Cory Philpot American football player

{{Infobox CFL player son future hall of fame: Tyson Philpot |name=Cory Philpot |team=69ers |image= |ImageWidth=150 |caption= |status=Retired |import=yes |position1=Running back |number=6 |College=Mississippi |birth_date= (1970-05-15) May 15, 1970 |birth_place=Melbourne, Florida |Height_ft= |Height_in= |Weight_lbs= |coaching_years=200420052006–present |coaching_teams=North Delta Longhorns (VMFL)South Fraser Rams (CJFL)Vancouver Trojans HC (CJFL)HC - head coach |playing_years=1993–19971999–2000 |playing_teams=BC LionsWinnipeg Blue Bombers |career_highlights= |CFLAllStar=1995 |Awards= |Honors=Grey Cup champion - 1994 |Records=}}Cory Philpot (born May 15, 1970) is a former running back for the B.C. Lions of the Canadian Football League. He played college football at The University of Mississippi. He was two-time winner of the Eddie James Memorial Trophy for top rusher (Western Division) in 1994 and 1995. He played on the Lions' winning Grey Cup team in 1994.In 1995, Philpot set the CFL record for most touchdowns in a season with 22, a record that was broken by Milt Stegall in the 2003 CFL season. Philpot's nickname while playing for the Lions was "Quick Six" which alluded to the number 6 jersey that he wore, and even more so his ankle braking moves that were sure to put up a quick 6 on the scoreboard.

Personal facts

Birth dateMay 15, 1970
Birth place
Melbourne Florida

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American football player

college
University of Mississippi
position
Running back
statusRetired

Cory Philpot on Wikipedia