Patrick Manning Kerney ( ;
born December 30, 1976 in Trenton, New Jersey
) is a professional football player who currently plays
defensive end for the Seattle Seahawks of the NFL. He played college football at the University of
Virginia
, where he was originally recruited to play lacrosse.
High school career
A native
of Yardley,
Pennsylvania
, Kerney enrolled in the Taft
School (CT) his sophomore, junior, and senior years after
attending Princeton Day
School
. At Taft, Kerney was a starter in football
and a two-year letterman in wrestling. Initially viewed by his
coach to be too scrawny to play football, Kerney eventually became
team captain and was selected Most Valuable Player while recording
three sacks, one blocked punt, one interception, and 84 tackles in
just eight games as a junior. He had seven sacks as a sophomore
defensive end. In wrestling, he placed second at the All-New
England tournament as a senior.
Princeton Day School
has named their new fitness center in honor of
Kerney. The center has his signed uniform and features his
number on the floor. The "Patrick Kerney '94 Fitness Center" opened
in 2007.
College career
Kerney
amassed 127 tackles and 24 sacks in his three-year career at the
University of
Virginia
. His 24 career sacks ranks third in Virginia
history. As a junior in 1997, he made 45 tackles and registered
eight sacks. In his senior year in 1998, he recorded 62 tackles and
15 sacks, and helped lead the 1998 Cavaliers to a 9-3 overall
record, a trip to the
Peach Bowl, and a
final ranking of 18th in both the Associated Press and USA
Today/CNN polls. The 15 sacks led the
Atlantic Coast Conference, ranked
second in the nation, and tied the Virginia record set by Chris
Slade in 1992.
Football News and the Football Writers
Association named him a first-team All-American at defensive end.
He also earned first-team All-
ACC honors. The Associated Press
and
The Sporting News selected him as a second-team
All-American. Kerney finished second in balloting for the 1998 ACC
Defensive Player of the Year by one vote to fellow Cavalier
All-American
Anthony Poindexter.
He was also one of five finalists for the Bronko Nagurski Award,
given annually by the Football Writers Association to the nation's
best defensive player. He finished second in the
ACC and 10th nationally with 21 tackles for loss.
Kerney was originally recruited to play lacrosse and he was a
defenseman on the
Virginia lacrosse team in
1996 and 1997. He was a member of the 1996 Cavalier squad that
advanced to the
NCAA championship game and lost
to Princeton 13-12 in overtime. Kerney was also a member of the
1997 team that made it to the NCAA playoffs and lost to Maryland in
the quarterfinals 10-9. He did not participate in 1996 spring
football practice in order to compete on the lacrosse team.
Measurables
NFL
Kerney was drafted as the thirtieth overall pick in the
1999 NFL Draft by the
Atlanta Falcons, wearing the number 97
jersey. The Falcons signed Kerney to a 5-year $5.6 million
contract. As a rookie Kerney started two games (one at left
defensive end and one a left defensive tackle) and recorded 25
tackles and 2.5 sacks. In 2000 Kerney was the starting left
defensive end and again recorded 2.5 sacks.
In 2001 Kerney recorded 12 sacks. Early in the 2002 season, the
Falcons agreed to a seven-year contract extension with Kerney. The
deal, which could be voided after five seasons, included a
team-record $8.5 million signing bonus. It could have been worth up
to $40 million if all incentives were met. He finished the 2002
season with 10.5 sacks while playing left defensive end in a 3-4
defense. He remained at that position in 2003 and recorded 6.5
sacks.
In 2004 the Falcons returned to a 4-3 defense and Kerney responded
with his best season up until that time, playing the
Pro Bowl for the first time and recording
career-highs in tackles (66), sacks (13) and passes defensed (9).
He was also voted second-team
All-Pro by the
Associated Press.
In 2006 Kerney moved to right defensive end as a starter and moved
to left defensive end in passing situations (newly acquired free
agent
John Abraham
played right defensive end in in those situations). In Week 9
Kerney's 105-game starting streak came to an end with a torn right
pectoral muscle that required surgery. (Kerney was injured while
tackling Cleveland Browns tight end Steve Heiden.) The seven games
he missed were the only games he has missed in his career. In
Kerney's absence Abraham was the starter at right defensive
end.
On February 23, 2007, Kerney opted out the last two years of his
contract with the
Atlanta Falcons to
become an unrestricted free agent. On March 5, 2007, he signed a
six-year, $39.5 million contract with the Seahawks that included
$19.5 million in guaranteed money.
With the Seahawks in 2007 he was voted as a starter in the
Pro Bowl and led the NFC in sacks with 14.5 (which
set a new career-high for Kerney). Kerney also had a career-high 5
forced fumbles and recorded 62 tackles. He missed the
Pro Bowl due to shoulder surgery.
Off The Field Incidents
In December, 2003, Kerney went on his weekly scheduled radio show
on World AIDS Day and voiced his disappointment that there wasn't
similar publicity for World Cancer Day. The story was carried on
the front page of Southern Voice newspaper. The following week, gay
playwright/columnist
Topher Payne wrote
an article in support of his former
Taft
School classmate, saying the remarks were taken out of context,
and praising Kerney as one of his own early defenders.
Personal
Patrick is one of six children. He has four sisters and had a
brother who died when Patrick was a child. When he first entered
the NFL, he set up a foundation in name of his brother called the
Lt. Thomas L. Kerney Endowment Fund . The fund provides college
scholarships and financial assistance to children of fallen police
officers. Kerney donates $1000 per sack he records to the
foundation. He is currently engaged to Seattle-area newswoman Lisa
Gangel.
References
- SeattleTimes.com
- SeattleTimes.com: Lacrosse launched Kerney's NFL
path
- 2005 Atlanta Falcons Media Guide
- Philadelphia Inquirer, April 18, 1999
- NFL Draft Scout.com
- Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
June 26, 1999
- Sports
Network, October
11, 2002
- Sovo.com
- Lt. Thomas L. Kerney Endowment Fund
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer.com
External links