American football player (born 1998)
American football player
James Blackman (born November 14, 1998) is an American professional football quarterback who is a free agent . He played college football for the Florida State Seminoles and Arkansas State . He was signed by the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent following the 2023 NFL draft .
Early life
Blackman played high school football at Glades Central High School in Belle Glade, Florida .[ 1]
College career
Blackman committed to Florida State over offers from West Virginia and Louisville .[ 2] He became the starting quarterback after Deondre Francois suffered a season-ending injury during the season opener against Alabama .[ 3] Blackman became the first true freshman starting quarterback at FSU since Chip Ferguson in 1985. Despite the Seminoles being down 2–5 at one point in the season, Blackman was able to lead the team to a 6–6 record and an appearance in the 2017 Independence Bowl against Southern Mississippi . During the game, he threw four touchdown passes (three to Auden Tate and one to Cam Akers ), setting an Independence Bowl record[ 4] and netted the Offensive MVP.[ 5]
On November 11, 2020, head coach Mike Norvell announced James Blackman was no longer with the team and was looking to transfer.[ 6] He transferred to Arkansas State in January 2021.[ 7]
College statistics
Season
Games
Passing
Rushing
GP
Record
Comp
Att
Pct
Yards
Avg
TD
Int
Rate
Att
Yards
Avg
TD
Florida State Seminoles
2017
12
7–5
173
297
58.2
2,230
7.5
19
11
135.0
64
−39
−0.6
0
2018
3
0–1
33
51
64.7
510
10.0
5
1
177.1
11
−26
−2.4
0
2019
12
5–7
184
292
63.0
2,339
8.0
17
11
142.0
68
41
0.6
1
2020
4
0–2
43
76
56.6
366
4.8
2
3
97.8
18
−11
−0.6
0
Arkansas State Red Wolves
2021
8
1–5
109
183
59.6
1,344
7.3
8
4
131.3
32
−39
−1.2
0
2022
11
2–9
223
347
64.3
2,471
7.1
14
3
135.7
61
−120
−2.0
3
Career
50
15–29
765
1,246
61.4
9,260
7.4
65
33
135.7
254
-194
-0.8
4
Professional career
On April 29, 2023, Blackman signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent.[ 9] He was waived on August 7, 2023.[ 10] He was re-signed by the Dolphins on August 21, 2023.[ 11] Blackman was then waived again as part of final roster cuts on August 28, 2023.[ 12]
References
^ "James Blackman, Florida State, Pro-Style Quarterback" . 247Sports.com . Retrieved May 19, 2018 .
^ Schoffel, Ira (August 3, 2016). "Florida State lands commitment from 2017 QB James Blackman" . Rivals.com . Retrieved May 19, 2018 .
^ Clark, Ryan S. (September 7, 2017). "Next man up? Why James Blackman is ready to stake his claim at FSU" . Rivals.com . Retrieved May 19, 2018 .
^ "Bowl Records" . Independence Bowl . April 25, 2014. Archived from the original on May 22, 2018. Retrieved May 19, 2018 .
^ Deen, Safid (December 27, 2017). "FSU's Cam Akers, James Blackman shine in freshman finales in Independence Bowl" . Orlando Sentinel . Tribune Publishing . Retrieved May 19, 2018 .
^ "FSU QB James Blackman will no longer be with FSU's program" . Noles247 . Retrieved November 11, 2020 .
^ " 'Everything starts with him': What made James Blackman the gas pedal that powers Arkansas State | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette" . September 2022.
^ "2023 NFL Draft Scout James Blackman College Football Profile" . DraftScout.com . Retrieved May 10, 2023 .
^ "Miami Dolphins Sign 21 Undrafted College Free Agents" . MiamiDolphins.com . May 12, 2023.
^ "Miami Dolphins Make Roster Moves" . MiamiDolphins.com . Retrieved August 7, 2023 .
^ "Miami Dolphins Make Roster Moves" . MiamiDolphins.com .
^ "Miami Dolphins Make Roster Moves" . MiamiDolphins.com . August 28, 2023.
External links
Bill Adams (1935–1936)
Joe Shaw (1949)
Bill Summers (1951–1952)
Bobby ? (1953)
Thomas Spires (1954–1956)
James Billings (1957)
Billy Caldwell (1957)
Don Sawyer (1958)
Robert Hyah (1958)
Ted Soriah (1959)
Jimmy McMurray (1960)
Bobby Hogue (1960)
Jim Murran (1961)
Jimmy Atkinson (1962)
Donnie Lindsey (1962–1963)
Gary Everett (1964)
Shelby Lee (1964)
Tim Keane (1965–1966)
Terry Gwin (1965)
Cecil LaGrone (1967)
James Hamilton (1968–1971)
James Flynn (1974)
Gene Bradley (1979)
Cleo Lemon (2000)
Tommy Miller (2002)
Elliot Jacobs (2003)
Mike Clark (2003)
Brian Hicks (2004)
Devin Hollins (2004–2005)
Nick Noce (2004–2005)
Travis Hewitt (2006–2008)
Corey Leonard (2008–2009)
Ryan Aplin (2010–2011)
Adam Kennedy (2012–2013)
Fredi Knighten (2014–2015)
James Tabary (2015)
Chad Voytik (2016)
Justice Hansen (2016–2018)
Logan Bonner (2019–2020)
Layne Hatcher (2019, 2021)
James Blackman (2021–2022)
AJ Mayer (2022)
J. T. Shrout (2023)
Jaxon Dailey (2023)
Jaylen Raynor (2023–2024)