
Born July 19, 1988
Longview, Texas, USA
4 credits
Acting
Trent Williams
Born July 19, 1988, in Longview, Texas, Trent Williams attended Longview High School, where he starred for the Lobos alongside future NFL players Malcolm Kelly, Chris Ivory, and Robert Henson. A unanimous first-team all-district selection as a senior, Williams also competed in track and field as a shot putter. Initially a three-star recruit ranked as the nation's twenty-eighth offensive guard prospect, he chose the University of Oklahoma over Louisiana State, Oklahoma State, and Texas A&M.
Williams played for coach Bob Stoops's Oklahoma Sooners from 2006 to 2009, becoming the starter at right tackle as a true freshman after Branndon Braxton suffered a broken leg. As a junior in 2008, he anchored a dominant offensive line that allowed only eleven sacks in 476 pass attempts while protecting quarterback Sam Bradford and paving the way for running back DeMarco Murray in what became the highest-scoring team in modern college football history with 702 points. As the lone returning starter from that legendary unit, Williams earned consensus All-American honors in 2009 despite missing the regular season finale due to injury.
The Washington Redskins selected Williams fourth overall in the 2010 NFL draft, signing him to a six-year, $60 million contract. His combination of rare athleticism, elite technique, and powerful run blocking revolutionized the left tackle position. The 2021 season cemented his legacy when he posted a 98.3 Pro Football Focus grade—the highest ever given to any player in a single season—while earning his ninth Pro Bowl selection and first First-team All-Pro honor. His most defining moment came in 2019 when he held out the entire season after the Redskins medical staff downplayed a growth on his head that private doctors diagnosed as dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans, a rare life-threatening cancer first noticed in 2013. The standoff led to his trade to the San Francisco 49ers in April 2020, reuniting him with head coach Kyle Shanahan. March 2021 brought validation when the 49ers signed him to a six-year, $138.06 million extension, making him the highest-paid offensive lineman in NFL history.



