Current CFL receiver Jalen Saunders was involved in a scary car crash which put him in the hospital.
Saunders shared pictures of the wreck on his Instagram account. He wrote: Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go. #Joshua1Nine #ThankYouYah
The Ottawa Redblacks re-signed Saunders in January after initially signing him for the 2020 CFL season which was eventually cancelled.
Saunders was selected by the Houston Roughnecks and head coach June Jones in the XFL Draft, but he was placed on injured reserve before the start of the 2020 season. With Vince McMahon’s league declaring bankruptcy, eventually selling to The Rock, Dany Garcia, and RedBird Capital, Saunders returned to his CFL roots and signed with Ottawa.
The 28-year-old Saunders registered 45 receptions for 739 receiving yards and two touchdowns in nine games for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 2018 before suffering a season-ending knee injury against the Toronto Argonauts — he was on pace for well over 1,000 yards.
Saunders led the Ticats in receiving yards during the 2017 schedule with 1,170 on 76 catches. In 25 games over two seasons with Hamilton (2017-2018), the native of Stockton, California accumulated 121 receptions for 1,909 yards and six touchdowns, 15.8 yards per grab.
The five-foot-nine, 171-pound Saunders was selected by the New York Jets in the fourth round, 104th overall during the 2014 NFL Draft. He played in nine games with the Jets and New Orleans Saints during his rookie season, posting one reception for seven yards, 15 punt returns for 125 yards and three kickoff returns for 139 yards.
The University of Oklahoma product also spent time with the Arizona Cardinals, Seattle Seahawks, New England Patriots and Chicago Bears over his two years in the NFL and earned over $850,000 USD.
While with Oklahoma, Saunders played 22 games recording 1,558 receiving yards on 123 receptions with 11 touchdowns. He spent two years in Norman, Oklahoma after two at Fresno State University where he produced 80 catches for 1,527 yards and 15 touchdowns in 26 games.
Saunders has dynamic athletic ability. At the 2014 NFL Combine he ran the 40-yard dash in 4.44 seconds, recorded a vertical jump of 34 inches and landed a 10-foot, two-inch broad jump. When fully healthy, Saunders can infuse play-making ability into an offence.
Hopefully the injuries from the crash don’t hinder Saunders from continuing his football career.