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Here is the template! It's just to make dynasty mode a little more exciting for me!
Name: Musa Ali
Color: Mixed
Size: 6'6 230
Number: 8
Strengths: Speed, strength, overall athleticism, love for sports
Weaknesses: Inexperience
Birthplace: The Bronx, New York
Hometown: Toronto, Canada
Equipment:
Backstory:
Scouting Report: Born to a Sudanese father and Haitian mother, Musa Ali is blessed with both a wealth of cultural knowledge and athletic genes. His father, Faheem Ali, was an international soccer player and his mother, Sarai Davis-Ali, was a track star that competed and placed in several triathlon competitions in New York, the city where the two met and later married.
The couple didn't stay there for long, living in three separate continents before retiring from athletic competition and settling in Canada to start a family. Musa Ali, their first born son, inherited his fathers length and his mothers speed. It was inevitable that he'd fall in love with sports and competition.
A natural at both team and individual sports, Musa was involved with basketball, soccer, track, hockey, lacrosse, diving, and was a black belt in Karate by the time he was 11-years-old. That same year he grew three inches and won an MVP award for his youth basketball team.
He was invited to participate in an American middle school combine featuring some of the best young basketball players in North America, where he shined and met several recruiters who urged him to focus solely on basketball.
Hundreds of free throws a day. Hours practicing dribbling. Hours in the weight room. Hours watching tape of his favorite players - Dirk Nowitski and Kobe Bryant - it all culminated in Ali developing into a starting forward for his varsity high school team. A year later he received his first college scholarship offer from Gonzaga University.
Ali was set on becoming a top notch basketball star, but a trip to Miami during the Holidays to visit his mothers side of the family changed his fate. A cousin invited him to a Miami Dolphins football game against the Dallas Cowboys; which happened to be the first American Football game Ali had ever watched live.
He'd never thought much of American Football. He thought Rugby looked more fun to play, from the few times he watched it passively on tv. But being near the sidelines gave him a closer, more intimate look into the game, it's structure, and it's speed. The hits. The one handed catches. The impressive throws. It left an impression that he couldn't shake.
When the New Years came, he sat himself down in front of the tv and watched the college football bowl games. Not knowing the players. Not knowing the traditions. But knowing what he saw, he liked. Oregon's colorful uniforms. Alabama's huge and physical defensive players. Florida State's chants. The band of Ohio State. It all intrigued him enough to tell his parents that he wanted to try out for the high school football team the next year, his junior season.
It was risky. He'd given up playing other sports to focus on basketball. But this was an itch he needed to be scratched. Ali knows three languages and has been learning sports all of his life, but learning American Football was a taller task than he expected.
He watched games on youtube and read the rules on wikipedia, but that couldn't prepare him for the newness of stepping on the gridiron. He needed help to put on his shoulder pads and was lost when he heard a coach say "you should be a tackle,", not knowing the coach was referring to playing the position offensive tackle. Those wouldn't be the only misunderstandings.
Was a safety a guy on the defense, or a 2 point score for the other team?
What was the difference between a running back, fullback, and halfback?
Why weren't some of the receivers on the line of scrimmage?
Maybe these basic concepts wouldn't have been explained to your average high school junior. But when the coaches saw a 6'6 205 lb kid anxious to learn the game, they eagerly accommodated him.
Impressing the coaches with his raw ability in the first few practices, they decided to play him at defensive end and tight end. By the middle of the season, he was leading the team in sacks and touchdown receptions. In the 9th game, he injured his ankle and was not only forced to miss the remaining football season, but his upcoming basketball season.
This was the crossroads. His basketball coach urged him to quit football and return to playing basketball exclusively, but despite the injury, Ali had fallen in love with football. When spring practice came around, he told the coaches he was all in with football under only one condition; they let him try out for quarterback.
Watching college and NFL football, Ali had grown to like the playing style of Cam Newton, Johnny Football, and Marcus Mariota. The coaches were skeptical, but figured it wouldn't hurt to let him compete for the starting QB spot. It took one pass in the spring game to change their minds. A 65-yard touchdown bomb across his body after shoving off a blitzing linebacker.
Ali attended a football combine that summer, and turned even more heads by running a 4.39. Rivals, ESPN, 247, and Scout all wrote glowing reviews on the Canadian prospect. Not even a day later, Ali received a phone call from Kirby Smart, the defensive coordinator from the defending national champions, who was interested in bringing Ali and his family in for a visit. By the end of the week, he had national interest from over two dozen schools, including offers from several northeast colleges like Western Michigan, Syracuse, and Northwestern.
With his senior season set to begin, many are wondering what will become of this incredibly talented prospect. He's put on 15 lbs of muscle since joining the football team, but still is usually the fastest player on the football field. Will it be basketball or football? Following in the footseps of Kobe or Cam?
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