More from Grok:
2024:
The Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team suffered 8 season-ending injuries during the 2024 season, as reported in late-season availability reports. These included:
| Player | Position | Notes |
|---|
| Mohamed Toure | LB | Torn ACL in training camp |
| Bryan Felter | OL | Season-ending during the campaign |
| Kenny Fletcher | TE | Season-ending during the campaign |
| Victor Konopka | TE | Season-ending during the campaign |
| Samuel Brown V | RB | Lower-body injury in October |
| Abram Wright | DB | Season-ending during the campaign |
| Tyler Needham | OL | Season-ending during the campaign |
| Wesley Bailey | DE | Season-ending during the campaign |
The team also dealt with numerous other injuries causing missed games or limited participation (e.g., Kyle Monangai, Tyreem Powell), but the 8 above were explicitly season-ending. No additional season-ending injuries were reported after late November, including during the Rate Bowl on December 26.
2023:
In 2023, the Rutgers football team dealt with a notable number of injuries among starters and key contributors, resulting in a total of 35 games missed due to those injuries. This figure highlights the season's injury toll, as reported in post-season analyses looking back at the Scarlet Knights' challenges that year.While exact counts of individual injury incidents vary by source (with at least 8–10 key players like wide receiver Chris Long, linebacker Tyreem Powell, running back Kyle Monangai, and cornerback Robert Longerbeam confirmed to have missed time), the 35 games-missed metric provides a standardized measure of impact from outlets covering the program. No official comprehensive tally of total injuries (minor or major) was published by the team, but the season was described as "injury-riddled" in multiple reviews.
2022:
The Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team suffered 11 season-ending injuries during the 2022 season, a major factor in their 4-8 record. This included key players like running backs Aaron Young and Rene Konga (both sidelined late in the year after procedures), freshman RB Sam Brown (foot injury in October), TE Victor Konopka (missed final nine games), OL Reggie Sutton (knee injury from prior fall, ruled out for 2022), and DE Mohamed Toure (post-surgery absence). Other unnamed players contributed to the total, as reported by head coach Greg Schiano. While additional minor injuries occurred, the 11 season-enders were the most notable issue.
2021:
Based on reports from Rutgers football's 2021 season, at least 11 players suffered injuries that affected their availability or performance. These included:
| Player | Position | Injury Details | Impact |
|---|
| Reggie Sutton | OL | Knee | Season-ending |
| Shawn Munnerlyn | WR | Knee | Season-ending |
| Bo Melton | WR | Shoulder | Missed games; questionable status |
| Aron Cruickshank | WR | Shoulder | Missed games; out for key matchups |
| Raiqwon O’Neal | OL | Leg | Missed games; questionable status |
| Tyreek Maddox-Williams | LB | Undisclosed | Missed games; game-time decisions |
| Olakunle Fatukasi | LB | Undisclosed | Missed games, including vs. Penn State and Maryland |
| Tyson Fogg | LB | Undisclosed | Played only 9 games |
| Noah Vedral | QB | Arm | Left game early but returned quickly |
| Christian Izien | S | Leg | Left game early but returned quickly |
| Patrice Rene | DB | Undisclosed | Missed first three games |
These came from weekly injury reports, coach updates, and season recaps, showing injuries as a key challenge, especially on defense and the line. No official total was released, but these are the documented cases.
2019--Ash Error:
In 2019, the Rutgers football team had 2 season-ending injuries, according to a comprehensive tracker of college football injuries that year. These included tight end Johnathan Lewis, who suffered an Achilles tear on August 27, and wide receiver Monterio Hunt, who tore his ACL on August 10. While other players like quarterback McLane Carter dealt with injuries (such as a concussion that led to his medical retirement), the tracker specifically focused on those ending the season, and no additional ones were noted for Rutgers.