Full Name: Randy Mos
Born: February 13, 1977 in Rand, WV
Height: 6" 4'
Weight: 210 lbs.
Age: 30 Position: WR
Experience: 10 years
College: Marshall
MOSS THE ATHLETE | MOSS THE MAN | CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
CAREER STATS | YEAR - BY - YEAR
MOSS THE ATHLETE
Explosive, playmaking wide receiver who has established himself as one of the most dangerous offensive players in the NFL since entering the league in 1998...Has played in 109 regular season league games in seven seasons, starting 104...Has also played in and started eight playoff contests.

Started 104 consecutive games, including playoffs, from the 10th game of his rookie season through Week Nine in 2004...Has 574 receptions for 9,142 yards and 90 touchdowns in seven professional seasons...Set an NFL record for most receiving yards in a player s first 7 seasons, his 9,142 yards topped Jerry Rice's 9,072...90 touchdown catches ranks ninth in league history...Is the only receiver in league history to record 1,000-yard seasons in his first 6 seasons...Named Associated Press All-Pro in 1998, 2000 and 2003...Earned Pro Bowl appearances in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002 and 2003...Named 2000 Pro Bowl Most Outstanding Player after setting records for catches (9) and receiving yards (212) in the game along with scoring the final TD of the day in a 51-31 win by the NFC...Has been named NFC Offensive Player of the Week four times in his career...Led the NFL in receiving TDs in 1998, 2000, 2003...Led the NFC in receiving yards in 1999 (1,413) and 2002 (1,347)...Led the NFC in receptions in 2002 (106) and ranked second in 2003 (111).

Since entering the league in 1998, Moss has 91 TDs in 109 games (90 receiving, 1 punt return) and has thrown 2 TD passes...Only St. Louis RB Marshall Faulk has more TDs since 1998 than Moss with 92...Has caught a pass in 107 of his 109 career regular-season games played and 115 of 117 games including playoffs...Had streak of 101 consecutive regular-season games with a catch snapped vs. Tennessee (10/24/04)...Before the Tennessee game, he had caught a pass in every game he played in his career...Has caught a TD in 6 of his 8 career playoff games. Combined with Daunte Culpepper for 53 career TDs, making them the 10th-most prolific quarterback-receiver combination in NFL history...Ranks second in Vikings history with 90 receiving TDs, trailing Cris Carter (110) and has 91 total TDs...Ranks third in Vikings history in career scoring with 552 points...Has caught three TD passes in a game five times, the last coming vs. San Francisco (9/28/03).

In nine career Monday Night Football games Moss has 49 catches for 941 yards (19.2 avg.) and 11 TDs...Holds a Vikings record with 26 plays of 50+ yards in his career 25 receptions and a punt return&In 109 career regular-season games, Moss has 13 catches and eight TDs of 60+ yards, 25 catches and 17 TDs of 50+ yards, and 52 catches and 28 TDs of 40+ yards...Broke Vikings playoff record with 9th career receiving TD...Broke his own Vikings record for single-season receiving yards with 1,637 in 2003, surpassing his previous record of 1,437 in 2000...Combined with Cris Carter for a team-record 2,711 receiving yards in 2000, breaking the mark of 2,654 yards the duo set in the 1999 season...Led the NFC in receiving yards in 1999 with 1,413, the first Vikings WR to lead the NFC since Ahmad Rashad in 1979...Set a Vikings record for most receiving yards in consecutive games with 331 in 1999 (204 at Chicago, 11/14/99 and 127 vs. San Diego, 11/28/99)...Became the first Vikings WR to throw a TD pass when he hit Cris Carter on a reverse pass at NY Giants (12/26/99) and threw his second career TD pass to D'Wayne Bates vs. Miami (12/21/02)...Only rookie in 1998 to earn a berth in the Pro Bowl.

In 2 seasons at Marshall, Moss re-wrote the school record book and proved to be one of the most productive receivers in NCAA history...Caught 145 passes for 2,720 yards with 53 touchdowns...Consensus first-team All-America in 1996 and 1997...Finished fourth in the 1997 Heisman Trophy voting behind Charles Woodson, Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf...Recipient of the 1997 Fred Biletnikoff Award...His 25 receiving touchdowns in 1997 broke the NCAA Division I single-season record of 23.