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Showing posts with label aaron kampman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aaron kampman. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Aaron Kampman enjoyed 'tremendous ride' in Green Bay

 






Pass rusher went from unheralded arrival to Packers Hall of Famer

Nov 13, 2023 at 05:10 PM

 

Mike Spofford

packers.com editor











GREEN BAY – If Aaron Kampman arrived in Green Bay in 2002 somewhat overlooked as a fifth-round draft pick, he learned pretty quickly it wouldn't be easy to change that perception.

 

"Funny story, early in my career when we set out the third-down pass rush depth chart, I remember that I thought I'd be the second, maybe third team," Kampman recalled. "I actually wasn't even on the depth chart to start things out. So that gave me a little indication about where I was starting."

 

He's finishing, though, in the Packers Hall of Fame, as Kampman and fellow pass rusher Clay Matthews will be the next two inductees in August 2024.


A small-town kid from Aplington-Parkersburg High School in Iowa who played college football for his home-state Hawkeyes, Kampman went on to earn two second-team All-Pro selections and two Pro Bowl honors during eight years with the Packers.

 

He's always shared credit with the teammates and coaches around him, but Kampman's own drive and work ethic played probably the biggest role in his success. His small-town, humble upbringing was the genesis of that, which is what he plans to talk about during his induction ceremony next summer.

 

"The work ethic there was instilled in me at a young age," he said, speaking with the media Monday. "That was something that exemplified itself all the way through my career, and I wanted to be the best.

 

"Being a 10-year-old, I had a dream I wanted to play in the NFL, and that was something I was very fortunate to be able to do. It was a tremendous ride."

 

It didn't start out like gangbusters, as Kampman had to persevere, steadily but surely working his way into a full-time starting role. Three years into his career, he had a total of seven sacks.

 

Then Jim Bates arrived as the Packers' new defensive coordinator in 2005, and the change benefited Kampman as an every-down defensive end.

 

"We started to play a little different defense at that time, which allowed me to get a little wider and start to rush a little bit differently," he said. "That's when I think I had more opportunities to get on the field, and to rush and show some of that ability."

 

Kampman nearly doubled his career sack total that year with 6½, and then when Bob Sanders arrived as defensive coordinator along with head coach Mike McCarthy in 2006, his career really took off.

 

He posted 15½ sacks in '06 and 12 more in '07, earning his All-Pro and Pro Bowl accolades those seasons. The 15½ sacks remain the third-highest single-season total in team history (since sacks became an official NFL statistic in 1982), and his 113 tackles that year still stand as a franchise record for a defensive lineman.


He added 9½ more sacks in 2008, capping a five-year run in which he started 89 of a possible 90 regular-season games, missing only the '07 finale when starters were resting for the playoffs.

 

A knee injury ended his season early in 2009 and, as it turned out, his time in Green Bay, which concluded with 54 total sacks, good for fifth on the franchise's all-time list. He finished his career with two injury-riddled seasons in Jacksonville.

 

He couldn't have asked for a better fit than coming to the NFL's smallest market, though, and for that he's forever thankful. He and his wife, Linde, became very involved in a number of community and charitable endeavors as three of their four children were born in Green Bay.

 

"It was a great time in our lives," said Kampman, who now runs a leadership development company called Align that he started seven years ago. He's also coached football at Solon High School in Iowa for roughly the past decade.

 

"When I was coming out of Iowa, I had three draft visits to the New York Jets, to San Diego and to Green Bay, and my wife and I, we've both reminisced about what life may have looked like if we would've ended up on one of the coasts. We're very blessed and fortunate that Green Bay was the spot for us."

 


Monday, November 13, 2023

Aaron Kampman named to Packers Hall of Fame

 










LB Clay Matthews (2009-2018) and DE Aaron Kampman (2002-2009) will be inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame in August 2024 (WBAY)

 

By WBAY news staff

 

Published: Nov. 13, 2023 at 10:01 AM EST | Updated: 3 hours ago

 

GREEN BAY, Wis. (WBAY) - Former linebacker Clay Matthews and former defensive end Aaron Kampman are being inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame.

The Hall of Fame made the announcement Monday morning. They’ll be formally enshrined at the 53rd Hall of Fame Induction Banquet on Thursday, August 29.

Matthews was a first-round pick for the Packers in the 2009 NFL Draft. He played for the Packers for 10 seasons, 2009-2018, and started 137 of the 143 games he played in. He left the NFL after playing for the Los Angeles Rams for one season in 2019.

According to the team, Packers Hall of Fame, he holds the team records for most sacks in a rookie season, with 10, and most career sacks since 1982, with 83.5. His six Pro Bowl selections as a Packer have him tied with Pro Football Hall of Famer Reggie White for second-most in the franchise for a defensive player. He also holds the team record for most sacks in post-season games since 1982, with 11 sacks, and ranks him #6 in NFL playoff history, too.

Kampman also started his career with the Packers and played for eight seasons in Green Bay. He was a 5th-round pick in the 2002 NFL Draft and made 104 starts in 112 games.

In 2006, his breakout year, he made 15.5 sacks, ranking him #2 in the NFL that season and #3 in Packers history. He also made 113 tackles that year, a record for a Packers defensive lineman. His 37 sacks from 2006 to 2008 ranked him #3 in the NFL at that time, and he was a Pro Bowl selection in 2006 and 2007.

Kampman played two more seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars before finishing his NFL career.

The Hall of Fame Induction Banquet will be held in the Lambeau Field Atrium starting with a cash bar at 4 p.m. and the dinner and program at 5:30. Details for getting tickets will be released soon, the Hall of Fame said.

Copyright 2023 WBAY. All rights reserved.

 


Monday, July 10, 2023

Aaron Kampman named to All-Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers team

 




The All-Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers team














Zach Kruse 

The book is now officially closed on what can only be labeled as the oustanding eras of Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers as the starting quarterbacks for the Green Bay Packers.

Favre, a first-ballot Pro Football Hall of Famer, was a 16-year starter from 1992 to 2007; Rodgers, a future first-ballot Hall of Famer, was a 15-year starter from 2008 to 2022. Together, the pair threw 1,001 touchdown passes for the Packers during the regular season and playoffs.

If not for Tom Brady and Bill Belichick, the Favre-Rodgers Packers would have been the NFL’s gold standard of the last 30 seasons. They’ll settle for silver.

Between 1992 and 2022, the Packers won 314 regular-season games, the second-most in the NFL trailing only the Patriots (323). The Packers also scored 12,451 points between 1992 and 2022, the most in the NFL, and had the second-highest point differential (plus-2,208). The franchise won Super Bowls XXXI and XLV (losing Super Bowl XXXII) and was second in both playoff games (43) and playoff wins (23), again trailing only the Patriots.

Favre and Rodgers won 15 NFC Central or North titles and made nine NFC title game appearances.

There is no doubting the greatness of either quarterback. But all great quarterbacks must be surrounded by great players to win so many football games and achieve so many milestones.

In an attempt to acknowledge both the quarterbacks and the supporting cast, Packers Wire enlisted over 25 Packers-based media members to organize the definitive All-Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers Packers team spanning the franchise’s incredibly successful run between 1992 and 2022:

***

 

Edge rusher (4)

1. Reggie White (1993-98)
2. Clay Matthews (2009-18)
3. Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila (2000-2008)
4. Aaron Kampman (2002-2009)

Just missed: Rashan Gary (2019-present), Julius Peppers (2014-16), Za’Darius Smith (2019-2021)

White and Matthews dominated the voting process. White, one of the greatest free-agent signings in NFL history, needed only 94 games to produce 68.5 sacks. He was a transformational force for the Packers franchise and a Pro Bowler during all six of his seasons in Green Bay. Matthews, a first-round pick in 2009, produced four seasons with 10 or more sacks and made six Pro Bowls. He intercepted six passes, forced 15 fumbles and scored three defensive touchdowns. “KGB” had four 10.0-sack seasons and six with 8.0 or more. He was a Pro Bowler in 2003, had 13.5 sacks in both 2001 and 2004 and finished his Packers career with 74.5 sacks and 17 forced fumbles. Kampman, a two-time Pro Bowler and All-Pro, was dominant during a three-year stretch spanning 2006-08, when he created 37.0 sacks and 84 quarterback hits in 47 games. His 15.5 sacks in 2006 are the third-most in a season in Packers history. Gary, who could emerge as an elite edge rusher for the Jordan Love era, just missed the cut based on vote count.

Thursday, April 07, 2022

The All-time University of Iowa NFL Team

 





There have been 13 tight ends drafted from Iowa since 1958 and all made their drafting teams.

RICK GOSSELIN

APR 6, 2022






Tight ends from the University of Iowa are drafting gold.

In 2016, George Kittle, Noah Fant and T.J. Hockenson were stacked at the position. Kittle was a fifth-round draft pick of the San Francisco 49ers in 2017 and both Fant and Hockenson were first-rounders in 2019. Kittle has already been to three Pro Bowls and was voted first-team all-pro for the NFC champions in 2019. Hockensen went to the Pro Bowl in 2020.

Since 1958, there have been 13 tight ends drafted by the NFL out of Iowa. All made their drafting teams and all caught passes in the NFL except one, Austin Wheatley, a fifth-round pick by the New Orleans Saints in 2000. He was the only Iowa tight end to play fewer than three NFL seasons. His career lasted one year.

Jonathan Hayes (1985, second round, Kansas City) played 12 seasons and Dallas Clark (2003, first round, Indianapolis) and Jim Gibbons (1958, sixth round, Detroit) 11 seasons apiece. Scott Chandler (2007, fourth round, San Diego) played nine seasons, Brandon Myers (2009, sixth round, Oakland) eight seasons and Marv Cook (1989, third round, New England) seven. Tony Moeaki (2010, third round, Kansas City) played five seasons and Scott Sluztker (1996, third round, Indianapolis) and C.J. Fiedorwicz (2014, third round, Houston) four seasons apiece.

Clark and Hockenson both won the Mackey Award as the best tight end in college football and Clark joined Kittle as the only Iowa tight ends ever voted first-team all-pro. Like Kittle, Gibbons went to three Pro Bowls, Cook went to two and Clark one. Those 13 Iowa tight ends have combined to play 83 NFL seasons, catching 2,466 passes for 27,812 yards and 184 touchdowns.

Tight end is the clear strength of the all-time University of Iowa NFL team, but safety isn’t far behind. The two top interceptors of all-time, Paul Krause (81) and Emlen Tunnell (79), both played in the defensive backfield at Iowa. They are among five Hall of Famers produced by the Hawkeyes.

Here’s Iowa’s all-time NFL team:

QB—Chuck Long, 21 career starts, 19 TD passes.

RB—Ed Podolak, NFL record 350 playoff yards in 1971 game against Miami Dolphins.

RB—Ronnie Harmon, 12 seasons, 582 catches, 24 TDs.

WR—Quinn Early, 12 seasons, 460 career catches, 40 TDs.

WR—Jerry Reichow, 1 Pro Bowl, 8 seasons, 172 career catches, 24 TDs.

*-TE—George Kittle, 3 Pro Bowls, 335 catches, 20 TDs.

OT—Duke Slater, Hall of Fame.

OT—John Alt, 2 Pro Bowls, 149 career starts.

G—Marshal Yanda, 8 Pro Bowls, 166 career starts.

G—John Niland, 6 Pro Bowls, 126 career starts.

C—Jay Hilgenberg, 7 Pro Bowls, 152 career starts.

DE—Adrian Clayborn, 10 seasons, 40 sacks.

DE—Aaron Kampman, 2 Pro Bowls, 10 seasons, 58 career sacks.

DT—Alex Karras, Hall of Fame.

DT—Karl Klug, 7 seasons, 21 ½ sacks.

LB—Andre Tippett, Hall of Fame.

LB—Chad Greenway, 2 Pro Bowls, 10 seasons, 1,103 career tackles.

LB—Wally Hilgenberg, 15 seasons, started in 4 Super Bowls.

CB—Bob Smith, 1 Pro Bowl, 6 seasons, 33 interceptions 4 TDs.

CB—Bob Jeter, 2 Pro Bowls, 11 seasons, 3-time NFL champion.

S—Paul Krause, Hall of Fame.

S—Emlen Tunnell, Hall of Fame.

K—Nate Kaeding, 2 Pro Bowls, NFL scoring leader in 2009.

P—Reggie Roby, 3 Pro Bowls, 1980s NFL all-decade team.

KR—Tim Dwight, 10 seasons, 3 career KR and 2 PR for TDs.

ST—Jim Jensen, 12 seasons, 97 career ST tackles, long snapper.

*-Still active


Wednesday, October 06, 2021

Farm life shaped Hawkeyes' ANF honoree Yanda

 





Steve Batterson

Oct 5, 2021 Updated 8 hrs ago






















Former Iowa offensive lineman Marshal Yanda discusses his selection to the America Needs Farmers Wall of Honor at Kinnick Stadium during a Tuesday news conference in Iowa City.

 

IOWA CITY — Lessons learned growing up on a farm served Marshal Yanda well throughout a football career that included stops at North Iowa Area Community College and Iowa before he played 13 seasons in the NFL.

Yanda, who on Saturday will become the ninth former Hawkeye to earn a spot on the America Needs Farmers Wall of Honor at Kinnick Stadium, is the part of the fifth generation to grow up on his family’s dairy farm five miles north of Anamosa, Iowa.

"To be a part of this group and be a part of this week is special," Yanda said Tuesday. "Growing up on a farm you learn things by hard work and discipline and sacrifice, things that really transitioned to football for me for sure."

Yanda said his parents taught him the value of hard work as he and his sister worked hours daily assisting in the family business.

"As a football player, I was pretty strong in the weight room, but people always talked about how I had that farm strength, that natural strength, that core strength," Yanda said.


















https://www.si.com/college/iowa/football/marshal-yanda-anf?jwsource=cl

That strength allowed Yanda to grow as a player, competing at Iowa in the 2005 and 2006 seasons when he learned value of preparation and focus that served him well as he developed into one of the top guards in the NFL.

He earned all-pro recognition seven times and spent his entire 13-year career with the Baltimore Ravens.

Throughout his career until his retirement from the game in 2019, Yanda would return to Iowa to train during the offseason, something he saw as an advantage.

Saturday, he will join former Hawkeyes Casey Wiegmann, Jared DeVries, Bruce Nelson, Robert Gallery, Dallas Clark, Chad Greenway, Aaron Kampman and Matt Kroul in having a spot on ANF Wall of Honor.





























































Wednesday, October 09, 2019

Matt Kroul Joins ANF Wall of Honor









Football 10/8/2019













By DARREN MILLER
hawkeyesports.com

IOWA CITY, Iowa -- Without doubt, Kinnick Stadium is the most popular venue in Iowa on seven fall Saturdays. From Sunday to Friday, however, that distinction could belong to Kroul Farms, located south of Mount Vernon.
 
Whether you're looking for pumpkins, tomatoes, firewood, flowering plants, eggs, or other produce, chances are, it's available at Kroul Farms. While you're there, you might recognize a former University of Iowa football player.   

Matt Kroul, who played on the Hawkeye defensive line from 2005-08, has experienced the rewards of laboring at both Kinnick Stadium and Kroul Farms. His life has transitioned from farm fields to football field and back to farm fields. After his college and professional football career, he now resides in Solon with his wife and three children and manages most aspects of the family farm.
 
When Iowa football takes on Penn State on Oct. 12 in the annual America Needs Farmers Game presented by 
Iowa Farm Bureau, Kroul will be recognized as its eighth ANF Wall of Honor recipient.
 
"I enjoy the whole adage of reap what you sow and the work you put in is what you get," Kroul said. "Some days aren't fun, some plays or games won't go well, some workouts don't go your way, but, especially this last six months and the way farming is, just adapt, overcome, and succeed."
 
Previous Wall of Honorees are Aaron Kampman (2018), Chad Greenway (2017), Dallas Clark (2016), Robert Gallery (2015), Bruce Nelson (2104), Jared DeVries (2013), and Casey Wiegmann (2012).
 
When Kroul was growing up, the family raised 150 beef cattle and farmed nearly 500 acres of row crops. By the mid-1980s (Matt was born in 1986), the farm crisis reached its peak and the Krouls looked for a more profitable way to utilize their land. With rolling hills near a river bank, theirs wasn't prime row crop ground.
 
"We jumped into pumpkins, sweet corn, tomatoes," Kroul said. "We diversified in a way and didn't beat our head against the door with corn and soybeans. They are still a valuable part of what we do, but we use these other options to maximize our acres."
 
A four-time member of Iowa's football leadership group, Kroul started a school-record 50 consecutive games. He made 238 tackles with seven sacks and was named team captain (2008), Academic All-Big Ten, second-team All-Big Ten (2008 by media) and honorable mention All-Big Ten (2008 by coaches and 2007 by media).
 
From 2005-08, the Hawkeyes played in three bowl games, and capped a nine-win season in 2008 with a 31-10 victory over South Carolina in the 2009 Outback Bowl.
 
From 2009-11, Kroul was a member of the New York Jets, playing six games in 2010.
 
"Coach (Kirk) Ferentz is one of the best at preparing young men for life after college, not only if you have an opportunity in the NFL," Kroul said.
 
In Kroul's case, that meant life in the NFL and life as a farmer.
 
"Farmers are farmers for a reason," Kroul said. "They like being their own boss, it's your own schedule, and you get out of it what you put into it. Agriculture and football are cut from the same cloth. It is the root of what Iowa is all about, and that is agriculture and the Hawkeyes."
 
"We couldn't be more pleased to have Matt join the ranks of the ANF Wall of Honorees," said Iowa Farm Bureau President and farmer, Craig Hill. "Farming is a calling and the farmers I know have the same passion that Matt does in putting in the effort to take care of the land and participate in your community. He's a great role model with a winning attitude."
 
Matt and his wife, Nicole, have two daughters (Leighton, age 4, and Jacie, 1) and a son (Brady, 3). The Krouls intend to pass down the farming work ethic…soon.
 
"They are just getting to where they can keep up," Kroul said. "Hopefully I have some pumpkin and tomato pickers soon."
 
About the Iowa Farm Bureau Federation
The Iowa Farm Bureau Federation is the largest statewide, grassroots farm organization in Iowa, celebrating more than 100 years of creating a vibrant future for agriculture, farm families and their communities. For more information, click 
HERE.

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Aaron Kampman, Packers alumni surprise patients at Marshfield Children's Hospital









Melissa Siegler, Marshfield News-Herald Published 7:43 p.m. CT April 9, 2019














MARSHFIELD - It was all smiles at Marshfield Children's Hospital on Tuesday, as Green Bay Packers alumni visited with patients and families during the team's annual statewide tour.
The 2019 Packers Tailgate Tour made a surprise stop at the hospital. Former Packers Nick Barnett, Earl Dotson, Ryan Grant, Bernardo Harris, Aaron Kampman and Scott Wells walked the halls of the hospital, shaking hands with staff members and chatting with patients and families.
Kampman, who played for the Packers as a defensive end from 2002 to 2009, said it was a rewarding experience to meet with the patients and brighten their day a little. Though the kids do get excited to meet the players, they're all just human, he said.
"Wearing this jersey is an honor, but we're just talking people to people," Kampman said.
Dotson, who was a right tackle for the Packers from 1993 to 2002, said seeing the smiles on the kids' faces was amazing. 
The message the Packers alumni wanted to convey to the kids is to keep fighting, but they know the kids already do that every day, he said.
Barnett, a linebacker for the Packers from 2003 to 2013, echoed that sentiment, saying the kids are inspiring the former players, not the other way around. Whether they're visiting kids in the hospital or addressing a gym full of students, Barnett said the effect is the same.
"You leave there a lot different than when you came in," he said.
The Packers alumni visited several patients, including Morgan Hansmann, 13, of Tomahawk. She said the visit meant a lot to her and helped take her mind off being in the hospital. Though she's hasn't been to Lambeau Field to see the Packers play, she's hoping to make it there this fall.
This isn't the first time Packers past or present have visited the hospital. The Tailgate Tour previously made a stop at Marshfield Children's Hospital in June 2016, and former Packers linebacker Clay Matthews also visited patients there last month.
The tour also surprised students at Ben Franklin Junior High in Stevens Point and Clintonville High School Tuesday. The players will also make stops in Sparta, New Richmond, Chippewa Falls and Antigo. 
Sushma Thapetta, a doctor at the Marshfield Children's Hospital, said the players brought a little bit of joy, fun and happiness to kids who are going through something difficult.
"(Something like this) brings joy and excitement to their little tiny hearts," Thapetta said.
Contact USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin reporter Melissa Siegler at (715) 345-2249 or msiegler@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @Marie2Melissa.

Friday, April 05, 2019

James Lofton, Aaron Kampman to announce Packers’ Day 2 draft picks












Thursday, Apr 04, 2019 04:02 PM
·          
·         
Wes Hodkiewicz PACKERS.COM STAFF WRITER














GREEN BAY – Pro Football Hall of Fame receiver James Lofton and two-time Pro Bowl defensive end Aaron Kampman will announce the Packers’ Day 2 picks at the NFL Draft on Friday, April 26, in Nashville.

For this year’s draft, the NFL is having former first-round picks announce their team’s second-round pick, while players drafted in later rounds will read off the third-round selection. The Packers are scheduled to pick at No. 44 in the second round and No. 76 in the third round.

Lofton, the sixth-overall pick in the 1978 NFL Draft, led the Packers in receptions in all but one of his nine seasons in Green Bay. He ranks third in franchise history with 530 catches and second with 9,656 receiving yards.

Kampman, a fifth-round pick out of Iowa in 2002, ranks fifth in franchise history with 54 sacks. He made back-to-back Pro Bowl appearances for the Packers in 2006-07.

Both players also will be on-site to mentor the prospects and give back to the city of Nashville through participation in a variety of community service events.

Pro Football Hall of Fame guard Jerry Kramer and former linebacker Brad Jones announced the Packers’ Day 2 picks last year.

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