Derrius Guice

Player

Birthday June 21, 1997

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.

Age 26 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.8 m

Weight 102 kg

#54956 Most Popular

1997

Derrius Guice (born June 21, 1997) is an American football running back who is a free agent.

Guice was born to parents Derek and Beulah Guice on June 21, 1997, in a poverty-stricken section of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, known as "the Bottom".

2003

On May 3, 2003, Derek was killed after being involved in a fight at a Denny's restaurant, with Guice learning of it after seeing the scene on the news.

As a way to deal with his emotions and not feeling safe at home, Guice focused his life around football, with his powerful running style being described as "running angry".

Guice first attended McKinley High School.

Due to his mother not liking the culture of McKinley, which she also attended, as well as his talents on the football field, Guice, along with three close friends and fellow football teammates, were given a scholarship to attend the predominantly white and affluent private school Catholic High.

Guice would come home crying, Guice begged his mother to allow him to transfer back to McKinley.

However, his mother said there was no way he was going to leave the scholarship behind, asking him about how many kids in their neighborhood had the same opportunity he did.

As a junior, Guice met Stephanie de la Houssaye, a white guidance counselor at the school.

De la Houssaye gravitated toward the three boys, and Guice specifically, because of their struggles at the school and her ability to relate to them, as she had also grown up in poverty.

Guice first befriended de la Houssaye after she had taken him home following a gang-related altercation at his house that left Guice unconscious.

Over the course of his junior year, Guice began spending more time at the de la Houssaye household, eating dinner with her and her husband and children and going on vacations with them, eventually moving in with them.

Catholic administrators had an issue with the close relationship, telling her to limit her guidance to school hours or she would lose her job.

De la Houssaye chose to continue personally helping Guice over the job, with her stating that she never regretted the decision.

2009

Guice, when speaking about the situation while in college, claimed that the situation reminded him of the 2009 film The Blind Side, in which another black football player is taken in by a white family due to troublesome circumstances at home.

As a senior, he rushed for 1,341 yards with 21 touchdowns.

Catholic went 9–2 on the season and lost 25–23 to New Orleans Brother Martin in the LHSAA Division I quarterfinals at BREC Memorial Stadium, after Guice was stopped on a two-point conversion that would have tied the game.

After his senior season, Guice played in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl and was awarded the Pete Dawkins Trophy.

Guice was rated by Rivals.com as a five-star recruit and was ranked as the second best high school running back at the time, behind Damien Harris.

He committed to Louisiana State University (LSU) to play college football, fulfilling a promise he made to his father before his death.

2015

Guice spent his true freshman year at LSU in 2015 as a backup to Leonard Fournette.

He played in all 12 games, rushing for 436 yards on 51 carries with three touchdowns.

Guice entered his sophomore season again as a backup to Fournette.

He started his first career game in place of an injured Fournette during the team's second game of the season and ran for 155 yards and a touchdown on 19 carries.

Against the Arkansas Razorbacks on November 12, Guice rushed for 252 yards, which was the second most in a game in school history.

The total included a school-record 96-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter.

Two weeks later, against Texas A&M, he set the school single-game record by rushing for 285 yards, breaking the previous mark set by Fournette earlier in the season by one yard.

He became only the fourth running back in Southeastern Conference history to record multiple 250-yard rushing performances in a career, following Bo Jackson, Herschel Walker, and Moe Williams.

He was named to the Associated Press first-team All-SEC team following the regular season.

Guice saw limited play in several games in the first half of his junior season due to a left leg injury.

In a game against Ole Miss that season, he rushed for 276 yards, becoming the first player in SEC history with three career games of at least 250 rushing yards.

2018

He played college football at LSU, where he was the first player in Southeastern Conference (SEC) history with three career games of 250 or more rushing yards before being selected by the Washington Redskins in the second round of the 2018 NFL Draft.

In January 2018, Guice announced that he would forego his senior year at LSU in favor of the 2018 NFL Draft.

Guice attended LSU's pro day in April 2018, but opted to stand on his combine numbers and only performed positional drills.

At the conclusion of the pre-draft process, Guice was projected to be a first or second round pick by NFL draft experts and scouts.

He was ranked among the best running backs of the 2018 class.

Predicted as a first round pick before the draft, Guice reportedly had his draft stock fall due to questions about his character and other incidents during the drafting process, such as an alleged verbal altercation between himself and Howie Roseman, executive of the Philadelphia Eagles.

Roseman and other Eagles personnel denied it took place, with Guice stating that the incident, as well as other rumors of him being lazy, immature, and dishonest, were not true.

2020

Guice appeared in just five games in two years in the NFL due to multiple knee injuries and was released in 2020 after being charged for crimes related to domestic violence.

LSU disassociated itself from Guice and removed all of his statistics from their record books in 2021 amid claims that the school had mishandled accusations of sexual harassment by him during his time there.