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{{dablink|This article is about Arena Football player Darryl Hammond. For the comedian, see [[Darrell Hammond]].}}
{{dablink|This article is about retired Arena Football player Darryl Hammond. For the comedian, see [[Darrell Hammond]].}}
{{Infobox Arenaretired
|image =Replace this image male.svg <!-- only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people - see [[WP:NONFREE]] -->
|width =
|caption =
|currentteam =Retired
|currentnumber =--
|currentpositionplain =[[Wide Receiver]] / [[Defensive back]]
|birthdate ={{Birth date and age|1967|24|09}}
|birthplace =Tappahannock, Virginia
|heightft =6
|heightin =4
|weight =225
|debutyear =1991
|debutteam =Albany Firebirds
|finalyear =2006
|finalteam =Nashville Kats
|college =[[Virginia Cavaliers football|Virginia]]
|pastteams =<nowiki></nowiki>
* [[New Orleans Saints]] (1989)*
* [[New York Jets]] (1990)*
* Albany Firebirds (1991 - 1994)
* [[St. Louis Stampede]] (1995 - 1996)
* [[Nashville Kats]] (1997 - 2001)
* [[Georgia Force]] (2002 - 2003)
* [[Austin Wranglers]] (2004)
* Nashville Kats (2005 - 2006)
<small>* Offseason and/or practice squad member only</small>
|status =Retired
|career_highlights =<nowiki></nowiki>
* 7x Ironman of the Game
* 1999 Nashville Kats' co-Ironman of the Year (w/ [[James Baron]])
* 3x All-Arena selection ([[1995 Arena Football League season|1995]] - [[1996 Arena Football League season|1996]], [[1999 Arena Football League season|1999]])
* 3x All-Ironman Team ([[2000 Arena Football League season|2000]] - [[2001 Arena Football League season|2001]], [[2005 Arena Football League season|2005]])
* Longest career in Arena Football League history (16 seasons)
|administrating_years =
|administrating_teams =
|coaching_years =
|coaching_teams =
|statedate =
|statlabel1 =[[Reception (American football)|Recptions]]
|statvalue1 =802
|statlabel2 =Receiving yards
|statvalue2 =8,559
|statlabel3 =Receiving [[Touchdown]]s
|statvalue3 =144
|statlabel4 =Receiving average
|statvalue4 =10.7
|statlabel5 =[[Tackle (football move)|Tackles]]
|statvalue5 =728
|statlabel6 =[[Interception]]s
|statvalue6 =31
|AFL =96906
|nfl =
|pfr =
|CBS =
|espn =
|si =
}}
'''Darryl Hammond''' (born [[September 24]], [[1967]] in [[Tappahannock, Virginia|Tappahannock]], [[Virginia]]) is a retired [[arena football]] [[wide receiver]] / [[defensive back]] in the [[Arena Football League]].


Hammond is ranked in the top 20 in numerous career record books. His sixteen-year career is currently the longest career in Arena Football League history. His 8,559 receiving yards are sixteenth-most in arena football history and his 802 [[Reception (American football)|receptions]] rank tenth, and 144 [[touchdown]] receptions rank 20th in league history. His 728 career [[Tackle (football)|tackles]] rank second, and his 31 career [[interception]]s are tied for 20th in league history as well. One of only two players to have played for the Kats in all six seasons of the team’s existence, the other being [[James Baron]].
'''Darryl Hammond''' (born [[September 24]], [[1967]] in [[Tappahannock, Virginia]]) is a veteran [[Arena Football League]] player, most recently with the revived [[Nashville Kats]], and holder of several AFL records including:


==High school and college==
{{Out of date}}
Hammond was an All-State player [[high school football|football]] player at [[Essex High School (Virginia)|Essex High School]]. He then attended [[Ferrum College]] for his freshman and sophomore years. He then transferred to the [[Virginia Cavaliers football|University of Virginia]], where he was the team's leading receiver in [[1985 NCAA Division I-A football season|1985]]. He recorded 11 receptions for 115 yards and one touchdown in [[1986 NCAA Division I-A football season|1986]]. He was switched from [[wide receiver]] to [[strong safety]] for his senior season in [[1987 NCAA Division I-A football season|1987]], and he recorded 61 tackles and earned honorable All-[[Atlantic Coast Conference|ACC]] mention honors.
* Most seasons played - Currently entering his 15th season
* Most career tackles - Currently at 688½
* All Arena First Team - 1995, 1996, and 1999


==Professional career==
Darryl was an honorable mention All-ACC strong safety at the University of Virginia and in 1989, was invited to the New Orleans Saints' training camp as a free agent, but was cut before the season began. The following year, the New York Jets signed Hammond. On the eve of his flight to their camp, however, he decided he was too burned out to focus on football.<ref>[http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1111178/index.htm http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1111178/index.htm]</ref>
===National Football League (1989 - 1990)===
Hammond went unselected in the [[1988 NFL Draft]] and worked at a [[Ben & Jerry's]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Reiter |first=Ben |authorlink=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/topic/article/Ben_Reiter/1900-01-01/2100-12-31/mdd/index.htm |title=Ageless Wonder |work=SportsIllustradedVault.com |publisher=[[Sports Illustrated]] |date=May 9, 2005 |url=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1111178/index.htm |format=HTML |accessdate=2008-06-09}}</ref> plant while completing his socialogy degree. He also, spent time working as a deputy sheriff in [[Manassas, Virginia]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Parsons |first=Keith |authorlink=http://articles.latimes.com/writers/keith-parsons |title=Hammond Still Going Strong |work=LATimes.com |publisher=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=May 4, 2003 |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2003/may/04/sports/sp-doghammond4 |format=HTML |accessdate=2008-09-10}}</ref> He then spent two years as a graduate assistant at [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]] under [[head coach]] [[Joe Paterno]] where he completed his degree in [[Turf management]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Parsons |first=Keith |authorlink=http://articles.latimes.com/writers/keith-parsons |title=Hammond Still Going Strong |work=LATimes.com |publisher=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=May 4, 2003 |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2003/may/04/sports/sp-doghammond4 |format=HTML |accessdate=2008-09-10}}</ref>


In [[1989 NFL season|1989]], he was invited to the [[New Orleans Saints]]' [[National Football League training camp|training camp]] as a [[free agent]], however was cut before the season began. The following year, he signed with the [[New York Jets]]. However, the night before his flight to camp, he decided he was too "burned out" to focus on football and did not attend.<ref>{{cite web |last=Reiter |first=Ben |authorlink=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/topic/article/Ben_Reiter/1900-01-01/2100-12-31/mdd/index.htm |title=Ageless Wonder |work=SportsIllustradedVault.com |publisher=[[Sports Illustrated]] |date=May 9, 2005 |url=http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1111178/index.htm |format=HTML |accessdate=2008-06-09}}</ref>
Darryl played [[Harold Carmichael]] in the movie ''[[Invincible (2006 film)|Invincible]]''{{Fact|date=March 2008}}.


===Arena Football League (1991 - 2006)===
Hammond played [[college football]] at [[Ferrum College]] as a freshman and sophomore and the [[University of Virginia]] as a senior.
====Albany Firebirds (1991 - 1994)====
Hammond joined the [[Albany Firebirds]] of the [[Arena Football League]] in [[1991 Arena Football League season|1991]], and recorded five [[interception]]s, which ranked him second in the league. He was also the Firebirds second-leading [[Tackle (football move)|tackler]], with 48 tackles, and he broke up 11 passes. He also ranked second among Firebird receivers with 27 [[Reception (American football)|receptions]] for 254 yards and seven [[touchdown]]s. He also was 1-of-1 passing the ball, a 27 yard completion. He also returned two [[kickoff]]s for a total of 39 yards.

In [[1992 Arena Football League season|1992]], Hammond ranked fourth in the league with 60 total tackles. He recorded two interceptions and four passes broken up. He also recorded 13 receptions for 138 yards, and one touchdowns. Once again he was 1-of-1 passing a 26-yard touchdown.

In [[1993 Arena Football League season|1993]], Hammond was Albany's second-leading tackler, recording 65 tackles and 1.5 [[Quarterback sack|sacks]]. He had two interceptions and eight passes broken up. He recorded 35 receptions for 454 yards and six touchdowns. He also recorded 12 total return yards on both a missed [[Field goal (football)|field goal]] and a kickoff.

In [[1994 Arena Football League season|1994]] Hammond ranked fifth among Albany receivers with 10 receptions for 101 yards and two touchdowns. He finished as the team's fifth-leading tackler, recording 35 total tackles. He was also second on the team with three interceptions.

====St. Louis Stampede (1995 - 1996)====
In [[1995 Arena Football League season|1995]], Hammond joined the [[St. Louis Stampede]] and was a First-team All-Arena selection. He led St. Louis with 80 receptions for 979 yards, and 12 touchdowns. He also had 11 carries for a career-high 36 yards and three touchdowns. He also recorded 49 tackles, four interceptions one sack, four passes broken up and a [[fumble]] recovery.

In [[1996 Arena Football League season|1996]], Hammond was a First-team All-Arena selection for the second time, after leading the Stampede 74 receptions for 860 yards, and 16 touchdowns. He also recorded 60 tackles and two interceptions, seven passes broken up and two fumble recoveries. He also returned one kickoff for 17 yards and a missed field goal for five yards. He also carried the ball four times for 21 yards.

====Nashville Kats (1997 - 2001)====
In [[1997 Arena Football League season|1997]], Hammond joined the [[Nashville Kats]] and was the team's second-leading receiver, recording 50 receptions for 607 yards and four touchdowns. He also recorded 49 tackles, one sack, two interceptions, a pass broken up, and a fumble recovery. He also caught two [[two-point conversions]], returned 15 kickoffs for 205 yards and two missed field goals for 23 yards. He tied a career-best with seven tackles in opening win against the [[San Jose SaberCats]]. He won his first Ironman of the Game award with Nashville, catching seven passes for 77 yards, making five tackles, a pass break up and one interception in a home win over the [[New York Dragons]].

In [[1998 Arena Football League season|1998]], Hammond recorded 31 receptions for 292 yards and seven touchdowns, despite missing six weeks with an injury. He recorded 22 [[Tackle (football move)|tackles]], two broken up passes and two fumble recoveries. He was named Ironman of the Game twice for the season, as well as the [[Dick Butkus]] Football Network Defensive Player of the Week twice. He was placed on [[injured reserve]] on June 4, and in his first game back, against the [[Tampa Bay Storm]], he recorded four [[Reception (American football)|receptions]] for 32 yards, for one [[touchdown]]. He also recorded one fumble recovery, on a kickoff, for a touchdown, and two tackles.

In [[1999 Arena Football League season|1999]], Hammond was an All-Arena Team selection for the third time, and chosen as Nashville’s co-Ironman of the Year, an award he shared with [[James Baron]]. He recorded a career-high 88 receptions for 788 yards and 19 touchdowns. He carries the ball 14 times for 31 yards and four touchdowns. He finished second on the team in tackles, yet he recorded a career-high with 61. In the last seven games of the season he recorded 65 receptions for 570 yards and 15 touchdowns. He also recorded one [[interception]], two fumble recoveries, and three passes broken up.

In [[2000 Arena Football League season|2000]] Hammond was an All-Ironman Team. He finished tied for the team lead with 71 total tackles. He ranked second in the league with five fumble recoveries. He finished as the team's second-leading receiver with 55 receptions for 581 yards and nine touchdowns. He had 10 carries for a career-high 52 yards, and one touchdown. He had five [[kickoff]]s returns for 56 yards and, two missed [[Field goal (football)|field goals]] returns for 43 yards, and two interceptions for 50 yards. The Kats made their way through the playoff and to [[ArenaBowl XIV]] in [[Orlando Predators|Orlando]], where he recorded three receptions, for 88 yards, two touchdowns, and two tackles.

In [[2001 Arena Football League season|2001]], Hammond statistically had one of the best seasons of his career. He led the Kats with 60 receptions for 708 yards and 10 touchdowns. He recorded 36 [[Tackle (football move)|tackles]], and two interceptions, despite missing two late season games due to injury. He was named to the All-Time All-Ironman team for the second time in his career. The Kats once again made their way to the ArenaBowl. In [[ArenaBowl XV]] in [[Grand Rapids Rampage|Grand Rapids]] he recorded one receptions for 11 yards, 2.5 tackles, and one pass broken up.

====Georgia Force (2002 - 2003)====
In [[2002 Arena Football League season|2002]], the Nashville Kats folded and moved to [[Augusta, Georgia]], and were renamed the [[Georgia Force]], similar to the [[Cleveland Browns]]/[[Baltimore Ravens]] move of 1996, whereas [[Nashville]] retained the Kats' name, colors, logo, and history.

With the start of the season, Hammond tied the league career record for longest AFL career, at the time it was shared between himself, [[Sylvester Bembery]] ([[1988 Arena Football League season|1988]]-2000) and [[George LaFrance]] (1988-2000). He finished third on the team with 50 tackles, and had two interceptions. He also led the team with 65 receptions for 620 yards and nine touchdowns.

In [[2003 Arena Football League season|2003]], Hammond led the team in receptions with 88 for 969 yards, and a career-high 20 touchdowns. He finished fourth on the team in rushing with three carries for 22 yards and one touchdown. On defense, he recorded 33.5 total tackles, three for a loss, three forced [[fumble]]s, one fumble recovery, and two interceptions for 13 yards.

====Austin Wranglers (2004)====
In [[2004 Arena Football League season|2004]], Hammond recorded 47 [[Reception (American football)|receptions]] for 427 yards and 12 [[touchdown]]s in his only season with the [[Austin Wranglers]]. He recorded 25 tackles and three fumble recoveries. He also carried the ball nine times for 14 yards and a touchdown. He also earned [[United States Army|Army]] Ironman of the Game honors twice. He was Injured early in the season and spent four weeks on injured reserve.

====Nashville Kats (2005 - 2006)====
In [[2005 Arena Football League season|2005]], Hammond joined the restart [[Nashville Kats]] for his final two seasons as a player. In his 15th season, he was named to the league’s All-Ironman team. He finished as the Kats’ second-leading receiver, recording 66 receptions for 632 yards and eight touchdowns. He also had seven carries for 10 yards and one touchdown. He also finished with 42.5 tackles, one tackle for loss, two [[interception]]s and a fumble recovery.

In [[2006 Arena Football League season|2006]], Hammond recorded 21 tackles, one [[Quaterback sack|sack]], two passes broken up, one fumble recovery, and two interceptions, one for a touchdown. He also recorded 13 receptions for 149 yards, and two touchdowns. He also carried the ball seven times for 10 yards and three touchdowns and had three [[kickoff]] returns for nine yards.

==Outside of football==
Hammond is an avid [[golf]]er. Also, in 2004, he appeared as an extra on the set of the [[Adam Sandler]] movie ''[[The Longest Yard (2005 film)|The Longest Yard]]'', and plays [[Philadelphia Eagles]] [[wide receiver]] [[Wilbert Montgomery]] in the [[Mark Wahlberg]] film, ''[[Invincible (2006 film)|Invincible]]''.

He also served as an assistant football coach at [[The Ensworth School]] in Nashville in the fall of 2005.

==Personal==
Hammond is married to his wife Robin, and the couple have two daughters, Darryn and Sydney.

==Notes==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.arenafootball.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=3500&ATCLID=96906 Darryl Hammond at ArenaFootball.com]
* [http://www.arenafan.com/players/?page=players&player=658 Stats at ArenaFan Online]
* [http://www.arenafan.com/players/?page=players&player=658 Darryl Hammond at ArenaFan Online]


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[[Category:American football wide receivers]]
[[Category:American football wide receivers]]
[[Category:Virginia Cavaliers football players]]
[[Category:Virginia Cavaliers football players]]
[[Category:New Orleans Saints players]]
[[Category:New York Jets players]]
[[Category:Albany Firebirds players]]
[[Category:Albany Firebirds players]]
[[Category:St. Louis Stampede players]]
[[Category:St. Louis Stampede players]]

Revision as of 19:42, 10 September 2008

Template:Infobox Arenaretired Darryl Hammond (born September 24, 1967 in Tappahannock, Virginia) is a retired arena football wide receiver / defensive back in the Arena Football League.

Hammond is ranked in the top 20 in numerous career record books. His sixteen-year career is currently the longest career in Arena Football League history. His 8,559 receiving yards are sixteenth-most in arena football history and his 802 receptions rank tenth, and 144 touchdown receptions rank 20th in league history. His 728 career tackles rank second, and his 31 career interceptions are tied for 20th in league history as well. One of only two players to have played for the Kats in all six seasons of the team’s existence, the other being James Baron.

High school and college

Hammond was an All-State player football player at Essex High School. He then attended Ferrum College for his freshman and sophomore years. He then transferred to the University of Virginia, where he was the team's leading receiver in 1985. He recorded 11 receptions for 115 yards and one touchdown in 1986. He was switched from wide receiver to strong safety for his senior season in 1987, and he recorded 61 tackles and earned honorable All-ACC mention honors.

Professional career

National Football League (1989 - 1990)

Hammond went unselected in the 1988 NFL Draft and worked at a Ben & Jerry's[1] plant while completing his socialogy degree. He also, spent time working as a deputy sheriff in Manassas, Virginia.[2] He then spent two years as a graduate assistant at Penn State under head coach Joe Paterno where he completed his degree in Turf management.[3]

In 1989, he was invited to the New Orleans Saints' training camp as a free agent, however was cut before the season began. The following year, he signed with the New York Jets. However, the night before his flight to camp, he decided he was too "burned out" to focus on football and did not attend.[4]

Arena Football League (1991 - 2006)

Albany Firebirds (1991 - 1994)

Hammond joined the Albany Firebirds of the Arena Football League in 1991, and recorded five interceptions, which ranked him second in the league. He was also the Firebirds second-leading tackler, with 48 tackles, and he broke up 11 passes. He also ranked second among Firebird receivers with 27 receptions for 254 yards and seven touchdowns. He also was 1-of-1 passing the ball, a 27 yard completion. He also returned two kickoffs for a total of 39 yards.

In 1992, Hammond ranked fourth in the league with 60 total tackles. He recorded two interceptions and four passes broken up. He also recorded 13 receptions for 138 yards, and one touchdowns. Once again he was 1-of-1 passing a 26-yard touchdown.

In 1993, Hammond was Albany's second-leading tackler, recording 65 tackles and 1.5 sacks. He had two interceptions and eight passes broken up. He recorded 35 receptions for 454 yards and six touchdowns. He also recorded 12 total return yards on both a missed field goal and a kickoff.

In 1994 Hammond ranked fifth among Albany receivers with 10 receptions for 101 yards and two touchdowns. He finished as the team's fifth-leading tackler, recording 35 total tackles. He was also second on the team with three interceptions.

St. Louis Stampede (1995 - 1996)

In 1995, Hammond joined the St. Louis Stampede and was a First-team All-Arena selection. He led St. Louis with 80 receptions for 979 yards, and 12 touchdowns. He also had 11 carries for a career-high 36 yards and three touchdowns. He also recorded 49 tackles, four interceptions one sack, four passes broken up and a fumble recovery.

In 1996, Hammond was a First-team All-Arena selection for the second time, after leading the Stampede 74 receptions for 860 yards, and 16 touchdowns. He also recorded 60 tackles and two interceptions, seven passes broken up and two fumble recoveries. He also returned one kickoff for 17 yards and a missed field goal for five yards. He also carried the ball four times for 21 yards.

Nashville Kats (1997 - 2001)

In 1997, Hammond joined the Nashville Kats and was the team's second-leading receiver, recording 50 receptions for 607 yards and four touchdowns. He also recorded 49 tackles, one sack, two interceptions, a pass broken up, and a fumble recovery. He also caught two two-point conversions, returned 15 kickoffs for 205 yards and two missed field goals for 23 yards. He tied a career-best with seven tackles in opening win against the San Jose SaberCats. He won his first Ironman of the Game award with Nashville, catching seven passes for 77 yards, making five tackles, a pass break up and one interception in a home win over the New York Dragons.

In 1998, Hammond recorded 31 receptions for 292 yards and seven touchdowns, despite missing six weeks with an injury. He recorded 22 tackles, two broken up passes and two fumble recoveries. He was named Ironman of the Game twice for the season, as well as the Dick Butkus Football Network Defensive Player of the Week twice. He was placed on injured reserve on June 4, and in his first game back, against the Tampa Bay Storm, he recorded four receptions for 32 yards, for one touchdown. He also recorded one fumble recovery, on a kickoff, for a touchdown, and two tackles.

In 1999, Hammond was an All-Arena Team selection for the third time, and chosen as Nashville’s co-Ironman of the Year, an award he shared with James Baron. He recorded a career-high 88 receptions for 788 yards and 19 touchdowns. He carries the ball 14 times for 31 yards and four touchdowns. He finished second on the team in tackles, yet he recorded a career-high with 61. In the last seven games of the season he recorded 65 receptions for 570 yards and 15 touchdowns. He also recorded one interception, two fumble recoveries, and three passes broken up.

In 2000 Hammond was an All-Ironman Team. He finished tied for the team lead with 71 total tackles. He ranked second in the league with five fumble recoveries. He finished as the team's second-leading receiver with 55 receptions for 581 yards and nine touchdowns. He had 10 carries for a career-high 52 yards, and one touchdown. He had five kickoffs returns for 56 yards and, two missed field goals returns for 43 yards, and two interceptions for 50 yards. The Kats made their way through the playoff and to ArenaBowl XIV in Orlando, where he recorded three receptions, for 88 yards, two touchdowns, and two tackles.

In 2001, Hammond statistically had one of the best seasons of his career. He led the Kats with 60 receptions for 708 yards and 10 touchdowns. He recorded 36 tackles, and two interceptions, despite missing two late season games due to injury. He was named to the All-Time All-Ironman team for the second time in his career. The Kats once again made their way to the ArenaBowl. In ArenaBowl XV in Grand Rapids he recorded one receptions for 11 yards, 2.5 tackles, and one pass broken up.

Georgia Force (2002 - 2003)

In 2002, the Nashville Kats folded and moved to Augusta, Georgia, and were renamed the Georgia Force, similar to the Cleveland Browns/Baltimore Ravens move of 1996, whereas Nashville retained the Kats' name, colors, logo, and history.

With the start of the season, Hammond tied the league career record for longest AFL career, at the time it was shared between himself, Sylvester Bembery (1988-2000) and George LaFrance (1988-2000). He finished third on the team with 50 tackles, and had two interceptions. He also led the team with 65 receptions for 620 yards and nine touchdowns.

In 2003, Hammond led the team in receptions with 88 for 969 yards, and a career-high 20 touchdowns. He finished fourth on the team in rushing with three carries for 22 yards and one touchdown. On defense, he recorded 33.5 total tackles, three for a loss, three forced fumbles, one fumble recovery, and two interceptions for 13 yards.

Austin Wranglers (2004)

In 2004, Hammond recorded 47 receptions for 427 yards and 12 touchdowns in his only season with the Austin Wranglers. He recorded 25 tackles and three fumble recoveries. He also carried the ball nine times for 14 yards and a touchdown. He also earned Army Ironman of the Game honors twice. He was Injured early in the season and spent four weeks on injured reserve.

Nashville Kats (2005 - 2006)

In 2005, Hammond joined the restart Nashville Kats for his final two seasons as a player. In his 15th season, he was named to the league’s All-Ironman team. He finished as the Kats’ second-leading receiver, recording 66 receptions for 632 yards and eight touchdowns. He also had seven carries for 10 yards and one touchdown. He also finished with 42.5 tackles, one tackle for loss, two interceptions and a fumble recovery.

In 2006, Hammond recorded 21 tackles, one sack, two passes broken up, one fumble recovery, and two interceptions, one for a touchdown. He also recorded 13 receptions for 149 yards, and two touchdowns. He also carried the ball seven times for 10 yards and three touchdowns and had three kickoff returns for nine yards.

Outside of football

Hammond is an avid golfer. Also, in 2004, he appeared as an extra on the set of the Adam Sandler movie The Longest Yard, and plays Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver Wilbert Montgomery in the Mark Wahlberg film, Invincible.

He also served as an assistant football coach at The Ensworth School in Nashville in the fall of 2005.

Personal

Hammond is married to his wife Robin, and the couple have two daughters, Darryn and Sydney.

Notes

  1. ^ Reiter, Ben (May 9, 2005). "Ageless Wonder" (HTML). SportsIllustradedVault.com. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2008-06-09. {{cite web}}: Check |authorlink= value (help); External link in |authorlink= (help)
  2. ^ Parsons, Keith (May 4, 2003). "Hammond Still Going Strong" (HTML). LATimes.com. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-09-10. {{cite web}}: Check |authorlink= value (help); External link in |authorlink= (help)
  3. ^ Parsons, Keith (May 4, 2003). "Hammond Still Going Strong" (HTML). LATimes.com. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-09-10. {{cite web}}: Check |authorlink= value (help); External link in |authorlink= (help)
  4. ^ Reiter, Ben (May 9, 2005). "Ageless Wonder" (HTML). SportsIllustradedVault.com. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2008-06-09. {{cite web}}: Check |authorlink= value (help); External link in |authorlink= (help)