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Read all posts "You can say I came to the Rams from the green Grand Am
instead of the green room," Gilyard said with a prideful laugh.
"I was homeless, living in a car, working four jobs. Now I'm a
Ram.
Gilyard paid his dues, working a construction job, cooking and delivering pizzas and selling cutlery door to door
before coach Brian Kelly took over the program at the end of the 2006 season and gave Gilyard another chance
with the Bearcats, this time as a wide receiver.
"I was working hard to get my real job back, my football job," Gilyard said. "I had to get back to school.
"I paid back the $10,000 I owed.
"It just showed I'm a hard worker and that I could fight through adversity. That's all the game of football is: It's
about fighting through adversity."
When Rams general manager Billy Devaney called on the morning of April 24 to inform Gilyard the Rams were
poised to select him with the first overall pick of the draft's fourth round, well you better believe that Gilyard broke
down.
"I was on my way to go crabbing, and I had stopped at McDonald's when my cell rang, and Billy Devaney told me,
'Hey, we're going to take you,' " Gilyard said from his Bunnell, Fla., home. "I cried a river.
"I'm blessed."
Blessed wasn't what he felt four years ago after he'd been kicked out of school and his apartment. He wanted to
return home to Florida. Except that his mother and older brother, Otis, wouldn't let him.
"I had to find faith and myself," Gilyard said. "I had to grow up. I was a real knucklehead kid, arrogant, cocky,
immature. I had to grow up."
Gilyard showed the resolve no NFL scouting combine or pro-day drill can measure.
"Most guys would have folded," Devaney said. "You flunk out of school, you say, 'Well, OK.' You go back to
Florida."
As a junior, he earned 2008 all-Big East honors with 81 receptions for 1,276 yards.
He finished as Cincinnati's all-time leader in receptions (204) while piling up nearly 6,000 all-purpose yards.
He brings a needed dynamic to a feeble Rams offense that averaged fewer than 11 points a game in 2009.
Gilyard ran a 4.51-second, 40-yard dash at his pro day. But his fluid quickness in and out of breaks impressed
scouts nearly as much as his candor.
"There's no one perfect in this world," Rams head coach Steve Spagnuolo said. "But what Mardy has shown is he
can go through a tough time, persevere.
"He showed a lot of resolve in what he did, failing out of college and then coming back and working those jobs. He
obviously wanted it bad enough."
Gilyard returned punts and displayed what Spagnuolo termed "a smoothness" in his route running while catching
passes from quarterback and fellow rookie Sam Bradford during last weekend's rookie minicamp.
Gilyard was given No. 81, former Rams star Torry Holt's number. And he certainly stands a fair chance of quickly
making his mark among an inexperienced collection of wideouts.
"I'm going to do everything I can in my power to make the game exciting and bring back 'The Greatest Show on
Turf' to St. Louis," Gilyard said.
NFLDraftScout.com senior analyst Rob Rang projected Gilyard as a third-rounder and considers him a steal, given
St. Louis got him one round later.
"He and the Rams are a perfect fit," Rang said. "He can come in and play in the slot immediately and be a return
man. He's a better route runner than you expect from a guy coming from a traditional spread offense."
And Rang also notes that Gilyard has shown an ability to cope with pressure.
"He has a history of playing his best when the lights are on," he said.
"And I don't know if there's a better story from the 2010 draft in terms of Mardy realizing he made some mistakes,
fighting through adversity. And then doing it at the level he did, speaks to his toughness."
Posted
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