"I'm trying to be better than Revis right now." -Jabrill Peppers

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Lagos (Da Jungle)
"Holy s---, that's him?"

An assistant coach from the University of Southern California stands awestruck as Jabrill Peppers -- the nation's No. 2 recruit in the class of 2014, according to Rivals.com -- walks down the track at Paramus Catholic High in New Jersey on a warm spring morning. Greg Russo, Paramus Catholic's offensive coordinator and head track coach, doesn't understand what all the excitement is about. The USC coach looks at Russo, then at Peppers, then back at Russo.

"I've only seen two players in high school with a body like that," the USC coach says, "and both of them are named Peterson [Adrian and Patrick]."

At 6-foot-1, 210-pounds, Peppers, who has committed to Michigan, is the top cornerback in his class and already has an NFL build. The 17-year-old is a chiseled specimen and a menace on both sides of the ball as a running back, quarterback, wide receiver and cornerback.

"Jabrill spins better than any person I've ever seen," Russo says. "When he does a spin move from right to left, he does it so quick, and he's so strong, most people would get out of their spin and not be able to go straight, but he's always straight. The average kid can't do that."


Peppers has never been average. After spending two seasons at Don Bosco, the Ramsey, N.J. football factory, Peppers transferred to Paramus Catholic in the winter of his sophomore year. His skills were already so refined and athleticism so unmatched even though he had never lifted weights before. In his first couple months at Paramus Catholic, he was in the weight room four times a week and got even stronger. With a regimented workout schedule, he added nearly 25 pounds of muscle in just under a year-and-a-half.

Peppers is versatile on both sides of the ball. He shuts down one half of the field on defense, and on offense, his mixture of speed, size and quickness is a nightmare for opposing defensive coordinators. On special teams, the moment he hits a seam he's untouchable.

"I feel like every time I touch the ball I can go the distance," Peppers says, more matter-of-factly than arrogant.


And why not? A gifted skill set coupled with an immense internal drive is a dangerous combination, one that has been building since his youth football days. Before Peppers was old enough to play with pads, he would beg the coach of the older kids to let him practice without equipment. The players were not allowed to tackle him, but most couldn't catch him anyway.

VIDEO: Highlights of Jabrill Peppers

When he turned eight and was finally able to strap on the pads in Pop Warner, he scored 18 touchdowns. He was already in a league of his own.

"In my second year, that's when the legacy really began," Peppers jokes, unable to contain his wide-eyed smile. "I was like, 'Wow, you're telling me I could someday make money doing this; are you serious?'"

When he suits up for Michigan in the fall of 2014, Peppers plans on being even stronger. When asked what it will be like for opposing quarterback and wide receivers to have to face someone of his size and agility at cornerback, his smile disappears, replaced by a competitive, all-business-like glare.

"It's going to be scary," he says.

Russo is used to having Peppers around. He's accustomed to the imposing nature of Peppers' presence on the field. Back at the Paramus Catholic track, Russo looks at the USC coach and mentions off-handedly that he must have a plethora of athletes who look like Peppers on his roster. The recruiter just laughs and shakes his head as Peppers thunders closer.

"We don't have anyone who looks like that," the coach says.

:pachaha:


*****

It's over in the blink of an eye. Peppers' teammates lose their composure from the sidelines -- some are laughing, others taunting. The only one seemingly unfazed is Peppers as he gets back in line, ready for another round, after having bull-rushed one of his teammates -- and fellow Division I prospect -- to the ground in a blocking drill.

Except there was no blocking. Only a drilling.

Peppers gives everything he has every time he steps on the field because it's the only way he knows how to play. His passion has no off switch. As a junior in 2012, Peppers led Paramus Catholic to the Non-Public, Group IV New Jersey State Championship with a 37-34 win over rival Bergen Catholic. For the season, Peppers compiled nearly 2,000 yards of offense at running back and wide receiver and scored 23 touchdowns. Defensively at corner, he racked up 77 tackles and three interceptions, despite the fact that opposing quarterbacks rarely threw in his direction.

"His competitiveness is special," says Paramus Catholic head coach Chris Partridge. "He's competitive in everything, not just when he has the football, but when he's in the classroom or playing pickup basketball or in the film room. He wants to be the best."

Being the best comes with sacrifice, however, one component of Peppers' game that is often overlooked due to the amount of physical talent he possesses. For instance, all spring, Peppers would run at 9 on Saturday mornings, then he would attend SAT class from 11 a.m.-2 p.m., followed by football practice at 3.

*****

Music blares inside the Paramus Catholic weight room. The strength and conditioning coach barks instructions. Players bend over, exhausted, their bodies spent.

Peppers stands tall underneath the pull-up bar, his hands on his hips, his breathing relaxed. He is shirtless and sweat beads on his forehead. The gold chain he wears around his neck curls as it contours around the muscles bulging in his upper chest and traps.

The room is rectangular, with squat and pull-up racks skirting the black and gold walls at either side. Peppers hoists himself up and begins his reps before noticing one of his teammates across from him doing what Peppers deems to be cheating. He calls him out.

Things escalate quickly. As the two teammates race toward each other, the strength and conditioning coach smiles slightly as he gets between them, laughing off what he thinks is friendly banter. Both Peppers and his teammate shove him aside like a rag doll. Players converge, expletives are traded and punches are nearly thrown. Peppers' teammate storms out, the door swinging violently behind him. While confusion and tempers spread, Peppers regains himself, finishes his set as if nothing had happened. He puts in 100 percent and he demands as much from everyone around him.

"I'm not just trying to be the best high school player," Peppers says. "I'm looking at what [Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Darrelle] Revis is doing. How is he doing in his backpedal? That's who I'm looking at. I'm trying to be better than Revis right now."



Read More: Michigan commit Jabrill Peppers already has next-level skills - College Football - SI.com

Read More: Michigan commit Jabrill Peppers already has next-level skills - College Football - SI.com

Jabrill Peppers - Yahoo! Sports

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:deadrose: at OSU fans saying Damon Webb is a better prospect than Jabrill.


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Lagos (Da Jungle)
When asked about the best part of his game, he mentions his aggressiveness and leadership ability to make everyone else better -- a mature response for a kid who could have named any number of physical attributes.

"I treat Jabrill like he's one of our coaches," Partridge says. "I'll tell him things that I would never tell other players. I treat him like one of the coaches because he can handle it, he gets it."

After completing his set, Peppers walks two racks to his left. A junior basketball-turned-football player struggles to finish his reps. Peppers grabs a hold of his torso and lifts -- slingshots, really -- him up so he can finish. The workout ends. The hard work doesn't.

Earlier this year, Peppers participated in a track meet during a rain storm. It was 45 degrees outside, and while the other runners were doing their preparations indoors, Peppers was outside in a sweatshirt going through his normal warmup routine.

"It's cold and it's raining and he's the only kid I saw out there doing that," Russo says. "The times were terrible that day and he ran his best time of the year. Mentally, he doesn't care about what the elements are around him."

When asked why he does what he does -- the extra effort, the burning desire to be the best he can be -- Peppers says: "This is the life I asked for, this is the life I wanted. I have parents telling me, 'my son looks up to you,' things like that. I embrace it." He hesitates, his eyes wandering waywardly before bringing them back. "In all honesty, I had to grow up fast. I stopped being a kid at seven years old."

*****

It is a scorching day in the summer of 2003. Seven-year-old Jabrill holds his mother's hand at a track meet. Under a large tent, runners congregate. Jabrill watches fathers prepare their sons for the race while he searches inside himself for his own.

Hundreds of miles away, Peppers' father, Terry, sits in a central Pennsylvania prison, where he was serving a 10-year prison sentence on weapons charges. While the two spoke on the phone often -- Terry has since completed his sentence and has recently been released -- Jabrill never visited him.

"He didn't want me to see him like that," Peppers says.

But Peppers hopes his father can see him one day -- on a football field, making a name for himself. During his father's absence, Peppers began pushing himself harder and harder, the workouts increasing, his desire insatiable.

By eighth grade, Peppers began to see the fruits of his labor. Local high school programs began coveting him and the talk of an eventual college scholarship intensified. But life, like football, had a few more hits of its own.

"Then the call comes," says Peppers' mother, Ivory Bryant, "and I have to tell my son that his brother was murdered."

Peppers' brother, Don Curtis, was gunned down when Peppers was 14 years old. Despite the fact that, as Bryant explains, the two brothers made different decisions in terms of the direction of their lives, Curtis made Peppers promise that he would stay focused and on track. Sports, more than ever, became an outlet for Peppers. A release, a way to channel his grief and his pain and turn it into something positive.

The losses of his father and brother before the age of 14 could have sent Peppers reeling, he could have given up. No one would have blamed him if he did. But both mother and son refused to let that happen.

"At that point," Bryant says, "it was important for me to put positive men around Jabrill, [many of whom] are his Pop Warner coaches who are still a part of his life."

Peppers, for the time being, lives with a teammate while Bryant spends the majority of her time outside of work taking care of her ailing mother. By her own admission, Bryant's lengthy commute down the Garden State Parkway to visit her mother would leave little time for her to fully support Jabrill, resulting in a less than ideal situation for both. But Bryant, who is still the most important person in Jabrill's life, had already lost one son and wasn't about to lose another.

"They say a woman can't teach a man how to be a man," Peppers says, "but [my mom] did a damn good job steering me on the right track. She instilled all these things in me: right and wrong, what to do and what not to do, school work first, how to work hard, how to lead."

Peppers' mother is ready to continue that support. She plans to be there to see it all come to life, to watch Jabrill's dreams manifest themselves into something tangible. Bryant -- who in Peppers' entire career, dating back to his Pop Warner days, has missed only three of her son's games -- intends to make as many home games in Michigan as she can, to be as close to him as possible.

"I work so hard because I'm not doing this just for me," Peppers says. "I want to be a role model to those kids and show that they can do it, too. This is for my brother, this is what he wanted me to do."

*****

Ask most prominent high school or college football players what classes they enjoy and you're likely to receive an answer coupled with a hint of contempt, as though the idea of relying on academics had somehow suggested that the athlete would never make it to the next level.

Not Peppers. "Medicine or business," he replies candidly. "And I was thinking that I want to be in front of a camera."

For a teenager oozing with talent, he is as dedicated to improving every aspect of his life as he is humbled by the opportunities presented to him.

"I was always pushing education," says Bryant, who has a Master's degree, "so for me, [football] was just something for him to do. Education was always what I emphasized and pushed. If not for football, I could see him becoming an orthopedic surgeon."

The on-field intensity and passion is mirrored in the classroom. Elizabeth Roper, Peppers' psychology teacher and a guidance counselor at Paramus Catholic, says she sees the same approach that has made Peppers successful on the football field applied to the classroom. At just 17, his well-rounded approach and maturity level are as impressive as they are rare. As Partridge notes, not many people can succeed in multiple facets of their lives, but Peppers makes it all look so easy.

"He's extremely bright," Partridge says. "That's what makes him excel. He's charismatic, he speaks well, he's intellectual, he's got every component. He's a young kid still, but people don't realize that when they hear him speak."

For a boy who grew up sooner than he should have, it is no wonder that Peppers' only fear is losing it all. He's continuing to work hard and stay true to the commitment he set for himself when was a little boy.

"I'm not even supposed to be here right now," he says. "I'm just trying to give my family a better life than what I had."

He's well on his way.
 

Carlos Huerta

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Don Bosco is coming back stacked this year. Gonna be real interesting to see how he does in that game.
 
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