Herrion enrolled at Kilgore College, to play under head coach Jimmy Rieves at the junior college level. As a freshman, he contributed to the Red River Bowl victory and the 2000 conference championship.
As a sophomore, he was part of a team that finished undefeated with a 12–0 record and a No. 4 national JUCO ranking, while receiving first-team All-Southwest Junior College Football Conference and honorable-mention JUCO All-America honors.
As a senior, he played under new head coach Urban Meyer. He started all 12 games at left guard and received honorable-mention All-Mountain West Conference honors, while blocking for future San Francisco 49ers teammate and number one overall draft pick quarterbackAlex Smith. He contributed to the team's Mountain West Conference championship and Liberty Bowl win. He finished his college career after appearing in a total of 22 games.[1]
On January 5, 2005, he signed a reserve/futures contract with the 49ers.[5] In February 2005, he was allocated to the Hamburg Sea Devils of NFL Europe, where he started 10 games at left tackle and received an invitation to attend the 49ers training camp.[1]
Death
Shortly after an exhibition game against the Denver Broncos on August 20, 2005, Herrion collapsed in the locker room and was transported to St. Anthony's Central Hospital in Denver where he was pronounced dead. The cause of death was later determined to be ischaemic heart disease, or (according to a subsequent examination of the autopsy report) hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.[6][7]
On September 2, 2005, the 49ers established the Thomas Herrion Memorial Award, which will be given to the player who best exemplifies his spirit.[9]
In 2006, the Kilgore College TRIO Learning Center was dedicated to Herrion's memory and renamed as the "Thomas L. Herrion TRIO Learning Center." In 2018, he was inducted into the Kilgore College Athletics Hall of Fame.[10]
Personal life
Herrion was a musician who played the drums in his church band. On the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle, former 49er coach Mike Nolan commended Herrion for being "musical".[11]