- Beanie Wells
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This article is about the football player. For the ice hockey player, see Chris Wells (ice hockey).
Chris Wells
Obi Ezeh attempts shoestring tackle on Wells during 2008 Michigan – Ohio State rivalry game.No. 26 Arizona Cardinals Running Back Personal information Date of birth: August 7, 1988 Place of birth: Akron, Ohio Height: 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) Weight: 235 lb (107 kg) Career information College: Ohio State NFL Draft: 2009 / Round: 1 / Pick: 31 Debuted in 2009 for the Arizona Cardinals Career history - Arizona Cardinals (2009–present)
Roster status: Active Career highlights and awards - 2006 Parade All-American
- 2006 U.S. Army All-American Bowl MVP
- 2007 All-Big Ten first team
- 2007 Rivals.com Second team All-American
Career NFL statistics as of Week 1, 2011 Rushing Yards 1,280 Rushing Average 4.1 Rushing TDs 10 Stats at NFL.com Chris "Beanie" Michael Wells (born August 7, 1988 in Akron, Ohio) is an American football running back for the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League. He was selected in the first round (31st overall pick) of the 2009 NFL Draft out of The Ohio State University.
Contents
High school career
Wells was a highly touted player out of high school, where he played at Akron Garfield High School. His high school running back coach Ben Dunn said that Beanie was one of the most explosive play-makers he had seen in his 28 years at the school. He was often considered the best recruit out of Ohio. Wells played at Akron Garfield High from 2002 to 2005, graduating early in December. He was listed as the top running back and All-American by Parade in 2006.[1]. His cousin, Justin Wells, is a return specialist and running back for the Crofton Cardinals in Maryland. He had 5 kick returns for touchdowns last year and 3 punt returns for touchdowns.
Year Attempts Yards Average TD Freshman 43 573 13.6 7 Sophomore 90 900 10.0 15 Junior 212 1,939 9.1 20 Senior 223 2,134 9.6 27 College recruiting
Wells was offered to play at schools such as Michigan and USC, but Wells always knew he was going to play at Ohio State, saying "I think I came out of my mom’s womb wanting to go to Ohio State."[2]
College career
Wells' arrival at Ohio State had been one of the most anticipated running back recruits to come to Ohio State. Beanie lived up to the hype on his first play of his first practice where he bowled over a tackler on a nine-yard rush.
Beanie's number during his career at Ohio State was 28. [3]
Freshman year
During Wells' freshman year, he shared carries with Antonio Pittman but still had a solid freshman year, and was a big part of the 2006 Buckeyes. The highlight of his freshman year came in the Ohio State-Michigan game where he broke a 52 yard run for a TD that put the Buckeyes up for the rest of the game.
Wells' Freshman Stats
Stat Number Yards Average TD Rushing 104 576 5.5 7 Receiving 2 16 8.0 0 Sophomore year
With Antonio Pittman going into the NFL Draft, Wells became the starting running back and started every game in his sophomore year for Ohio State. He was followed by Junior Maurice Wells in the depth chart. Wells rushed for 222 yards in the annual rivalry game against Michigan, more than any other Ohio State running back against Michigan.
His stats for this season are as follows
Stat Number Yards Average TD Rushing 274 1609 5.9 15 Receiving 5 21 4.2 0 Junior year
Wells rushed 13 carries for 111 yards and a touchdown in his first game against the Youngstown State Penguins on August 30, 2008. He also suffered a foot injury.[4] After missing three games, he returned to the starting lineup September 27, 2008 against Minnesota, where he rushed for 105 yards on 14 carries. He then followed that performance up with a 22 carry, 168 yard effort against Wisconsin, which included a 33-yard touchdown on the game's first possession and a 54-yard run to start the second half. In the November 15 game against Illinois, Wells leaped over an Illini defender, images of which were re-broadcast widely. He entered the NFL Draft, and was drafted 31st overall by the Arizona Cardinals.
Stat Number Yards Average TD Rushing 207 1197 5.8 8 Receiving 7 26 3.7 0 Awards and honors
- 2006 Parade All-American[5]
- 2006 U.S. Army All-American Bowl MVP[6]
- 2007 All-Big Ten first team[7]
- 2007 Rivals.com Second team All-American[8]
- 2008 team MVP[9]
- 31st overall pick by the Arizona Cardinals in the 2009 NFL draft.
Professional career
2009 NFL Draft
Pre-draft measureables Ht Wt 40-yd dash 10-yd split 20-yd split 20-ss 3-cone Vert Broad BP 6 ft 1 in 238 lb 4.62 s 33½ in 25 rep All values from NFL Combine[10] Arizona Cardinals
Wells was drafted 31st overall by the Arizona Cardinals in the 2009 NFL Draft. He competed for the starting running back job with Tim Hightower.
On August 1, 2009, Wells was signed to a 5 year contract. Later that same day, he was carted off from practice with an ankle injury.
On August 28, 2009, Wells made his professional debut with the Arizona Cardinals in a preseason game against the Green Bay Packers. He ended the night with 7 carries for a total of 46 yards and 2 touchdowns, including a 20-yard score in the second quarter.
On October 25, 2009, in the second quarter against the New York Giants, Wells ran 13 yards for his first NFL touchdown. In that game vs New York, Wells ran for 67 yards on 14 attempts.
On December 20, 2009, Wells ran for his first career 100-yard game against the Detroit Lions. In that game, he had 17 carries for 110 yards and a touchdown.
On January 16, 2010, Wells scored his first postseason touchdown, a 4-yard rush against the New Orleans Saints. He ended the season with 793 yards rushing second best among rookies second to Knowshon Moreno. He also caught 12 passes for an 11.9 average.
For the upcoming 2011-2012 NFL season the Arizona Cardinals and coach Ken Whisenhunt are placing a heavy emphasis on the ground-attack led by Beanie "Monster-Mash" Wells. Beanie has looked crisp and powerful all pre-season and is primed to join the ranks of elite running-back's in the NFL. Early projections have him in the top-5 in rushing touchdowns by years end. The moniker "Monster-Mash" was first coined by local Akron suburb sports writer Rowley MaCastro. The ground-swell of support from this community as well as the entire state of Ohio being as Wells was an Ohio State alum, will only help propel this young star to rise like a phoenix out of the desert and into Pro Bowl status.
Personal
He was born August 7, 1988 in Akron, Ohio and is one of eleven children. His parents are James and Paulette Wells.
- Nickname
The nickname Beanie was given to him by his family at a young age and he is quoted as saying, "I got the nickname because when I was young, my big brother said I was skinny like a bean pole."
References
- ^ Chris Wells Biography – The Ohio State Buckeyes Official Athletics Site – OhioStateBuckeyes.com[dead link]
- ^ Chris Wells Interviews & Quotes. Chrisbeaniewells.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ What number did chris wells wear in college – kgb answers. Kgbanswers.com (2009-08-19). Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ sports.espn.com. Sports.espn.go.com (2008-08-30). Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ Michael O'Shea Parade All-America Teams. all-americans.parade.com 2006
- ^ Football Bowl Games: U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Football-bowl.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ Big Ten Announces 2007 Football All-Conference Teams and Individual Honors – BIG TEN CONFERENCE Official Athletic Site. Bigten.cstv.com (2007-11-19). Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ Rivals.com College Football – Rivals.com All-America Second Team. Collegefootball.rivals.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ BuckeyeGrove.com – Jenkins fulfills dream, wins Thorpe Award. Ohiostate.rivals.com (2008-12-11). Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
- ^ *Chris Wells | Ohio State, RB : 2009 NFL Draft Scout Player Profile. Nfldraftscout.com (2006-09-21). Retrieved on 2011-11-01.
External links
Awards and achievements Preceded by
DeSean JacksonU.S. Army All-American Bowl MVP
2006Succeeded by
Chris GalippoSporting positions Preceded by
Antonio PittmanOhio State Buckeyes
Starting Tailbacks
2007–2008Succeeded by
Daniel Herron2009 NFL Draft First Round Selections Matthew Stafford · Jason Smith · Tyson Jackson · Aaron Curry · Mark Sanchez · Andre Smith · Darrius Heyward-Bey · Eugene Monroe · B. J. Raji · Michael Crabtree · Aaron Maybin · Knowshon Moreno · Brian Orakpo · Malcolm Jenkins · Brian Cushing · Larry English · Josh Freeman · Robert Ayers · Jeremy Maclin · Brandon Pettigrew · Alex Mack · Percy Harvin · Michael Oher · Peria Jerry · Vontae Davis · Clay Matthews III · Donald Brown · Eric Wood · Hakeem Nicks · Kenny Britt · Beanie Wells · Evander HoodChicago / St. Louis / Phoenix / Arizona Cardinals first-round draft picks Lawrence • Buivid • Robbins • Aldrich • Cafego • Kimbrough • Lach • Dobbs • Harder • Trippi • Jones • Coulter • Spavital • Fischer • Groom • Matson • Olszewski • McHan • Boydston • Childress • Tubbs • Hill • Crow • Stacy • Izo • Rice • Echols • Goode • Stovall • Brumm • Kortas • McAdams • Dave Williams • Lane • Wehrli • Stegent • Thompson • Moore • Butz • Cain • Gray • Dawson • Pisarkiewicz • Little • Greene • Anderson • Greer • Junior • Sharpe • Smith • Duncan • Nunn • Bell • Stouffer • Harvey • Hill • Wolf • Swann • Hearst • Dye • Miller • Rice • Knight • Wadsworth • Boston • Shelton • Jones • Davis • Bryant • Johnson • Pace • Fitzgerald • Rolle • Leinart • Brown • Rodgers-Cromartie • Wells • Dan Williams • PetersonArizona Cardinals 2009 NFL Draft selections Chris "Beanie" Wells • Cody Brown • Rashad Johnson • Greg Toler • Herman Johnson • Will Davis • LaRod Stephens-Howling • Trevor CanfieldArizona Cardinals current roster Active roster 2 Richard Bartel | 3 Jay Feely | 4 Kevin Kolb | 9 Dave Zastudil | 11 Larry Fitzgerald | 12 Andre Roberts | 17 Chansi Stuckey | 18 Stephen Williams | 19 John Skelton | 20 A. J. Jefferson | 21 Patrick Peterson | 23 Hamza Abdullah | 24 Adrian Wilson | 25 Kerry Rhodes | 26 Beanie Wells | 27 Michael Adams | 29 Chester Taylor | 31 Richard Marshall | 35 Anthony Sherman | 36 LaRod Stephens-Howling | 37 Sean Considine | 45 Reagan Maui'a | 46 Alfonso Smith | 49 Rashad Johnson | 50 O'Brien Schofield | 51 Paris Lenon | 53 Clark Haggans | 55 Joey Porter | 56 Reggie Walker | 58 Daryl Washington | 63 Lyle Sendlein | 70 Rex Hadnot | 71 Daryn Colledge | 72 Brandon Keith | 73 Jeremy Bridges | 74 D'Anthony Batiste | 75 Levi Brown | 76 Deuce Lutui | 79 David Carter | 81 Jim Dray | 82 Mike Leach | 84 Rob Housler | 85 Early Doucet | 86 Todd Heap | 87 Jeff King | 89 DeMarco Sampson | 90 Darnell Dockett | 91 Vonnie Holliday | 92 Dan Williams | 93 Calais Campbell | 94 Sam Acho | 97 Stewart Bradley | 98 Nick Eason
Reserve lists 6 Max Hall (IR) | 22 Crezdon Butler (IR) | 28 Greg Toler (IR) | 34 Ryan Williams (IR) | 38 Andrew Rich (Left Squad) | 48 Brandon Sharpe (IR) | 78 Floyd Womack (IR)
Practice squad 30 Marshay Green | 32 Korey Lindsey | 44 Steve Skelton | 54 Quan Sturdivant | 62 Ryan Bartholomew | 67 D. J. Young | 83 Jaymar Johnson | 96 Ronald Talley
Name Wells, Beanie Alternative names Short description Date of birth August 7, 1988 Place of birth Akron, Ohio Date of death Place of death Categories:- 1988 births
- Living people
- People from Akron, Ohio
- African American players of American football
- Ohio State Buckeyes football players
- American football running backs
- U.S. Army All-American football players
- Arizona Cardinals players
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Look at other dictionaries:
Beanie Wells — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Chris Wells. Beanie Wells … Wikipédia en Français
Chris Wells (football américain) — Beanie Wells Pour les articles homonymes, voir Chris Wells. Beanie Wells Nom complet … Wikipédia en Français
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