He was a good football player - recruiting services rated him three stars out of five - but a better student. He got a 1400 on his SATs (back when they were out of 1600), and missed being valedictorian by a less than tenth of a grade point.
So when he returned to Dominguez last spring, the Stanford grad had a unique message for the football team: don't focus on football.
Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins wrote about the pep talk he gave his old team in a profile last year:
"Football players at Dominguez High reminisce about the time last spring that Sherman returned and gathered the team in the weight room. 'Who wants to make the
It's not what you'd expect from the league's most notorious trash talker, and a guy who caused a firestorm by giving an unhinged postgame interview.
Sports are often viewed as a "way out" for inner-city kids. But the odds that football will be a permanent solution in and of itself are incredibly slim. Sports can be the catalyst for economic mobility, but education is what makes it stick.