StuckinChicago
Starter
I havent heard anything about him having problems qualifying, but then again, who really knows?
They can Purify and Zack Potter along with Will Henry on the field for opponents FG's and Extra points - Maybe get a few blocks now and then. As everyone knows a missed Extra point has made a difference in a game more than once.yes, he sounds lik e a fantastic athlete......hope he picks up the O quickly
hunter
NU did that with that big WR a couple years back. The kid from OMaha North. 6'6" kidThey can Purify and Zack Potter along with Will Henry on the field for opponents FG's and Extra points - Maybe get a few blocks now and then. As everyone knows a missed Extra point has made a difference in a game more than once.yes, he sounds lik e a fantastic athlete......hope he picks up the O quickly
hunter
They should do it again with all 3 at the same time.NU did that with that big WR a couple years back. The kid from OMaha North. 6'6" kidThey can Purify and Zack Potter along with Will Henry on the field for opponents FG's and Extra points - Maybe get a few blocks now and then. As everyone knows a missed Extra point has made a difference in a game more than once.yes, he sounds lik e a fantastic athlete......hope he picks up the O quickly
hunter
Wilson Thomas?NU did that with that big WR a couple years back. The kid from OMaha North. 6'6" kidThey can Purify and Zack Potter along with Will Henry on the field for opponents FG's and Extra points - Maybe get a few blocks now and then. As everyone knows a missed Extra point has made a difference in a game more than once.yes, he sounds lik e a fantastic athlete......hope he picks up the O quickly
hunter
Barry Turner did a heckuva job last year as well.They can Purify and Zack Potter along with Will Henry on the field for opponents FG's and Extra points - Maybe get a few blocks now and then. As everyone knows a missed Extra point has made a difference in a game more than once.
Good article - I hope he has a MONSTER game against cu next year - That would drive their fans insane being who his nephew is. :lol:CCSF star is a natural- It took time to emerge but Nebraska-bound Maurice Purify has it all as an athlete
Jake Curtis, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, April 22, 2006
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Only in retrospect can City College of San Francisco sophomore Maurice Purify identify the incidents that led to his unprecedented two-sport accomplishment.
It was not evident when he embarked on the Vainuku Boot Camp four years ago that it would turn him into a junior-college All-America wide receiver last fall. He could not have imagined that a friend's plea four months ago would lead to him becoming a JC all-state basketball player last month.
It's believed to be the first time in recent history an athlete has received the highest California JC honor in those two sports in the same school year. Only a natural athlete can pull that off, and Purify's 6-foot-4, 218-pound Terrell Owens-type body, his 4.45 speed in the 40-yard dash and reports that he jumped from a standing start atop boxes stacked 4 1/2 feet high attest to his physical gifts.
"God has blessed him with an unbelievable amount of ability," said Nebraska wide receivers coach Ted Gilmore, who watched Purify play basketball after Purify had committed to play football for the Huskers next fall.
It's more than that, of course, and Purify is among those who believe happenstance plays a major role.
"I think things happen for a reason," Purify said.
The so-called Vainuku Boot Camp happened for reasons apparent only now.
"That's what changed my whole life," Purify said.
It was the summer of 2002, after Purify's sophomore year at Eureka High School, when he was a pretty good basketball player and a mediocre football player.
"As a freshman and sophomore I wasn't an athlete," he said.
He and his best friend, Sam Vainuku, a running back for the Eureka High Loggers, decided, with the encouragement of Sam's father, David, that Purify would live at Vainuku's house over the summer so he and Sam could work out together every day.
Each morning, David Vainuku, a rugby player in his native Tonga, woke the two boys up, pushed them through a strenuous weight-lifting regimen before noon and running drills in the afternoon.
"He hadn't really lifted until my dad got a hold of him," said Sam Vainuku, now a running back at Butte College. "My dad didn't play around. There was no 'no' about it."
Skinny when the summer began, Purify transformed himself into the big-bodied wide receiver that makes him special today.
"That year as a junior he was running two or three guys over," Vainuku said.
After the Loggers went 13-0 in 2003, academics precluded a Division I scholarship for Purify, who took the advice of a Bay Area JC basketball coach who steered Purify to CCSF's nationally prominent football program.
The Rams provided the exposure, the polish and conditioning coach John Balano, who helped Purify shave a tenth of a second off his 40 time. Voila. A receiver rated the No. 2 JC player in the country by scout.com. While recruiting him, Nebraska coach Bill Callahan told Purify he could catch 70 passes a year for the Huskers, whose single-season school record is 55.
Basketball was not on Purify's mind when he completed his football season with a loss in the Dec. 10 state championship game. He hadn't played basketball as a CCSF freshman, and did not consider it as a sophomore until he started shooting around during the football season with buddy Terrell Anderson. Anderson was the Rams' best basketball player, and pleaded with Purify to join the basketball team.
"I saw how bad he wanted me on the team," Purify said.
When football was finished, Purify agreed to give it a try, and when basketball coach Justin Labach saw Purify casually dunk while wearing street clothes and a back pack, he let the football player join the team 13 games into the season.
"I expected to be the sixth or seventh man, come off the bench and do what was needed," Purify said.
That was Purify's role for his first four games, beginning with a 6-for-6 performance in his first game six days after his football finale. It changed on Dec. 26, when Anderson was shot and killed outside a San Francisco night club. Purify was promoted to the starting lineup, replacing his fallen friend who had persuaded him to play basketball for the Rams.
The more Purify played, the more he became the team's go-to player. He had 21 rebounds in one game, 23 points in another and guarded centers as well as point guards while helping the Rams reach the state semifinals.
Labach has no doubt Purify could play Division I basketball, and Brad Duggan, CCSF athletic director and longtime basketball coach, said, "He could start for USF or Gonzaga right now."
He might be able to play basketball for Nebraska, and Gilmore said the football coaches would not stand in his way. Purify knows where his professional future lies, though, and has no intention of playing basketball in Lincoln.
Much of his focus now is on academics, because he needs to graduate this spring to be eligible to play at Nebraska next fall. That does not prevent Purify from attending all of the CCSF basketball team's offseason workouts, which are meant for the players returning next season.
There's probably a reason Purify is doing it. He just doesn't know what it is yet.