Chris Samuels Bio, Wiki, Age, Husband, Love & Marriage DC, Net Worth, Salary

Chris Samuels Biography

Chris Samuels is a former American college and professional football player who was an offensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) for ten seasons. He played college football for the University of Alabama and was recognized as a consensus All-American. Selected third overall in the 2000 NFL Draft, Samuels played his entire pro career for the NFL’s Washington Redskins (now Washington Commanders) and was a six-time Pro Bowl selection.

Chris Samuels Age

Samuels is 44 years old as of 2021. He was born on July 28, 1977, in Mobile, Alabama. He celebrates his birthday on 28th July every year.

Chris Samuels Height

Samuels stands at a height of approximately 1.97 meters.

Chris Samuels Family

Samuels has managed to keep his personal life away from the limelight hence he has not disclosed any information about his parents. Samuels is the younger brother of Arena Football League player and coach Lawrence Samuels.

Chris Samuels Wife

Samuels is happily married to his longtime girlfriend Monique Cox since March 2012. Together, they are blessed with three children, Chris Jr., Milani, and Chase. His wife Monique has appeared as a cast member on The Real Housewives of Potomac for four seasons.

Samuels Son

One of his sons, Chase, underwent minor surgery to correct an inguinal hernia in 2019. 

Chris Samuels Photo
Chris Samuels Photo

Chris Samuels Net Worth

Samuels has an estimated net worth of $ 17 Million which he has earned through his successful career as a football player.

Chris Samuels Education

He is a graduate of John Shaw High School in Mobile, where he played both offense and defense for the John Shaw high school football team and helped Shaw to an 8–3 record and a spot in the AHSAA playoffs.

Chris Samuels College career

While going to the University of Alabama, Samuels played for the Alabama Crimson Tide football crew from 1996 to 1999. As senior in 1999, he was named to the All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) first group by the gathering’s mentors, the Associated Press, the Birmingham News and the Mobile Press Register, and was perceived as an agreement first-group All-American. He likewise won the Outland Trophy as the country’s best school inside lineman and was a semifinalist for the Lombardi Award. Samuels won the Jacobs Blocking Trophy as the SEC’s most remarkable blocker.

He began 42 straight games, from right off the bat in his 1996 rookie season until his last standard season game as a senior, without yielding a sack. Samuels didn’t permit a quarterback tension in 1999, had 91 knockdown blocks, played essentially every hostile snap during the standard season, and opened openings for Crimson Tide running back Shaun Alexander, who acquired 1,383 yards hurrying.

Chris Samuels Professional career

Samuels was regarded as the best offensive lineman prospect in the NFL Draft of 2000. After suffering an injury to his right knee, he did not participate in the NFL Combine. The Washington Redskins selected him third overall after trading two first-round picks (12th and 24th) as well as a fourth and fifth-round pick to move up to third in the first round. Samuels was the first Alabama offensive lineman picked in the first round since Bob Cryder in 1978, and he was the only offensive tackle selected in the top 19 in the selection.

Chris Samuels Washington Redskins

Samuels quickly turned into the beginning left tackle for the Redskins and was then chosen to six Pro Bowls. In 2000, Samuels was one of simply four players on offense to begin each game, joining Jon Jansen, Mark Fischer, and Stephen Alexander. Samuels and Dolphins tackle Todd Wade was named co-Offensive Rookies of the Month for October. He missed the last 3/4 in the season finale versus Arizona with a neck injury.

In 2001, Samuels began each of the 16 customary season games at left tackle and was cast a ballot to the Pro Bowl, he procured game balls, alongside the remainder of the hostile line, for two games: versus Seattle and at New Orleans. Samuels was highlighted on the front of the December 3, 2001 issue of Sports Illustrated alongside pursuing back Stephen Davis turning into the main group in NFL history to lose its initial five games, then, at that point, proceed to dominate its next five matches. In 2002, Samuels began 15 normal season games at passed-on tackle and acquired his second sequential outing to the Pro Bowl. He was additionally cast a ballot as the Redskins 2002 Ed Block Courage Award champ.

In 2003, he began 13 ordinary season games at left tackle and missed games versus New Orleans, at New York Giants, and versus Dallas in light of a knee injury. In 2004, he began every one of the 16 customary season games at left tackle and assisted running back Clinton Portis with scrambling for 1,315 yards, turning out to be just the fourth Redskin in history to do such in a solitary season. Samuels was viewed as the head of Washington’s hostile line. During the 2005 slow time of year, the Redskins marked him to a 7-year contract worth about $47 million and a marking reward of about $16 million.

In 2005, he began each of the 16 standard season games and two postseason challenges at left tackle. He was named to the Pro Bowl after helping open up running paths for Clinton Portis to scramble for an establishment record 1,516 yards. In 2006, he began each of the 16 normal season games at left tackle. He assisted Ladell Betts with scrambling for a profession best 1,154 hurrying yards and four scores. Samuels was named to the Pro Bowl for the second sequential season. In 2007, Samuels was named to the Pro Bowl for the third successive season and began every one of the 16 ordinary season games and one postseason challenge at left tackle.

He made ready for the Redskins to post their third most elevated all-time hurrying complete in a solitary game ( 296 yards on 48 conveys) at New York Jets on November 4. Samuels was fined $12,500 for conveying an unlawful slash block that harmed Antonio Garay of the Chicago Bears during a game in 2007. He later apologized to Garay, who spent the rest of the time on Injured Reserve, as well as to Bears lead trainer Lovie Smith. In 2008, New York Giants cautious end Mathias Kiwanuka blamed Samuels for “grimy play,” after he made a low tackle on Kiwanuka during the last minutes of the 2008 NFL season opener.

Samuels denied claims that he deliberately endeavored to harm Kiwanuka, expressing “On that specific play I was simply attempting to safeguard my quarterback… It was never my aim to go out there and harm another player.” Samuels was appointed a Team Captain in 2008, and he played and started in 12 regular-season games before going down with knee ligament trouble at Detroit on October 26, ending his 73-game back-to-back starting streak. On December 9, 2008, he was placed on injured reserve due to a tear in his rear arm muscles, and he missed the next three games. Samuels was named to the 2008 Pro Bowl but was unable to participate due to an injury to his back arm muscles.

Clinton Portis was expected to finish fourth in the NFL in both rushing yards (1,487) and total yards from scrimmage (4,587). (1,705). Portis and Chicago Bears RB Matt Forte tied for the NFL lead in absolute first downs (82) with Atlanta Falcons RB Michael Turner. Samuels assisted Portis with having the second-most surging yards (1,487) in a solitary season in club history and opened up running paths for Portis to post in excess of 120 yards hurrying in five sequential challenges (121 hurrying yards, at Dallas; 145 at Philadelphia; 129 versus St. Louis; 175 versus Cleveland, and 126 at Detroit).

Samuels drove the way for Portis to tie a club record for most successive 100-yard surging games (5 straight challenges in 2008), a record shared by Rob Goode (1951), Portis (2005), and Ladell Betts (2006). On October 11, 2009, Samuels experienced temporary upper-body paralysis due to compression of his neck from a helmet-to-helmet hit while in pass protection against the Carolina Panthers. The damage was linked to spinal stenosis, a condition he had been diagnosed with when he was a toddler. He retired from the NFL on March 4, 2010, on the recommendation of his physicians, because extending his career would put him at risk of long-term, serious injury connected to his disease.

Chris Samuels Coaching career

Samuels stated during his retirement public interview with the Washington Football Team that he planned to proceed with his profession in football and become a mentor. In 2010, he partook in the NFL’s Minority Coaching Fellowship as an aide to the Redskins’ hostile line mentor Chris Foerster. In February 2011, Samuels chipped in as the hostile organizer at Mattie T. Blount High School in Prichard, Alabama. At Blount, he helped lead the Leopards to a general record of 10-2 and an appearance in the Alabama High School Athletic Association end-of-the-season games.

After only one season at Blount, in January 2012 Samuels got back to the University of Alabama to act as an understudy right-hand mentor for Crimson Tide lead trainer Nick Saban. There he was an associate hostile line mentor while attempting to finish his certificate in actual training. In 2015, he passed on Alabama to turn into a secondary school mentor at Osbourn High School in Manassas, Virginia. In November 2016, Samuels ventured down from the Osbourn football trainer work. In 2017, Samuels was employed as the Offensive Coordinator at Winston Churchill High School in Potomac, Maryland. In the wake of venturing down at Winston Churchill in 2019, Samuels was employed as Offensive Coordinator at Northwest High School in Germantown, Maryland.

Chris Samuels Honors

Samuels was a member of the 2016 class of the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame. On October 20, 2019, at halftime against the San Francisco 49ers, he was inducted into the Redskins Ring of Fame.

Chris Samuels Love & Marriage DC

Monique and Chris Samuels are back on reality TV after leaving the Real Housewives of Potomac, ready to demonstrate who they really are. However, as the Samuels and their couple friends negotiate relationships while living the D.C. lifestyle, marriage is not simple.  

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