Cole Stoudt
Sport(s) | Football |
---|---|
Current position | |
Title | Offensive assistant |
Team | Jacksonville State |
Biographical details | |
Born |
Greenville, South Carolina | October 23, 1992
Playing career | |
2007–2010 | Dublin Coffman (HS) |
2011–2014 | Clemson |
2015 | San Diego Chargers |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
2015–present | Jacksonville State (QB) |
Cole Stoudt (born October 23, 1992) is an American football college coach and former player. He is currently an offensive assistant coach at Jacksonville State. He played college football at Clemson and was the Tigers starting quarterback in 2014.
High school career
Stoudt’s high school career took place at Dublin Coffman High School located in Dublin, Ohio. Cole Stoudt was coached under head coach Mark Crabtree where he was ranked as the No. 21 quarterback in the nation by Rivals.com, No. 28 quarterback in the nation by Scout.com, and No. 23 quarterback in the nation by 247Sports.com. Stoudt was extremely successful during his years as starting quarterback. He broke the overall passing yardage and touchdown records for Dublin Coffman High School that was previously held by Brady Quinn, who later went on to become the starting quarterback for the University of Notre Dame and who is currently in his 8th season in the NFL. In his high school career, Stoudt passed for 4,393 yards, 52 touchdowns and only 11 interceptions. He also holds the school record for career wins as a starting quarterback and passing touchdowns in a game (5). His most successful season was likely in 2010, during his senior year. He completed 2,159 passing yards and 22 passing touchdowns with only 6 interceptions. He was awarded Conference Player of the Year in 2010 as well. Cole Stoudt was recruited by Clemson University, Akron University, Arizona State University, University of Cincinnati, and the University of Colorado. Billy Napier recruited him from Clemson University. His first official visit date at Clemson took place in October, 2010.
College career
2011–2013 seasons
Stoudt spent his first three years at Clemson as the backup quarterback to Tajh Boyd.[1] In 2011, he played briefly during the following games in the regular season against Troy, Boston College, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Virginia Tech, and during the Discover Orange Bowl against West Virginia. During this season he completed a total of 12 passes out of 21 pass attempts, for an average completion percentage per game of approximately 66.8%. He passed for 115 total yards and rushed for −7 yards. He threw for no interceptions or touchdowns during the entirety of this season.
In 2012, Stoudt made an appearance during the Ball State, Furman, Wake Forest, Duke, and Maryland games. He completed a total of 27 out of 39 pass attempts for an average pass completion rate of 74.5%. He passed for a total of 212 yards and rushed for a total of 55 yards during the 2012 season and threw for 1 interception and 3 touchdowns.
In 2013, Stoudt played in the games against South Carolina State, Wake Forest, Syracuse, Florida State, Maryland, Virginia, Georgia Tech, and the Citadel. He completed a total of 47 out of 59 pass attempts for an average completion rate of 77%. He passed for a total of 415 yards and rushed for a total of 58. He threw for zero interceptions and passed for 5 touchdowns and rushed for 2.[2] On April 15, 2014, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney named Stoudt the starter for the 2014 season.[3][4]
2014 season
The 2014 football season was Cole Stoudt’s senior season. Out of 13 games during the entire season Cole started 8 of those games. He had 1,892 yards and 9 touchdowns with 624 snaps for the season as well as 63.2% pass completion percentage. He was ranked 6th in school history for the pass completion percentage and 7th in the Atlantic Coast Conference in passing completion efficiency for the 2014 season. Overall for his college career, Stoudt threw only 11 interceptions yet 10 of those were in his final year playing at Clemson. He threw 3 interceptions in an ACC rivalry game versus Georgia Tech; as Clemson went on to lose that game 28–6, discontinuing a 6-game winning streak which was a major damper in the Tigers season as it got close to bowl games. In his final college game, Cole Stoudt delivered a winning performance at the Russell Athletic Bowl with a final score of 40–6. Cole Stoudt had 4 touchdowns, throwing for 3 and running for another. He completed 26 of 36 pass attempts for a season high of 319 yards. Cole was honored as MVP and team offensive player-of-the-game for the Russell Athletic Bowl.
Professional career
Shortly after the conclusion of the 2015 NFL Draft, Stoudt was signed by the San Diego Chargers as an undrafted rookie free agent.[5] On May 20, 2015, Stoudt was released by the Chargers.[6] Cole is currently an offensive assistant coach at Jacksonville State University.
Personal
Son of Cliff and Laura Stoudt. When Cole was three, the Stoudts moved to Dublin, Ohio, but Cole returned to the area in 2011 to play football at Clemson University. Cole is the youngest of three children; his brother Zack, 24, was recruited to the Pittsburgh Steelers, but instead decided to finish his football and academic career at Ole Miss. Cole’s sister Cydnei, 27, played college basketball at UNC-Wilmington. Stoudt's father, Cliff Stoudt, played in the National Football League from 1977 to 1991.[7] Cole majored in Sociology. Many of Stoudt’s teammates describe him as laid-back and easy to get along with.[8]
References
- ↑ Stoudt QB legacy grows with emergence of Tigers' backup
- ↑ ESPN Cole Stoudt Game-By-Game Stats
- ↑ Cole Stoudt in with Chad Kelly out
- ↑ Dabo Swinney names Cole Stoudt as Clemson's starting QB
- ↑ Wilkening, Mike (May 3, 2015). "Chargers reach deals with 21 undrafted free agents". NBCSports.com. Retrieved July 17, 2015.
- ↑ Henne, Ricky (May 20, 2015). "Chargers Bring QB Chase Rettig into the Fold". Chargers.com. Retrieved July 17, 2015.
- ↑ Like father, like son: Cole Stoudt’s dad, Cliff, played at YSU
- ↑ quarterback Cole Stoudt and his father Cliff share special bond
External links
- Clemson Tigers bio
- Cole Stoudt Biography
- Cole Stoudt Game by Game Stats
- Cole Stoudt Player Profile
- Cole Stoudt Player Profile News
- Clemson slams Oklahoma behind QB Cole Stoudt's 4 TDs
- Cole Stoudt Bio
- Washington Post Stats
- Cole and Cliff Stoudt