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Mike Salmon (American football)
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Mike Salmon (American football) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mike Salmon (American football)

Michael William Salmon (born December 27, 1970 in Long Beach, California) is a former American Football defensive back in the National Football League. Salmon is a founder and vice-president of the Lott IMPACT Trophy, which is named after Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive back Ronnie Lott, and is awarded annually to college football's Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year.〔http://www.lottimpacttrophy.com/〕
==Football career==
Salmon named both the 5A Arizona High school football Player of the year and the Arizona Athlete of the year in 1989 by the Arizona Republic. He received scholarship offers out of Greenway high school in 3 sports, football, baseball and basketball. In 1988 Salmon was selected by USA Today as the National H.S. Player of the Week after helping Greenway upset the #1 ranked Brophy Broncos on T.V. A game in which Salmon caught a T.D., threw for 2 T.D.'s, intercepted 2 passes, kicked 2 field goals and made 4 extra points all in the first half. Salmon later signed with the University of Southern California. Salmon was a captain, started all four seasons at either free safety, strong safety, cornerback, outside linebacker, kicker, punt returner and holder. Salmon played both football and baseball for the USC Trojans. He batted .280 as a junior on the USC Trojans baseball team. Salmon turned down a chance to play professional baseball, like his older brother Tim, rejecting an $80,000 offer by the Philadelphia Phillies to accept USC's scholarship offer. Against Washington State in 1993, Salmon beat out future NFL kicker Cole Ford . Salmon entered the game and made four field goals from greater than 38 yards and was named Pac-10 Player of the week. "Here's a guy who hadn't kicked since high school, and he couldn't wait to get in there and kick," Coach John Robinson said. "If it'd been me, I'd have been scared to death." Salmon also kicked the game winning kick that year at Oregon as time expired in front of a sold out stadium.Salmon was on the Deans List twice at USC and also had the top GPA on the football team in 1992.
"He may be more important to our defense than (quarterback) Rob Johnson is to our offense," Salmon's defensive coordinator at USC, Don Lindsey, said. "We have an outstanding backup quarterback in Kyle Wachholz, so if we lost Rob it would hurt us, but it wouldn't be a killer. But if we lost Mike, the defense would lose a whole lot." On Senior Day in 1993, against the UCLA Bruins, as Salmon entered the Coliseum for the last time, USC coach John Robinson introduced Salmon as "one of the hardest hitting Trojans of all time".
Salmon played in the NFL for the San Francisco 49ers (1994-1997) and the Buffalo Bills (1996). Salmon backed up the two NFC pro bowl safeties Merton Hanks and Tim MacDonald in San Francisco. He then had the same luck in Buffalo by backing up the AFC pro bowl safeties Henry Jones and Kurt Shultz. In 1997 he suffered a career ending cartilage tear to his knee. Salmon played two seasons (1995-1996) of NFL Europe with Rhein Fire in Düsseldorf, Germany. Salmon had four interceptions in two years with Rhein Fire after being selected 121st overall in the 1995 World League of American Football Draft where he was later named to the All World League First team at Free Safety and team captain.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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