- Source: Kiehl Frazier
Kiehl Frazier (kaɪl) (born October 2, 1992) is a former American football quarterback and safety. He attended Ouachita Baptist University in 2014, having attended Auburn University the previous three years. Frazier played backup to returning quarterback Clint Moseley for the starting quarterback position for the 2011-2013 Auburn Tigers football team.
Early life
Frazier led his team to three Class 4A state championships during his last three years in high school and earned MVP honors all three years at Shiloh Christian School. He was named USA Today's National Offensive Player of the week. During his senior season, Frazier passed for 2,975 yards and 42 touchdowns and rushed for 1,164 yards and 22 touchdowns. He was listed as the nation's No. 2 quarterback by ESPN.com/Scouts Inc. and the No. 47 player overall on the ESPNU 150. Frazier was named an All-American, the nation's No. 4 quarterback, and the No. 1 recruit from Arkansas by SuperPrep and the No. 26 overall player nationally in the SuperPrep Elite 50. He in the Under Armour All-American game and was elected to play for USA Football's 2011 U.S. Under-19 National Team in the Team USA vs. the World game on February 2.
College career
In 2011, as a true freshman, Frazier appeared in ten games, connected on 5-of-12 passes for 34 yards and rushed 76 times for 327 yards and three touchdowns. On December 31, 2011, Frazier ran for 55 yards and two touchdowns serving in a wildcat role during a 43–24 victory over the University of Virginia. In 2013, Frazier switched positions from quarterback to safety. The move came after Nick Marshall was named the Tigers' starting quarterback as part of coach Gus Malzahn's new offense. After the 2013 season, Frazier transferred to Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. In 2014, Frazier would lead the Ouachita Baptist Tigers to a 10–1 record, a Great American Conference championship, and a berth in the NCAA Division II football playoffs.
= Career statistics
=References
External links
Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived January 28, 2011)
Auburn Tigers bio
Ouachita Baptist Tigers bio