Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Adams is proof that dreams can be rekindled

Nice article on Bob Adams.

Bob is a spokesperson for the Church of Scientology International.

One-time scrawny kid muscles his way into county sports Hall of Fame
By John Horgan, STAFF WRITER

Bob Adams is living proof that first impressions are not always accurate. Far from it. Adams, a slight, skinny kid as a youngster at El Camino High School back in the early 1960s, gave up on football prior to his senior year.

He was too small and slight. The sport didn't appear to be a good fit for him. That all changed when Adams matriculated to the College of San Mateo. A coach, Stu Carter, saw Adams lifting impressively in the CSM weight room and noticed how he had filled out.

Carter urged Adams to give football another try. He did and the rest, as they say, is history. Adams played for CSM for one season, went on to what is now the University of the Pacific and wound up with a solid and productive seven-year career in the National Football League.

Adams, who lives now in Southern California, will be inducted into the San Mateo County Sports Hall of Fame June 22 at the San Mateo Elks Lodge.

The 18th annual event is presented by The Times and sponsored by the First National Bank of Northern California.

That fateful spring 1966 conversation with Carter is still embedded in Adams' memory 40 years later.

"It was like I had broken through," he recalled recently. "I realized that football was what I wanted all along. It was all about purpose. I actually had a pent-up energy to play. I was so excited I was walking on air."

Adams had been on the CSM track-and-field team and played basketball as well. But he was searching for something else to satisfy his competitive juices. It also helped greatly that Adams, whose father had died when he was 16, had grown from a 5-foot-7, 149-pound high school junior to a strapping 6-foot-2, 205-pound collegian in the short span of three years.

At the local two-year college during the 1966 football season, Adams played tight end. Following that campaign he got a call from a former CSM coach, Doug Scovil, who was then running the College of the Pacific football program in Stockton.

"I was intending to go to UC-Santa Barbara to play football and try out for the track team," Adams said. "There was no scholarship. Then Coach Scovil called." He had a full scholarship for Adams. It was a perfect fit.

One of his close friends, Walt Harris, another El Camino/CSM football player (and a member of the County Sports Hall of Fame), was already playing for Scovil. And the financial inducement was too good to pass up.

Adams played two seasons there. In his senior year, 1968, he was captain of the COP offense. By that time, he was 6-2 and 218, and still growing. He wasn't drafted by the NFL. He signed a free agent contract with Pittsburgh for the princely sum of $15,000. He got a $1,000 signing bonus as well.

His first pro coach was also a rookie, Chuck Noll. Adams didn't remain with the Steelers, who would become a dominant NFL entity under Noll's guidance in the 1970s. In his final season with Atlanta, Adams earned $54,000.

He has had a number of careers since then. He has been a teacher, an author, a consultant in the high-tech industry and the owner of a Redwood City fitness center. Now, he is a communications executive with the Church of Scientology in Hollywood.

His advice for young people is pretty simple: "If you have a dream and it gets re-kindled, the fire can still be there. Don't give it up. I had lost sight of my dream. But I found it again."