Would-be tacklers know Totino-Grace running back Kez Flomo is strong. They would be surprised to know the tender place from which Flomo draws his strength.
Tucked away in a drawer at home is a binder that preserves Flomo's collection of football and wrestling awards. Amid them is a photograph of Flomo as a youngster, sitting on the lap of his mother, Angeline, back home in the African country of Liberia. The picture represents a simpler time, before Flomo, his grandparents and younger brother fled the country amid civil war in 2003.
Angeline remained in Liberia, and Flomo longs for a reunion 11 years in the making. Financial challenges are a big reason their relationship is sustained by monthly phone calls, never more than five minutes long. There are plans to meet next summer. Until then, Flomo tries to keep the conversations positive.
"I told her I play football and she told me to do my best and make her proud," Flomo said. "That's my motivation."
More honors seem certain for Flomo, who has averaged almost 200 rushing yards per game this season, and leads the 4-0 Eagles into Friday's showdown at fellow unbeaten Maple Grove.
"He's carried us," Totino-Grace coach Jeff Ferguson said.
Separation from his mother is not the only heartache in Flomo's personal life. He is estranged from his father. And his grandfather and guardian, David, died in 2009. He and his brother, Gayflor, live with their grandmother.
As a kid, Flomo would fight anyone for teasing him about his broken English. Football and wrestling — he reached the state tournament last season — provide healthy outlets for a young man processing through difficult emotions.