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QB guru George Whitfield's resume called into question in report | FOX Sports on MSN
A Shreveport Times story titled "Resume of 'Quarterback Whisperer' appears fraudulent" quickly made its way around the Internet earlier this week. The Quarterback Whisperer in question is George Whitfield, who in the past five years has gone from obscurity to being a national name in football circles having trained Ben Roethlisberger, Cam Newton and Johnny Manziel, among others.
The story focused on the bio information listed on Whitfield's website that included short stints playing arena football from 2001-2006 with the Chicago Rush, Louisville Fire, Memphis Xplorers and Bossier City Battle Wings. The story quoted the owner of the Battle Wings, Dan Newman, saying, “I can find no record of George Whitfield playing AFL or af2 and he certainly never played for us.”
On Tuesday night, Mike Hohensee, who has been in arena football for 28 seasons and was the coach of the Chicago Rush from 2001-08, told FOX Sports he found Whitfield at an open tryout in Pennslyvania. "We had about 250 players come out and he was one of the two players we kept," Hohensee said. "I did coach him. He came to camp. We were loaded at quarterback and he didn't make it."
Hohensee thought Whitfield spent around three or four weeks with the Rush, but conceded that it has been a long time since then and that a whole bunch of players have come in and out of arenaball, so it's not so easy to recall exactly for how long.
"He needed to learn the game," the coach said. "That was his first experience with (arena football), so I recommended he play at one of the lower levels. He was a student of the game with a great atitiude. He took coaching well and he applied it quickly. He just didn't have the experience. I remember I made a couple of calls for him."
More from Bruce Feldman
Whitfield, who was a record-setting quarterback at D2 Tiffin University after transferring out of Youngstown State, had told me in prior conversations that he was working at a bar in Iowa when he made the drive to the Pittsburgh area for that open tryout. Reached Wednesday morning, Whitfield said, "I'm not really sure what more there is for me to say about any of this."
The Shreveport Times story mentioned that "Arenafan.com is the consummate source for Arena Football and there is no George Whitfield, Jr. in their database," but there actually is a story on that site mentioning Whitfield playing quarterback for the Louisville Fire in a 2004 exhibition game and throwing two touchdowns.
Ryan Russell, now the strength coach at Auburn, played wide receiver for the Fire. He told FOX Sports that he roomed with Whitfield for about a month when they were teammates in Louisville.
"I remember being impressed with his knowldge of football," Russell said. "He lived and breathed football."
A Shreveport Times story titled "Resume of 'Quarterback Whisperer' appears fraudulent" quickly made its way around the Internet earlier this week. The Quarterback Whisperer in question is George Whitfield, who in the past five years has gone from obscurity to being a national name in football circles having trained Ben Roethlisberger, Cam Newton and Johnny Manziel, among others.
The story focused on the bio information listed on Whitfield's website that included short stints playing arena football from 2001-2006 with the Chicago Rush, Louisville Fire, Memphis Xplorers and Bossier City Battle Wings. The story quoted the owner of the Battle Wings, Dan Newman, saying, “I can find no record of George Whitfield playing AFL or af2 and he certainly never played for us.”
On Tuesday night, Mike Hohensee, who has been in arena football for 28 seasons and was the coach of the Chicago Rush from 2001-08, told FOX Sports he found Whitfield at an open tryout in Pennslyvania. "We had about 250 players come out and he was one of the two players we kept," Hohensee said. "I did coach him. He came to camp. We were loaded at quarterback and he didn't make it."
Hohensee thought Whitfield spent around three or four weeks with the Rush, but conceded that it has been a long time since then and that a whole bunch of players have come in and out of arenaball, so it's not so easy to recall exactly for how long.
"He needed to learn the game," the coach said. "That was his first experience with (arena football), so I recommended he play at one of the lower levels. He was a student of the game with a great atitiude. He took coaching well and he applied it quickly. He just didn't have the experience. I remember I made a couple of calls for him."
More from Bruce Feldman
Whitfield, who was a record-setting quarterback at D2 Tiffin University after transferring out of Youngstown State, had told me in prior conversations that he was working at a bar in Iowa when he made the drive to the Pittsburgh area for that open tryout. Reached Wednesday morning, Whitfield said, "I'm not really sure what more there is for me to say about any of this."
The Shreveport Times story mentioned that "Arenafan.com is the consummate source for Arena Football and there is no George Whitfield, Jr. in their database," but there actually is a story on that site mentioning Whitfield playing quarterback for the Louisville Fire in a 2004 exhibition game and throwing two touchdowns.
Ryan Russell, now the strength coach at Auburn, played wide receiver for the Fire. He told FOX Sports that he roomed with Whitfield for about a month when they were teammates in Louisville.
"I remember being impressed with his knowldge of football," Russell said. "He lived and breathed football."