The son of former NFL linebacker
Sam Rogers, Armani was born on December 4, 1997, in
Buffalo, New York.[1] He grew up in
Los Angeles and attended
Alexander Hamilton High School, Armani has four brothers and one sister where he passed for 1,433 yards and 18 touchdowns while rushing for 431 yards and six touchdowns as a senior.[2] Rogers was rated a three-star recruit and initially committed to play college football at California over offers from UCLA, Washington, and Utah.[3] He decommitted during his senior year following changes to California's coaching staff and later signed to play at UNLV after considering Fresno State.[2]
College career
UNLV Rebels
Rogers began his college career at the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas and redshirted as a freshman.[4] He started nine games for the Rebels during his redshirt
freshman season and was named the
Mountain West Conference Freshman of the Year after completing 99 of 189 pass attempts for 1,471 yards and six touchdowns with five interceptions and setting a school record for rushing yards by a quarterback with 780 and also rushing for eight touchdowns.[5] Rogers suffered a foot injury in the fourth game of his redshirt
sophomore year and missed the next six games before returning and finishing the season with 601 passing yards and 10 touchdowns and 565 rushing yards and eight touchdowns.[6] He passed for 393 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions and rushed 204 yards and two touchdowns in four games as a redshirt junior before again suffering an injury.[7]
Ohio Bobcats
Rogers transferred to
Ohio as a graduate student.[8][9] In
2020, he was used mostly in
offensive package plays and threw for 48 yards and a touchdown while rushing for 114 yards and two touchdowns.[10] Rogers used the extra year of eligibility granted to college athletes in 2020 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic and returned to Ohio for a second season. He started two games at quarterback and was also used in offensive packages throughout the season, finishing the season with 334 passing yards and 552 rushing yards and seven touchdowns, including a 99-yard rushing touchdown against the
Buffalo Bulls, which set an NCAA record for a quarterback.[11][12]