Dale Murphy's Son to NFL

DixieDestroyer

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Utah State OG Shawn Murphy (son of Atlanta Braves legend Dale Murphy) is looking to be drafted in the NFL. If this kid is anything like his classy, gentleman Dad, I hope he gets drafted high...

Murphy's son hopes to be picked in NFL draft

The Associated Press

Published on: 04/17/08

Logan Utah â€â€￾ Shawn Murphy found a very effective way to get out from under his father's Major League shadow.

He became an offensive lineman.

Murphy, the son of former Atlanta Braves star Dale Murphy, is forging his own way into pro sports as an NFL draft prospect. He gave up his father's game late in high school to focus on football, not knowing that it would turn into a career decision eight years later.

He's a little surprised to hear his name mentioned in any of the early projections, let alone as a possible sleeper who could go in the second or third round. He's also heard he may not get picked at all.

After the roundabout route he has taken to get here, Shawn would be content with any chance he gets.

"I feel like I deserve a shot I'm getting through work, playing hard and sticking with it," he said, "but at the same time it just still doesn't feel very real."

At 25, Shawn could be one of the oldest members of this year's rookie class. He took two years off from football to serve a church mission in Brazil, then spent another year away from the game considering whether he wanted to even play again.

His career has included stints at two junior colleges and finally Utah State, where he spent the last two years and got plenty of attention from scouts â€â€￾ more for what he was doing on the offensive line than for his athletic pedigree.

He started 12 games at tackle as a junior, then moved to guard for his senior season and started all 12 again. At 6-foot-4, 315 pounds, his size is ideal for a guard. He also has quick feet and graded well at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis.

Now, he's working out and waiting.

Dale said the pre-draft anxiety brings back some memories, but what he went through before the 1974 baseball draft and what Shawn is experiencing are vastly different. Baseball's selections still don't garner the attention the two days of NFL picks get every spring. And the idea of watching a draft for either sport round-by-round, live on television, was unheard of when Dale was selected No. 5 overall by the Braves 34 years ago.

"I can't even remember how we found out. I think I got a phone call," Dale said.

Shawn, the third of eight Murphy children, naturally played baseball growing up during his father's career with the Braves, Phillies and briefly the Rockies. He remembers being heckled when he struck out in high school, the superstar's kid failing to deliver. He said the taunts didn't bother him much, but they probably made him appreciate the anonymity he enjoyed in football a little more.

He doesn't mind being known as Dale Murphy's kid. He's just not the kind of guy to drop his dad's name unless he's asked.

"I can't complain about having a dad that did what he did and to be able to have the experiences I had," said Shawn, who inherited his father's modesty.

To Shawn, Dale is just "Dad" â€â€￾ not the two-time National League MVP remembered for his 398 home runs, 2,111 hits and 1,266 RBIs. And to Dale, Shawn is just a son who has worked his way through some confusing times before deciding what he wanted to do and then working for it.

After returning from Brazil, where he lost 40 pounds and weighed in around 230, Shawn was without a football home. He had played as a freshman at Ricks College, now known as BYU-Idaho, which dropped athletics while Shawn was serving his Mormon mission.

He waited tables and worked as a bouncer while taking classes and trying to figure out his life. For a while, he wasn't sure he wanted to play football again.

That changed when he went to see BYU's season opener against Notre Dame in 2004.

"I just remember thinking 'I can do this and I want to do this,'" he said.

Cheeseburgers, pizza and lots of time in the weight room helped him get back to his playing weight. He returned to football at Dixie State in 2005, moving from defensive end to the offensive line. After one season with the Rebels, larger schools were interested in Murphy and Utah State won the recruiting campaign, largely because he could play for the Aggies right away.

Utah State went 1-11 in 2006 and 2-10 last fall. Despite the team's struggles, Murphy stood out enough to play in the East-West Shrine game and get invited to the draft combine.

NFL draft adviser Gil Brandt said Murphy impressed scouts with his strength and agility and showed versatility by moving from tackle to guard last year. Brandt said the only potential downsides he sees with Murphy are his age, although that could be a plus if a team is looking for maturity, and his lack of experience.

Overall, Brandt said Murphy could be a good pick for someone in the middle of the draft.

"He's definitely a very underrated or under-publicized player," said Brandt, the former personnel director for the Dallas Cowboys.

Dale retired from baseball 15 years ago and has spent countless hours traveling and shuttling kids to game after game. His youngest two children are still in high school and son Jacob is about to go on his church mission, then plans to play football and baseball at BYU.

Dale and his wife, Nancy, plan to be at as many games as they can â€â€￾ whatever the sport.

"I love to see them play as many sports as they can as long as they enjoy playing," Dale said. "I'm convinced as a parent we need to find out what they like to do and encourage that instead of having them doing what we want them to do. And that's kind of tough sometimes."


Reference articleEdited by: DixieDestroyer
 
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His brother committed to BYU for football and possibly baseball this past February. I didn't even know there was another Murphy that was a senior at Utah State and an NFL prospect at OL.
 

White Power

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Was drafted by Parcells and in the 4th round slated to start at guard for the Phins. This means that they will have one Hawiian and four whites starting on their offensive line this year. This team has come very far from the days of Nick Saban. Congratulations Shawn do us all proud.
 

guest301

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White Power said:
Was drafted by Parcells and in the 4th round slated to start at guard for the Phins. This means that they will have one Hawiian and four whites starting on their offensive line this year. This team has come very far from the days of Nick Saban. Congratulations Shawn do us all proud.

It wouldn't suprise me either if the white TE they just traded to get from the Cowboys, Anthony Fasano get's alot of playing time and/or starts for the Fins. Parcells drafted him and is well aware of what he can do.
 
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