Jason Sehorn
Jason Sehorn was born in Sacramento, California, United States on April 15th, 1971 and is the Football Player. At the age of 53, Jason Sehorn biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 53 years old, Jason Sehorn has this physical status:
Jason Heath Sehorn (born April 15, 1971) is a former American football cornerback who competed for the New York Giants from 1994 to 2002 and the 2003 St. Louis Rams.
He played college football at the University of Southern California (USC).
Early years
Sehorn was born in Sacramento, California. At Mount Shasta High School in Mount Shasta, California, he played just one year of high school football.
Personal life
Sehorn was briefly married to former CNN reporter Whitney Casey from February 14, 1998 to their divorce in 1999. His marriage to actress Angie Harmon is well-known due to his unusual and public proposal. During one of Harmon's appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Sehorn (with the assistance of host Jay Leno), she hid backstage and stunned Harmon by getting on one knee and asking for her hand in marriage in front of a live studio audience and millions of viewers watching on television. They were married on June 9, 2001. Finley, 2003; Avery, 2005; and Emery, 2008 Both publicly support the Republican Party. The couple announced in November 2014 that they were divorced after 13 years of marriage, and divorced in December 2015. In 2017, Sehorn remarried to Meghann Gunderman.
Sehorn's top school jersey #1 was retired by his alma mater, Mt., on January 19, 1999. Joe Blevins, a long-time friend, mentor, and former coach, attended a Shasta High School service. On local cable television, the ceremony was broadcast.
College career
Sehorn played his first two years of college football at Shasta College, a junior college in Redding, California, where he was a standout wide receiver, kick returner and punt returner. He then played two years at the University of Southern California, where he was moved to safety due to an abundance of talent at wide receiver.
Professional career
Sehorn was drafted in the second round of the 1994 NFL Draft by the New York Giants, and spent most of his career playing cornerback for them.
After back-to-back successful seasons in 1996–97, Sehorn suffered a debilitating knee injury, tearing his anterior cruciate (ACL) and medial collateral ligaments (MCL) while returning the opening kickoff in a 1998 preseason game against the New York Jets. Though Sehorn returned the next season, his speed was diminished. Still, he started 73 games for the Giants at cornerback in six seasons played from 1996 to 2002. He represented the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV.
The Giants released Sehorn on March 7, 2003, and in May of that year he signed with the St. Louis Rams as a safety. He missed the first six games of the season with a broken foot, but played in the last ten. The next year, his contract with the Rams was terminated after he failed a physical examination before the start of the 2004 season.
Sehorn was signed by the Chicago Cubs after just one season of playing American Legion Baseball following his senior year of high school. An outfielder, Sehorn failed to produce as a hitter, batting just .184 in 49 games in 1990 for the rookie league Huntington Cubs.
Sehorn played a firefighter for one episode on the NBC show, Third Watch, in which his character is killed in a warehouse blaze.
Sehorn is now the Director of Communications at the Hendrick Automotive Group in Charlotte, NC, an automotive retailer in the United States.
In 2005, Sehorn joined Fox Sports Net, where he was a panelist on their Sunday NFL pregame show.
Sehorn participated in ABC's Superstars competition during the NFL offseason. As a testament to his athleticism, he won the competition three consecutive years from 1998 to 2000.
Sehorn is also a college football analyst for ESPNU. He joined the network in 2011 as the in-studio analyst for Thursday and Saturday night games on ESPNU.