BRIAN MITCHELL— A standout quarterback at Plaquemine High School and UL-Lafayette, he went on to become one of the NFL’s greatest kick returners -- setting nine records while playing 14 seasons for the Washington Redskins (1990-99), Philadelphia Eagles (2000-02) and New York Giants (2003). Mitchell, a fifth-round draft pick, helped the Redskins win Super Bowl XXVI. When he retired in 2004, he held NFL career records for total kick return yards (19,013), combined kick returns (1,070), combined kick return touchdowns (13), kickoff return yards (14,014), punt return yards (4,999), kickoff returns (607), punt returns (463) and fair catches (231). He was also the leader in all-purpose yards (23,330) until Jerry Rice (23,546) passed him in 2004. In 223 career games, he averaged 23.1 yards on kickoff returns and 10.8 yards on punt returns -- returning four kickoffs and nine punts for TDs. He had kickoff returns of 101, 97, 94 and 89 yards and his longest punt returns went for 84, 78, 76, 72 and 71 yards. At the age of 34, Mitchell averaged a career-best 27.0 yards on kickoffs and also averaged 12.3 yards on punts. The breakdown on his 23,330 all-purpose yards were 1,967 (rushing), 2,336 (passing), 4,999 (punt), 14,014 (kickoff) and 14 (fumble). He was a Pro Bowl pick in 1995. At ULL from 1986-89, Mitchell became the first quarterback in NCAA Division I history to pass for 5,000 yards and rush for 3,000 yards, finishing with 5,447 and 3,335, respectively, with both setting school marks. Jake Delhomme surpassed him as the career passing leader, but Mitchell still holds the rushing mark. Mitchell led the Ragin’ Cajuns to four straight winning seasons and capped his career in 1989 by passing for 1,966 yards and rushing for 1,311. He rushed for a school-record 271 yards vs. Colorado State in 1987 and also recorded games of 232 and 214 yards. In all, he had 14 100-yard rushing games. He still holds school records for rushing TDs in a game (five), season (19) and career (47).
KIM PERROT — Named to the LSWA’s 20-woman All-Century Team for women’s hoops, she starred at Louisiana-Lafayette in her hometown from 1986-90, played for Team USA and overseas and became a star in the first two years of the WNBA. She helped lead the Comets to back-to-back WNBA titles in her first two years in the league as the team’s starting point guard. Perrot inspired the Comets to their third title despite being stricken with cancer and passing away in late August 1999. She etched her name into numerous spots in the Cajun record book as well as the NCAA record book. Perrot stands as UL Lafayette’s all-time leading scorer (2,157 points), assists leader (654), steal leader (421), and ranks fifth on the rebounding list with 553 career boards. Still owns 26 school records and has registered six of UL Lafayette’s top seven all-time scoring performances. She registered 14 games in which she scored 30 or more points during her career, including a 58-point effort against Southeastern Louisiana that still ranks as the second-highest scoring performance in a single game in NCAA history. She owns the NCAA mark for most field goal attempts in a game with 40. Perrot ended the 1989-90 season as the nation’s leading scorer with a 30.0 average. She is listed in 11 different categories in the NCAA record book, including scoring in a season, scoring average in a season and steal average for a season and a career. The Comets retired her No. 10 jersey, the WNBA’s Sportsmanship Award is named in her honor and the children’s treatment center at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center is named “Kim’s Place.” She was an all-state performer at Acadiana HS in Lafayette.
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