The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Freshman QB still motivated by Granddad

‘He taught me most of everything I know,’ James Graham says.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

FITZGERALD — The father figure in James Graham’s life was Granddad.

Robert Graham was a father to 12 and a grandfathe­r to 23. He was a diesel mechanic, a church deacon and a youth football coach. He liked doing magic tricks. And before his death in April 2016 at the age of 76, he was a central figure in the life of his grandson James, now a freshman quarterbac­k at Georgia Tech.

“I think about him every day,” Graham said.

Graham last saw his biological father at the age of 10. But his maternal grandfathe­r was a constant presence. Graham lived with him for a few years as a teen, soaking up his love, attention and wisdom. As Graham begins his first year as a Yellow Jacket, his grandfathe­r is his inspiratio­n.

“He always pushed me in the right way and led me down the right path,” Graham told the AJC. “He was a great supporter. He taught me most of everything I know. He was just the best. He’s the reason I’m really pushing right now.”

Graham spoke in a small conference room at MANA, a nonprofit in Fitzgerald that produces an enriched form of peanut butter that is distribute­d to malnourish­ed children around the world. Graham’s mother, Bridget Daniels, works there as an office assistant. As strongly as her second son feels about his grandfathe­r, so her father felt about him.

“He always saw something special in James,” Daniels said. “He did. He said, ‘That boy there’s going to be special.’ He always told me that.”

Graham’s home sits on 37 acres of land on the outskirts of Fitzgerald, property purchased by Robert Graham in 1986 when he and his family were still living in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Ben Hill County, about halfway between Macon and Valdosta, has a population of about 17,000. It’s largely rural, covered by farmland and groves of pine trees. Fitzgerald is its county seat, a town founded in 1895 by Civil War veterans from both the Union and Confederac­y.

Daniels’ family property has four houses on it, and Daniels and three of her sisters live there. Robert Graham grew up on a farm in Fitzgerald, left as a teenager to live with an older sister in Delaware before finally settling with his wife, Juanita, in Fort Lauderdale. They returned to Fitzgerald in 1986.

After staying in Florida to finish high school, Daniels followed. She has five children; James is the third. His grandfathe­r was the one who encouraged him to go to church. He taught him to drive. When Robert Graham was in the midst of his cancer fight, Daniels sent James and his older brother Trey to live with him, both to tend for him but also to be in his presence.

“He just taught him basic life skills,” she said. “What a mother couldn’t teach her son.”

Jason Strickland, Graham’s coach at Fitzgerald High for his first three seasons, saw that his quarterbac­k had a superior role model.

“His granddad was a blue-collar working guy, which is probably where James got a lot of that,” said Strickland, now coaching at Pierce County High.

Strickland’s perspectiv­e comes from plenty of observatio­n. He said that Graham is highly competitiv­e, loves to practice, hates to be taken out of games and leads in such a way that he draws teammates to him, but at the same time isn’t afraid to challenge them.

In Graham’s sophomore year, his first as the starting quarterbac­k, the Purple Hurricane had lost most of their offense to graduation.

“(We) just didn’t know what we were going to have coming back, and kind of as we got into his sophomore year, his athletic ability and his leadership, character, all that type stuff came through,” Strickland said. “He carried us to the state championsh­ip that year as a sophomore.”

Graham was a one-of-a-kind player for Strickland. He said that in two decades of coaching, he was the best athlete that he has coached.

“He just does stuff that, I don’t know, it just kind of makes you shake your head sometimes, figuring out how the human body can do that,” Strickland said.

“Change of direction, jumping, just absolutely full-speed, wideopen and be able to come to a complete stop,” Strickland said. “He just does things that normal humans can’t do.”

They were exploits that, before he died in the spring of Graham’s sophomore year, Robert Graham delighted to experience. After games on Friday night, they talked over the game on Saturday mornings.

“He’d be like, if he saw him do something that he should have done a different way, he’d tell him,” Daniels said.

Graham developed into a fourstar prospect as a dual-threat quarterbac­k, rated the No. 38 prospect in the state of Georgia.

Alabama wanted him to play defensive back, and Miami recruited him as a running back. He initially committed to play slot receiver for Virginia Tech before switching to Georgia Tech late in the process.

The opportunit­y to play quarterbac­k was not a small part of coach Paul Johnson’s pitch.

“I think that’s what really changed his mind,” Daniels said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? Quarterbac­k James Graham (2) built a reputation not only as a swift and elusive player but as a hard worker at Fitzgerald High School.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ Quarterbac­k James Graham (2) built a reputation not only as a swift and elusive player but as a hard worker at Fitzgerald High School.

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