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Adam Taliaferro graduates

tibor75

Banned
:)

Taliaferro walks away from PSU feeling fortunate
Wednesday, April 20, 2005

By Chico Harlan, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- His grin is eternal, immune to circumstance. That is the first thing people notice. Today, Adam Taliaferro has reason to break his smile, and still he doesn't. The things he talks about -- the end of college at Penn State; the end of his association with the football team; the end of many things he has grown to love -- are the very topics that should, with most people, encourage melancholy.

It catches you off guard, how he smiles even when he tells you he's sad.

"It's amazing," he says, sitting on a couch in his on-campus apartment. "It's still amazing to me that I only played in five football games for Penn State, but it feels like I've never stopped playing. Just the way everybody embraced me -- Joe Paterno, the guys on the team. To this day, in the Penn State community, people still remember me. And I'm like, 'Hey, I didn't do anything except get injured!' But this place will always have a special place in my heart."

It's the afternoon, atypically warm. Music videos, volume turned low, play in the background. Taliaferro wears a gray Penn State football shirt and navy Penn State sweats, the kind issued to players, though he last played football Sept. 23, 2000. On that day, Taliaferro was a freshman. The four years that separated him from graduation didn't prevent coaches from suggesting that their newest cornerback had NFL potential. First-round potential. The kind of potential that can become an affliction if something prevents it from flowering.

Now, Taliaferro says, he's getting old. That's another of those phrases he delivers with an incongruent laugh. He points to four 18-inch tires -- adorned with sparkling chrome rims, the kind that spin without pause, even when the body of the car stops moving. The tires lean on an angle against a living room wall. A year ago, Taliaferro bought them for $2,500. Now, on eBay, he's selling them -- because of his age, he jokes, and because his next step in life will take him to a place where cardigan is cool. He's 23. In one month, after graduation from Penn State, he'll begin law school at Rutgers.

Law textbooks clutter Taliaferro's coffee table, remnants from the months he spent studying for the LSATs. "I can let them collect dust for a little," he quips.

Taliaferro, now and for the future, is the product of the unexpected. After his career-ending neck injury -- which left him temporarily paralyzed -- doctors told Taliaferro's parents that his life was in danger. That, in retrospect, turned into a starting point. A starting point for recovery and inspiration and small-scale fame. A starting point for Taliaferro's education, and a starting point for the education of others.

Only weeks from leaving Penn State with a pre-law degree, Taliaferro already has had internships with a Philadelphia-area law firm, the NFL Players Association and an NFL agent, Jerrold Colton. That's what Taliaferro wants to become -- an agent.

"Adam's involvement with the NFL might not be what he once expected," Colton says. "But you know what? My guess is that he'll be more successful than he ever dreamed."


Counting on a miracle
Everybody asks him what it felt like, the sensation of being sensationless. What does he remember?

Well, for one, Taliaferro remembers everything that happened beforehand. He remembers a dismal afternoon -- a 45-6 Penn State loss. He remembers the waning moments of the game -- how Penn State defensive coordinator Tom Bradley ordered him into the game at cornerback, and then, how his adrenaline suddenly buzzed.

He remembers the hit, a helmet-first collision with Ohio State running back Brian Westbrooks. He remembers wilting to the ground, and instinctively trying to hop back up, because that's what he had done every time before. And then he remembers panic, first in the core of his heart -- his body was numb ... totally numb ... frozen dead -- and then in the faces of everybody around him, everywhere in Ohio Stadium. Teammate Bhawoh Jue stood above him and begged him to get up. Players knelt on the sidelines and prayed. Team doctors rushed toward him and initiated the frantic, fantastic process of saving an 18-year-old's life.

He remembers that much, and nothing more. He had shattered the fifth cervical vertebra in his neck. He had bruised his spinal cord. Doctors later told Andre and Addie Taliaferro that their son had a 3 percent chance of walking again. Taliaferro's life became a blur of sleep and morphine haze. He spent 10 days in the Ohio State University Medical Center, where doctors performed spinal fusion surgery.

Taliaferro was transferred to the Magee Rehabilitation Hospital in Philadelphia -- close to his family's home in Voorhees, N.J. His parents made the hospital their second home. Penn State coaches and administrators visited. So did high school friends.

"His body had deteriorated so quickly," best friend Justin Barton recalls. "It was devastating to see him. And yet, still, it seemed like he was more concerned with how everybody else was holding up."

That's partly because Taliaferro's parents intercepted every saddened sympathy, every suggestion that their son wouldn't be OK. They made sure he never heard the doctors' grave prognosis. Even when Taliaferro was clamped to a hospital bed, unable to move, he figured his recovery was just a matter of time. Everybody else waited on a miracle. Taliaferro, again, was the only person smiling.

"I remember waking up there one day and blinking my eyes," Taliaferro says. "My mom, my dad, they were like, 'Try to move something.' Hours on end, every day. I remember trying to move my big toe, and I'd been trying to gain movement so many times, I didn't even realize I was finally doing it. From that point on, everything else started coming back."

Slowly. With setbacks. With hours of rehab and therapy. With encouragement. Three months after his injury, Taliaferro had already gained back more movement than most doctors had dreamed. And that's how he left the hospital Jan. 5, 2001 -- walking with the help of crutches, intent on fully recovering, returning to school and once again doing all the normal things that suddenly seemed miraculous.


The real world
"It was tough at first," Taliaferro says. "I drove myself crazy, even though, really, I should have been thankful just to be walking. All my life, it was just football, football, football. After I got hurt, I had no idea what I wanted to do. All through middle school, I always did OK in school, but I always did it just so I could play football.

"And then, at Penn State, you see all these guys ahead of you -- Larry Johnson, Jimmy Kennedy -- advance to the pros, and you think it's almost automatic. College, then the NFL. It's so close to you. You see those guys coming back to campus with nice cars, and it's easy to get entangled in all that. You almost forget that only a small percentage of athletes do go to the next level.

"That's why I'm thankful [my injury] happened so early. I had a chance to focus on what I wanted, getting into law school. If I'd gotten hurt as a senior, it would have been so much more devastating. Because as a college athlete, you don't think about the real world until it hits you. The real world hit me about five years early."

To this day, Taliaferro has limitations. He remains unable to run. He sometimes struggles with balance, and he's more susceptible to extreme temperatures. Because of nerve damage, his hands naturally curl into a C-shape.

For every football season since his injury, though, Taliaferro remained a de facto member of the team. Every week, coaches asked him to study film of opposing wide receivers. Then he would draft a report and distribute it to the Penn State defensive backs. Other times, when Taliaferro worked out in the Lasch Football Building gym -- something he still does every weekday -- Penn State strength coaches pushed him so hard, Taliaferro swore they wanted him to play the upcoming Saturday.

Taliaferro developed into everything he never expected. When Doug Allen, an executive in the NFL Players Association, came to campus to conduct a seminar, Taliaferro attended, then waited for the crowd to file out before introducing himself.

"Mr. Allen," Taliaferro said, "I'm Adam."

Allen already knew.

That led to a summer in Washington, D.C., where Taliaferro interned with the NFLPA. He did that for half of the summer, spending the other half with Colton -- "Crazy job," Taliaferro says of being a sports agent. "He was on the phone, like, 25 hours per day, making dentist appointments for his players."

On May 31, Taliaferro begins law school at Rutgers. Joe Paterno wrote his letter of recommendation. Aside from his daily workouts, Taliaferro has backed away from the football team this semester. He'll attend the Blue-White game Saturday, but after that, his duties officially end.

"I'm just trying to savor these last few weeks," Taliaferro says. "I know there will be no time like this in my life again. There's not much more I could have done here.

"I graduate, and then I'll walk out of here on my own two feet."
 
Best of luck to Adam in law school and beyond, it's great that he's doing so well.

The way that both universities responded after the injury was very classy.

But the author should have said Jerry Westbrooks as the RB, not Brian.
 
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a few things.

he lead with his head, westbrooks did nothing wrong-though he has been accused of cheapshot

the place was dead silent when it happened, everyone knew what happened

the thing you never hear is cooper, westbrooks and the team visting adam all the time. everyday he had a visitor, a show of class, but adam is a class act.

congrads adam!
 
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For his part Adam has been nothing but gracious, and a total class act all the way. I can't relay how happy I was when I heard he was able to walk into the Med Center (where my wife used to work) and thank everyone. He's a great kid and I'm so proud to be associated with both universities at a time like this. Best of luck to him and I'm sure he will do great and if anyone is going to enjoy life, it is going to be him.
 
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I remember that game vividly. We had them beaten pretty badly, yet Cooper seemd to go Spurrier on us and was looking for more.

The place so quiet when he didn't get up. I felt so bad for him.

I'm glad he's doing so well.

Congrats Adam
 
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scooter1369 said:
I remember that game vividly. We had them beaten pretty badly, yet Cooper seemd to go Spurrier on us and was looking for more.

The place so quiet when he didn't get up. I felt so bad for him.

I'm glad he's doing so well.

Congrats Adam

Agreed. Coop was always good at not running real plays at the end of blow outs (see Iowa 56-35 game). But after Adam got injured, I think he passed on the next play. PSU fans were annoyed...I probably would have been too if the same thing had happened to us. Sure, you play all 60 minutes. But Coop used to fold things near the end before this. Maybe he was just getting desparate as his Buckeye career started to fall apart.
 
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Former Penn State player Taliaferro still dreaming of the NFL <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD width=10> </TD><TD>[font=Arial, Helvetica]<!-- T8469580 --><!-- Sesame Modified: 05/13/2005 16:26:15 --><!-- sversion: 2 $Updated: yvonnej$ -->
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Dressed in a gray Penn State T-shirt and sweat pants, Adam Taliaferro lounged on a cushioned bench in the trainer's room, smiled and laughed about life after Happy Valley.
A severe neck injury while making a tackle during a game against Ohio State in 2000 may have ended his football-playing days, but it hasn't prevented Taliaferro from dreaming about the NFL.

Taliaferro, an avid Philadelphia Eagles fan, graduates Saturday with a degree in labor studies and industrial relations. He starts law school later this month at Rutgers, and is considering becoming a sports agent.

The topic of discussion in the trainer's room on a recent morning: What would Taliaferro do if he was representing Eagles' star wide receiver Terrell Owens, who skipped a minicamp last month because he wants to redo a seven-year deal worth nearly $49 million?

"I'd tell them to 'Show me the money,"' he jokes, eliciting a chuckle from Penn State trainer George Salvaterra and several others nearby.

Those close to Taliaferro say it's a rare day when they don't see the one-time freshman phenom flash his contagious smile or exude a positive, can-do attitude. That was evident even in the days and weeks immediately following his injury when doctors feared that he would never walk again.

Salvaterra has the moment of the injury - in the closing minutes against the Buckeyes on Sept. 23, 2000 -- recorded on a videotape that sits atop of a stack of tapes in his office.

"It's something you never forget," Salvaterra said, watching the tape and queuing it back and forth in slow motion.

"I think if it wasn't such a positive outcome for the kid, it would be something I wouldn't look at," he added. On a locker near the TV is a photo taken weeks after the injury of team members and others organized into a "43" on a football field - Taliaferro's jersey number.

Taliaferro left the hospital three months after the injury and began walking unassisted soon afterward. On Sept. 1, 2001, following a grueling rehabilitation regimen that he still follows today, Taliaferro walked back out onto the Beaver Stadium field before a game for the first time since his injury.

Today, running is still out of the question; even a weekend game of touch football is off limits. "The best thing I can do now is have a catch," he said.

Taliaferro has involuntary contractions in his calf muscles that make it look like he has a hop in his step, Salvaterra said. Taliaferro also can't completely grip his hands and will likely undergo surgery to help address that problem.

Taliaferro's father, Andre Taliaferro, says he's just thankful his son can walk.

"Graduation day is a dream after all we've been through," Andre Taliaferro said. "We are fulfilling a dream. He's healthy and he's walking; he's walking to get his diploma."
Andre Taliaferro talks proudly of his son's academic accomplishments. Adam, he boasts, had already been an honors student in high school when he arrived at Penn State.

But Adam Taliaferro says the injury forced him to renew focus on academics after his playing career ended. As a freshman, he didn't know what he wanted to do beyond football, so he took an occupational test that would help him figure out his interests. The tests pointed him to law.

"It's funny. I kind of feel fortunate that at the early stage of my college career (the injury) forced me to focus on where I wanted to go in the future," he said.

The days leading to graduation are filled with last goodbyes and bittersweet memories for Taliaferro. He kept a locker in the locker room even after his injury, though he finally had to clear out earlier this week.

"A.T.!" shouted defensive end Tamba Hali before slapping hands with Taliaferro as the two passed each other in the locker room. Taliaferro walked over to a couple other teammates, fresh out of the weight room, to make plans to meet later in the day.

Taliaferro also wants to continue to be a role model to others recovering from similar injuries or long-term illnesses.

"The first thing I try to do is look them in the face and see if they are gloomy. If they are, I'll call them on it," he says. "If they are positive ... when I see their eyes light up, it tells me they are making progress."

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