LONG BEFORE HE WAITED for the call to tell him which NFL franchise had chosen him, Adrian Peterson anticipated another important football-related phone message.
As a seven-year old growing up in
“I remember sitting at my grandmother’s house and getting a phone call from my dad. ‘Tell your mom to take you down to the
“I was excited because it was the first time I was going to play organized football.”
That was how it started for the seventh overall pick and first choice of the Minnesota Vikings who went on to set rushing records and win the 2007 NFL Rookie of the Year award.
Peterson took advantage of his little league football experience. As you would imagine, he was one of the
It was the early stages of what is becoming a great professional career, but it almost didn’t go as Peterson planned.
He was more than a little nervous that first day at the youth football complex. It could have changed his path to college and professional stardom.
“I remember going down and weighing in,” Peterson said. “It’s funny, I can remember I was like 119 pounds and if you were over 120 pounds you couldn’t carry the ball. So I remember stalling myself, running to the bathroom to get under that marking. I barely made it. Who knows? If I’d been a little heavier I might be a linebacker.”
There are more than a few members of the Big 12 and the NFL that wish the youthful Peterson would have had an extra biscuit or two on his way to his initial weigh-in.
In college at
He’s second on the all-time
The San Diego Chargers would have preferred Peterson stopped at the closest drive-thru 15 years ago, too.
In a Nov. 4 game between the Vikings and Chargers, Peterson rushed for an NFL single-game rushing record 296 yards. He also scored three touchdowns in the 35-17
For Peterson, though, the youth football experience had little to do with what position he played, and more to do with the relationships he made and lessons he learned.
“I learned the value of team and how each player matters,” said Peterson of his
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Story courtesy of Red Line Editorial, Inc.


