sport.wikisort.org - AthleteTaylor Bennett (born September 12, 1985) is a former college football quarterback and former member of the Georgia House of Representatives. He began his collegiate career at Georgia Tech before transferring to the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs. He majored in International Affairs at Georgia Tech. He later enrolled as a graduate student majoring in Information Systems Security at Louisiana Tech in the fall of 2008. Taylor also obtained a law degree from Atlanta's John Marshall Law School.
American attorney and politician from Georgia
Taylor Bennett |
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In office August 27, 2015 – January 9, 2017 |
Preceded by | Mike Jacobs |
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Succeeded by | Meagan Hanson |
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Born | (1985-09-12) September 12, 1985 (age 37) St. Louis, Missouri |
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Political party | Democratic |
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Residence | Brookhaven, Georgia |
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Alma mater | Georgia Institute of Technology |
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Occupation | Attorney, politician |
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He also played football professionally in Sweden in the Superserien.[1]
American football player
Taylor Bennett|
Height: | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) |
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Weight: | 215 lb (98 kg) |
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High school: | Lafayette High School |
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College: | Georgia Tech (2004–2007) Louisiana Tech (2008) |
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Position: | Quarterback |
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- Stockholm Mean Machines (2009)
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High school
Taylor Bennett attended Lafayette High School in Wildwood, Missouri from 2000 to 2004.
College
Bennett was selected as the Yellow Jackets' backup quarterback before the 2004 game against the Maryland Terrapins.[2] Prior to the 2007 season, he started in two games; in 2005 against the Connecticut Huskies when Reggie Ball had viral meningitis,[3][4] and in the 2007 Gator Bowl against the West Virginia Mountaineers when Reggie Ball was academically ineligible to play.[5] At the Connecticut game, Bennett became only the second quarterback in NCAA history to complete a pass for a touchdown in his first ever collegiate play from scrimmage. The only other quarterback to do this was former Southern California quarterback Matt Leinart. In May 2007, Bennett was given a Spring Team honorable mention by The Sporting News in recognition of his outstanding performance in spring practice.[citation needed]
Bennett had a mediocre showing in Georgia Tech's 2007 season, finishing 7–6, 4–4 ACC, including a loss to Fresno State. After the 2007 season, Paul Johnson was named as Georgia Tech's new head coach. Many believed that Bennett would not fit well into Johnson's option offense, and in February 2008 Bennett announced that he planned to transfer to another school for the 2008 season.[6] On April 28, it was announced that Bennett would transfer to Louisiana Tech, and the NCAA would allow him to play in the 2008 season rather than sitting out a season as most transfers are required to do.[7]
Bennett won the starting job for the Bulldogs during 2008 fall camp. He led his new team to a victory over the Mississippi State Bulldogs of the Southeastern Conference in the 2008 season opener. Unfortunately, this proved to be the highlight of Bennett's season with the Bulldogs. Over the first five games of the season Bennett completed only 39 percent of his passes. He threw 2 touchdowns and 5 interceptions and led the team to a 2–3 record. After a disappointing loss to Hawaii, in which Bennett threw 2 interceptions, head coach Derek Dooley announced that sophomore Ross Jenkins would start the next game against Idaho.[8] Bennett saw little action for the rest of the season. He went 5 for 11 in only 2 games for no touchdowns and 1 interception.[9]
Sweden
During the 2009 season Bennett was the starting quarterback for the Stockholm Mean Machines in Stockholm, Sweden. A season that ended with the club's 11th national championship. Bennett finished his season in the EFL playing for the Stockholm Mean Machine with a 6–2 record although the team finished 14–3. The team went on to win the national championship, thus qualifying for the Euro-Championship tournament. Taylor finished the season with 1756 yards passing, 26 touchdowns, and just 3 interceptions.
Political career
A member of the Democratic Party, Bennett ran in a special election to replace Republican Mike Jacobs for the right to represent District 80 in the Georgia House of Representatives. He won a runoff election against former Brookhaven, Georgia mayor J. Max Davis on August 11, 2015 to capture the seat.[10]
In 2016, Bennett was defeated for reelection by Atlanta attorney Meagan Hanson.[11]
See also
- List of Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets starting quarterbacks
- 2006 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team
- 2007 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team
- 2008 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team
References
- "Player Bio: Taylor Bennett". RamblinWreck.com. Georgia Tech Athletic Association. Retrieved March 14, 2007.
- Thomason, Kyle (October 29, 2004). "Talented freshmen earn playing time, contribute". The Technique. Archived from the original on January 9, 2007. Retrieved May 17, 2007.
- Bretherton, William (September 30, 2005). "Backup Bennett steps up when called upon". The Technique. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved May 16, 2007.
- Joshi, Nikhil (September 23, 2005). "Viral meningitis". The Technique. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved March 4, 2007.
- "Georgia Tech's Ball, Scott ruled out of Gator Bowl". December 20, 2007. Retrieved March 8, 2007.
- "Bennett plans to transfer, won't play senior season at Ga. Tech". February 6, 2008. Retrieved April 19, 2008.
- "Ex-Jackets QB leaving to become a Bulldog". April 28, 2008. Retrieved April 29, 2008.
- "Dooley Names Jenkins Starter for Idaho game". October 13, 2008. Retrieved June 10, 2009.
- "Taylor Bennett Stats". ESPN.com. Retrieved June 10, 2009.
- Niesse, Mark (August 11, 2015). "Democrat wins runoff for Brookhaven House seat". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved August 20, 2015.
- Niesse, Mark. "Hanson defeats Bennett for Brookhaven-area House seat". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
External links
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets starting quarterbacks |
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- Stafford Nash (1892)
- John Kimball (1893)
- John E. Smith (1894)
- Wight (1896)
- Manly (1899)
- Maddox (1900)
- Brinson (1902)
- Alfred Monsalvatge (1903)
- Butler (1904–1905)
- Chip Robert (1906, 1908)
- W. H. Hightower (1907)
- T. S. Wilson (1909)
- Piggy Johnson (1910)
- Bill Coleman (1911)
- Alf McDonald (1912–1913)
- Froggie Morrison (1914–1916)
- Al Hill (1917)
- Red Barron (1918)
- Shorty Guill (1919)
- Jack McDonough (1919–1922)
- Pinkey Hunt (1923)
- Fred Moore (1924)
- Ike Williams (1925)
- John Brewer (1926)
- Bob Durant (1927–1928)
- Earl Dunlap (1929–1930)
- Marshall Flowers (1931)
- Roy McArthur (1932)
- Shorty Roberts (1933–1934)
- Fletcher Sims (1935–1937)
- Joe Bartlette (1938)
- Billy Beers (1939)
- Johnny Bosch (1940–1941)
- Pat McHugh (1942)
- Eddie Prokop (1943–1944)
- Ed Holtsinger (1945)
- Frank Broyles (1946)
- Jimmy Southard (1947–1949)
- Darrell Crawfard (1950–1951)
- Bill Brigman (1952–1954)
- Pepper Rodgers (1953–1954)
- Ron Vann (1955–1956)
- Wade Mitchell (1955–1956)
- Fred Braselton (1957–1959)
- Stan Gann (1960–1961)
- Billy Lothridge (1961–1963)
- Jerry Priestly (1964)
- Kim King (1965–1967)
- Larry Good (1968)
- Jack Williams (1969)
- Eddie McAshan (1970–1972)
- Jim Stevens (1973)
- Rudy Allen (1974)
- Danny Myers (1975)
- Gary Lanier (1976–1977)
- Mike Kelley (1978–1981)
- Jim Bob Taylor (1982)
- John Dewberry (1983–1985)
- Rick Strom (1986–1987)
- Darrell Gast (1987)
- Todd Rampley (1988)
- Shawn Jones (1989–1992)
- Donnie Davis (1993, 1995)
- Tom Luginbill (1994)
- Joe Hamilton (1996–1999)
- George Godsey (2000–2001)
- A. J. Suggs (2002)
- Reggie Ball (2003–2006)
- Taylor Bennett (2005–2007)
- Joshua Nesbitt (2008–2010)
- Tevin Washington (2010–2012)
- Vad Lee (2013)
- Justin Thomas (2014–2016)
- Matthew Jordan (2016)
- TaQuon Marshall (2017–2018)
- Tobias Oliver (2018–2019)
- Lucas Johnson (2019)
- James Graham (2019)
- Jeff Sims (2020–2022)
- Jordan Yates (2021)
- Zach Gibson (2022)
- Zach Pyron (2022)
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Louisiana Tech Bulldogs starting quarterbacks |
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- Zack T. Young (1905)
- Mickey Slaughter (1960–1962)
- Billy Laird (1963–1965)
- Phil Robertson (1966–1967)
- Terry Bradshaw (1967–1969)
- Ken Lantrip (1970–1971)
- Denny Duron (1972–1973)
- Randy Robertson (1974–1975)
- Steve Haynes (1975–1976)
- Keith Thibodeaux (1977–1978)
- Matt Buchanan (1979)
- Matt Dunigan (1980–1982)
- David Brewer (1983)
- Kyle Gandy (1984)
- Jordan Stanley (1985–1986)
- David McKinney (1987)
- Conroy Hines (1988)
- Gene Johnson (1989–1991)
- Sam Hughes (1989)
- Aaron Ferguson (1992)
- Jason Martin (1993–1996)
- Tim Rattay (1997–1999)
- Brian Stallworth (1999–2000)
- Maxie Causey (2000)
- Luke McCown (2000–2003)
- Matt Kubik (2004–2005)
- Donald Allen (2004)
- Zac Champion (2006–2007)
- Michael Mosley (2007)
- Taylor Bennett (2008)
- Ross Jenkins (2008–2010)
- Colby Cameron (2010–2012)
- Tarik Hakmi (2010)
- Nick Isham (2011)
- Scotty Young (2013)
- Ryan Higgins (2013, 2016)
- Cody Sokol (2014)
- Jeff Driskel (2015)
- J'Mar Smith (2016–2019)
- Aaron Allen (2019–2021)
- Luke Anthony (2020)
- Austin Kendall (2021)
- JD Head (2021)
- Parker McNeil (2022)
- Landry Lyddy (2022)
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