| Celebrated
'Cat players become coaches and mentors by
Carol Schmidt |
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James
Clark (L) and Junior Adams
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| A
little more than five years ago, James Clark,
'03 ElEd, stopped in Bozeman while taking a Greyhound
bus from his home in Milwaukee to seek his basketball
fortune at a junior college in Bremerton, Wash. |
| "From
the bus station, (Bozeman) seemed like such a small
place to me," recalls Clark, who specifically
remembers thinking that the town seemed so little
that it couldn't possibly include a college or university
where basketball was played. |
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| Half a
decade later, Clark knows that not only is there a university
in Bozeman, but Montana State University has been a positive
and pivotal force in his life. Now an assistant basketball coach
with the MSU program, the former Bobcat point guard says he
hopes he can give something back to the university that has
helped him achieve so much. |
| Clark and
Alton 'Junior' Adams, '04 Soc, the Bobcat grid great
who is now an MSU assistant football coach, have started Focused
and Motivated Minorities, or FAMM, a mentoring group for MSU
African-American athletes. Adams and Clark are the first MSU
African-American student athletes and graduates who have been
hired as MSU position coaches in their respective sports. |
| They both
remember what it felt like to be a young, urban African-American
newly arrived in Montana and know first-hand the sorts of social
and academic difficulties faced by young black athletes. |
| "We
don't preach; we just provide information," says Adams,
who set up the weekly meetings in fall semester attended by
anywhere from two to 30 athletes who talked about everything
from classes and how to conduct themselves to being homesick.
"They're basically kick-it sessions." Josh Perkins,
'02 Bus Mktg, now a successful businessman in Bozeman, also
helps with the groups. |
| "We
talk from experience," Adams said. "And, we're walking
examples that you can turn it around." |
| The two
have done more than just turn it around. According to Mike Kramer,
MSU head football coach, Adams is a great addition to the 'Cat
staff. |
| "Junior
Adams is an amazing story of resiliency and attention to detail,"
Kramer said, adding that Adams brings to the staff a natural
coaching talent that he inherited from his late father, Alton
Johnson Adams. Kramer said that even though the elder Adams
"wasn't a trained coach, he helped thousands of kids in
Fremont, Calif." before he died during Adams' junior year
at MSU. |
| "Junior
has a tremendous amount of ambition supported by a foundation
of daily hard work," Kramer said. |
| Kramer
adds that both the MSU football and basketball programs have
benefited from having Adams and Clark on staff and their work
with young athletes from diverse backgrounds. |
| "That's
really been a cool thing for us," Kramer said. "Their
life experiences serve as a model for a lot of kids who come
to our program from diverse backgrounds. The parents appreciate
it, and the kids have an immediate kinship with them. As former
players, James and Junior see the program from a double perspective,
and they enable the young guy to benefit from the wealth of
experiences that they have gone through." |
| Mick Durham,
MSU head men's basketball coach, said that Clark, who helps
coach the Bobcat perimeter players, has been an assistant with
the 'Cats for about 18 months. "It's nice because he's
from our program, and he understands how we do things in our
program." |
| "He's
a young guy who can relate to the players in different ways,"
Durham said, adding that Clark "has a real bright future"in
coaching. |
| Both Adams
and Clark say they have profited from learning from personal
adversity. |
| Adams was
a rising star at Oregon State before he was derailed by an assault
conviction that stemmed from an incident at a summer party.
Determined to redeem himself with a second chance at MSU, Adams
demonstrated a legendary work ethic, a gregarious personality
and celebrated talent. He forever will be remembered for scoring
the electrifying winning touchdown at Washington Stadium in
Missoula that ended MSU's 16-year grid drought against archrival,
the University of Montana. |
| "James
was one of the first people I met on campus," recalls Adams.
MSU was a world away from his native Fremont, Calif., and while
Adams was gifted with natural athleticism and a vibrant personality,
he struggled academically, working hard to complete his degree
last spring. |
| "I
let (the athletes) know that not everything will be easy for
them, but if they work hard, they can make it, too," Adams
said. |
| Clark said
he got into some trouble while he was in high school and as
a result took the bus to Seattle to live with an uncle in nearby
Bremerton, where he played at Olympic Junior College. |
Former
assistant basketball coach Jerry Olson saw the Chicago native
play and recruited him to MSU, where the frenetic point guard
was key to MSU's 2002 Big Sky Championship season.
"When I got (to MSU), I felt like a king," Clark recalls.
"Everyone was so nice." |
| Clark said
he and Adams know that not all the young athletes will hear
what they have to say, but they hope they can be positive models. |
| "I
never thought I would graduate from college, that I would get
married (he is married to Dana Ricci Clark,) buy a car and now
buy a home," Clark said. "There are so many opportunities
here that I wouldnÕt have received at other places." |
| Clark's
wife, Dana Ricci Clark, will graduate in May with a degree in
family science. |
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"Everyone
here is a family," Adams says of the MSU Athletic Department.
"What happened for me here is a miracle. The support
of the staff and others on campus means a great deal to me,
and also to my mother. I love it. My life has changed here,
and it's a place that I will always come back to."
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