Since my previous post about the McCaffrey family got quite a bit of traffic, I thought I might follow them throughout the season in 2015.
The McCaffrey’s are not the only family in college football. There are three brothers from the Edmunds family currently playing for the Virginia Tech Hokies. The sons of former NFL Tight End Ferrell Edmunds Jr, from Danville, Virginia are teammates at Tech.
Trey, Terrell, and Tremaine Edmunds are a rare set of three brothers on the same team at the same time period. But, since they are on the same team and obviously play at the same time, that makes seeing your kids play on a weekend much easier.
The McCaffrey’s have a son, their oldest Max, on the East Coast where he is playing Wide Receiver at Duke.
Their second son, Christian is a sophomore Running Back/Return Specialist at Stanford.
The third son of the McCaffrey family is in high school and is a highly recruited Quarterback. The junior Dylan McCaffrey is listed at 6-3, 180 by 247.com and 6-5, 200 by Hudl and I have no idea which is accurate, if either. All I do know is that he seems to have a good arm and has excellent speed and agility with that family speed coming out again in Dylan.
They have a fourth son, Luke, who is now a freshman at Valor Christian.
It was not the greatest of weekends for the McCaffrey family as far as wins and losses, but it’s always a good weekend when you have at least 3 talented sons playing football and none of them are injured.
Max McCaffrey, the 6-2, 200 senior at Duke, caught 4 passes for 61 yards as the Blue Devils started their season with a 37-7 beating of Tulane. New Duke Quarterback Thomas Sirk was pretty good in completing 27 out of 40 passes for 289 yards and a couple of Touchdowns.
Sirk was the running Quarterback last season and he came in to replaceĀ Thomas Boone on Quarterback sneaks and other plays where the Quarterback needed yardage with his feet. Obviously, Sirk is a talented athlete and runs really well, and he ran for 68 yards against Tulane on Saturday.
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At least the Duke Blue Devils won and Max had a decent game.
Stanford was a different story. The highly favored Stanford Cardinal came into the game with Northwestern in Evanston, Illinois as a heavy favorite.
The Cardinal came out like gang busters and moved down the field on the first series before being stopped and having to settle for a Field Goal.
Being stopped and having to kick the Field Goal should have been a sign for things to come, however, as they were unable to do much at all after that point.
5th year senior, Kevin Hogan, the one guy that you would expect to be consistent and to play well played like a true freshman. In reality, he probably played worse than a couple of true freshmen like
UCLA’s Josh Rosen and Washington’s Jake Browning.
Christian represented the McCaffrey family well, but he mostly had nowhere to run as Northwestern’s defense just overwhelmed the Cardinal.
With little opportunity, Christian McCaffrey ran for 66 yards on 12 carries. He caught 5 passes for 23 yards and returned 4 kickoffs for 90s.
Stanford lost 6 to 16 to a Northwestern team that looked better prepared and hungry to win.
In high school, younger brother Dylan, the highly recruited Quarterback didn’t have the best of weeks, either.
Valor Christian lost to Pomona, 14 to 28. Dylan had 22 completions out of 37 attempts for 212 yards and a Touchdown. He also threw 2 Interceptions. He ran for 33 yards on 16 carries for a not so impressive 2.1 average per carry with another Touchdown.
Valor Christian dropped to 1-1 on the season. In defense of the Valor Christian program, Pomona is one of the better schools in the state and highly ranked.
It’s hard to imagine the travel schedule of the McCaffrey family.
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