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Sua Cravens

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Position
  
Safety

Name
  
Su'a Cravens

Class
  
Junior

Role
  
American football player

College
  
USC (2013–2015)

Height
  
1.85 m

Weight
  
225 lb (102 kg)


Su'a Cravens USC Star Su39a Cravens Ready to Cap Monster Season with


Date of birth
  
(1995-07-07) July 7, 1995 (age 20)

Place of birth
  
Los Angeles, California

High school
  
Vista Murrieta High School

Current team
  
USC Trojans football (#21 / Defensive back)

Parents
  
Yolanda Cravens, Kevin Cravens

Siblings
  
Siaki Cravens, Malia Cravens

Similar People
  
Cody Kessler, JuJu Smith, Clay Helton, Jaylon Smith, Myles Jack

Su a cravens ultimate usc highlights


Su'a Cravens (born July 7, 1995) is an American football strong safety for the Washington Redskins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at USC, and was drafted by the Redskins in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft. Cravens played the inside linebacker position during his rookie year with the team, before moving full time to strong safety the following season. Just before his second season with the team, Cravens announced his decision to retire, reportedly due to undisclosed personal issues, and was placed on the team's reserve list.

Contents

Su'a Cravens USC Trojans Su39a Cravens 39liking39 new position after big

High school career

Su'a Cravens USC Star Su39a Cravens Ready to Cap Monster Season with

A native of Murrieta, California, Cravens attended Temecula Valley High School as a freshman in 2009. He then transferred to Vista Murrieta High School as a sophomore, where he had 90 tackles, eights sacks, five fumble recoveries and three forced fumbles. He earned Max Preps Sophomore All-American second team, Cal-Hi Sports All-State Sophomore first team, and All-Southwestern League first team honors.

Su'a Cravens Su39a Cravens Bolts

In his junior year in 2011, Cravens played linebacker and defensive back on defense, as well as running back and wide receiver on offense. He was Max Preps All-American first team, ESPNHS.com All-American second team, Max Preps Junior All-American first team, ESPNHS.com Underclass All-American first team, along with other honors. For the year, he had 98 tackles, 11 sacks, three interceptions, six deflections, one fumble recovery and four forced fumbles on defense and also caught 20 passes for 239 yards (17.0 avg.) with four touchdowns and ran for 673 yards on 75 carries (9.0 avg.) with 15 touchdowns on offense, as Vista Murrieta went 14–0 and captured the CIF Inland Division title with a 35–28 win over perennial powerhouse Corona Centennial.

Su'a Cravens Su39a Cravens Bolts

His 2012 senior season honors included USA Today All-USA Defensive Player of the Year, Parade All-American, Prep Star All-American Dream Team, and Max Preps All-American first team. Cravens compiled 97 tackles, eight sacks, three interceptions, four deflections, two fumble recoveries, four forced fumbles and three blocked punts on defense in 2012, and also caught 21 passes for 342 yards (16.3 avg.) and ran for 200 yards on 17 carries (11.8 avg.) with 14 total touchdowns on offense, helping lead Vista Murrieta to a 13–1 record. Their only loss came in the CIF Inland Division final against Corona Centennial.

Su'a Cravens Su39a Cravens Set to Lead Secondary for USC Trojans in 2014

Cravens also participated in track & field at Vista Murrieta, where he competed in jumps and posted a personal-best leap of 1.93 meters (six feet, four inches) in the high jump.

Recruiting

Su'a Cravens Su39a Cravens Injury What if he Misses Games for USC

Regarded as a five-star recruit by Rivals.com, Cravens was listed as the No. 1 safety prospect in his class and the No. 12 prospect overall in the country. He played in the 2013 U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Cravens chose the Trojans over offers from nearly every BCS program in the nation, including Michigan, Nebraska and Ohio State. Cravens became the Trojans’ eighth commitment for the 2013 class and the fifth five-star rated recruit in a class featuring quarterback Max Browne, defensive lineman Kenny Bigelow and running backs Ty Isaac and Justin Davis. He enrolled at USC in the spring of 2013 after graduating a semester early from high school.

College career

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Cravens finished his distinguished career at USC with 199 tackles, 34 tackles for loss, 10.5 sacks, nine interceptions and four forced fumbles.

Freshman year

Su'a Cravens AllAmerican linebacker Su39a Cravens declares for NFL

Cravens started at strong safety as a first-year freshman and made quite an impact. Overall in 2013, while appearing in and starting 13 games (he suffered a groin injury against Utah and missed the Oregon State game), he had 52 tackles, including 1.5 for losses of four yards, plus four interceptions for 54 yards (13.5 avg), one deflection, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery. He also returned a kickoff for 33 yards and a punt for one yard. He made the 2013 Sporting News Freshman All-American first team, Athlon Freshman All-American first team, Phil Steele Freshman All-American first team, CollegeFootballNews.com Freshman All-American first team and 247Sports.com True Freshman All-American second team. He was also an All-Pac-12 honorable mention. He missed the last half of spring practice after having surgery for a torn cartilage in his knee.

Sophomore year

Su'a Cravens USC defense gets behind Su39a Cravens Pac12

Cravens returned as a starter for his sophomore year in 2014. He was asked to play a hybrid strong safety/strongside outside linebacker spot. Starting all 13 games for the second consecutive season, he compiled 68 tackles, including a team-best 17 for losses (more than any defensive back in the nation), five sacks, nine deflections and a team-best three interceptions (he returned one of them 31 yards for a touchdown). His 17 tackles for loss in 2014 were the most by a non-defensive lineman at USC since linebacker Markus Steele had 17 in 2000. For his season efforts, he was named to the All-American third team by the Associated Press (AP) and Athlon, fourth team All-American by Phil Steele and was an SI.com All-American honorable mention, as well as CollegeFootballNews.com Sophomore All-American first team. He made the 2014 All-Pac-12 first team, as well as the Athlon All-Pac-12 first team, Phil Steele All-Pac-12 first team and CollegeSportsMadness.com All-Pac-12 first team. He won USC's Defensive Perimeter Player of the Year Award. Against Oregon State in Week 4, he returned an interception 31 yards for a touchdown to open the scoring against the Beavers and also had a team-best six tackles, including two for losses (with his first career sack) to earn Chuck Bednarik National Defensive Player of the Week honors.

Junior year

Cravens returned for his third year as a starter, again playing strongside outside linebacker (a hybrid safety-linebacker role) as a junior in 2015. After completing his junior season at the University of Southern California in 2015, he opted to forgo his final year of eligibility and enter the 2016 NFL draft.

Career statistics

Source:

2016 NFL Draft

Upon entering the draft, Cravens was projected in the NFL as a hybrid linebacker-safety, being compared to Arizona Cardinals player Deone Bucannon.

Washington Redskins

Cravens was selected with the 53rd overall pick of the 2016 NFL draft by the Washington Redskins. Shortly after being drafted, the Redskins listed him as a safety on their roster. It was also announced that he would wear 36 as his jersey number due to him being a fan of the former Redskins safety, Sean Taylor, who wore the same number as a rookie. On May 9, 2016, the Redskins signed Cravens to a four-year, $4.43 million contract.

Cravens played inside linebacker during offseason practices and training camp, taking majority of play snaps from the position. In a game against the New York Giants in September 2016, Cravens made a game-clinching interception of Eli Manning to help the Redskins win their first game of the season.

Cravens was projected to be the team's starting strong safety for the 2017 season. A week before the season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles, Cravens told the team that his decision to retire. Considered sudden and unexpected, the announcement led to Redskins team president Bruce Allen convincing him to postpone it, and placed him on the team's exempt list, which was done to give him time to fix any personal issues that may have lead to the decision. Two weeks later, the team placed him on the reserve/left squad list, foregoing any chance of him playing for the team in 2017.

Personal life

A native of Temecula, California, Cravens is the son of Kevin and Yolanda Cravens. His older sister, Malia, was on the women's basketball team at Hawaii in 2012 before transferring to USC, where she was briefly on the 2013 Women of Troy basketball team as a guard before joining the track team as a high jumper. His older brother, Siaki, was a defensive lineman at Hawaii who previously played at Utah. His grandfather, Jack Cravens, played basketball and baseball at Brigham Young from 1957 to 1959. His cousins, Jordan and Brynn Cameron, played football (2008–2010) and women's basketball (2005–2009), respectively, at USC; Jordan also played men's basketball at USC in 2008 and BYU in 2007 and now plays as a tight end for the NFL's Miami Dolphins. Another cousin, Colby Cameron, was a quarterback at Louisiana Tech (2009–2012) before signing with the NFL's Carolina Panthers.

With family roots from Hawaii, Cravens is a distant cousin of New Orleans Saints linebacker Manti Te'o. His mother is second cousin with former Arizona State and NFL safety David Fulcher. His uncle is married to Kyle Whittingham's sister.

References

Su'a Cravens Wikipedia