AUBURN, Ala. – The process of getting to the Plains has been a long one for senior offensive lineman Dillon Wade, full of adversity and challenges. But it has been a process that has taught him valuable life lessons.
“Playing football has taught me how to handle adversity,” Wade said. “Everyone says that, but it’s so true. It’s a sport where you’re going to have battles every day, and you have to learn to just not give up – to keep fighting to get to where you want to be.
“And also, that you need to eat right to gain weight,” Wade, who measures 6-foot-3, 303 pounds, added with a smile.
Wade’s progression of growth in the sport began in his hometown of Houston at the age of 6.
Starting out playing for fun at home with his uncle to get him moving, Wade worked his way up to running back and linebacker as he progressed in the sport in one of the country’s football hotbeds. He then moved on to tight end the more he grew. But eventually, his physical growth made it obvious that he was meant for the trenches.
“I got bigger and bigger as I grew up,” Wade said. “I took a year off from football once they moved me to the trenches because, like most kids, I wanted to score touchdowns and make all the plays. I came back to the sport my sophomore year of high school and had no idea what I was doing on the offensive line.”
However, an older player at his first high school stepped up and showed him the way.
“Ladarius Carey was a big role model for me in high school,” Wade said. “He was an older player that introduced me to the O-line and saw the potential in me. We would go out and do drills together when I was at Andy Dekaney High School.”