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{{Infobox NFLactive
{{Infobox NFLactive
|image=Replace this image male.svg <!-- only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people - see [[WP:NONFREE]] --> |
|image =Replace this image male.svg <!-- only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people - see [[WP:NONFREE]] -->
|name=Lorenzo Neal
|name =Lorenzo Neal
|currentteam=Baltimore Ravens
|currentteam =Baltimore Ravens
|currentnumber=42
|currentnumber =42
|currentpositionplain=[[Fullback (American football)|Fullback]]
|currentpositionplain =[[Fullback (American football)|Fullback]]
|birthdate={{birth date and age|1970|12|27}}
|birthdate ={{birth date and age|1970|12|27}}
|birthplace=Hanford, California
|birthplace =Hanford, California
|heightft=5
|heightft =5
|heightin=11
|heightin =11
|weight=255
|weight =255
|debutyear=1993
|debutyear =1993
|debutteam=New Orleans Saints
|debutteam =New Orleans Saints
|college=[[Fresno State Bulldogs football|Fresno State]]
|college =[[Fresno State Bulldogs football|Fresno State]]
|draftyear=1993
|draftyear =1993
|draftround=4
|draftround =4
|draftpick=89
|draftpick =89
|pastteams=<nowiki></nowiki>
|pastteams =<nowiki></nowiki>
*[[New Orleans Saints]] (1993-1996)
* [[New Orleans Saints]] (1993 - 1996)
*[[New York Jets]] (1997)
* [[New York Jets]] (1997)
*[[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] (1998)
* [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] (1998)
*[[Tennessee Titans]] (1999-2000)
* [[Tennessee Titans]] (1999 - 2000)
*[[Cincinnati Bengals]] (2001-2002)
* [[Cincinnati Bengals]] (2001 - 2002)
*[[San Diego Chargers]] (2003-2007)
* [[San Diego Chargers]] (2003 - 2007)
*[[Baltimore Ravens]] (2008-present)
* [[Baltimore Ravens]] (2008 - present)
|status=Active
|status =Active
|highlights=<nowiki></nowiki>
|highlights =<nowiki></nowiki>
* 2x All-Big West selection (1991 - 1992)
* 1z All-American wrestler
* 4x [[Pro Bowl]] selection ([[2003 Pro Bowl|2002]], [[2006 Pro Bowl|2005]], [[2007 Pro Bowl|2006]], [[2008 Pro Bowl|2007]])
* 4x [[Pro Bowl]] selection ([[2003 Pro Bowl|2002]], [[2006 Pro Bowl|2005]], [[2007 Pro Bowl|2006]], [[2008 Pro Bowl|2007]])
* 2x First-Team [[All-Pro]] selection ([[2006 All-Pro Team|2006]], [[2007 All-Pro Team|2007]])
* 2x First-Team [[All-Pro]] selection ([[2006 All-Pro Team|2006]], [[2007 All-Pro Team|2007]])
* 1x Second-Team All-Pro selection ([[2005 All-Pro Team|2005]])
* 1x Second-Team All-Pro selection ([[2005 All-Pro Team|2005]])
|nfl=NEA237924
|nfl =NEA237924
|statweek=16
|statweek =16
|statseason=2008
|statseason =2008
|statlabel1=Rushing yards
|statlabel1 =Rushing yards
|statvalue1=804
|statvalue1 =804
|statlabel2=Receiving yards
|statlabel2 =Receiving yards
|statvalue2=1,080
|statvalue2 =1,080
|statlabel3=[[Touchdowns|Total TD]]s
|statlabel3 =Total [[Touchdown]]s
|statvalue3=18
|statvalue3 =18
}}
}}
'''Lorenzo LaVonne Neal''' (born December 27, 1970 in [[Hanford, California]]) is an [[American football]] [[Fullback (American football)|fullback]] for the [[Baltimore Ravens]] of the [[National Football League]]. he was drafted by the [[New Orleans Saints]] in the fourth round of the [[1993 NFL Draft]]. He played [[college football]] at [[Fresno State Bulldogs football|Fresno State]].
'''Lorenzo LaVonne Neal''' (born December 27, 1970 in [[Hanford, California]]) is an [[American football]] [[Fullback (American football)|Fullback]] for the [[Baltimore Ravens]] of the [[National Football League]]. He was drafted by the [[New Orleans Saints]] in the fourth round (89<sup>th</sup> overall) of the [[1993 NFL Draft]]. He played [[college football]] at [[Fresno State Bulldogs football|Fresno State]].


A four-time [[Pro Bowl]] selection and three-time [[All-Pro]] selection, Neal has also played for the [[New York Jets]], [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]], [[Tennessee Titans]], [[Cincinnati Bengals]] and [[San Diego Chargers]].
A four-time [[Pro Bowl]] selection and three-time [[All-Pro]] selection, Neal has also played for the [[New York Jets]], [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]], [[Tennessee Titans]], [[Cincinnati Bengals]] and [[San Diego Chargers]].


==Early years==
==Early years==
Neal attended [[Lemoore High School]] in [[Lemoore, California]] and was a letterman in football and wrestling. Lorenzo Neal set many rushing records at Lemoore High with over 2,000 yards in rushing in a season, which would later be broken by Nick Sula. In wrestling, he won a State Title as a senior. He played tail back in high school but now plays full back
Neal attended [[Lemoore High School]] in [[Lemoore, California]] and was a [[letterman]] in [[high school football|football]] and [[Scholastic wrestling|wrestling]]. He set many rushing records at with over 2,000 yards in rushing in a season, which would later be broken by Nick Sula.{{Fact|date=December 2008}} In wrestling, he won a state championship as a [[Twelfth grade|senior]].


==College career==
==College career==
Neal is an alumnus of [[Fresno State]] University. Finished college with 2,405 yards rushing. Was All-[[Big West]] his junior and senior seasons. Was also an all-American wrestler at Fresno State.
Neal attended [[Fresno State University]]. Where he finished his college career with 2,405 yards rushing. He was an All-[[Big West]] selection his junior and senior seasons. He was also an All-American wrestler.


==Professional career==
==Professional career==
Neal was selected in the [[1993 NFL Draft#Round four|fourth round (89<sup>th</sup> overall)]] of the [[1993 NFL Draft]] by the [[New Orleans Saints]].


===New Orleans Saints (1993 - 1996)===
Prior to playing for the Chargers, Neal has had stints with the [[New Orleans Saints]], [[New York Jets]], [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]], [[Tennessee Titans]], and [[Cincinnati Bengals]]. Neal is also currently the NFL's highest paid fullback gaining a three year deal after becoming a free agent in 2007, which was worth 5.1 million dollars.
Neal, as a [[Halfback (American football)|Halfback]] made his NFL debut on September 5, against the [[Houston Oilers]] and led the team in rushing with 13 carries for 89 yards, it was his first of two starts as a [[rookie]]. Just seven days later, he suffered a season-ending [[ankle]] injury during a road game against the [[Atlanta Falcons]]. Then on September 15, he was placed on [[Injured Reserve]], ending his season. He was later told he would not be able to run as he had before, so his coaches proposed the idea that he be switched to fullback.<ref>Neal appearance on NFL Network in 2007.</ref>


Then in [[1994 New Orleans Saints season|1994]], he set career high with 30 carries for 90 yards and one [[touchdown]]. In [[1995 New Orleans Saints season|1995]], he caught a career-long 69-yard touchdown pass during a road game against the [[New England Patriots]] on December 3. In [[1996 New Orleans Saints season|1996]], he set career highs with 31 receptions for 194 receiving yards in his last season with the Saints.
Neal is best known as an exceptional blocking fullback, and has blocked for 1000 yard rushers in 11 straight seasons ([[Adrian Murrell]] in 1997, [[Warrick Dunn]] in 1998, [[Eddie George]] in 1999-2000, [[Corey Dillon]] from 2001-2002, and [[LaDainian Tomlinson]] from 2003 to 2007.)


===New York Jets (1997)===
Neal was involved in the famous postseason kickoff return known as the [[Music City Miracle]]. With the Titans behind 16-15 with only 16 seconds to go, Neal fielded the kickoff and handed the ball off to tight end [[Frank Wycheck]], who then lateraled the ball across the field to another Titans player, [[Kevin Dyson]], who then ran down the sidelines for a 75-yard touchdown, which won the game.
In [[1997 New York Jets season|1997]], Neal signed with the [[New York Jets]], on March 31. In his lone season with the team, he helped running back [[Adrian Murrell]] rush for 1,086 yards.


===Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1998)===
On [[February 28]], [[2008]] Neal was released by San Diego.<ref>{{Citation |last= |first= |title=Rams' Bruce, Chargers' Neal on the Move |url=http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hTSOIzG4IsgEHSt8CW6NP0pxMi5gD8V3UFL81 |publisher=''[[Associated Press]]'' |date=2008-02-29 |accessdate=2008-03-01}}</ref>
On March 12 [[1998 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season|1998]], Neal was traded to the [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] for a fifth-round pick. In his season in Tampa Bay, he helped [[Warrick Dunn]] rush for 1,026 yards. He was then released by the Buccaneers on February 11, 1999.


===Tennessee Titans (1999 - 2000)===
===Baltimore Ravens===
On March 23, [[1999 Tennessee Titans season|1999]], Neal signed with the [[Tennessee Titans]]. Where during his first season with the team, he helped [[Eddie George]] rush for 1,304 yards in the regular season, and two 100-yard games in the playoffs. Neal also helped run the "[[Music City Miracle]]," against the [[Buffalo Bills]] en route to an appearance in [[Super Bowl XXXIV]] against the [[St. Louis Rams]]. He was also selected to ''[[USA Today]]''’s All-Joe team.
On [[August 12]], [[2008]] the [[Baltimore Ravens]] signed Neal to a one year contract.

In [[2000 Tennessee Titans season|2000]], Neal helped George rush for 1,509 yards and 14 touchdowns. Neal was named the "NFL's Best Blockign Fullback" by ''[[Sporting News]]''. He was also named to ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'''s midseason All-Pro team. He was also named a [[Pro Bowl]] third-alternate. He was released by the Titans on March 1, 2001.

===Cincinnati Bengals (2001 - 2002)===
After two seasons with the Titans, and one [[Super Bowl]] appearance, Neal signed with the [[Cincinnati Bengals]] on May 8, 2001, where in his first season with the team, he helped [[Corey Dillon]] rush for 1,315 yards. After the season Neal was named to ''USA Todays'''s All-Joe team. He was also selected as a Pro Bowl Second-alternate.

In [[2002 Cincinnati Bengals season|2002]], Neal helped Dillon rush for 1,311 yards. He also recorded a one-yard touchdown receptions, against his former team, the Tennesse Titans on October 27. He also was selected to his first [[2003 Pro Bowl|Pro Bowl]].

===San Diego Chargers (2003 - 2007)===
On March 3, [[2003 San Diego Chargers season|2003]], Neal signed with the [[San Diego Chargers]] and began the longest stint of his career, with one team, five seasons. During his first season blocking for [[LaDainian Tomlinson]], he helped him rush for 1,645 yards and the team to rush for a total of 2,146 yards. Tomlinson became Neal's fifth 1,000 yard rusher he blocked for. He scored his first touchdown of the season on a three-yard run on the road against the [[Oakland Raiders]] on September 28. He also carried the ball three times for seven yards in short yardage situations against the [[Baltimore Ravens]] on September 21, all three of which resulted in first downs. He recorded a season-high seven carries for 22 yards on the road against the [[Cleveland Browns]] on October 19. For the season, he was named to ''USA Today'''s All-Joe team, as well as a Pro Bowl First-alternate.

In [[2004 San Diego Chargers season|2004]], Neal helped Tomlinson rush for 1,335 yards and the Chargers rush for 2,185 yards as total. Neal also recorded a 12-yard kickoff return against his for team, the [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] on December 12. He was also named Chargers Alumni Player of Week after rushing four times for season-high 16 yards on the road against the Browns on December 19. He was, once again, named to ''USA Today'''s All-Joe team. He was also, named a Pro Bowl first-alternate, once again.

The [[2005 San Diego Chargers season|2005]] season began with an historic moment in Neal's career, he played in his 100th career game, in season opener against the [[Dallas Cowboys]]. A game in which he recorded three carries on short yardage plays, all resulting in first downs. For the season he was named a [[2006 Pro Bowl|Pro Bowl]] starter. He was also named to the "All-Interview" team by ''NFL.com''. On October 28, 2005, he signed a two-year contract extension through 2007.

In [[2006 San Diego Chargers season|2006]], Neal helped Tomlinson and [[Michael Turner]] record a 194-rushing yards for the September 11 season opening 27-0 win in Oakland. The Chargers scored two rushing tuchdowns, one by Tomlinson and one by Turner. Neal helped block for a 241-rushing yard performance against the Titans in a 40-7 Week 2 win, which included two Tomlinson rushing touchdowns. On October 15, during a road game against the [[San Francisco 49ers]], Neal helped Tomlinson tie a team record and set a career-high with four rushing touchdons. In the Chargers 32-25 win over the Browns on November 5, Neal played in his 200th-consecutive game and helped the Chargers rush for 190 yards and three touchdowns. During November 19 35-27 Chargers win, he helped Tomlinson rush for 105 yards and three touchdowns, which put Tomlinson over 1,000 yards for season, marking the 10th-straight year Neal was the lead blocker for a 1,000-yard rusher. He scored his first touchdown of the season against the [[Denver Broncos]] on December 10, on four-yard trick play run called the “Bumarooski” late in first quarter, it was his first rushing touchdown since September 28, 2003 at Oakland and gave the Chargers a 14-0 lead. He also threw a key block on [[Kansas City Chiefs]] [[Linebacker]] [[Kendrell Bell]] that helped Tomlinson run for a career-long 85-yard touchdown on December 17, it was the third-longest run in team history. Neal also helped contribute to the Chargers recording 265 rushing yards, fifth-most in team history. He was named to his third [[2007 Pro Bowl|Pro Bowl]] and was a First-team All-Pro selection by the ''[[Associated Press]]'', ''[[USA Today]]'', ''[[Sports Weekly]]'' and ''[[ESPN.com]]''.

In [[2007 San Diego Chargers season|2007]], Neal has his streak of 221 consecutive games played come to an end when he was inactive for Week 14 agaisnt the [[Detroit Lions]], while he recoved from a broken [[leg]] suffered the previous week against the Titans. he had not missed a game since 1994. Against the Chiefs, he helped Tomlinson surpass 1,000 yards, marking the 11th-straing season as the lead blocker for a 1,000 yard rusher. Neal recorded a touchdown reception on a fourth-and-goal play in Week 2 on the road against the [[New England Patriots]], his first touchdown receptions since 2005). He was named to his fourth [[2008 Pro Bowl|Pro Bowl]] and was named First-team All-Pro by the ''Associated Press'' and All-NFL by ''USA Today'' and ''Sports Weekly''. On [[February 28]], [[2008]] Neal was waived by San Diego.<ref>{{Citation |title=Rams' Bruce, Chargers' Neal on the Move |url=http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hTSOIzG4IsgEHSt8CW6NP0pxMi5gD8V3UFL81 |publisher=''[[Associated Press]]'' |date=2008-02-29 |accessdate=2008-03-01}}</ref>

===Baltimore Ravens (2008 - present)===
On [[August 12]], 2008 the [[Baltimore Ravens]] signed Neal to a one year contract.

Neal played in his first game with the Ravens Week one against the Bengals, when he served as the back-up to [[Le'Ron McClain]] and helped the Ravens rush for 229 yards and recorded one reception for 13 yards. During Week 2, he cCarried the ball once for two yards and helped the Ravens hold the ball for 13:18 in the fourth quarter against the Browns. During Week 5, on the road againt the [[Indianapolis Colts]] he subbed for McCalin and helped protect [[rookie]] [[Quarterback]] [[Joe Flacco]], allowing him to set career-highs with a 73.7% completion and 241 passing yards. During Week 8 in Cleveland, Neal subbed for McCalin and helped the Ravens rush for a season­ high 193 yards in the 37-­27 victory. He also carried the ball once for two yards. In Week 10 (at the [[New York Giants]]), Neal started his first game as a Raven and helped protect Joe Flacco, allowing him to complete 60.6% of his passes and holding the Giants to just one sack.


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.lorenzoneal.com/ Official Website]
* [http://www.lorenzoneal.com/ Official Website]
*[http://www.baltimoreravens.com/People/Players/Active/Lorenzo_Neal.aspx Baltimore Ravens bio]
* [http://www.baltimoreravens.com/People/Players/Active/Lorenzo_Neal.aspx Baltimore Ravens bio]
*[http://www.newyorkjets.com/team/all_time/player/1176-lorenzo-neal New York Jets bio]
* [http://www.newyorkjets.com/team/all_time/player/1176-lorenzo-neal New York Jets bio]


{{2006 All-Pro Team}}
{{2006 All-Pro Team}}

Revision as of 19:06, 24 December 2008

Lorenzo Neal
Baltimore Ravens
Career information
College:Fresno State
NFL draft:1993 / round: 4 / pick: 89
Career history
Roster status:Active
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics as of Week 16, 2008
Rushing yards:804
Receiving yards:1,080
Total Touchdowns:18
Stats at Pro Football Reference Edit this at Wikidata

Lorenzo LaVonne Neal (born December 27, 1970 in Hanford, California) is an American football Fullback for the Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League. He was drafted by the New Orleans Saints in the fourth round (89th overall) of the 1993 NFL Draft. He played college football at Fresno State.

A four-time Pro Bowl selection and three-time All-Pro selection, Neal has also played for the New York Jets, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tennessee Titans, Cincinnati Bengals and San Diego Chargers.

Early years

Neal attended Lemoore High School in Lemoore, California and was a letterman in football and wrestling. He set many rushing records at with over 2,000 yards in rushing in a season, which would later be broken by Nick Sula.[citation needed] In wrestling, he won a state championship as a senior.

College career

Neal attended Fresno State University. Where he finished his college career with 2,405 yards rushing. He was an All-Big West selection his junior and senior seasons. He was also an All-American wrestler.

Professional career

Neal was selected in the fourth round (89th overall) of the 1993 NFL Draft by the New Orleans Saints.

New Orleans Saints (1993 - 1996)

Neal, as a Halfback made his NFL debut on September 5, against the Houston Oilers and led the team in rushing with 13 carries for 89 yards, it was his first of two starts as a rookie. Just seven days later, he suffered a season-ending ankle injury during a road game against the Atlanta Falcons. Then on September 15, he was placed on Injured Reserve, ending his season. He was later told he would not be able to run as he had before, so his coaches proposed the idea that he be switched to fullback.[1]

Then in 1994, he set career high with 30 carries for 90 yards and one touchdown. In 1995, he caught a career-long 69-yard touchdown pass during a road game against the New England Patriots on December 3. In 1996, he set career highs with 31 receptions for 194 receiving yards in his last season with the Saints.

New York Jets (1997)

In 1997, Neal signed with the New York Jets, on March 31. In his lone season with the team, he helped running back Adrian Murrell rush for 1,086 yards.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1998)

On March 12 1998, Neal was traded to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for a fifth-round pick. In his season in Tampa Bay, he helped Warrick Dunn rush for 1,026 yards. He was then released by the Buccaneers on February 11, 1999.

Tennessee Titans (1999 - 2000)

On March 23, 1999, Neal signed with the Tennessee Titans. Where during his first season with the team, he helped Eddie George rush for 1,304 yards in the regular season, and two 100-yard games in the playoffs. Neal also helped run the "Music City Miracle," against the Buffalo Bills en route to an appearance in Super Bowl XXXIV against the St. Louis Rams. He was also selected to USA Today’s All-Joe team.

In 2000, Neal helped George rush for 1,509 yards and 14 touchdowns. Neal was named the "NFL's Best Blockign Fullback" by Sporting News. He was also named to Sports Illustrated's midseason All-Pro team. He was also named a Pro Bowl third-alternate. He was released by the Titans on March 1, 2001.

Cincinnati Bengals (2001 - 2002)

After two seasons with the Titans, and one Super Bowl appearance, Neal signed with the Cincinnati Bengals on May 8, 2001, where in his first season with the team, he helped Corey Dillon rush for 1,315 yards. After the season Neal was named to USA Todays's All-Joe team. He was also selected as a Pro Bowl Second-alternate.

In 2002, Neal helped Dillon rush for 1,311 yards. He also recorded a one-yard touchdown receptions, against his former team, the Tennesse Titans on October 27. He also was selected to his first Pro Bowl.

San Diego Chargers (2003 - 2007)

On March 3, 2003, Neal signed with the San Diego Chargers and began the longest stint of his career, with one team, five seasons. During his first season blocking for LaDainian Tomlinson, he helped him rush for 1,645 yards and the team to rush for a total of 2,146 yards. Tomlinson became Neal's fifth 1,000 yard rusher he blocked for. He scored his first touchdown of the season on a three-yard run on the road against the Oakland Raiders on September 28. He also carried the ball three times for seven yards in short yardage situations against the Baltimore Ravens on September 21, all three of which resulted in first downs. He recorded a season-high seven carries for 22 yards on the road against the Cleveland Browns on October 19. For the season, he was named to USA Today's All-Joe team, as well as a Pro Bowl First-alternate.

In 2004, Neal helped Tomlinson rush for 1,335 yards and the Chargers rush for 2,185 yards as total. Neal also recorded a 12-yard kickoff return against his for team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on December 12. He was also named Chargers Alumni Player of Week after rushing four times for season-high 16 yards on the road against the Browns on December 19. He was, once again, named to USA Today's All-Joe team. He was also, named a Pro Bowl first-alternate, once again.

The 2005 season began with an historic moment in Neal's career, he played in his 100th career game, in season opener against the Dallas Cowboys. A game in which he recorded three carries on short yardage plays, all resulting in first downs. For the season he was named a Pro Bowl starter. He was also named to the "All-Interview" team by NFL.com. On October 28, 2005, he signed a two-year contract extension through 2007.

In 2006, Neal helped Tomlinson and Michael Turner record a 194-rushing yards for the September 11 season opening 27-0 win in Oakland. The Chargers scored two rushing tuchdowns, one by Tomlinson and one by Turner. Neal helped block for a 241-rushing yard performance against the Titans in a 40-7 Week 2 win, which included two Tomlinson rushing touchdowns. On October 15, during a road game against the San Francisco 49ers, Neal helped Tomlinson tie a team record and set a career-high with four rushing touchdons. In the Chargers 32-25 win over the Browns on November 5, Neal played in his 200th-consecutive game and helped the Chargers rush for 190 yards and three touchdowns. During November 19 35-27 Chargers win, he helped Tomlinson rush for 105 yards and three touchdowns, which put Tomlinson over 1,000 yards for season, marking the 10th-straight year Neal was the lead blocker for a 1,000-yard rusher. He scored his first touchdown of the season against the Denver Broncos on December 10, on four-yard trick play run called the “Bumarooski” late in first quarter, it was his first rushing touchdown since September 28, 2003 at Oakland and gave the Chargers a 14-0 lead. He also threw a key block on Kansas City Chiefs Linebacker Kendrell Bell that helped Tomlinson run for a career-long 85-yard touchdown on December 17, it was the third-longest run in team history. Neal also helped contribute to the Chargers recording 265 rushing yards, fifth-most in team history. He was named to his third Pro Bowl and was a First-team All-Pro selection by the Associated Press, USA Today, Sports Weekly and ESPN.com.

In 2007, Neal has his streak of 221 consecutive games played come to an end when he was inactive for Week 14 agaisnt the Detroit Lions, while he recoved from a broken leg suffered the previous week against the Titans. he had not missed a game since 1994. Against the Chiefs, he helped Tomlinson surpass 1,000 yards, marking the 11th-straing season as the lead blocker for a 1,000 yard rusher. Neal recorded a touchdown reception on a fourth-and-goal play in Week 2 on the road against the New England Patriots, his first touchdown receptions since 2005). He was named to his fourth Pro Bowl and was named First-team All-Pro by the Associated Press and All-NFL by USA Today and Sports Weekly. On February 28, 2008 Neal was waived by San Diego.[2]

Baltimore Ravens (2008 - present)

On August 12, 2008 the Baltimore Ravens signed Neal to a one year contract.

Neal played in his first game with the Ravens Week one against the Bengals, when he served as the back-up to Le'Ron McClain and helped the Ravens rush for 229 yards and recorded one reception for 13 yards. During Week 2, he cCarried the ball once for two yards and helped the Ravens hold the ball for 13:18 in the fourth quarter against the Browns. During Week 5, on the road againt the Indianapolis Colts he subbed for McCalin and helped protect rookie Quarterback Joe Flacco, allowing him to set career-highs with a 73.7% completion and 241 passing yards. During Week 8 in Cleveland, Neal subbed for McCalin and helped the Ravens rush for a season­ high 193 yards in the 37-­27 victory. He also carried the ball once for two yards. In Week 10 (at the New York Giants), Neal started his first game as a Raven and helped protect Joe Flacco, allowing him to complete 60.6% of his passes and holding the Giants to just one sack.

References

  1. ^ Neal appearance on NFL Network in 2007.
  2. ^ Rams' Bruce, Chargers' Neal on the Move, Associated Press, 2008-02-29, retrieved 2008-03-01 {{citation}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

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