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DB Tyler Everett (official thread)

Cleveland PD

Everett excels in his emotional return


Sunday, November 13, 2005Doug Lesmerises
Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus- For a moment a month ago, lying on the field unable to move, Ohio State senior defensive back Tyler Everett thought his football career was over.
"You always expect the worst when something like that happens," Everett said Saturday.
After that hit against Michigan State, Everett regained the feeling in his arms and legs after a few minutes and walked off the field. He immediately started aiming for Senior Day.
"I told the coaches, no matter what happens, I have to play in the Northwestern game," Everett said. "That's my last game in the Shoe. Even if I have to put on a neck brace, I'm going out there playing."
After rehabbing from his neck injury for three weeks, Everett was cleared for action against Illinois last week but saw only a few snaps. Saturday in Ohio State's 48-7 win over Northwestern, Everett started at cornerback and played his best game of the season, offering tight coverage and making four tackles as the Buckeyes shut down Northwestern's high-powered passing attack.
"There was a lot of emotion involved, so I wanted to make it my best," Everett said. "The whole week of practice, all the seniors preached that this should be the best game we played, and everybody in the senior class went out and did that."
Freshman corner Malcolm Jenkins, who had started the previous three games in Everett's absence, stayed on the sideline the entire game. Junior safety Brandon Mitchell came in the game as the fifth defensive back as Ohio State played its nickel defense for most of the game.
 
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ABJ

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Everett lives up to vow to return

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McKinley grad recovers for great final home game
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[SIZE=-1]By Marla Ridenour[/SIZE]
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[SIZE=-1]Beacon Journal sportswriter[/SIZE]
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<!-- begin body-content --> COLUMBUS - On Oct. 15, Tyler Everett lay flat on the grass at Ohio Stadium, temporarily unable to feel anything in his arms or legs.
Four games later, the senior cornerback from Canton McKinley chased down receivers with unbridled emotion and amazing stamina.
Everett turned in one of the best performances of his 46-game career in last weekend's 48-7 rout of Northwestern in the Buckeyes' home finale. It was his first extensive action since suffering a neck injury against Michigan State that forced him to miss two games and limited him to 11 plays in his return Nov. 5 against Illinois.
Northwestern targeted Everett, and he responded to the challenge, making four tackles and breaking up a pass.
``A lot of times people come back from big injuries and they're timid and that's where you end up hurting something else,'' Everett said. ``I had a broken ankle in high school and I came back. You have to push harder.''
No matter how his neck felt, Everett told coach Jim Tressel he didn't want to miss his final game in the Horseshoe.
``I told Coach, `No matter what's going on with it, I have to play the Northwestern game. If I have to put on a neck brace, I'm going out there and playing,' '' Everett said.
Everett didn't need extra equipment and played like the injury was far from his mind. This week, he'll have receivers Steve Breaston, Jason Avant and Mario Manningham to keep his attention.
No. 9 Ohio State visits No. 17 Michigan on Saturday with a share of the Big Ten title and a possible at-large BCS bowl selection on the line. Everett had a career-high eight tackles against the Wolverines last season and relishes the rivalry.
``There's really no words that can explain it,'' Everett said. ``Coming from a big high school program, last time we played Massillon it was pretty much the same way, but it's on a higher scale. We're not going to do anything different. We're going to play hard like we play every week and hopefully take care of business.''
Before the game, Everett might be thankful he's able to battle the Wolverines again. That didn't look likely when he hit linebacker Marcus Freeman helmet-to-helmet early in the game against Michigan State.
``I had full consciousness, but I couldn't move anything,'' Everett said.
``It lasted until they rolled me over and started touching my legs and hands and arms and saying, `Do you feel this?' and I started to feel it.''
Everett was rushed to the hospital and didn't return until his teammates were leaving the stadium.
``I said, `You've got to get me back for the fourth quarter,' and they were like, `I don't think that's going to happen today,' '' Everett said. ``I got in the locker room and (players) were asking me, `Are you all right? You scared me.' I was scared myself, not being able to move.''
Everett said he'd been hurt earlier against the Spartans and ignored senior free safety Nate Salley's urging to sit out.
``The first series I was at the bottom of a pile and I was getting up and all the weight of the players fell on my head. It was hurting, stiff and could barely move. Nate goes, `Don't come back in.' I said, `I'm not coming out of this game.' ''
Everett played in 13 games as a true freshman in 2002 backing up Mike Doss, but didn't become a starter until his junior year, when he split the strong safety spot with Donte Whitner and also served as nickel back.
At 5-foot-11, 202 pounds, Everett has started six games at cornerback this season and has 25 tackles (14 solos), a tackle for loss, a sack and two pass breakups. The leader of the secondary, Salley is glad to have Everett back.
``It felt very good having him out there,'' Salley said.
``He's been through a whole lot. He played his heart out and I was very happy to see that.''
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DDN

Everett feeling just fine

OSU senior suffered temporary paralysis during MSU victory

By Doug Harris
Dayton Daily News
Columbus — Tyler Everett admits he was terror-stricken when he found himself face-down on the Ohio Stadium turf, unable to move anything below his neck. And he wasn't the only one gripped with fear.
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His mother, Audrea Everett, had never been squeamish about watching her son play. A self-described tomboy and an ex-athlete herself, she always knew injuries were inevitable.
<!-- inset --> <!--begintext--> But as the Ohio State senior cornerback remained motionless after trying to make a second-quarter tackle against Michigan State in an Oct. 15 game, Audrea Everett began to panic for the first time in her son's career.
"He's been playing football since he was 8 years old, and I never had a feeling that he wasn't going to get up," she said. "He's gotten hurt before from eighth grade through high school, but he's always gotten right back up.
"It was like, 'OK, something's not right.' There was something in the pit of my stomach."
Everett had suffered a neck injury earlier in the game and then aggravated it on a helmet-to-helmet blow from teammate Marcus Green.
Trainers worked feverishly, poking the Canton native on his arms, legs and body, asking him whether he could sense their touch. Gradually, he began to regain some feeling in his limbs.
"It was temporary paralysis," Everett said. "I wasn't knocked out. I never lost consciousness. But I couldn't feel anything. It was scary.
"You always expect the worst when something like that happens."
His mother watched from the stands as the minutes ticked by. Finally, she left her husband's side and blew past an usher, reaching the field just as Tyler was being lifted to his feet.
"By the time I got down there, he was walking off with help, which made me feel a lot better," she said. "He got to the (OSU) medical center and started joking with the nurses, and I felt a whole lot better.
"He was still sore, but he was able to move everything. Once all the tests came back, everything was fine."
Everett was alert enough to even demand updates from the game.
"He kept having me run into the lobby, checking on the score," Audrea said.
More good news: The Buckeyes pulled out a 35-24 victory.
After being sidelined for the next two games, Everett jumped in for 11 plays against Illinois and then started last week in a 48-7 rout of Northwestern.
He was credited with four tackles and a pass break-up on Senior Day, coming out only when the decision was no longer in doubt.
"There was no way I wasn't playing in this game, the last time in the Horseshoe," he said afterward. "If I would have had to wear a neck brace to play, I would have."
His teammates were relieved to see him make a full recovery. Like Everett, some of them had expected the worst.
"He had blood on his (facemask) shield, and some on his face and helmet," linebacker Anthony Schlegel said. "I didn't know what to think. We all said some prayers there on the field.
"For him to come back so soon and not be hesitant shows what kind of character he has."
Contact Doug Harris at 225-2125.
 
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12/30/05

For a short guy, Everett didn’t get picked on
Notre Dame might throw on Ohio State’s small cornerback

Friday, December 30, 2005
Ken Gordon

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — He’s not tiny, like Honey, I Shrunk the Cornerback or anything. But Ohio State senior Tyler Everett somehow managed to hide from opponents this season.

He can’t figure out why he wasn’t picked on more often. As the Buckeyes’ shortest (5 feet 11) and least-experienced corner, logic dictated he should have been under siege.

"A lot of times, I felt like they didn’t come my way and I just wondered why," Everett said. "It’s not like I’ve been playing corner for five years. It’s my first year at corner. I was kind of surprised they didn’t come at me more."

He also knows his grace period might be over. On Monday, he expects Notre Dame and its twin-tower receivers to put him in the cross hairs.

"They go at the person they feel is weak on the defense, that’s the way coach (Charlie) Weis is, so it’s a test," Everett said.

It has been a season of tests for Everett, who came into the year with 38 games and seven starts worth of experience, all at safety. With the Buckeyes thin at cornerback in spring practice, Everett was asked for his thoughts on moving there.

"They left the decision up to me, and I said pretty much any way I can help, I want to be on the field," Everett said. "If you asked me to play (weak-side) linebacker, I’ll put on weight and go out there and play."
Everett started the first six games and held up well. He didn’t intercept a pass, but he didn’t give up a touchdown, either.

Of all the players who have contributed to Ohio State’s stellar defensive rankings, Everett seemed to be overlooked. Whether or not he was a star, he must have had something to do with the Buckeyes ranking fourth in the country in total defense, seventh in scoring defense and a decent 36 th in pass defense, in the nation’s top third.

"He played good this year, I think he exceeded everybody’s expectations," strong safety Donte Whitner said. "Playing out there on an island at the cornerback position, he went out there and he handled his business. You didn’t see a lot of balls thrown over his head and guys catching deep balls."

Everett suffered a neck strain against Michigan State and missed three games, but he returned to play in the final two contests.

In the Fiesta Bowl, he and his fellow defensive backs will face 6-5 receivers Jeff Samardzija and Maurice Stovall. Both were 1,000-yard players this season, combining for 131 catches, 2,213 yards and 26 touchdowns.

Quarterback Brady Quinn soon discovered how to use those attributes.

"It’s kind of an understanding between Brady and the receivers that being taller just creates an advantage in different situations," Samardzija said. "There’s times you can be covered but have a few inches on the guy, (and it) pretty much equals being uncovered."

The Buckeyes take heart in their successful defense of some other tall receivers this season. Indiana’s James Hardy is 6-7 and had two catches for 27 yards. Michigan State’s Matt Trannon (6-6) had three grabs for 18 yards.

"You’ve just got to be more physical than they are, not let them off the line," Everett said. "If they can’t get off the line, the height doesn’t really matter. They’ve got to get downfield to use the height.

"It’s just a matter of being physical and stopping them from getting into their game."

[email protected]
 
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1/15/06

Everett flying with an ex-Eagle

Sunday, January 15, 2006



<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>[FONT=Verdana, Times New Roman, arial, helvetica, sans-serif]SUNDAY SPECIAL BY TODD PORTER[/FONT]



Now that his Ohio State football career is finished, McKinley High School graduate Tyler Everett has turned his attention toward trying to make a little money on this football thing. Everett, a three-year letterman for the Buckeyes, has hired an agent.

Oddly enough, he didn’t have to look too far.

Eugene Lee of ETL and Associates in New York will represent Everett, who is expected to be a mid-to-late round pick in April’s NFL Draft. Lee graduated from GlenOak in 1991 and played football for the Golden Eagles. The Notre Dame law school graduate practiced for four years before starting his own agency.

Lee has represented 14 NFL clients and has four active contracts on NFL rosters. All four — former Notre Dame players Carlyle Holiday and Dwight Ellick, Columbia graduate Wade Fletcher and Southern Connecticut State’s Sarth Benoit — were undrafted free agents. They are longshots to stay in the NFL, but they are there for now.

“We’re looking at representing 11 guys in this year’s class, so we’ll see how that plays out,” Lee said. “We’re very excited to have Tyler. He’s a guy who is a little under-ranked, but he will improve his draft status between now and April.”

That may not be just fancy agent talk pushing his client. Everett is one of four Ohio State defensive backfield starters in this year’s draft, and he is the most underappreciated. Everett is technically sound and a good tackler. He’s not great in coverage, but he’s not a liability, either.

Everett is projected as an NFL safety, but playing cornerback this year for the Buckeyes after three seasons at safety will help him. His coverage skills improved a great deal.

“Ohio State is one of the few school that does a great job educating players on agents,” Lee said. “I first met Tyler at Ohio State’s agent day. They open up Ohio Stadium, and you meet with players in 30-minute intervals. It’s a small world.”

Everett’s draft stock could improve a lot. The 40-yard time NFL teams have on him, according to Lee, is 4.6.

“Tyler ran three 40 yards, hand-timed, between 4.35 and 4.38,” Lee said.

“Every NFL team will be at Ohio State’s pro day to see him run a 4.35 or 4.4 40-yard. He’s a hard-nosed player who can help out on special teams right away.”

Lee and Everett could be a perfect match. The latter will enter the league with something to prove, and Lee gets a likely rookie draft pick. No head coach or general manager wants to admit a draft-day mistake. If Everett is picked, he’ll get every opportunity to make the team.

“We’re still in the process of putting our foot in the industry,” Lee said. “We’re on our way there with players who have great athletic ability like Tyler.”

TYLER THE AUTHOR Look for a periodic journal from Everett in The Repository beginning in the coming weeks. Everett will write about his workouts, agent selection and his road trying to crack into the NFL starting next month.

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i remeber him running down the wide receiver from texas who had a good ten yards on him......i thought his tackling abaility looked suspect against notre dame though

For some reason I am thinking this was Jenkins, but it could of been someone else.

I think the reason no one realized he was so fast, was b/c of how big he looks in his pads for a corner. I think he will play safety in the pros.

Maybe a 5th or 6th round pick.
 
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“Tyler ran three 40 yards, hand-timed, between 4.35 and 4.38,” Lee said.

wow.... i didn't realize Tyler had that kind of speed.

Wasn't there a thread about 6 months ago where enough people questioned the validity of hand-timing?

I never would have guessed that Everett had that kind of speed. I thought that he was the weak point of the OSU defense last year, and he played pretty well. In fact, opposing defenses disagreed with my assessment and picked on Youboty, instead, indicating what many of us already knew: I ought not be a talent scout for the NFL.

Best of luck to Tyler. I hope he has a long and successful NFL career.
 
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