Magnus did not get their start in football until high school, however despite that he was able to contribute immediately thanks to his borderline superhuman strength. The transfer from high school to college saw him in a similar situation. Throughout his first few seasons he was able to dominate in college by virtue of his raw strength, but an accident in his junior year saw him lag behind a bit. His senior year was thus spent rebuilding himself from the ground up to be able to contribute at the next level.
This started at the prospect bowl where despite not having a single appearance on the stat sheet he was able to contribute to the team surrendering no touchdowns on the defensive side of things. Throughout his first year with the Norfolk Seawolves despite being surrounded by tougher competition he kept up just fine. The team never surrendered more than twenty-eight points thanks to the talent that surrounded him on defense and he was even able to get some noteworthy stats of his own in the form of forced fumbles.
Honestly thanks to that the jump from college to the Developmental Simulation Football League did not hurt Magnus in the slightest as far as he is concerned. He is a nose tackle and so his concern is points allowed over anything else. Although he did see a drop off in his own statistical performance that was more by virtue of the players around him making plays before he could. Which is something he understandably welcomes.
The jump from the Seawolves to the Second Line was ideally suited to keep him in a good position as he joined arguably the best defense in the league. His first game saw them hold the Sabercats to just 14 points while Magnus put up four tackles and a sack. Which is honestly significantly better than his average performance when he was in Norfolk. I do not know if this technically fulfills the requirements of the point task, however as a well built nose tackle Magnus has been able to do what he has needed to do throughout his career.
I guess the closest thing to a welcome to the league moment was week two of season twenty-one again the Kansas City Coyotes. The Seawolves were on the road and lost 21 to 6 that game. All three touchdowns were rushing touchdowns for the Coyotes in that game, and that was also the first of many games for Magnus where he had just two tackles on the stat sheet. Being a road game against an eventual Ultimini participant though meant that Magnus was able to just roll with it. Regarding rebounding from it I can say that was the worst loss Norfolk suffered all season in terms of point differential and so I would say Magnus rebounded by just keeping at it. The general managers of Norfolk then and now have been gifted at keeping motivation high and were able to keep him motivated towards getting better which allowed them to set their regular season record for wins that season.
This started at the prospect bowl where despite not having a single appearance on the stat sheet he was able to contribute to the team surrendering no touchdowns on the defensive side of things. Throughout his first year with the Norfolk Seawolves despite being surrounded by tougher competition he kept up just fine. The team never surrendered more than twenty-eight points thanks to the talent that surrounded him on defense and he was even able to get some noteworthy stats of his own in the form of forced fumbles.
Honestly thanks to that the jump from college to the Developmental Simulation Football League did not hurt Magnus in the slightest as far as he is concerned. He is a nose tackle and so his concern is points allowed over anything else. Although he did see a drop off in his own statistical performance that was more by virtue of the players around him making plays before he could. Which is something he understandably welcomes.
The jump from the Seawolves to the Second Line was ideally suited to keep him in a good position as he joined arguably the best defense in the league. His first game saw them hold the Sabercats to just 14 points while Magnus put up four tackles and a sack. Which is honestly significantly better than his average performance when he was in Norfolk. I do not know if this technically fulfills the requirements of the point task, however as a well built nose tackle Magnus has been able to do what he has needed to do throughout his career.
I guess the closest thing to a welcome to the league moment was week two of season twenty-one again the Kansas City Coyotes. The Seawolves were on the road and lost 21 to 6 that game. All three touchdowns were rushing touchdowns for the Coyotes in that game, and that was also the first of many games for Magnus where he had just two tackles on the stat sheet. Being a road game against an eventual Ultimini participant though meant that Magnus was able to just roll with it. Regarding rebounding from it I can say that was the worst loss Norfolk suffered all season in terms of point differential and so I would say Magnus rebounded by just keeping at it. The general managers of Norfolk then and now have been gifted at keeping motivation high and were able to keep him motivated towards getting better which allowed them to set their regular season record for wins that season.
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