Cedric Thompson has occasional flashbacks to his years in Bombay Beach, Calif., the tiny desolate town along the Salton Sea, where he transformed himself into a college football player.
"There will be a story that pops into my head, and I'll be like, 'God, I forgot that even happened to me,' " said Thompson, a senior safety who led the Gophers in tackles last year.
Bombay Beach has about 300 residents, most of them retired. Back in the 1960s, it was a popular resort destination, with ads billing it as "Palm Springs by the Sea." Now, dead fish wash up on the deserted shore, and the roads are lined with abandoned houses.
Thompson moved there with his dad after his parents divorced. For father and son, it served as a refuge from all the gang violence they'd experienced in south-central Los Angeles.
Thompson found a whole new focus — for football and school — that helped him land an unexpected scholarship to Minnesota. After coming to campus as a complete unknown in 2011, he has emerged as this team's de facto captain, alongside quarterback Mitch Leidner.
"I thought Cedric would be a good leader, but I had no idea he was going to do the job he's done," coach Jerry Kill said. "With his upbringing, and how he survived things, and what he stands for, he's got great respect."
Finding his way
Thompson's memories of Bombay Beach mostly include the constant boredom, the occasional 120-degree heat, earthquakes and the stench wafting off the landlocked Salton Sea. It's a town that sits 223 feet below sea level, on the southern edge of the San Andreas Fault.
The closest high school was 27 miles away, in Calipatria, so Thompson would catch a bus each morning at 6:15 a.m.