Roanoke Rampage
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Roster

Roanoke Rampage Fire and Police Football Team

No. Name Ht Wt Pos. Dept

#1 Tyrone Harrington 5’7 180 CB/RB Roanoke Fire

#2 Karim Thompson 6’0 235 LB/RB Roanoke Fire

#3 Jason Gardner 5’9 150 DB/RB Roanoke Fire

#4 William Monteith 6’2 225 DB/WR Virginia State Police

#5 Michael Nedd 6’1 165 S/WR Roanoke Police

#6 George Harris 6’2 230 DE/WR Roanoke Fire

#7 Collin Humphries 5’9 150 S/WR Roanoke Fire

#8 Raysean Priest 5’10 200 DB/WR Roanoke Fire

#9 Jermaine Hardy 5’11 220 S/RB Roanoke Co Police

#10 Henley Green 6’6 272 DE/TE Roanoke Fire

#11 John Burrows 5’11 185 CB/WR/P Roanoke Fire

#12 Xavier Lee 5’11 200 DB/QB/K Roanoke Fire

#13 Josh Dixon 6’2 160 CB/WR/P Roanoke Fire

#14 Jacob Weddle 5’10 185 CB/QB,WR Roanoke Police

#15 Nathan O’Dell 6’3 212 SS/QB Blacksburg Police

#16 Jarrod Fuhrman 6’1 190 S/QB Roanoke Fire

#17 Richard Conley 5’10 212 WR/SS Virginia State Police

#18 Derek Surratt 5’9 183 FS/WR Roanoke Fire

#19 Wes Mitchell 5’9 175 CB/WR Roanoke Police

#20 Kent McIlhany 6’0 205 S/QB Roanoke Fire

#22 Ben Lott 5’11 185 CB/RB,WR Roanoke Police

#24 Tim Donathan 6’2 210 CB/TE Roanoke Police

#25 Stephen East 5’10 175 DB/WR,K Roanoke Fire

#28 Ronald Robertson 5’9 200 S/WR Roanoke Police

#30 Chris Ward 5’9 192 LB/WR Roanoke Fire

#31 Travis Harvey 6’2 190 CB/WR Montgomery Sheriff

#34 Daniel Moore 5’10 175 CB/TE,RB Roanoke Police

#33 Ben Machingo 6’1 215 LB/RB Blacksburg Police

#35 Willie Wines Jr 5’9 127 CB/WR Roanoke Fire

#36 Kevin Slough 6’0 195 LB/ Roanoke Co Police

#41 Brian Hughes 6’3 220 S LB Roanoke Police

#43 James McClain 5’10 202 SS/FB Virginia Tech Police

#44 Kelly Jennings 6’4 220 DE/TE Roanoke Police

#45 George Jackson 6’0 215 S/FB Virginia Tech Police

#50 Phillip Dillon 6’0 240 DE/OG Roanoke Fire

#53 Tim Cady 5’11 240 DT/OG Roanoke Fire

#54 Brad Harris 6’1 245 LB/TE Roanoke Fire

#55 Todd Stone 5’9 225 LB/C Roanoke Fire

#57 Jay Matze 6’1 220 LB/OG Roanoke Co Police

#58 Corbin Brown 6’0 230 DT/OG Virginia State Police

#59 Jason Crouch 5’11 205 DE/TE Roanoke Fire

#62 Jacob Carroll 5’10 250 DT/OG Roanoke Co Sheriff

#67 Devin Turner 6’3 255 DT/OT Roanoke Fire

#69 Joey Pugh 6’3 252 DT/OT/P Roanoke Fire

#71 Tony Rickman 6’1 310 DT/OT Salem Fire

#76 Ben Sweeney 5’10 330 DT/OT Roanoke Fire

#77 Kevin Hicks 6’1 275 DT/OT Roanoke co Sheriff

#80 Lemmie Sanders 5’10 200 CB/WR Radford Police

#82 Sedrick Hayes 6’2 238 SS/WR Blacksburg Police

#88 Phillip Johnson 6’0 180 DE/WR Roanoke Fire

#95 Rock Windel 5’10 235 LB/ Salem Fire

#96 Zack Slayton 5’9 268 DT/OT Roanoke Fire

#98 Mark Crouch 6’4 380 DT/OT Roanoke Co Sheriff

#99 Jacob Palmer 6’1 280 DT/OT Roanoke Fire


NPSFL
The Roanoke Rampage 2011 Game Schedule!
March 19 Home Chicago Fire Department
April 2 Home Carolina Commanders
April 16 Home Charlotte Cobras
May 7 Away Orange County Lawmen
June 4 Away DC Generals

NPSFL. 
The National Public Safety Football League

 Understand Who WE are not!

We are not Collegian athletes with the idea of some day gaining employment in the haloed halls of the NFL. We are not professional athletes whose income for one month more than triples the average person’s salary a year.

 We are in fact a national collision of first responders, (Firefighters, Police officer’s, Emergency Medical technicians, Paramedics and Corrections officers) that donate time, effort, and service to our various communities. Each team in our league earns money during their season for a given charity of their choice in their respective cities.
Our goal is to raise money for our charities via spirited Play.
Read more about our league at www.hostedfootball.net/npsfl/

25 Teams.
6 Conferences
2 Championships
1 goal, Raising Money for Charity!

 

New Public Safety Football Team Snaps To it!!

Phillip Dillon limped to the sidelines.

“Ah. I pulled — a delicate muscle, shall I say?”

The 45-year-old Roanoke fire captain walked off his injury and was soon back in the huddle with his teammates, several former college football players and a former professional football player among them.

Monday was the third time that the Roanoke Rampage, a newly formed, minor league football team, has practiced.

The players are all firefighters, police officers and sheriff’s deputies throughout the Roanoke and New River valleys, and the team is one of 25 in the National Public Safety Football League, which was established 12 years ago.

The Rampage’s season begins in April.

The disparities among the 49 players are vast. The oldest player is 53 — 30 years older than the youngest player. The heaviest player is 330 pounds, more than double the weight of the lightest player.

And the most experienced player is Roanoke County police Officer Jermaine Hardy, a former safety for the Carolina Panthers. Hardy, a William Fleming High School graduate, will play safety and running back. He’ll be on the field with a few guys whose experience is limited to throwing the pigskin around in a back yard.

For all their differences, the team was focused and organized during Monday’s two-hour practice at the Edge Sports Performance Center in Roanoke.

Todd Stone, a Roanoke fire captain who helped establish the team, led about 30 players through drills and offensive plays.

He also distributed playbooks and encouraged the players to study them.

“When you are in your police cruiser at 2 a.m., bored, running radar, pull out your playbook,” he said. “When you’re at the fire house, after you’ve studied your map books, study” the playbook.

Soon the team will be getting help from Doug Jones, head coach of the Virginia Crimson Cardinals, a semiprofessional team in Lynchburg, and Marty Bishop, who has experience coaching high school football.

The team would like to play their games at Patrick Henry High School’s new stadium but have yet to work out an arrangement, Stone said.

Another issue still in the works: funding. The team has raised $4,200 but is looking for more sponsors to help pay for travel expenses, equipment and other costs. And, they estimate that they’ll need at least $3,000 for their two home games because the league requires the home team to provide lodging and a meal for the visiting team.

Proceeds from admission, merchandise and raffles will go to a charity of the team’s choosing. Players also plan to donate their time at summer football camps organized by Roanoke’s parks and recreation department.

The Rampage’s 2010 schedule includes a home game against the DC Generals from Washington and away games against the Orlando Guardians in Florida and Charlotte Cobras in North Carolina.

Their first game is at home April 3 against South Carolina’s Commanders.

That leaves players such as 53-year-old Phillip Johnson just four months to get ready.

“I decided to give it a try,” said Johnson, who plays defensive end and wide receiver. “I told them I’d take it day to day until I couldn’t take it anymore.

“I’m definitely going to make sure my insurance is paid up.”

Dillon, who plays on the offensive and defensive lines, said he is looking forward to getting in shape.

“I don’t expect to be starting every game,” he said. “I’m trying to get myself in better shape, that’s why I’m doing this.”

Others joined because they said they wanted to relive the glory days of playing high school football and liked that it benefits charity.

“When else are you going to get to play football?” said Sedrick Hayes, a Blacksburg police officer.

And many players said they enjoy the camaraderie, and meeting others in the public safety field.

“A lot of these guys I only see at work, and I don’t know anything about them,” said Roanoke police officer Josh Lynch.

But concerns about injuries discouraged some players from joining.

Roanoke Fire Chief David Hoback said he shares those worries but understands that he can’t control what his staff does while they are off-duty.

“The reason they’re doing it is admirable, but I do have concerns,” Hoback said.

“This is voluntarily putting themselves in harm’s way.”

For that reason, the league prohibits tackling or blocking below the waist.

And, because every player works in public safety, they each understand that it is important that no one gets hurt, Stone said.

“We both have to get up and go to work tomorrow,” he said.

Some Rampage players dismissed the potential of getting injured.

“If you get hurt, you get hurt,” said Lt. Jason Crouch of the Roanoke Fire-EMS Department. “You could get hurt walking out your front door.”

Stone told the team that their goal is to stay healthy.”Our success on this team this year is we don’t want to get anybody injured”, “When you walk on the field, you got to know what’s on the line”

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categoriesWritten by the Roanoke Times