2008 All-Metro Football: Morgan’s record-breaking trail leads to Blacksburg

2008 All-Metro Football: Morgan’s record-breaking trail leads to Blacksburg

Dinwiddie quarterback Adam Morgan has generated limited recruiting interest despite stellar statistics and reaching the Group AAA championship game his senior season.

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In a game, just following through on a play is hard enough.

But Adam Morgan did more than execute at Dinwiddie. The Generals' quarterback watched the same film his coaches watched. He recognized defenses. And his coaches trusted him to make the call at the line of scrimmage if he saw something different.

"It's a lot of responsibility," Morgan said. "It can be a lot of stress, dealing with school, dealing with out of school."

The Times-Dispatch All-Metro player of the year turned that responsibility into a trip to the Group AAA, Division 5 final at Virginia Tech.

On his way to Blacksburg, Morgan shattered Virginia High School League passing records. He'll graduate with the records for career touchdowns, yards and completions. Passing for 48 touchdowns, he also set a state season record.

Just as Morgan helped make the Generals, the arrival of Dinwiddie coach Billy Mills helped make Morgan. In Mills' first season, he discovered the smallish freshman backup had a big arm and a cool head.

"It's huge that he came in at the right time," Morgan said. "You could almost say it's perfect."

After his sophomore year, Morgan and Mills shifted Dinwiddie to a spread offense. Morgan and his teammates started getting letters of interest from colleges. Usually form letters -- hey, we got the film, keep in touch.

Now a senior, Morgan can read a recruiting letter as seamlessly as a defense. Sometimes, he doesn't even have to open them to know.

Hand-written is the best. Someone took the time to sit down with a pen and learn his name. But those have been scarce.

After 9,152 passing yards and 114 touchdowns, Morgan still gets form letters. He gets printed updates on the progress of college teams that have never invited him to a game, let alone sent someone to Dinwiddie for his. What coaches are seeing, or not seeing, he isn't quite sure.

"If I knew," Morgan said, "I would try my best to fix it."

But he can't fix 5-11. The passing quarterbacks who get phone calls, visits and hand-written letters are taller.

Today, Morgan leaves for Coastal Carolina. He'll take one last shot in the Offense-Defense All-American Bowl, hoping someone will see how tall he is when he's standing on his dream.

"You talk to any athlete, you want to go to the NFL," he said. "It's a dream. It's a dream as a kid. That's what I want to do, and I want to hold on to my dream until it's completely gone."

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