next great star. But no.

    It could have been Brett Favre's last Super Bowl, the grand farewell. But no.

    The Green Bay Packers, with all their grand history of Lombardi and ... No.

    Jake Delhomme.

    Carolina Panthers.

    How's that for the star appeal needed to carry our interest for two weeks until Super Bowl XXXVIII in Houston?

    Jake Delhomme. Carolina Panthers. Houston. New England Patriots and coach Bill Belichick, the straight man's straight man.

    Super Bowl Sizzle?

    ''I realize it's like having a great love story on the screen played by some overweight, overaged so-and-so,'' said Marv Levy, the Buffalo Bills coach in IV of the first XXXVII Super Bowls. ''Maybe fans say 'Ah heck, this one doesn't have a lot of glamor to it.

    ''But the people in Carolina are excited and the people in New England are excited, and the people from next year's come-from-nowhere city are going to be excited, and they have hope now. I know people like offensive fireworks, and these two teams are built on defense and percentage play. But to me, it's the ultimate chess match.''

    Exactly. A chess match. On TV. For five hours.

    Actually, Levy meant that as a compliment, saying the game might not excite the fans now, but it excites a coach who can see all the strategy that is going to go into this game.

    ''I realize it won't have a lot of actors in the end zone and no receiver with a telephone stuck in the goalpost pad,'' he said. ''But the greatest game I ever coached in was an AFC Championship game, Jim Kelly vs. John Elway. And everyone said it was going to be this great shootout and this and that. Going into fourth quarter it was 0-0. We finally won 10-7.''

    Fine, but the sizzle is in the hype, in Kelly and Elway and ''everyone'' saying things.

    Do you think they will know how to say your name now? That's what Delhomme, pronounced Delhomme, was asked after the Panthers' victory over Philadelphia Sunday.

    ''You know, however they say it, that's all right,'' he said. ''All I know is that we'll be in the Super Bowl, you know. If they say Delhomme, that's fine. But certainly, I'd love them to say Delhomme.''

    Last week, the Philadelphia papers were calling him, ''Jake Who?'' or ''The Guy Who Couldn't Start for the Saints.'' Delhomme used to ride the bench in New Orleans.

    And even if anyone is saying Delhomme's name right now, the real trick is in spelling it.

    This was one of the guys the Bears were considering this past offseason, when they ended up signing Kordell Stewart. Now, Stewart might be without a job and Delhomme is in the Super Bowl.

    The rest of the story

    BY GREG COUCH SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST


  4. People Town (Breaux Bridge) keeps Delhomme grounded

    BREAUX BRIDGE, La. -- To understand the man who will start at quarterback for the Carolina Panthers in the Super Bowl, you have to study Jake Delhomme's roots.

    You have to come here, to this town of 7,200 in the heart of Cajun country that advertises itself as the "Crawfish Capital of the World."

    You have to see the massive oak tree where Delhomme's father hung the tire so Jake could practice throwing footballs. You have to spot the street signs in Breaux Bridge that are written in both French and English. You have to go to nearby Lafayette to visit the small Catholic high school where Jake starred and hear about that football game in which he did everything but sing the national anthem.

    Most of all, you have to realize how close Jake Delhomme is to his family -- literally and figuratively.

    Delhomme lives in Breaux Bridge in the offseason with his wife, Keri, and 13-month-old daughter Lauren in what used to be his grandfather's house. The tidy ranch home is so unassuming most Super Bowl quarterbacks probably have a TV room boasting more square footage.

    Delhomme's house used to be a quarter-mile away from Jake's parents'. But that wasn't close enough. So a moving company picked up the house and placed it 50 yards from the house of Jake's parents, Jerry and Marcia Delhomme.

    People don't leave Breaux Bridge much. For his entire life, this town has been Jake Delhomme's sanctuary.

    "We don't veer far away from our roots here," says Jerry Delhomme, Jake's father. "There were five kids in my family, and none of us ever left."

    Growing up in a family that acted like it was always celebrating Thanksgiving rubbed off on the Panthers' quarterback. He has made sure his life includes constant reminders of his family, and of Breaux Bridge.

    Delhomme calls his parents more in a week than some of us do in a year. He went to college 10 minutes from his childhood home to play for the Louisiana-Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns. He married a hometown girl who was his seventh-grade girlfriend.

    And he chose to wear No. 17 with the Panthers because his daughter was born Dec. 17, 2002, after his wife went through 17 hours of labor.

    Jake's big brother

    Jerry and Marcia Delhomme have two sons.Jeff, their oldest, came five years before Jake. Jeff was the original star athlete in the family -- a speedster who got a full scholarship to McNeese State and attracted some NFL interest. But Jeff blew out his knee in college. He now lives a half-mile down the road with his wife and three kids.

    During the offseason, the brothers frequently play catch with a football in the back yard so Jake can keep his arm in shape.

    "Jake was always a part of things with me -- a nagging part of things, usually," Jeff says laughing. "But once he got into high school, we developed a close bond."

    Like Jake, Jeff is tough. When Jake told family members last week not to go anywhere near Philadelphia for the NFC Championship Game, fearing for their safety, Jake's wife and parents obeyed.

    Jeff didn't. He went to the game with a friend, saw several fights in the stands, ate a cheesesteak, cheered Carolina's win and loved it all.

    Horses in the blood

    Jake, Jeff and Jerry Delhomme share a passion for horses.

    Together, the Delhommes own seven thoroughbreds and race them for modest stakes at tracks throughout Louisiana. There's a small red barn in back of Jerry Delhomme's house where he keeps horses.

    A scrappy athlete at one time who now favors boots and baseball caps, Jerry once worked a little as a jockey -- he's 5 feet 8, while Jake is 6 feet 2. Jerry will occasionally lapse into French when speaking about Jake this season -- "C'est incroyable!" -- but the parents always spoke English at home while Jake and Jeff were growing up.

    Jerry Delhomme trains the horses while also working full-time as a government food-safety supervisor. Jake's mother works full-time in the local school system office.

    Jake and Jeff have gone to the racetrack with their father for decades, cleaning stalls, conditioning horses and soaking up knowledge. The night of Carolina's playoff win at St. Louis on Jan. 10, Jake became even happier when he learned that a $7,500 claim the Delhommes had put in on a racehorse had gone through, allowing them to purchase a new filly.

    "I think he was almost as excited about that horse," Jerry Delhomme says, "as he was about the touchdown pass to Steve Smith."

    More than just crawfish

    In 1859, Breaux Bridge was founded, mostly by Cajuns. Cajuns are descendants of the French Canadians whom the British drove from the captured French colony of Acadia and down into the fertile bayou of Louisiana.Breaux Bridge is 127 miles west of New Orleans and 223 miles east of Houston, where on Feb. 1 Delhomme will lead Carolina against New England in the Super Bowl.

    Delhommes have been in town from the beginning -- the name means "The Man" in French. Delhommes have served the town as postmasters, farmers, laborers and now as mayor. Jack Dale Delhomme, a cousin of Jerry Delhomme, is in his sixth year as mayor and is so popular he ran unopposed in the last election.

    There's a historical marker outside Breaux Bridge's City Hall. It notes that the town has been "long recognized for its culinary artistry in the preparation of crawfish."

    Mayor Jack Dale wants to make sure people know there is more to Breaux Bridge than crawfish, however. Along with Delhomme, the town has turned out a recent Miss USA, along with several football players on LSU's national championship team and Houston Texans star rookie running back Domanick Davis.

    "We do produce good doctors, lawyers, soldiers and athletes down here," the mayor says. "We're not just all about those mud bugs. Don't believe everything you saw in that movie `The Waterboy.' "

    Trumping the Saints

    Delhomme's 1993 graduating class at Teurlings High in nearby Lafayette included the quarterback, his future wife and 42 others. Delhomme played both ways in football. He was good enough as a defensive back that he made all-state as a senior, and didn't make all-state as a quarterback.

    In a family of storytellers who talk with their hands, it's not surprising Delhomme was always excitable on the field.

    People still talk about one game. Against a rival Catholic school, Delhomme grabbed two interceptions and threw for more than 400 yards.

    Still, his team was about to lose, so he volunteered to try a field goal. He made it to put Teurlings ahead. Then the other team drove the ball and lined up for the possible game-winning field goal in the final seconds.

    Delhomme came straight up the middle to block the field goal and seal the win.

    "I've been in coaching 24 years, and Jake's a very good athlete but not the best one I've ever coached," says Sonny Charpentier, who helped coach Delhomme in both football and basketball. "But he's the most competitive player I've ever had. By far."

    The competitiveness -- everyone says Delhomme was always just like that. Born with it.

    So what has Delhomme inherited from Breaux Bridge besides that Cajun accent?

    Toughness from his older brother.

    Leadership from his coaches.

    A work ethic from his parents.

    And a sense of family -- and decency -- from everyone.


    The rest of the story

    Scott Fowler: (704) 358-5140
    sfowler@charlotteobserver.com.


  5. UL Football Delhomme's therapy works

    Dreams cushion reality, make it bearable, allow us to imagine ourselves in ways we'll never be. So a physical therapist playing in a pickup touch football game can throw the winning touchdown pass against his buddies on a Saturday but in his mind's eye see himself celebrating a victory in the Super Bowl.

    Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme attributes part of his success to getting a chance to play in NFL Europe for two seasons.
    By Eileen Blass, USA TODAY

    Reality reflects dreams, bears out the work and time and patience necessary to achieve them. And that's why Jake Delhomme will be throwing passes in the Super Bowl instead of supervising exercise classes at a rehab clinic and pondering what might have been.

    Coming out of Louisiana-Lafayette in 1997, this quarterback from Breaux Bridge, La., faced a triple option that almost didn't include football. No NFL team drafted him, only a few showed interest in checking him out and employment in the real world beckoned.

    "I think I probably could have done whatever I wanted to," he says. "I did very well in school. I was a major in pre-physical therapy, so physical therapy school was something that I considered. Coaching was also something that I thought I could do well in and enjoy it. But I'm kind of glad I didn't have to go down that avenue just yet. I just want to stay in this job for a little while."

    In his first season with the Panthers, Delhomme has started and won more games (13) than he played in during his first six seasons with the New Orleans Saints (12), whom he joined as an undrafted rookie. Signed as a free agent last spring by the Panthers, Delhomme became another testament to perseverance at a position valued highly and nurtured badly by the NFL.

    With the Saints, he could barely escape the bench area, went to NFL Europe to get playing time and found that a rude slap.

    "I was a backup," he says. "You talk about a blow to your ego. I mean, if you can't start in the NFL Europe, how are you going to make a roster?"

    He's a little tough on himself there. On that 1998 Amsterdam Admirals team, he played behind Kurt Warner, who, in a year's time, would become the world's best-known former grocery clerk and an electrifying passer with the Super Bowl champion St. Louis Rams.

    That same year Delhomme went back to Europe and led the Frankfurt Galaxy to the World Bowl title. OK, it might not sound like much, but Delhomme says it's exactly what young quarterbacks need. To improve, they have to play. To play, they have to improve.

    The rest of the story

    By Larry Weisman, USA TODAY


  6. #256

    Default

    Can't get link to work.


  7. Default

    fixed


    Geaux Cajuns

  8. Ragin' Cajuns Geaux Jake / Geaux UL (signs)

    I took a right off Willow this morning and had to pull over to take a picture of this PRO JAKE sign at Teurlings.

    I am hoping someone can let us know who had the sign made and who made the sign so we can give them props.

    As far as I am concerned a pro Jake sign is a pro UL sign. How cool would a Sadie Hawkins SuperBowl dance party be?

    Attached Images Attached Images

  9. #259

    Default

    The sign was made and donated by Lowry's Sign Shop.


  10. #260

    Default

    Way to geaux Lowry's are they pro UL as well?


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