BayBay Thomas

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Of all of the bad things that have happened with the program lately, this dwarfs everyone of them.
What a sad thing to happen to our beloved former player . Prayers go out to his family!
Thomas lived his life in a way that made us all proud that he was a GT man.
RIP to a man seemingly loved by everyone who knew him.
 
When you think of Baybay, you first think of how he was constantly smiling that big ole smile of his. Then you think of all the great things he did on the field. I'm sure a lot of you idiots feel the same. Thinking of his family today. Sad.
 
When Bebe"s mother and grandmother had to go away, my daughter-in-law's family pseudo-adopted him (think The Blind Side) for his last years at West Laurens and Georgia Tech.

My son drove him to his recruiting interviews at Tech. He filled him with Tech's legacies from 222-0, through 7-6 over #1 Alabama leading the Bear to confirm that Coach Dodd was the only game-day coach he feared, attending every game of the 1990 Natty, to the legacy football program AND a world-class degree.

Bebe committed that day.

This is an ideal example of the contemporary Tech Man who makes his success at the highest levels, even when all of life's cards are stacked against him.

This news is devastating... God rest his soul.
 
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I had so many great memories of him while I had season tix during his career here. Great player and great person. So Sad.
 
He helped coach at Nesbitt's youth camp the last couple of years. One of the guys I teach with at Social Circle took his two sons there and he said that it was the best camp that's he seen.
 
Awful loss. One of my favorite Tech alums of all time. Will always be remembered for what he accomplished in his career and life. RIP. I remember getting goosebumps when he had that walkoff TD catch from Tebow.
 
Remembering the life of Demaryius Thomas
Former NFL player, Georgia Tech standout Demaryius Thomas dead at 33

Caption


Georgia Tech
By Ken Sugiura, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
12 minutes ago


It wasn’t the speed or the power or his athletic grace that those who knew Demaryius Thomas remembered on Friday. It was something far more meaningful.

“He was just the kind of kid that just lit up a room when he walked in with a big smile,” said Jeff Clayton, who was one of Thomas’ coaches at West Laurens High.


“He was always smiling and he could kind of light up a room,” former Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson said. “He was just one of those guys everybody liked to hang with.”

“Always had that big smile, was fun to be around,” said former Tech athletic trainer Jay Shoop. “Great team-type person. But it wasn’t just the football team. It was everybody he came into contact with. He just made you feel better.”
The light that Thomas brought with him, seemingly everywhere, has been sadly dimmed. Thomas, a Tech All-American wide receiver from central Georgia who grew up in difficult circumstances but went on to achieve greatness with the Yellow Jackets and in the NFL with the Denver Broncos, was found dead Thursday in his Roswell home, according to Roswell police. Thomas was to turn 34 on Christmas.


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Preliminary reports indicated a medical issue. LaTonya Bonseigneur, a first cousin of Thomas’, told The Associated Press that the family believes he died from a seizure, a condition that she said he had been suffering from for more than a year.
“You hate to lose anybody that early in life,” Johnson said. “He had worked so hard to get to where he was, and he was just now to the point where he could have enjoyed some of it.”

There was no mistaking Thomas’ ability, which he used at Tech to outleap cornerbacks for passes from quarterback Josh Nesbitt, run under his deep passes down the sideline or to stiff-arm defenders into the turf as he motored downfield for a long gain. It was no less clear in the NFL, where he became a favorite target of hall of fame quarterback Peyton Manning, a five-time Pro Bowler and a Super Bowl champion.


“He was given a lot of God-given ability, but he worked at it,” Johnson said. “He was a hard worker and he held himself to a high standard.”
It bears mention that he was a three-star prospect who redshirted his first year at Tech with coach Chan Gailey – 2006 – when he improbably shared the position group with arguably the greatest Jackets football player of all-time, Calvin Johnson.
“He was a project and worked himself into a first-round pick and worked himself into a great NFL player,” said former Tech captain Roddy Jones, a teammate of Thomas’ for three seasons. “He worked his (butt) off. He worked his tail off at every level.”
Thomas’ life was a story of triumph over immense challenges. With his mother and grandmother serving federal prison sentences for drug trafficking starting from the time he was 11 and a father who was often absent because of Army commitments, Thomas lived in at least seven different homes growing up.
Sports became his release, an outlet where he could take the turmoil of his life and use it as fuel. An aunt and uncle in Montrose gave him desperately needed stability. His determination to succeed, too, kept him on a narrow path.
“Aside from my family, this is the most important thing to me,” Thomas told the AJC in 2010 at the time of his selection by the Denver Broncos with a first-round pick, the first receiver selected. “I won’t let anything get in the way.”
Along that way, though, he won friends with a joyful and quiet manner.
“I don’t know of anybody who didn’t like Bay-Bay,” Johnson said. “He was just kind of that way.”
Coach Geoff Collins got to know Thomas when he was on Gailey’s staff in 2006 as player personnel director, which was the same year that Thomas arrived as a freshman.
“He was one of the most genuine, well-meaning people I’ve ever been around,” Collins said.
Buzz Preston, Thomas’ wide-receivers coach at Tech, recalled how some players became more difficult to deal with as their status grew. That was never the case with Thomas, he said.
“He was definitely the greatest player I ever coached,” said Preston, who coached at the FBS level from 1980 through 2018. “He had it all, all the physical attributes. But the greatest thing he had was the person. That’s what I’ll always remember.”
When he returned to West Laurens, he was the same Bay-Bay, a nickname that was a take on his father Bobby Thomas’ own nickname, Boo-Boo.
“Not a bit,” said Clayton, his high-school coach . “Would sign autographs, take pictures and just nonstop. He was just a real giving kid, and I still considered him a kid when he was an adult. He never really changed his disposition.”
Thomas became the subject of widespread attention in 2015 when his mother Katina Smith was one of 46 non-violent drug offenders whose prison sentences were commuted by President Barack Obama. After her release, she was able to see her son play in a playoff game against Pittsburgh and then Super Bowl 50 in Santa Clara, Calif., in February 2016.
“I always wish that she was around to see me play and stuff,” Thomas said at the Super Bowl. “The good thing about it is that she always gave me a call before I played and after I played. Now, to have her out, it’s even better. To have her at games, I don’t have to think no more and wish she was at the game. Now, I can go out and know that she’s in the stands and play ball.”
In that Super Bowl, Thomas caught one pass for eight yards (he caught a Super Bowl record 13 passes in the Broncos’ 43-8 loss to Seattle in Super Bowl 48), but his team was victorious, defeating Carolina 24-10.
Thomas was able to thank Obama personally when the Broncos visited the White House as Super Bowl champions in June 2016.
“I talked to him for a quick second. I told him, “Thank you for helping my family,’ " Thomas said. “We talked about my mother and we also talked about my grandmother.”
Thomas’ grandmother Minnie Pearl Thomas, who was serving two life sentences, had her sentence commuted in August of the same year, one of 214 federal inmates to be given their release.
“When they went away, I got good at football and I just chased it and chased it and chased it,” Thomas said in a video recorded by the Broncos to announce his retirement in June after 10 seasons. “It did wonderful things for me and my family. I’ve been able to get my mom and grandma out of prison. I don’t know if football did it, but winning the Super Bowl, meeting Obama, after that situation, they both kind of got out, which I’m thankful for. But football has done a lot.”
Thomas was a visitor to Tech as recently as August, when he stopped by to take in a Jackets’ preseason practice. In the presence of greatness, Tech wide receivers asked him for advice about playing the position.
“Anytime you get a guy like that to come back and talk to the guys, it has the extreme impact on them, not only football-wise, but as far as life, as well,” wide receivers coach Kerry Dixon said.
Collins and Johnson both recalled a particular contribution of Thomas’ to Tech. When he came on his official visit as a high-school senior and recruits were treated to dinner at The Capital Grille in Buckhead, Thomas had a special drink made, a mixture of all the fruit juices, Collins said. It’s called Bay-Bay juice, and it has been made for recruits ever since, with Jackets players who were hosting the prospects telling them they needed to order it.
“That was kind of legend,” Johnson said. “They wanted that Bay-Bay juice.”
As timing would have it, Collins was to begin hosting an official-visit weekend Friday ahead of the start of the early signing period next Wednesday.
A man whose impact went far beyond touchdowns will be remembered at dinner Saturday night with the serving of a unique and special concoction, and undoubtedly long after that.
 
Great article by Bradley ---


Demaryius Thomas: Gone too soon, never to be forgotten
Shaw had 230 yards passing on nine completions, all to Demaryius Thomas (8) -- the second-highest total in school history. An 88-yard touchdown reception in the fourth quarter is the third-longest in school history.

Caption
Credit: Johnny Crawford

Mark Bradley Blog
By Mark Bradley, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
4 hours ago


On Nov. 29, 2008, Georgia Tech opened its game against Georgia with a completed pass. The Yellow Jackets were in their first season under Paul Johnson, whose offense didn’t rely overmuch on passing. Never was this more blatant than on that unforgettable day in Sanford Stadium. Tech upset the Bulldogs, who’d entered the season ranked No. 1 in the land. The final score was 45-42. The Jackets’ joy was unconfined.

That game produced many memories – Roddy Jones flying down the sideline as the Jackets were scoring 23 points in the first seven minutes after halftime – and many curiosities. My favorite: The pass Tech completed on its first play was its last completion. It went for 19 yards. Joshua Nesbitt threw it. Demaryius Thomas caught it.


That’s how good Demaryius Thomas, known as Bay Bay, was as a collegian. In 2008 and 2009, you went to Tech games knowing you’d see Nesbitt keeping and the A-backs – Jones among them – flitting around the corner and B-back Jonathan Dwyer storming up the middle, but you’d leave recalling those times the ball was thrown in Thomas’ vicinity. You’d leave asking how a wideout could make such magic on a team that dealt more in pitchouts than forward passes. There was no prettier sight than Thomas rising to attack, as they say in the trade, the football.

His Tech career overlapped Calvin Johnson’s, a wonder unto himself. The two never played together, though. (Imagine if they had.) Thomas took a redshirt in Johnson’s last Tech season. The latter left for the NFL in 2007, which would be Chan Gailey’s final year on the Flats. We’ll never know if Thomas would have signed with Tech to play for Paul Johnson, but he stuck around and, between B-back dives, built a legacy and a future.
Calvin Johnson, among the greatest receivers in collegiate and professional history, averaged 16.4 yards on 178 Tech catches; on 120 catches, Thomas averaged 19.5 yards. In 2009, when Tech went 11-3 and beat Clemson in the ACC Championship game, the Jackets completed a total of 78 passes; 45 were to Thomas. That’s 58%. Tech gained 1,774 yards passing; Thomas had 1,154 of those. That’s 65%.

That was the genius part of Paul Johnson’s offense. No, Tech didn’t throw much. When it did, its wideouts – Johnson’s offense included no tight ends – drew single coverage. Thomas against any cornerback was a mismatch. He’d outrun most. He’d overpower any and all.
For all the numbers we’ve cited, here’s the jaw-dropper: In 2009, Thomas averaged 25.1 yards per catch. That’s one-fourth of a football field per reception. That’s outrageous. That was Bay Bay.

Demaryius Thomas was found dead in his Roswell home Thursday. He was 33. I’ll not pretend I knew him well, but I saw many of his Tech games and witnessed many interviews. The first two seasons under Paul Johnson were among the giddier in Institute annals. Thomas was a source of much of that joy. He was fun to watch. He had fun playing. He was a great collegian. He became a great pro.

In the NFL, he played a key part in the signature moments of quarterbacks as disparate as Tim Tebow and Peyton Manning. Thomas’ 80-yard touchdown for Denver in overtime against Pittsburgh is what we recall first about Tebow’s post-Florida life. Of Thomas’ five consecutive 1,000-yard seasons, four came with Manning as quarterback. The fourth ended with the Broncos winning the Super Bowl in Manning’s final game.
Thomas grew up in Laurens County, which sits just off I-16 between Macon and Savannah. His mother and his grandmother went to jail for distributing crack cocaine. His father often was away on military duty. His mother’s sentence was commuted by President Obama in November 2015. The first two times she saw her son play football came in a playoff win against Pittsburgh and the Super Bowl victory over Carolina.
Thomas is gone now. It makes no sense, but what, in the grand scheme, really does? The best we can hope to do is live a life that makes others remember us fondly. Bay Bay Thomas aced that test. We’re saddened by his loss. We’ll never forget his life.
 
Devastating. That young man had so much to offer the world. So f-- cruel. Heartbreaking.
 

While I was at work yesterday, a co-worker came up to me (who is a FSU fan) and told me Demariyus had passed away. It's so sad. I will pray for his family and friends during this difficult time. Demariyus's bright spirit will never die! He is now back home in heaven. He will be greatly missed but not forgotten!
 
I expect the DT tributes during tomorrow’s CBS/FOX NFL pregame shows will be super emotional.

God, this is awful.
 
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