Qadry Ismail

Qadry Ismail
No. 82, 83, 86, 87
Position: Wide receiver
Personal information
Date of birth: (1970-11-08) November 8, 1970
Place of birth: Newark, New Jersey
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight: 196 lb (89 kg)
Career information
High school: Wilkes-Barre (PA) Elmer L. Meyers Junior/Senior
College: Syracuse
NFL draft: 1993 / Round: 2 / Pick: 52
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Receptions: 353
Receiving yards: 5,137
Touchdowns: 33
Player stats at NFL.com

Qadry "The Missile" Ismail (born November 8, 1970) is a former National Football League wide receiver for the Minnesota Vikings, Green Bay Packers, Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints, Baltimore Ravens, and the Indianapolis Colts in a 10-year career that lasted from 1993 to 2002.[1] Ismail won Super Bowl XXXV with Baltimore in the 2000 season.

Early Years

Growing up in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and attending Elmer L. Meyers Junior/Senior High School while living with his grandmother, Qadry Ismail would find himself being named the Inaugural recipient of the Martin Luther King Youth Leadership Award among several Meyers records and honors, including 3X All State and All American honors.

Ismail would go on to star in football and track at Syracuse University. Some of his achievements while at Syracuse University include: 5X Bowl winner, 1991 College Football All-America Team as a Kick Returner, 1993 Japan Bowl All-Star Game MVP, All-Big East 1st Team wide receiver and conference 2nd team kick returner.

NFL career

Drafted by the Minnesota Vikings, with the 52nd pick in the Second Round of the 1993 NFL Draft, Qadry Ismail became the highest draft pick from Syracuse since Art Monk. In 1999, Qadry was voted Number 22 on the list of top 100 athletes by the Citizen’s Voice, a Wyoming Valley Newspaper. Ismail had some success in Minnesota, including 696 yards and five touchdowns in 1995, but not enough for the Vikings to want to keep him long term.

Ismail played for the Green Bay Packers, Miami Dolphins, and New Orleans Saints over the next three years, having very little success.

However, in 1999 with the Baltimore Ravens, Ismail led the team with 68 catches, 1,105 receiving yards and 6 TDs in 1999, including career-high 258 yards in one game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. What might have been the high-water mark of Ismail's career and potential crowning moment came on January 28, 2001, when the Baltimore Ravens defeated the New York Giants 34-7 in Tampa, Florida in Super Bowl XXXV. Ismail caught a 47-yard reception and earned his first Super Bowl ring. In 2001, Ismail again posted 1,000 yards for Baltimore.

In 2002, Ismail signed a 1-year deal with the Indianapolis Colts as a #2 wide receiver before retiring after posting 462 receiving yards and three touchdowns in his lone season with Indianapolis.

NFL stats

Year Team Games Receptions Yards Yards per Reception Longest Reception Touchdowns First Downs Fumbles Fumbles Lost
1993 MIN 15 19 212 11.2 37 1 13 0 0
1994 MIN 16 45 696 15.5 65 5 28 0 0
1995 MIN 16 32 597 18.7 85 3 19 1 1
1996 MIN 16 22 351 16.0 54 3 19 0 0
1999 BAL 16 68 1,105 16.3 76 6 49 2 0
2000 BAL 15 49 655 13.4 53 5 38 0 0
2001 BAL 16 74 1,059 14.3 77 7 50 1 1
2002 IND 14 44 462 10.5 42 3 23 0 0
Career 134 353 5,137 14.6 85 33 239 4 2

[2]

Personal life

Qadry Ismail is the brother of Raghib and Sulaiman. In the summer of 1984, Qadry’s mother sent her sons to live with their grandmother in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Ismail has been described as a "vocal Christian" and converted from Islam to Christianity in his early teens after his Muslim father died.[3]

Ismail has been an analyst for Comcast Sports Net, B.E.T. Black College Football, ESPN and Rave TV, home of Baltimore Ravens football, and WBAL (AM). He hosts the show "Ravens Report" with former Baltimore Ravens center Mike Flynn and Gerry Sandusky, the Ravens play-by play commentator. Ismail also assists Sandusky in color commentating for Ravens games.

Ismail currently coaches the Patterson Mill High School track and field team.

Ismail was present during the Ravens Super Bowl XXXV reunion in 2010.

External links

References

  1. Qadry Ismail. databaseFootball.com
  2. "Qadry Ismail Stats". ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  3. Baltimore Sun, "Ravens' Ismail: Hate no answer," Baltimore Sun (September 19, 2001). Retrieved December 9, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.