Happening Now

December 16, 2021  
By Al Muskewitz  
East Alabama Sports Today  

Munford’s Gibson never got distracted by the noise, signs with Troy, ready to get down to business

Bear and Sons

MUNFORD – A lot has happened in the world Munford lineman Kyler Gibson is about to immerse himself in since he committed to play football at Troy this past summer.

GIBSON

The Trojans changed head coaches and the conference in which they are committed to playing is undergoing some ground-shaking changes.

They are the kind of things that could have an impressionable young recruit rethinking his position.

But Gibson isn’t wired that way. He’s the consummate be-where-your-feet-are kind of guy.

He blocked out the noise and stayed committed to the program that remained committed to him. He made it official Wednesday, signing his letter with the Trojans in the morning and then recreating the act for friends and family in the school cafeteria.

“That’s what I’m about,” Gibson said. “I’m about getting the job done and then you can have fun.

“I’m more of a business guy. I’m ready to get to work. I don’t focus on the outside publicity and all the commotion going on; I’m like, let’s get it done. My dad’s a captain in the Oxford Police Department, so I’ve had very good influence on getting things done and not getting distracted. I’ve been raised to get the job done and then you can have fun.”

It’s that focus that has made him the player he is today. And it extends all the way to the classroom, a lesson he learned at an early age. He once brought home an 88 during a quarterly grading period and had his phone and X-box taken away for a couple weeks. He hasn’t done that again.

“My dad’s always said there’s no such thing as having a crooked A, an A-minus,” he said. “If you’re going to have an A-minus, you might as well have an A. If you have an A, you might as well have an A-plus.”

The biggest potential kink to Gibson connecting with Troy Nov. 21 when the school fired head coach Chip Lindsey before the end of the regular season. All it took was one phone call to clear up where Gibson stood.

“There was 50-50 shot getting honored or not, but Troy is a very respectable school; they liked me from Day One,” he said. “The AD called me the night after Coach Lindsey got fired and said, ‘We like you, we still want you to play here.’ I told him I’d stay committed.

“Of course, you have to worry you won’t have the scholarship honored. I had other (Sun Belt Conference) coaches and colleges interested, but my main priority was being a Troy Trojan.”  [**read more]

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