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Corona Centennial’s Korey Foreman finds his calling at Clems
Feb 3, 2020, 7:03 PM
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According to Los Angeles Times
By SHOTGUN SPRATLING JAN. 31, 2020 8:45 PM
A cross-country trip last Saturday that featured tears, cheers, thrills and chills, first impressions and a sensational second look led to Mariessa and Kevin Foreman Sr. snickering behind the back of their son, Korey.
“They started giggling, and I wanted to know what they were talking about,” said Korey, the Corona Centennial High defensive lineman and nation’s No. 1 football prospect in the 2021 recruiting class. “My mom didn’t tell me right then and there.”
The parents had already come to a realization that Korey would lock in on over the next couple of hours. He was Clemson-bound.
The family was visiting the small upstate South Carolina town set in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains for Clemson’s junior day recruiting event. Korey had been on the campus previously, but it was the first trip for his parents.
Seeing the way Korey had floated around the campus throughout the day and was taking in every word Tigers coach Dabo Swinney was saying, his parents had their suspicions. Then after Korey had compiled a list of 10 reasons why Clemson was the best fit as his parents had asked him to do on any visit, Kevin leaned over and whispered to his wife, “We lost him.”
In an individual meeting with the coaching staff soon after, Swinney asked Korey how he felt about the visit. Korey’s eyes began to fill with emotion. He asked for a minute alone and chose to call his cousin, who is a pastor and also his godfather. Before he could say anything into the phone, Foreman was overwhelmed with tears.
A voice came through the phone: “What’s up?”
“I think this is where I want to be,” Foreman said. “He asked, ‘Where you at?’ And I told him Clemson. He was like, ‘Man, I knew this from the get-go. Man, I was already dotting this down in my head. I already knew we lost you before you knew it.’ ”
The 6-foot-4, 265-pound Foreman had his list of positives, but he was concerned about leaving his family and friends in Southern California. A reassuring message from his cousin led him to follow his heart.
“At the end of the day, everybody can’t go and meet your attributes and your goals with you. That’s something that is set personally,” Foreman said. “You can’t go out and set goals for other people without meeting yours first. You want to help your friends grow, but at the same time, you got to meet your own attributes personally.”
When Foreman returned to the room, Swinney again asked how he was feeling. Foreman took a deep breath and committed to trade in the Death Valley in the desert of Southern California for the Death Valley of a small college town on the banks of Lake Hartwell: “Coach, I’m all in.”
Foreman said Swinney quickly corrected him. “He said, ‘Nah, we all in!’ Then he looked at my mom and dad, gave them a hug and then he promised my dad he would look out for me and vouch for me as his son while I’m over here across the country.”
Foreman felt an icy sensation. But it wasn’t just a brief bump of cool air cascading over him.
“The chills only last for a second,” Foreman said. “But I tell you those chills was at least 10 seconds or 15. Geez Louise! You could have sworn he had the A/C on in his office.”
It wasn’t the first time Foreman got chills talking to Swinney. Foreman estimated he had spent three to four hours speaking with the coach throughout the day. Swinney’s message of physical, emotional and spiritual development had occasionally piqued the skin on the back of Foreman’s neck.
“I just loved it. Everything about that school is genuine to me,” Foreman said. “I’ve been to a lot of campuses and nothing has been anywhere near Clemson. I’ve been to schools with wonderful uniforms, with wonderful facilities, a really nice coaching staff, but I built a rapport with the whole coaching staff at Clemson.
“My inner self, sometimes, just hasn’t been able to go out and be able to do that to other colleges.”
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