Ricky Proehl
Ricky Proehl is a 17-year veteran of the NFL. He started playing
football when he was eight years old. He attended Hillsborough High
School in Hillsborough, New Jersey, where he starred in both football
and baseball. Proehl attended Wake Forest University, where he was a
four-year letterman in football. . Proehl was taken in the 1990 NFL
Draft by the Phoenix Cardinals. He set the Cardinal rookie record for
receptions, as well as becoming the first rookie to lead the team in
receptions since Bob Shaw in 1950. He played four more seasons for the
Cardinals before being traded to Seattle for a draft pick. He spent two
seasons with the Seahawks, signed with Chicago for one year, and ended
up with the Rams for the start of the 1998 NFL season. As part of "The
Greatest Show on Turf", he helped lead the Rams to victory at Super
Bowl XXXIV. He spent three more seasons with the Rams before signing
with Carolina as a free agent at the start of the 2003 NFL season. He
was talked out of retirement for a 16th season by Panther quarterback
Jake Delhomme and head coach John Fox. He has played in three Super
Bowls and in 2005 Ricky ranked 11th in career receptions on the NFL
active player lis. Proehl is retired and worked as a color analyst with
the Rams' television pre-season games and season pre game show when he
got a from the Colts to join them as a free agent in November of 2006.
Super Bowl 41 with the Colts was Proehl's 4 Super Bowl and his second
ring. Now with a "for sure" retirement Proehl's primary mission along
with broadcasting will be the Ricky Proehl Foundation to support
children in North Carolina who have medical and/or social needs that
would otherwise not be met. The Ricky Proehl Foundation was created in
1999 and is administered by the Community Foundation of Greater
Greensboro. Before the foundation was established, and since 1996 until
present, the Ricky Proehl NFL Charity Golf Classic, which helps fund
the Ricky Proehl Foundation, has raised over $1,000,000 for children
with developmental disabilities. These funds benefit various North
Carolina children's charities such as Amos Cottage Rehabilitation
Hospital, Greensboro Cerebral Palsy Association housed at Gateway
Education Center, Oak Ranch, Boys and Girls Club of Raleigh and
Children's Home Society.