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Monday, July 16, 2018

Lavonte David's tackle numbers declined, and no one should care ...
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Lavonte David (born January 23, 1990) is an American football linebacker for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the University of Nebraska, and was drafted by the Buccaneers in the second round of the 2012 NFL Draft.


Video Lavonte David



High school career

A native of Miami, Florida, David attended Northwestern High School, where he was a teammate of Marcus Forston, Anthony Gaitor, Jacory Harris, Sean Spence, Tommy Streeter, and Brandon Washington. Northwestern won back-to-back state titles in 2006 and 2007, and was listed as mythical national champions by USA Today in 2007. Regarded as only a two-star prospect by Rivals.com, David was not highly recruited.


Maps Lavonte David



College career

David originally signed with Middle Tennessee State, but then decided to attend Fort Scott Community College. David led Fort Scott Community College to the Junior College National Championship Game, while ranking among the conference's leaders in tackles and tackles for loss. He was also a two-time first-team All-Jayhawk Conference selection and a Region VI All-American in 2009. David was the defensive most valuable player of the 2009 national championship game against Cam Newton-led Blinn. David racked up 12 tackles, including sacking Newton on the game's final defensive play, before Fort Scott lost on a punt return for a touchdown. During his first season at Fort Scott, led the Jayhawk Conference with 93 tackles.

In 2010, he transferred to Nebraska, where he set the school's single-season record for tackles with 152, in his first year with the team. In a game against South Dakota State, David recorded a career-high 19 tackles, the seventh- most in school history. After the season, David was named first-team All-American by Rivals.com and CBS, unanimous first-team Big 12 and Big 12 Newcomer of the Year, as selected by the coaches.

As a senior, led Nebraska with 133 tackles and ranked third in the Big Ten in tackles per game. Also led Nebraska in tackles for loss (13.0), sacks (5.5), interceptions (2), forced fumbles (2) and fumble recoveries (2) in 2011. At the conclusion of the season, he was named First Team All-Big Ten by both the coaches and media. He was also the winner of the inaugural Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year, awarded to the best linebacker in the Big Ten.

David started all 27 games he played in at Nebraska (2010-11), recording 285 tackles, 28 tackles for loss, 11.5 sacks, two interceptions, 12 passes defensed, three forced fumbles and two fumbles recovered. His 285 career tackles rank fourth in school history, and most by a two-year player.


Lavonte David || Tampa Bay Buccaneers Highlights á´´á´° - YouTube
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Professional career

David entered the 2012 NFL Draft and attended the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, Indiana. He completed all of the combine and positonal drills. Teams spoke about possibly moving him to safety as they thought he was undersized to play linebacker in the NFL. David was projected to be a second or third round pick by Sports Illustrated and NFL draft experts. At the conclusion of the pre-draft process, David was ranked as the third best outside linebacker in the draft by DraftScout.com, was ranked the fourth best outside linebacker prospect by NFL analyst Mike Mayock, and was ranked the tenth best outside linebacker in the draft by Sports Illustrated.

2012

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers selected David in the second round (58th overall) of the 2012 NFL Draft. He was the highest selected Cornhuskers linebacker since Barrett Ruud in 2005.

On May 19, 2012, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed him to a four-year, $3.47 million contract that includes $1.36 million guaranteed and a $964,896 signing bonus.

In his first professional game, David made his presence felt against the Miami Dolphins, notching a tackle for loss and an interception off quarterback Matt Moore in the second quarter, on a tipped ball by defensive tackle Frank Okam.

David quickly made an impact with the Bucs who immediately handed a lot of responsibility over to the second-round pick out of Nebraska. David, starting on the weak side, led the team with six tackles in a 16-10 win over the Panthers, his first NFL regular season game, impressing with his instinctive and aggressive play.

The Bucs also trusted David enough to give him the green-dot helmet transmitter through which coaches can talk to him, making him responsible for making defensive calls.

He was named Defensive Rookie of the Month for November, the first Buccaneers to win the award, after amassing a league-leading 47 tackles in just four games. David's 98 tackles (18 solo) led the Buccaneers for the season, and had him eighth league-wide in the 2012 season. He also led all NFL rookies in tackles.

The big month for David was evidenced by big performances in Week 9 against the Oakland Raiders (16 tackles) and in Week 10 against the San Diego Chargers (14 tackles). David rolled up five tackles for loss in the month of November.

He registered a team-leading 139 tackles, which tied London Fletcher and Paul Posluszny for eighth in the league. He started all 16 games at outside linebacker for the Buccaneers in 2012. David also posted 20 tackles-for-loss, the most by a rookie since Kendrell Bell in 2001.

2013

During opening day against the New York Jets on September 8, 2013, David achieved notoriety for a late hit against Geno Smith out of bounds at the end of a scramble that would have put the Jets, who had no timeouts, on the Tampa 45-yard line with 15 seconds to play. The Jets ended up having game-winning field goal instead. The play wasn't malicious as Smith had just stepped out and David explained after the game that he thought Smith was going to stay in bounds before he delivered the blow. On September 12, 2013, David was fined $7,875 for his late hit on Smith.

On November 27, 2013, David was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week after a great performance against the Lions, the latest in a string of strong performances. His 5.0 sacks and two interceptions on the season, made him one of just six players in franchise history to post those totals in a season along with defensive end Gaines Adams, cornerback Ronde Barber, defensive end Simeon Rice, defensive tackle Warren Sapp and linebacker Broderick Thomas.

On January 3, 2014, Lavonte David was named 2013 First-Team All-Pro. During the regular season, David tallied a total of 145 tackles (107 solo), 7 sacks, 5 interceptions, 10 passes defensed, 12 quarterback hurries, a safety and 2 forced fumbles. David's 20 tackles-for-loss in 2013 ranked 3rd in the NFL behind defensive ends Robert Quinn and J. J. Watt who registered 23 and 22, respectively. Despite those numbers, David did not make the Pro Bowl team for 2013. David finished the year one of only two players in NFL history to record 100 tackles, 6 sacks and 5 interceptions in a season. The other was safety Rodney Harrison.

2014

In 2014, new Buccaneers head coach Lovie Smith, who replaced Greg Schiano, compared David to Buccaneers legend Derrick Brooks. Brooks played for the Buccaneers during his entire career and Smith, who had coached him in the late 1990s said that David was a younger version of Brooks. During his 2014, which was also his first season in the new "Tampa 2" system installed by Lovie Smith, David put up great numbers with 146 combined tackles (101 solo), one sack, four forced fumbles, and three passes defensed. Per NFL analysts and his coaches, David has shown to be one of the best 4-3 linebackers in the league. With his strong performance this season David was named as an alternate for the 2015 Pro Bowl though he would not get the chance to play when all linebackers selected would participate.

2015

On August 9, 2015, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed David to a five-year, $50.25 million contract extension with $25.55 million guaranteed.

Following the season David, who was a first team alternate, made his first Pro Bowl appearance as a result of the Denver Broncos advancing to the Super Bowl. He was ranked 53rd on the NFL Top 100 Players of 2016.

2016

David started all 16 games in 2016, recording a career-low 87 tackles to go along with five sacks, four passes defensed, four forced fumbles and one interception.

2017

On September 17, 2017, in Week 2 against the Chicago Bears, David recovered a Mike Glennon fumble, which set up the Buccaneers on an eventual touchdown scoring drive.


NFL's top 100 players: Buccaneers LB Lavonte David | SI.com
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Personal life

While at Nebraska, David volunteered his time with the team to hospital visits and the Husker Heroes program. In December 2012, David led students through football drills and promoted the importance of health and fitness for the opening of BUCS CARE School Fitness Zones at two local Elementary schools. In the same month, the linebacker also visited youth at All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg and sang holiday carols to residents at Westminster Palms retirement home in December 2012. In June 2012, David visited MacDill Air Force Base in Downtown Tampa to tour a hurricane aircraft, witness a military dog training session, and thank civilian workers and active duty military for their service.


53: Lavonte David (LB, Buccaneers) | Top 100 NFL Players of 2016 ...
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Statistics


Nebraska's Lavonte David is 'tackle machine' | Deseret News
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References


Lavonte David Bucs
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External links

  • Lavonte David on Twitter
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers bio
  • Nebraska Cornhuskers bio

Source of article : Wikipedia