Great article posted yesterday. Solid character and conviction reside in this young man.
Dobbs for President??? He says in 2040! Lol
http://www.navysports.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/111510aad.html
"Ivin Jasper understands how good he's had it, and he knows how good he's got it. Eleven seasons, split between two stints, as a Naval Academy assistant have taught him as much.
In various roles, traced to his first tour of Annapolis in the mid-1990s, Jasper has helped shape some of the most successful seasons and careers in Navy football history.
He was here when a once unknown defensive back converted to quarterback in 1995. Soon enough, Chris McCoy's name was unavoidable on the pages of the school's record book.
Since returning this decade, Jasper's overseen a succession of outstanding quarterbacks. Initially, strictly as their position coach. The last three seasons, as their offensive coordinator.
For six straight years, there were six primary players at the position, leading the Midshipmen to six consecutive bowl games. Then, there was a seventh. In the spring of 2009, he was foremost on Jasper's mind.
Ricky Dobbs first flashed his promise the previous fall. A sophomore behind two seniors, their injuries allowed us a peak at his potential. He completed a miraculous rally in relief against Temple. And nearly did the same, a week later vs. Notre Dame.
Against SMU, he bulled his way to 224 yards on 42 carries. On that rainy day, one could clearly see that this kid with the powerful legs had a huge upside.
Jasper realized there was much more than met the eye. The only real unknown was just how high Dobbs's ceiling might be.
"I didn't want to jinx the kid, but in the spring of his junior year, I told our staff that with (Ricky), we have something special in that position," Jasper says. "I cut it off at that."
Twenty months later, he need not say more. By now, the rest of college football grasps what Jasper was getting at.
But what makes Dobbs special transcends the field. His remarkable story belongs almost as much to everyone else as it does to Dobbs, himself. It's a story told, and retold, ever since Dobbs earned national media acclaim early in 2009.
Less than 10 minutes into a near upset of 6th-ranked Ohio State, he scored his first touchdown of the season with a 16-yard run. Another followed, on a 24-yard rush up the middle with 1:28 to go. Dobbs also threw two touchdown passes, including an 85-yarder.
Playing to a crowd of 105,092 in Columbus and television viewers nationwide, he was equal to, if not superior to counterpart Terrelle Pryor.
The Mids started piling up victories, and Dobbs kept making touchdowns, despite suffering a fractured right kneecap at SMU, in the seventh game. It caused him to miss one full contest and most of a second.
Yet when Dobbs dived across the goal line, midway through the fourth quarter of a 17-3 win over Army, it was his 24th score of the season. More than all other quarterbacks in Division I history.
Far from finished, Dobbs led Navy to a stunning rout of Missouri, 35-13, in New Year's Eve's Texas Bowl. He rushed for 166 yards - an Academy postseason record - and three more touchdowns to raise his total to 27.
An additional 130 yards passing made Dobbs the easy choice as most valuable player. As such, he posed for a postgame photo on the field in Houston, wearing a white cowboy hat and holding his MVP award. Right then, some people began picturing Dobbs with a much larger trophy in the year to come.
He had broken a NCAA scoring record shared by Tim Tebow and become just the 37th player to pass and rush for 1,000 yards in the same season. Plus, Dobbs led the Mids to their second 10-win finish since 1905. All while competing for half the year on one good leg.
If anyone merited mention in the same sentence as Heisman Trophy last summer, it was Dobbs. A long shot, Dobbs, nonetheless, began appearing on some very short lists. The movement's momentum accelerated when Sports Illustrated published his photo in its college football preview issue.
Stewart Mandel wrote a lengthy piece for SI's website. Washington Post Magazine put him on its cover. Dobbs was billed as a Heisman dark horse, and the Midshipmen were sharing the spotlight. They were built up as a team that could go unbeaten.
More than simply considering each a possibility, it seemed some media wanted it so. Mandel captured that sentiment by writing that "college football needs Dobbs and the rest of the 2010 Navy football team."
Inside a vast and often unseemly Division I universe, what wasn't to like about the relatively small world of the Mids and their co-captain?
There was the name itself, Ricky Dobbs; so authentically All-American. There was the ever-present smile; one that makes his whole face glow. There were the uniforms of an officer-to-be in the United States Navy.
And mostly, there was his young life's story; equally a study in perseverance and an inspiration to others.
Clarence Ricky Dobbs Jr. was born Jan. 31, 1988. The road from his upbringing in Douglasville, Ga. - a city of roughly 32,000, about 20 miles west of Atlanta - to Annapolis was anything but smoothly paved. Dobbs' parents divorced when he was 2. Shortly thereafter, his mother, Barbara Cobb, became, as she told Steve Yanda of The Washington Post, "a functional drug addict."
She frequently moved Dobbs and his older sister from one apartment to another. Decembers presented an annual choice; either pay rent or buy Christmas gifts for her kids. She chose the latter, and so it was always on to the next place.
Barbara's parents, Lewis and Louise Cobb, cared for Dobbs, as did her brothers. Thomas Cobb, who ran a concrete business, took Dobbs into his home when Ricky was 11. Lewis Jr., a minister, took him on the road to sing and preach the gospel.
They helped lay a foundation that Dobbs fortified with spirituality. His belief in The Book allows him to open up his past like a book to others.
"It's been a blessing that I've come this far," Dobbs says of the jagged path from Point A to this point in his life. "I wouldn't trade it for anything. It's shaped me and molded me into a better man. I've had a wonderful time here. It's a true testament to what God can do for you."
Religion and athletics, like anything else, may not always mix comfortably. But for Dobbs, faith is inseparable from everything else.
It is why, Dobbs believes, he's projected magnetism since his childhood. Nicknamed the `Mayor of Douglasville,' Dobbs says he befriended everyone from "rednecks" to "addicts." Personal guideposts enabled him to reach them, without following them.
"A lot can be said about me personally, but a lot of it can't be explained, except for the light inside," Dobbs says. "The person that I am is derived from the God I serve."
"He's so strong from a spiritual standpoint, it's where he gets his refuge" says Navy head coach Ken Niumatalolo. "Everybody loves Ricky."
Whether light escapes from inside his soul, or beams outwardly from his smile, Dobbs hasn't stopped touching others.
He was elected class vice president last year. While stumping for votes, Dobbs told the Brigade of Midshipmen that instead of choosing a college where he "could be `The Man,'" he picked a place that would teach him how to be "a man."
Dobbs also, unabashedly, discussed intentions of someday seeking a much higher office - one in the shape of an oval, a little more than 30 miles west of the Academy.
America once elected a president from Hope. Why not someone of such faith? Furthermore, the country had recently voted for a man of color.
Dobbs first had an audience with President Barack Obama as a sophomore, when he and his teammates were guests of the White House as Commander-In-Chief's Champions.
One of the many charming anecdotes about Dobbs emerged from that visit. The Mids presented an autographed helmet to the president. Dobbs signed it several times, yearning to be noticed.
When he returned for a similar ceremony the following year, Dobbs got called out. President Obama evoked laughter when he playfully chided Dobbs for announcing his candidacy...in 2040! Dobbs's response shows that he's already adept at political spin.
"It was my first official, publicized endorsement from President Obama," he joked. "I twisted it into an endorsement." ..."
Continued
Con_Alma
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Con_Alma
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Tue, Nov 16, 2010 11:55 AM
Nov 16, 2010 11:55 AM
Nov 16, 2010 11:55am