Age: 23 (Dec. 18)
College: Florida State
Height: 6’4” Weight: 255
Prelude:
A defensive end in college,
where he gained notoriety for his pass rushing, Boulware was taken by the
Ravens in the first round (fourth overall) of the 1997 NFL draft. Converted to
outside linebacker, he moved directly into the starting lineup, joining fellow
rookie Jamie Sharper and second year MLB Ray Lewis to create a young but
formidable linebacking corps.
1997 Season Summary
Appeared and started in all 16
games
[Bracketed numbers indicate
league rank in Top 20]
Sacks – 11.5 [9]
Most sacks, game – 2 vs. Philadelphia 11/16, vs. Seattle 12/7
Interceptions – 0
Fumble recoveries – 0
Forced fumble – 1
Tackles – 43
Assists – 15
Awards & Honors:
NFL Defensive Rookie of the
Year: AP, PFWA
Ravens went 6-9-1 to finish
fifth in the AFC Central.
Aftermath:
Boulware followed up on his
outstanding rookie season by gaining selection to the Pro Bowl following the
1998 and ’99 seasons and was also recognized as a first-team All-AFC choice of
Pro Football Weekly and second-team All-NFL pick by the Associated Press in
1999. While a shoulder injury caused his performance to level off, he was a
mainstay of the defense in 2000 that fueled a late-season run culminating in
victory in the Super Bowl. In 2001 he was shifted to defensive end during the
season due to injury depletion and the result was a club-record 15 sacks.
Boulware returned to outside linebacker and gained selection to two more Pro
Bowls in 2002 and ’03. However, his string of 111 consecutive games was broken
when he sat out the 2003 season finale due to injury and offseason knee surgery
cost him all of 2004. He was released and re-signed to a lesser salary in ’05,
playing as a reserve, and injuries forced his release and retirement prior to
the 2006 season. Overall, he had 70 regular season sacks and three in the
playoffs over the course of his career that included four Pro Bowl selections.
--
Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were named Rookie of the Year in
the NFL (including NFC/AFC), AFL (1960-69), or USFL (1983-85) by a recognized
organization (Associated Press – Offense or Defense, Newspaper Enterprise
Association, United Press International, The Sporting News, or the league
itself – Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Year).
[Updated 2/9/14]
[Updated 2/9/14]
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