Jay Bottom
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Barry Faulkner
The sweat and sacrifice have far outnumbered the fleeting moments of
bliss, but Jay Bottom, a business major, has no complaint with the
rate of exchange.
A junior in his final season of football at USC, the 6-foot-3,
225-pound walk-on out of Corona del Mar High is scheduled to
graduate, after seven unit-packed semesters at the school, in May.
In addition to his degree, he could also take home a national
championship ring, should the Trojans, ranked No. 1 in both major
polls, take care of Michigan in the Rose Bowl Jan.1.
But even if the Wolverines, or the controversial BCS boondoggle
that left the Trojans out of the Suger Bowl, intervene, Bottom is
thankful he passed up scholarship offers from smaller schools in
order to assume a smaller on-field role in what has become a grand
collegiate experience.
“There were times when I was worried about whether I made the
right decision,” said Bottom, who is counting down his practice
sessions before his final game in Pasadena. “It was not only coming
to USC, but spending all the time you spend to play football in a
program like this. I wondered if I could have done something else
with my time. But, it was during a postgame party last season after
the Orange Bowl (a 38-17 victory over Iowa, Jan. 2), that I realized
all the hard work had finally paid off. Staying up all night with my
teammates at the hotel, before heading to the airport, was just very
gratifying to know that all the stuff I’d done meant something.”
Bottom, the Pacific Coast League Defensive Player of the Year as a
senior in 1999, followed older brother Alex, also a football walk-on
one year ahead of Jay, to USC.
But, in a broader sense, the younger Bottom followed his heart to
the Los Angeles campus.
“I had scholarship offers to other schools, like Cal Poly [San
Luis Obispo] and maybe I could have become a big-time player there,”
Bottom said. “But after visiting my brother one weekend during his
freshman year, I realized I really wanted the USC experience. How
could you not want to come here? The whole experience here is just
phenomenal.”
After a semester at Concordia University in Irvine, Bottom entered
USC, stepping onto the spring practice field and into an alternate
reality.
“I got my rear end kicked,” he recalled. “I had lost 20 pounds
from high school, so I was a 205-pounder going against guys who
weighed 300-plus. Some of them were five years older than me and had
been some of the best high school players in Southern California. It
was surreal stepping into the same drills with them.”
As he beefed up his body, Bottom also found solace in a
competitive spirit that propelled him not only in the trenches, but
in the classroom.
“I’m overly competitive,” he said. “You can ask my fraternity
brothers who have played basketball against me. I might get beat to
the basket, but I’m not one for giving up very easily. You might beat
me, but I guarantee you’ll have some bruises to show for it.”
Soon, Bottom was faring better on the football field, earning a
spot on the traveling roster for games, including at Notre Dame, and
playing in three contests.
“I remember going onto the field for the first time,” he recalled.
“I was so excited, I totally forgot my assignment. I just kept saying
to myself ‘I’m in. I’m in. Don’t jump offside.’ ”
As a sophomore, he dressed for every home and away game and played
in all but a couple.
This season, after he missed the opener at Auburn with an infected
heel, has been more of the same. He has played some on special teams
and rotated in on defense at end and tackle.
“This season is the stuff you dream of,” he said. “Winning every
week and, now, being in the unique situation of being in a Rose Bowl
with a chance to win a national championship. We have a chance to
accomplish everything we could ever hope to accomplish.”
With football, school -- including at least 18 units per semester,
beyond the normal load of 12 or 15 -- and a social life centering
around his fraternity, Bottom said he sleeps only about four or five
hours a night, in order to squeeze everything in.
He plans to travel after graduation, before settling into the
business world, and he looks forward to a less-hectic schedule than
his college years.
But he also believes his willingness to strive for his
accomplishments will translate into success in whatever field he
chooses.
“All I’ve ever done is work hard,” he said. “I’ve experienced the
pure joy of playing college football and I think I can apply some of
the lessons I’ve learned to the business world. It may take a while,
but If I keep working at it, I believe success is going to happen.”
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