Kam Chancellor

Player

Birthday April 3, 1988

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Norfolk, Virginia, U.S.

Age 35 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6′ 3″

Weight 232 lbs

#35425 Most Popular

1921

SuperPrep and The Roanoke Times rated him the 21st-ranked player in the state.

The 247Sports recruiting site assessed Chancellor as a three-star recruit and he accepted a scholarship offer from Virginia Tech.

1927

Rivals.com assessed him as the 27th-ranked pro-style quarterback prospect in the nation and the 20th-ranked player in the state of Virginia.

1988

Kameron Darnel Chancellor (born April 3, 1988), nicknamed "Bam Bam Kam", is an American former professional football safety who spent his entire nine-year career with the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (NFL).

Chancellor was born in Norfolk, Virginia on April 3, 1988.

He attended Matthew Fontaine Maury High School where he played basketball and football as a quarterback and safety for the Commodores athletic teams.

2005

As a senior in 2005, he recorded more than 2,000 passing yards and 500 rushing yards and led his team to a 10–2 record and an appearance in the Group AAA Division 5 playoffs.

Chancellor was named the team's most valuable player, and he was also placed on the All-Eastern District first-team as well as The Virginian-Pilot All-Tidewater second-team.

2006

Chancellor enrolled at Virginia Tech in 2006 to study human development.

He worked out as a quarterback before eventually being moved to the cornerback position prior to the start of the season.

He saw action that year as a true freshman in all 13 games, and recorded nine tackles, two broken up passes, and one interception.

2007

In 2007, he was moved to the rover position as the starter and also played on special teams.

He started in all 14 games and recorded 79 tackles, seven broken-up passes, three quarterback hurries, and one interception as a sophomore.

2008

Before the 2008 season, Chancellor was moved to the free safety position, his third position change in three of four years at Virginia Tech.

Chancellor started in all 14 games and recorded 52 tackles, of which 27 were solo, two interceptions, five broken-up passes, seven pass deflections, one forced fumble, and two fumble recoveries.

2009

After the season, he considered entering the 2009 NFL Draft a year early, but decided to remain at Virginia Tech for his senior season.

Before his senior season in 2009, Hokies' defensive backs coach, Torrian Gray said that Chancellor could be "the greatest safety in Virginia Tech history. In his senior season, Chancellor recorded two interceptions, one fumble return, 68 total tackles, three tackles-for-loss, and four broken-up passes. Chancellor has said that he attempts to emulate the late Washington Redskins safety Sean Taylor, and said, "[He was a] big safety, the prototype guy for the position.

I'm a big safety, too, and I've just always wanted to be just like him.

2010

He played college football for the Virginia Tech Hokies prior to being selected by the Seahawks in the fifth round of the 2010 NFL Draft.

A four-time Pro Bowler, he was one of the key members of their Legion of Boom secondary.

He also helped lead the Seahawks to victory in Super Bowl XLVIII.

I don't necessarily say I can be Sean Taylor before it's over, but I think I can be just as good." Also, before games and when he needs motivation, Chancellor says he watched the highlights of Sean Taylor on YouTube. He says it motivated him to do better, strive for greater things, and took him to a darker place which makes him play better. The CBS Sports-affiliated NFL Draft Scout considered Chancellor the third-ranked of the 126 free safeties available for the 2010 NFL Draft and projected him as a third-round selection.

Chancellor was elected to the Virginia Tech Sports Hall of Fame in 2022.

The Seattle Seahawks selected Chancellor in the fifth round as the 133rd overall pick in the 2010 NFL Draft.

He was the second safety the Seahawks drafted in 2010, behind first round pick Earl Thomas, and was the ninth safety selected overall.

On June 2, 2010, the Seattle Seahawks signed Chancellor to a four-year, $2 million contract that included a signing bonus of $213,000.

Throughout training camp, he competed for a job at strong safety against Lawyer Milloy, Kevin Ellison, and Jordan Babineaux.

Head coach Pete Carroll named Chancellor the third strong safety on the depth chart to start the regular season, behind veterans Lawyer Milloy and Jordan Babineaux.

He made his professional regular season debut in the Seattle Seahawks' season-opening 31–6 victory against the San Francisco 49ers.

On September 26, 2010, Chancellor recorded his first career tackle on Darren Sproles after Sproles returned a kickoff for 22 yards.

Chancellor forced a fumble that was recovered by Dexter Davis.

He finished their 27–20 victory with two solo tackles and one forced fumble.

On October 31, 2010, Chancellor recorded two solo tackles and sacked quarterback Jason Campbell in the Seahawks' 33–3 loss at the Oakland Raiders.

The following week, he collected a season-high seven combined tackles (five solo) in a 41–7 loss to the New York Giants.

He finished his rookie season with 23 combined tackles (17 solo), a pass deflection, a sack, and a forced fumble in 16 games and no starts.

Chancellor entered training camp slated as the starting strong safety after the Seahawks opted to not re-sign Lawyer Milloy.

Defensive coordinator Gus Bradley officially named him the starting strong safety, alongside free safety Earl Thomas.

He started the Seattle Seahawks' season-opener at the San Francisco 49ers and recorded a season-high ten solo tackles in their 33–17 loss.

2011

On September 25, 2011, Chancellor collected five combined tackles, two pass deflections, and made his first career interception off a pass attempt by quarterback Kevin Kolb during their 13–10 victory against the Arizona Cardinals.

2017

Chancellor retired following complications from a neck injury he suffered in 2017.