Coach & Player Magazine Spring 2017 | Page 19

the time he was little, but he was truthfully just an average player when he started school ball,” explained his mom Telisha Feamster. “It was the summer between his 10th and 11th grade that a light came on. He started working really hard and got better.” your sport The hard work certainly paid off as Feamster ended his high school career ranked as the 90th best safety in the country. A senior season that saw him accumulate 31 tackles and three interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns, raised his profile enough to gain offers from both UMass and Temple, but that was it. No other major Division I programs made an offered him, including Duke. “Brandon was always a smart kid, but we knew he wasn’t a Duke kid then,” explained his father Malik. “He is a Duke student now, but he wasn’t in high school.” So what changed? His stats were always there; the talent was in his blood. Yet only Temple and UMass came calling on signing day. Maybe it was because of where he grew up, or that he was a late bloomer – but replace both of those, and the fact remains, Duke still never would have called. What changed was instead of taking the predicted route of going to Temple where both his father and uncle played, the Feamsters knew what was truly best for their son and pushed him elsewhere. He would not attend Temple or UMass, instead he headed to Cheshire Academy, a preparatory school in Connecticut. “It wasn’t about what offers he received or didn’t receive for football,” Malik He would not attend Temple or UMass. Instead, he headed to Cheshire Academy, a preparatory school in Connecticut. explained. “He was always a year younger than those in his high school class, the decision to send him to Cheshire was about age, maturity and academics.” For those reading who are familiar with athletes attending post-high school preparatory schools, it is likely an image marred by the idea that people who take this route do it solely with athletics in mind. And while this stigma is founded on some truth, Cheshire is not one of those places. “When we were looking at prep schools we knew there were two kinds,” Malik went on to say. “The kind we ended up sending Brandon to where you actually go to class and really truly prepare to be a college student. And the ones we call ‘factories’ where you go to play without much emphasis on maturity or academics.” Impressed yet? In a world that seems so completely focused on athletic accomplishments alone – the Feamsters saw the bigger picture for their son. A picture Brandon himself was not yet capable of grasping himself. “He kicked and screamed the whole way through, but what kid doesn’t,” admitted Felisha. Who could blame him really? While his high school friends went off to college, some even to play football, he was headed to a school away from all of them to what in his eyes would only delay the start of his college football career. “He struggled with it at times,” Malik explained. “He understands now that it Coach & Player Magazine • Spring 2017 19