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American football player and coach (born 1989)
American football player
Ronald Kainoa Fouch is an
American football coach and former
quarterback . He was most recently the quarterbacks coach for the
Salt Lake Stallions of the
Alliance of American Football (AAF). He played
college football for three years at the
University of Washington and then transferred to
Indiana State University .
High school
Fouch was ranked as the #44 quarterback during his senior year by Scout.com
[1] and as the #21 pro-style QB prospect by
Rivals.com .
[2]
College career
Washington
Fouch attended the
University of Washington for 3 years. While at Washington he started 8 of 12 games in the
2008 season , throwing for 1,339 yards, 4 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions.
[3] He also managed to record a reception for a touchdown in a losing game against
Arizona State .
[4]
Indiana State
Fouch decided to transfer to
ISU in January 2010 in order to receive more playing time. While playing for the Indiana State Sycamores, Fouch started 22 games, completing 322 of 544 attempted passes, for 4,316 yards and 38 touchdowns and only 15 interceptions. The team finished with consecutive overall records of 6 wins and 5 losses, and Fouch was credited with playing a significant role in an overtime victory against
Missouri State
[5] and with leading the Sycamores to their finest offensive season on record.
[6] Indiana State spent most of the 2011 season ranked in the Top 25 due to Fouch's leadership.
Post-college career
In 2012, Fouch tried out for the
Chicago Bears , but was not signed.
[7] He eventually became a graduate assistant at
Georgia State University
[8] with his former head coach
Trent Miles from 2013–2014.
In October 2018, Fouch became the quarterbacks coach for the
Salt Lake Stallions of the
Alliance of American Football .
[9]
References
^
"Scout.com: Ronnie Fouch Profile" . Recruiting.scout.com. Retrieved 2012-09-29 .
^
"Player Bio: Ronnie Fouch – University of Washington Official Athletic Site" . Gohuskies.com. 2008-10-25. Retrieved 2012-09-29 .
^
"Ronnie Fouch Stats – ESPN" . Sports.espn.go.com. Retrieved 2012-09-29 .
^
"Carpenter leads Arizona State past Washington" .
USA Today . November 8, 2008. Retrieved March 9, 2011 .
^ "Indiana St. 38, Missouri St. 35, OT".
ESPN . October 16, 2010.
^
"Archived copy" (PDF) . Archived from
the original (PDF) on 2010-09-28. Retrieved 2010-11-28 . {{
cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link )
^ Murphy, John (2012-05-02).
"FOOTBALL: Fouch to Bear mini-camp; Riley to Iowa college – HS GameTime – Inland SoCal" . Blogs.pe.com. Archived from
the original on 2012-05-21. Retrieved 2012-09-29 .
^
http://www.georgiastatesports.com/pdf9/2534318.pdf [
dead link ]
^
"Erickson, Stallions stack up coaching staff" .
Alliance of American Football . October 11, 2018. Archived from
the original on October 30, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2019 .
External links
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