May not be able to confirm injury until tomorrow.
But here was an article on him in yesterday's San Francisco Chronicle before today's championship game.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c...SPGVDMRLJT1.DTL
A happy turnaround for CCSF's Lee
Son of former NFL quarterback raised profile in 10-1 season with Rams
Jake Curtis, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, December 8, 2006
Zac Lee will enroll at Nebraska next month, and in a year or two it's reasonable to believe he will be the starting quarterback for a program challenging for a national championship.
Two years ago, virtually no college wanted Lee despite an impressive senior season at St. Ignatius High School.
"The thing that shocked me," City College of San Francisco coach George Rush said, "was that he didn't get a scholarship (out of high school). But a lot of things work out as a blessing."
It's a common story in sports: A major disappointment one day turns into the best thing that could have happened the next.
When the expected scholarship offer never came, Lee decided to go to CCSF "because I thought it was the best place to get me where I thought I should be."
At first, it merely got him a seat in the stands to watch CCSF play as he spent last fall as a grayshirt, a part-time student whose eligibility did not begin until he enrolled as a full-time student in the winter.
Today, as a freshman, Lee is the star of a CCSF team that will play El Camino College (11-2) on Saturday in Fresno in the community college state championship game. He has thrown 32 touchdown passes and only five interceptions for the Rams (10-1), with none of the picks coming in the postseason.
He heads to Lincoln, Neb., on Jan. 15 and will participate in spring drills with three years of eligibility remaining.
Sometimes things just work out, much as they did for Lee's father, Bob Lee. The elder Lee went to Lowell High, started out at Arizona State, then transferred to CCSF, where he and another newcomer from San Francisco named O.J. Simpson found themselves on the second-team offense. Injuries to the starters at quarterback and running back opened the door for Lee and Simpson. Lee continued on to Pacific and then a 12-year NFL career. Simpson did all right on the football field, too.
Zac Lee was born six years after his father had completed his NFL career and was never pushed into football by his father. In fact, Zac didn't played football until his freshman year at St. Ignatius, and Bob Lee figured his son's main sport would be baseball.
This is not the Manning family. Father and son do not have all-night film sessions, nor does Bob drill his son on the mechanics of quarterbacking.
If they talk about football, it's about demeanor and approach.
"It's a lot on the psychological side," Bob Lee said, "what to expect in a certain situation."
Zac said their discussions focus more on leadership issues.
"It's nice to have someone who's had success and failure, and it's even better when that person is your father," Zac said. "If I can be as successful as him, it would be a great accomplishment."
And the NFL is now within dreaming distance for Zac.
"Why not?" he said.
Bob Lee says his son is bigger, stronger and faster than he was at the same age, and rivals.com rates Zac Lee as the nation's top junior-college quarterback prospect and the 10th-best junior-college prospect overall.
With Arizona State transfer and former San Ramon Valley High School star Sam Keller the leading candidate to become the Huskers' starting quarterback next season, Lee may opt to redshirt the season, which would be Keller's last year of eligibility.
That would prevent Lee from playing with former CCSF standout Maurice Purify, who has become a star wide receiver as a Nebraska junior. There was also the possibility that current CCSF star and Oakland Skyline High alumnus Kenny O'Neal, the No. 1-rated junior college wide receiver, according to rivals.com, might go to Nebraska, but he recently committed to Tennessee.
So Lee and O'Neal will hook up for the final time Saturday.