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Stuckey Fact: Only player in Clemson history to have multiple touchdown receptions in consecutive games.
Years Lettered: 2003,04,05
Years Starter: 2004,05
Bowl Participation: Starting wide receiver in the 2005 Champs Sports Bowl against Colorado.
Fall 2006 Depth Chart Position: First-team wide receiver
Overview: Preseason All-America candidate by the Football Writers Association...preseason honorable mention All-American by Street & Smith...#16 wideout in the nation by Lindy's, #17 by Sporting News, and #21 by Phil Steele...preseason first-team All-ACC by Blue Ribbon, Street & Smith, Phil Steele, and Athlon...on the cover of many preseason magazines...has four 100-yard games in his career, second among active ACC players...has 91 career receptions, 15th-most in Tiger history...his 1,060 career receiving yards are 20th-most in school history...leading returning receiver in the ACC in terms of receptions and second in reception yards per game...went the first 71 receptions of his career without a touchdown, then had two against Duke and two against #16 Florida State in consecutive games in 2005...became the first Tiger in history to have consecutive games with multiple touchdown catches...has accounted for a touchdown four different ways in his career (pass, rush, punt return, reception), just the third player in school history and the first since the 1940s to do that...has a streak of 21 straight games with a catch...has over 1,500 career all-purpose yards.
2005: Led the ACC in receptions per game, the first Tiger underclassman to do that since Perry Tuttle in 1980; Tuttle then led the Tigers to the national title as a senior...his 64 receptions were fourth-most and his 5.33 receptions were fifth-most in Tiger history...first Clemson underclassman to make All-ACC as a wideout since 1984...first-team All-State by the Orangeburg Touchdown Club...led the ACC and was 46th in the nation in receptions per game (5.33)...third in the ACC in reception yards per game (64.2); he had 770 receiving yards in 12 games...seventh in the ACC in punt return average (7.4), which included a 47-yard return for a touchdown against #17 Texas A&M, the Tigers' only touchdown of the game...eighth in the ACC in all-purpose yards per game (89.1)...his stats and ranking dropped a bit after the Champs Sports Bowl because he was injured early in the game (mild concussion) and had just two catches for nine yards...team's most improved player by the coaches...had 156 receiving yards against #16 Florida State on November 12, the second-highest total by an ACC player on the season; his 11 receptions were the most by an ACC player...had two other games with eight catches (Georgia Tech, N.C. State) to rank in the top 10 for the season...had three 100-yard receiving games, second-most in the ACC...had 188 all-purpose yards against #16 Florida State, the high figure by a Tiger...had three catches for 50 yards and two punt returns for 53 yards against #17 Texas A&M...had seven catches for 71 yards against #13 Miami (FL)...had eight catches for 103 yards at N.C. State; he added two rushes for 22 yards...had five catches for 112 yards and two scores against Duke...had 11 catches for 156 yards against #16 Florida State; his reception total was one shy of the Tiger record, and his receiving yards were fifth-most in Tiger history.
2004: Second in receiving with 25 catches for 280 yards...started all nine games that he played; he missed two games with an injury...had eight catches in the season opener and seven in the season finale, but just 10 in between; the injuries had a lot to do with that...recipient of the team Iron Man Award on offense...had eight receptions against Wake Forest, tied for the fourth-most receptions in a game by an ACC player in 2004; had his first career 100-yard receiving game in that game; he had 112 yards; also had four rushes for 10 yards and a punt return for three yards for 125 all-purpose yards; added a blocked punt and a key block on Justin Miller's punt return for a score...had seven catches for 74 yards against South Carolina; he was Clemson's top receiver for the game...had at least one catch in all nine games he played.
2003: Played in eight games as a backup quarterback...despite only 17 carries, he was fourth on the team with 136 rushing yards...his average of 8.0 yards per carry led the team...saw his first action against #9 Georgia; he completed a 13-yard pass...had an 11-yard reverse run as a receiver against North Carolina...his best performance came in backup duty at Wake Forest; he was 9-15 for 71 yards and two scores; added four carries for 35 yards; had 106 yards of total offense in less than a quarter...had a four-yard touchdown run against Duke...had a team-high 77 rushing yards on just six carries at South Carolina; that total included a 33-yard touchdown run in which he drug defenders into the endzone; also had a 31-yard run...was 11-21 for 97 passing yards in relief of Charlie Whitehurst...joined Derrick Hamilton and Duane Coleman, who threw a pass, caught a pass, and ran the ball.
2002: Red-shirted.
Before Clemson: Passed for 1,286 yards and 13 scores as a senior in leading Northside High to the AAAAA state title game...rushed for 1,008 yards and 10 scores...four-star prospect by Rivals100.com...#15 athlete in the nation by Rivals100.com...coached by Conrad Nix...chose Clemson over Auburn, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Georgia Tech, South Carolina, and Tennessee...born Chansi V. Stuckey Oct. 4, 1983...graduated with a degree in sport management.