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EMMITT SMITH Dancing With The Stars Season 3 |
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Emmitt James Smith III (born May 15,
1969) was one of the most prolific running backs to
ever play professional football. He was only the
seventh player in NFL history to carry the title of
all-time rushing leader, and is the current holder
of the title. He passed his childhood hero Walter
Payton in a game against Seattle on October 27,
2002. He was born in Pensacola, Florida.
High School Years
Smith attended Escambia High School in Pensacola,
Florida and finished his career with 8804 rushing
yards and 106 touchdowns.
College Career
He starred at the University of Florida, where he
set 58 school records, including the single game
rushing record in his very first start. He left
Florida after his junior year with 3,928 rushing
yards and 36 touchdowns.
NFL career
Emmitt James Smith III was drafted with the 17th
overall pick by the Dallas Cowboys in 1990 and
subsequently became an integral part of their three
Super Bowl championship teams in four years
following the 1992-93 and 1995 seasons. Smith led
the NFL in rushing four times (1991-1993, 1995),
rushing touchdowns 3 times (1992, 1994, 1995), was
the league's MVP in 1993, the MVP of Super Bowl
XXVIII, and made eight Pro Bowls throughout his
career. (Among running backs selected to the Pro
Bowl, he's behind only Barry Sanders, who has 10,
and the late Walter Payton, who has 9.) In his 3
Super Bowls, Smith rushed 71 times for 289 yards,
caught 11 passes for 56 yards, and scored 5
touchdowns. His 5 rushing touchdowns are a career
Super Bowl record.
Smith is one of only three players in Cowboys
history with three career 100-point seasons, and he
is the only non-kicker to accomplish the feat. The
century mark became a big number in Smith's career,
having rushed for 100 yards in 155-of-326 games
dating back to high school (45-of-49 at Escambia
High School, 25-of-34 at Florida, 81-of-202 at
Dallas, including playoffs, and two-of-25 at
Arizona). His 45 100-yard games in high school is
still the national record, and in NFL annals,
Smith's 78 100-yard rushing games makes him the
NFL's all-time leader - just ahead of Walter Payton
(77) and Barry Sanders (76). Included in Smith's
league record 78 regular season 100-yard rushing
games are 18 days with over 150 yards, which is the
fourth highest total of 150-yard games in NFL
history.
On February 27, 2003, Smith volunteered to be
released by the Cowboys, rather than put owner Jerry
Jones in the awkward position of cutting him to fit
under the league's salary cap. He signed a two-year
deal with the Arizona Cardinals on March 26. After
finishing 2003 as a backup, he began the 2004 season
as the Cardinals starting running back and accounted
for 937 rushing yards and nine touchdowns on 267
carries. His 267 carries marked his highest total
since 2000 and his nine touchdowns were his highest
total since scoring 11 times in 1999. He also caught
15 passes for 105 yards for Arizona. On October 3,
he posted his best game as a Cardinal against New
Orleans, totaling 127 rushing yards on 21 carries
(6.0 avg.), including a 29-yard scoring jaunt (his
longest as a Cardinal). Smith also became the oldest
player in NFL history ever to complete his first
career touchdown pass, tossing a 21-yard scoring
strike to fullback Obafemi Ayanbadejo in a game
against New Orleans. The Saints game also marked his
77th career regular season 100-yard rushing game,
tying Payton for the most in NFL history. On October
24, Smith broke Payton's record for career 100-yard
rushing games when he totaled 106 yards and a
touchdown on 26 carries against Seattle. Then in
November, he totaled 67 yards and two touchdowns on
19 carries against the N.Y. Giants to become the
only player in NFL history to eclipse the 18,000
career rushing yard mark.
In 2005, Smith signed a new contract with Dallas for
one-day and no money so he could retire as a Cowboy.
On February 3, 2005, at a press conference in
Jacksonville, Florida three days before Super Bowl
XXXIX, he announced his retirement after fifteen
seasons in the NFL
Now we will see if another football player can keep
step on Dancing With The Stars.

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