Brock Glenn
American football player
Florida State Seminoles – No. 11 | |
---|---|
Position | Quarterback |
Class | Freshman |
Personal information | |
Born: | Covington, Tennessee |
Height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) |
Weight | 213 lb (97 kg) |
Career history | |
College |
|
High school | Lausanne Collegiate School (Memphis, Tennessee) |
|
Brock Glenn is an American football quarterback for the Florida State Seminoles.
Career
Glenn attended Lausanne Collegiate School in Memphis, Tennessee.[1] During his high school career he had 3,928 passing yards with 57 touchdowns and 1,654 rushing yards with 11 touchdowns. He originally committed to play college football at Ohio State University before switching to Florida State University to play college football.[2][3]
Glenn began his true freshman season as a third-string behind Jordan Travis and Tate Rodemaker.[4] After injuries to Travis and Rodemaker, Glenn started his first career game in the 2023 ACC Championship Game.[5][6]
References
- ^ Perry, David (December 27, 2022). "Covington native Brock Glenn popularizes his name outside the community". The Covington Leader.
- ^ Gay, Colin (November 21, 2022). "2023 QB Brock Glenn changes commitment from Ohio State to Florida State". The Columbus Dispatch.
- ^ Gray, Nick (November 21, 2022). "Lausanne 2023 4-star QB Brock Glenn flips commitment to Florida State footbal". The Commercial Appeal.
- ^ Williams, Jack (December 1, 2023). "Freshman quarterback Brock Glenn might start for FSU in ACC Championship Game". The Tallahassee Democrat.
- ^ Hale, David (December 2, 2023). "Brock Glenn gets start for Florida State for ailing Tate Rodemaker". ESPN.
- ^ Reed, Steve (December 2, 2023). "Freshman QB Brock Glenn makes first start for Florida State with potential CFP berth on line". USA Today.
External links
- Florida State Seminoles bio
- v
- t
- e
Florida State Seminoles starting quarterbacks
- Don Grant (1947)
- Jack McMillan (1947)
- Ralph Chaudron (1947, 1949)
- Walter Foy (1948)
- Whitey Urquhart (1948–1949)
- Norman Eubanks (1949)
- Mac Huey (1950–1951)
- Don Gladden (1950)
- Bill Driver (1950)
- Mike Sellers (1951)
- Jimmy Lee Taylor (1952)
- Lee Corso (1953, 1956)
- Harry Massey (1953–1954)
- Len Swantic (1954–1955)
- Vic Prinzi (1954–1955, 1958)
- Bobby Renn (1957)
- Jerry Henderson (1957)
- Joe Majors (1959)
- Eddie Feely (1960–1962)
- Ed Trancygier (1961)
- Steve Tensi (1963–1964)
- Ed Pritchett (1965)
- Kim Hammond (1966–1967)
- Gary Pajcic (1966–1968)
- Bill Cappleman (1968–1969)
- Tommy Warren (1970)
- Frank Whigham (1970)
- Gary Huff (1970–1972)
- Billy Sexton (1973)
- Mark Orlando (1973)
- Billy Prescott (1973)
- Ron Coppess (1974)
- Jimmy Black (1974, 1976)
- Steve Mathieson (1974–1975)
- Clyde Walker (1975)
- Jimmy Jordan (1977–1979)
- Wally Woodham (1977–1979)
- Rick Stockstill (1980–1981)
- Blair Williams (1982)
- Kelly Lowrey (1982–1983)
- Bob Davis (1983)
- Eric Thomas (1983–1985)
- Kirk Coker (1984–1985)
- Danny McManus (1985–1987)
- Chip Ferguson (1985–1986, 1988)
- Peter Tom Willis (1986, 1988–1989)
- Brad Johnson (1990–1991)
- Casey Weldon (1990–1991)
- Charlie Ward (1992–1993)
- Danny Kanell (1993–1995)
- Thad Busby (1996–1997)
- Dan Kendra (1996)
- Chris Weinke (1998–2000)
- Marcus Outzen (1998)
- Chris Rix (2001–2004)
- Adrian McPherson (2002)
- Fabian Walker (2002)
- Wyatt Sexton (2004)
- Drew Weatherford (2005–2007)
- Xavier Lee (2006–2007)
- Christian Ponder (2008–2010)
- EJ Manuel (2009–2012)
- Clint Trickett (2011)
- Jameis Winston (2013–2014)
- Sean Maguire (2014–2015)
- Everett Golson (2015)
- Deondre Francois (2016–2018)
- James Blackman (2017–2020)
- Alex Hornibrook (2019)
- Tate Rodemaker (2020, 2023)
- Jordan Travis (2020–2023)
- Chubba Purdy (2020)
- McKenzie Milton (2021)
- Brock Glenn (2023)