David Blough

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

David Blough
refer to caption
Blough with Purdue in 2017
Washington Commanders
Position:Assistant quarterbacks coach
Personal information
Born: (1995-07-31) July 31, 1995 (age 28)
Carrollton, Texas, U.S.
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:207 lb (94 kg)
Career information
High school:Creekview (Carrollton)
College:Purdue (2014–2018)
Undrafted:2019
Career history
As a player:
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
As a coach:
Career highlights and awards
  • Third-team All-Big Ten (2018)
Career NFL statistics
TDINT:6–9
Passing yards:1,435
Completion percentage:57.0%
Passer rating:67.1
Rushing yards:60
Receiving touchdowns:1
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR

David Marshall Blough (born July 31, 1995) is an

undrafted free agent in 2019. Following an injury to Matthew Stafford and Jeff Driskel, Blough assumed the starting role for the final five games of the Detroit Lions' 2019 season. He is married to Colombian-American hurdler Melissa Gonzalez
.

Early years

Blough was born on July 31, 1995, in Carrollton, Texas.[1] His mother, LuAnn Blough is a cancer survivor and a graduate of Vanderbilt University.[2] Blough is the youngest of three brothers; his elder brothers are Matthew and Daniel.[3]


Playing career

High school

Blough played

interceptions. He also ran for 244 yards and six scores.[5]

Blough was rated as the seventh-best pocket passer quarterback in the class of 2014, according to ESPN during The Opening rankings,[6] but was later rated as the thirty-fifth best pocket passer.[7] Other ratings services also had Blough in their class of 2014 rankings: 19 by Rivals.com and 26 by Scout.com following his reclassification.[8][9] Blough appeared in the 2013 Elite 11, where he had an early lead as the camp's MVP;[10] however, he ended up losing to Sean White.[11]

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight 40 Commit date
David Blough
QB
Carrollton, Texas Creekview H. S. 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 4.73 Jun 16, 2013 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:3/5 stars   Rivals:3/5 stars   247Sports:3/5 stars    ESPN:3/5 stars   ESPN grade: 77
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: 26 (Pro-Style QB)   Rivals: 19 (QB), 56 (TX)
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

  • "Purdue Football Commitments". Rivals.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  • "2014 Purdue Football Commits". Scout.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  • "ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  • "Scout.com Team Recruiting Rankings". Scout.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  • "2014 Team Ranking". Rivals.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.

College

2014

In May 2013, Blough received a scholarship offer, and verbally committed to play college football at Purdue University following his visit on June 15, 2013.[12] On December 16, 2013, he signed his National Letter of Intent.[13] In January 2014, he enrolled early at Purdue.[14] He attended Purdue's spring camp in April 2014 under coach Darrell Hazell.[15] Blough redshirted his entire freshman season for the 2014 Boilermakers as sophomore Danny Etling was named the team's starter.[16]

2015

As a redshirt freshman for the 2015 Boilermakers, Blough began the season as a backup to Austin Appleby. Blough was the backup on a roster that had just three scholarship quarterbacks, the other being true freshman Elijah Sindelar, who was recovering from a high school knee injury, and who Hazell wanted to redshirt.

Blough made his Purdue debut on September 12, 2015, throwing one incomplete pass in a three-and-out series in the closing minutes of a victory over Indiana State.[17] Hazell ultimately decided to redshirt Sindelar during the 2015 season, resulting in Blough seeing playing time as Appleby's principal backup. Blough completed three passes in seven attempts against Virginia Tech on September 19.[18]

On September 22, Blough was named Purdue's starting quarterback, replacing Appleby.

completion percentage
.

2016

Purdue's 2016 spring practice featured a quarterback battle between Blough and redshirt freshman Elijah Sindelar.[29] After spring practice, press reports indicated that Blough was leading the competition.[30] Blough and Sindelar were the starters in the April 16 spring game.[31] Blough passed for 226 yards but was intercepted twice as his team was defeated 17–23.[32]

On August 22, 2016, Blough was named the starting quarterback.[33] In the opening game, Blough led Purdue to a 45–24 victory over Eastern Kentucky. On Purdue's first drive, Blough found Tario Fuller on a screen pass for a 27-yard gain. For the game, he completed 25 of 43 passes for 245 yards with a touchdown pass and an interception while also running for two touchdowns.[34][35] In his third start of the season on September 24 against Nevada, Blough completed 21 of 30 passes for 300 yards with two touchdown passes and one interception to rally Purdue to a 24–14 victory.[36] On October 8, Blough's fourth quarter pass to Cameron Posey against Illinois set up a game-tying touchdown run by Richie Worship for Purdue first win against Illinois since the 2014 Boilermakers beat the 2014 Fighting Illini.[37] After leading Purdue to a 3–2 start, Blough and Purdue lost to Iowa 49–35 on October 15, throwing a career high five touchdowns.[38] The loss lead to head coach Darrell Hazell's dismissal.[39] On November 5, Blough almost knocked off Minnesota on the road. He posted 4 touchdowns, but had 1 interception in the loss.[40] Following the season, Blough was an honorable mention All-Big Ten selection by the coaches.[41]

2017

Blough in 2017

Blough once again entered training camp in a quarterback battle, with his primary competition being redshirt sophomore Elijah Sindelar and redshirt freshman Jared Sparks.[42] Blough was injured during Purdue's scrimmage on August 12, 2017, but was not expected to miss the season opener.[43] Blough began the season opener against #16 Louisville Cardinals as the backup to Sindelar.[44] Blough came in during the second quarter and sparked the struggling Purdue offense, leading two touchdown drives to give Purdue the lead and increase their lead. However, late in the third Blough was intercepted twice, one of which being a 61-yard touchdown for Louisville. Blough returned to the bench for the rest of the game in favor of Sindelar. Blough finished the game with 175 passing yards.[45] On September 8, Blough completed six of seven attempts in the first half for 174 yards and 2 touchdowns. He finished the game 11-for-13 passing for 235 yards and three scores. This would have been considered a perfect passer rating by NFL standards.[46]

2018

Purdue's first game of the season was against Northwestern and Elijah Sindelar was named as the starting quarterback.[47] Sindelar was named the starter for third game of the season against Missouri, but he was injured the Wednesday before the game. Blough was named the starter after the injury announcement.[48] The team was 0–2 when he took over.[49]

On September 15, 2018, against Missouri, Blough threw for a school record 572 passing yards.[50] He set the Big Ten record for total yards with 590. He was named the Big Ten offensive player of the week.[51] Despite Blough's performance, Purdue lost 40–37.

Purdue played at Illinois October 13. Since Illinois was the team he was playing when he got hurt the previous year, Blough said the game "...was personal." Purdue routed Illinois 46–7. Blough was pulled from the game due to their lead, but accumulated 377 yards passing and three touchdowns with one interception. He also had his first career receiving touchdown.[48]

Purdue played #2 Ohio State on October 20. Purdue won 49–20 in a surprising upset. Blough threw for 378 yards and three touchdowns in the game.[52]

His last game at Purdue ended in a blowout loss to Auburn in the 2018 Music City Bowl. Auburn led 56–7 and finished the game 63–14, the most points scored against Purdue in their history.[53]

He played in the

East-West Shrine Bowl. He finished the game 10–15 with two touchdowns and 149 yards.[54]

College statistics

Purdue Boilermakers
College statistics
Season Games Passing Rushing
GP GS Record Cmp Att Pct Yds Avg TD Int Rtg Att Yds Avg TD
2014 0 0 Redshirted Redshirt
2015 10 8 1–7 169 293 57.7 1,574 5.4 10 8 108.6 67 94 1.4 4
2016 12 12 3–9 295 517 57.1 3,352 6.5 25 21 119.4 80 13 0.2 4
2017 9 5 3–2 102 157 65.0 1,103 7.0 9 4 137.8 42 103 2.5 2
2018 12 11 6–5 283 425 66.5 3,521 9.0 25 8 159.1 38 43 1.1 2
Career 43 36 13–23 849 1,382 61.4 9,550 6.8 69 41 126.8 227 253 1.1 12

National Football League

Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split
20-yard shuttle
Three-cone drill Vertical jump Broad jump
6 ft 0+14 in
(1.84 m)
200 lb
(91 kg)
29+58 in
(0.75 m)
9+38 in
(0.24 m)
4.91 s 1.66 s 2.82 s 4.55 s 7.22 s 31.5 in
(0.80 m)
8 ft 11 in
(2.72 m)
All values from
Pro Day[55]

Cleveland Browns

Blough was signed by the Cleveland Browns as an undrafted free agent on May 3, 2019.[56]

Detroit Lions (first stint)

On August 30, 2019, Blough was traded to the Detroit Lions in an exchange that also saw the teams swap conditional seventh-round draft picks.[57][58] On November 27, 2019, following injuries to Matthew Stafford and backup quarterback Jeff Driskel, Blough was named the starting quarterback for the Lions for their game on Thanksgiving Day against the Chicago Bears, making it his first NFL start.[59] Blough completed the game with 22 completed passes on 38 attempts for 280 yards with two touchdowns and an interception but the Lions lost 24–20.[60] During the game he threw for his first NFL completion on a 75-yard touchdown pass to Lions wide receiver Kenny Golladay.[61] In Week 14 at the Minnesota Vikings, Blough threw for 205 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions and was sacked five times in a 20–7 Lions loss.[62] In Week 15 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Blough threw for 260 yards and 2 interceptions, one returned for a touchdown, in a 38–17 Lions loss.[63] In Week 16, against the Denver Broncos Blough threw for 117 yards and a touchdown in a 27–17 Lions loss.[64] In Week 17 against the Green Bay Packers, Blough threw for 122 yards and an interception and caught a 19-yard touchdown pass from wide receiver Danny Amendola during the 23–20 loss.[65] Blough finished the 2019 NFL season going 94-of-174 throwing for 984 yards with four touchdowns and six interceptions.[66]

On September 5, 2020, Blough was waived by the Lions and signed to the practice squad the next day.[67][68] He was promoted to the active roster on October 17.[69]

On March 17, 2022, Blough re-signed with the Lions.[70] On August 31, after making the initial 53-man roster, the Lions released Blough to make room for Nate Sudfeld.[71]

Minnesota Vikings

On September 1, 2022, the Vikings signed Blough to their practice squad.[72]

Arizona Cardinals

On December 14, 2022, Blough was signed off the Vikings practice squad to the Arizona Cardinals active roster.[73] On December 30, Blough was named the starting quarterback for Week 17 against the Atlanta Falcons after Colt McCoy experienced a recurrence of concussion symptoms.[74]

He re-signed with the team on March 20, 2023.[75] On August 29, Blough was released by the Cardinals as part of final roster cuts before the start of the season.[76]

Detroit Lions (second stint)

On August 31, 2023, Blough was signed to the Lions practice squad.[77]

NFL career statistics

Year Team Games Passing Rushing
GP GS Record Cmp Att Pct Yds Avg TD Int Rtg Att Yds Avg TD
2019 DET 5 5 0–5 94 174 54.0 984 5.7 4 6 64.0 8 31 3.9 0
2020 DET 1 0 6 10 60.0 49 4.9 0 1 32.9 1 18 18.0 0
2021 DET 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 1 6 6.0 0
2022 ARI 2 2 0–2 38 58 65.5 402 6.9 2 2 82.7 4 5 1.3 0
Total 9 7 0–7 138 242 57.0 1,435 5.9 6 9 67.1 14 60 4.3 0

Coaching career

Washington Commanders

On February 15, 2024, Blough was hired by the Washington Commanders as their assistant quarterbacks coach under head coach Dan Quinn.[78]

Personal life

Blough is a

brother-in-law of NFL player Christian Gonzalez.[80]

References

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External links