Jake Plummer

Player

Birthday December 19, 1974

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Boise, Idaho, U.S.

Age 49 years old

Nationality United States

Height 188 cm

#27300 Most Popular

1947

In the playoffs, he led the Cardinals to an upset of the same Cowboys for the franchise's first postseason victory since 1947, before losing in the second round to the Minnesota Vikings.

1974

Jason Steven "Jake" Plummer (born December 19, 1974) is an American former professional football quarterback who played 10 seasons in the National Football League (NFL).

He played college football for the Arizona State Sun Devils.

Born in Boise, Idaho, in 1974, Plummer and his two older brothers spent much of their youth at the family lumber mill and warehouse in Smiley Creek, a town of 50 in the Sawtooths.

1993

Plummer attended Pierce Park Elementary, Hillside Junior High, and graduated from Capital High School in 1993.

He was a three-sport star in high school, playing baseball and basketball in addition to football.

Plummer was selected all-state as both a quarterback and punter and passed for 6,097 yards and 68 touchdowns in his junior and senior years.

Plummer originally wanted to play football at Stanford, but they only offered him a preferred walk-on offer; he instead accepted a full ride from California until Hue Jackson, then a coach at Arizona State, heavily recruited Plummer and eventually successfully convinced him to recommit to the Sun Devils.

Plummer also received scholarship offers from Boise State, Idaho, Montana, Oregon State, Washington State, and Wyoming.

Plummer accepted a football scholarship to Arizona State University in Tempe.

He did not redshirt and took over as the starting quarterback (from Grady Benton) early in his freshman season in 1993.

He had consistent, but not outstanding, statistical output during his career, and never led the Pac-10 in any major statistical category.

He threw for an impressive 1,650 yards in his freshman season, but also had seven interceptions to just nine touchdowns.

1994

He broke 2,000 yards in 1994 as a sophomore, and upped his touchdowns to 15.

1995

As a junior in 1995, his 2,222 yards and 17 touchdowns, many coming at pivotal moments in games, earned him a strong fan base and all-conference honors despite a lackluster 6–5 record.

1996

His senior season in 1996 was arguably the best in school history.

Arizona State attracted national attention on September 21 when they shut out top-ranked Nebraska 19–0 to snap the Huskers' 26-game winning streak.

Plummer evaded a sack to toss a 25-yard touchdown on the game's opening drive, and finished 20 of 36 for 292 yards, setting a new school record for career passing yards in the process.

He led ASU to an undefeated regular season and a Pac-10 championship, aided in no small part by fellow all-conference linebacker and close personal friend Pat Tillman.

In the Rose Bowl, he scored a sensational 11-yard go-ahead touchdown run late in the fourth quarter, but Ohio State responded and won 20–17.

A victory likely would have meant a national championship as the only undefeated team in the nation, but their final ranking was fourth.

Plummer was third in the Heisman Trophy voting behind Florida's Danny Wuerffel and Iowa State's Troy Davis, was a second-team All-American, and the Pac-10's Offensive Player of the Year.

Plummer ended his career with several school records; most have since been surpassed, but his 34 games with a rushing or passing touchdown remains an ASU record.

A dedicated student, Plummer was also a two-time Academic All-Conference player.

1997

Plummer was selected by the Arizona Cardinals in the second round of the 1997 NFL Draft, spending six seasons with the Cardinals and then four with the Denver Broncos.

Since retiring from the field, he launched Umbo, a functional mushroom supplement company alongside former UFC Champion Rashad Evans.

He subsequently founded MyCOLove Farm in Fort Lupton, Colorado to better understand mushrooms and mycology.

His nickname, "Jake The Snake", was given to him as a tribute to professional wrestler, Jake "the Snake" Roberts.

Coincidentally, Roberts adopted his nickname as a tribute to his favorite NFL player, former Oakland Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler, who was nicknamed "Snake."

Plummer was drafted in the second round of the 1997 NFL Draft by the Arizona Cardinals.

He played behind Kent Graham and Stoney Case at the start of his rookie season.

1998

He took his first snap late in the 4th quarter of the seventh game, and promptly led the Cardinals on a 98-yard drive, going 4-of-6 for 87 yards and capping it with a 31-yard go-ahead touchdown.

He led the Cardinals to three of their four victories that year.

Already locally popular from his days at ASU, according to teammate Chad Carpenter he was now treated "like a god. We go to a restaurant and people stand up and clap when he walks by."

In 1998, the Cardinals drafted Plummer's friend Pat Tillman, and the two started all sixteen games en route to a 9–7 regular season record.

In the tenth game against Dallas Cowboys, he threw for a stellar 465 yards and three touchdowns.

1999

Plummer had a disappointing season in 1999; he went 3–8 as a starter, threw nine touchdowns to 24 interceptions, and the Cardinals finished 6–10.

Regarding Plummer's season, the Football Outsiders commented: "At the start of the 1999 season, Jake Plummer was being celebrated as one of the NFL's best young quarterbacks, the man who would make the Cardinals respectable again. By the end of the 1999 season, Plummer ranked as the league's worst quarterback."

His reputation as a risk-taking "gunslinger" became a liability.

2013

A 2013 review listed Jake Plummer as the best player to wear number 16 in Sun Devil history.