Road to X Bowl XXXIII: Al Rilwan Adeyemi on a journey of faith and committment

The call finally came.

After all that time Al-Rilwan Adeyemi had spent keeping in shape over the two years since finishing college, never giving up on his dream, an NFL team was finally on the line at last.

Adeyemi before a Pearl Bowl game against the MPD Eagles — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
Adeyemi before a Pearl Bowl game against the MPD Eagles — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
For once, he wasn’t being told he was too small, or there were too many others at his position. It didn’t matter that his school, the University of San Diego, lacked the clout of those football powerhouses that churn out pros and challenge the term “student-athlete.”
Adeyemi during a USD Toreros game — Courtesy of University of San Diego Athletics
Adeyemi during a USD Toreros game — Courtesy of University of San Diego Athletics
An injury at the Lions’ training camp had produced an opening, and Detroit wanted him to come in and see if he could fill the spot. Adeyemi had tried out for the Lions before and been turned away, and the New York Giants before that.

Yet here he was, getting a rare second chance.

Sorry, he told them. Thanks but no thanks.

Adeyemi at Giants minicamp - Jim McIsaac (Getty Images), May 11, 2012
Adeyemi at Giants minicamp – Jim McIsaac (Getty Images), May 11, 2012
The Nigerian-born Californian passing up such an opportunity was a reflection on the values that his parents had instilled in him, the respect he has for commitments, and the humility he derives from his Muslim faith.
Adeyemi spent his early years in Nigeria - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Adeyemi spent his early years in Nigeria – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Those same characteristics are what led to him finding success and satisfaction playing for the Fujitsu Frontiers of Japan’s XLeague.

Adeyemi has won four championships with Frontiers - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Adeyemi has won four championships with Frontiers – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
“When I got out here in August [of 2013], the Lions called and said someone had gone down in camp,” Adeyemi said “Obviously they wanted me to come work out for them and see if I was in shape.

“I thought about it. But for me, religion plays a big part in my life. For me, when you give your word as a Muslim, you can’t go back on it. So I couldn’t break that verbal promise that I gave Fujitsu that I was going to commit to them for that six months that I was here.”

On the sidelines with teammates — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
On the sidelines with teammates — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
How many others would have made that decision? To Adeyemi, it is an irrelevant question, became he knows there was only one choice, even if that might not seem as obvious to others.

Those six months have now stretched to six years and counting. The positive effects that Adeyemi has had on Fujitsu, and by extension the XLeague in general, cannot be denied or underestimated.

Lined up against Challengers WR Donnie King — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 15, 2017
Lined up against Challengers WR Donnie King — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 15, 2017

On the field, he has been the premier cornerback in the league, making the All XLeague team all six years he has been here, while helping Fujitsu reach the Japan X Bowl every year. On four of those six occasions he walked off the field at Tokyo Dome a champion, including the past three in a row.

With LB Trashaun Nixon at the Rice Bowl — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3, 2017
With LB Trashaun Nixon at the Rice Bowl — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3, 2017

According to XLeague statistics, Adeyemi has 17 regular-season career interceptions, two of which were returned for touchdowns. He has either shared, or was outright league leader in INTs four times. An argument could be made that would have many more, but teams understandably tend not to throw his way. Last year, Adeyemi had a career-high five interceptions, including one he took back 99 yards for a score.

Adeyemi grabs one of his two INTs against Nojima last season — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Sept 23, 2018
Adeyemi grabs one of his two INTs against Nojima last season — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Sept 23, 2018
He has also picked off three passes in the Japan X Bowl, and had another four in either playoff games or the second stage under the old format. One of his biggest came in the 2018 semifinals, when a late interception clinched a 13-10 victory over the Obic Seagulls, whose record of four consecutive league championships the Frontiers will look to equal in 2019.
This pick sealed a semi final win over Obic — Sachiyo Karamatsu, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 25, 2018
This pick sealed a semi final win over Obic — Sachiyo Karamatsu, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 25, 2018
Off the field, Adeyemi, who turned 29 on Aug. 13, stands out with his demeanor, class and compassion, and his willingness to help elevate the level of those around him.
Al Rilwan Adeyemi — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, June 10, 2019
Al Rilwan Adeyemi — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, June 10, 2019
“He got over here more or less the same time that I did,” says IBM Big Blue quarterback / head coach Kevin Craft, whose team has lost twice to Fujitsu in the Japan X Bowl. “On the field for them, obviously he’s a good player.
IBM QB Kevin Craft and Adeyemi after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016
IBM QB Kevin Craft and Adeyemi after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016
“But what I hear more than anything about Ade is more about him off the field. He’s genuinely a nice person, he’s nice to be around, he always has kind words, he’s always trying to help people.”
Adeyemi and teammates after last year's Japan X Bowl — Sachiyo Karamatsu, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018
Adeyemi and teammates after last year’s Japan X Bowl — Sachiyo Karamatsu, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018
“He’s the type of person that you want to have on your team. He’s the type of person that you want to have in your country. He probably fits in every well to Japan, the culture.”
Adeyemi gets the crowd going after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
Adeyemi gets the crowd going after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
Second-year quarterback Michael Birdsong, who had the unenviable task of replacing Frontiers star Colby Cameron, says Adeyemi was indispensible in his making a smooth transition to football in Japan.
Fujitsu QB Michael Birdsong — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018
Fujitsu QB Michael Birdsong — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018
“It’s been huge, having a guy like him around. He’s just a good guy, a good dude. He’s been here for so long, he’s engulfed in the Japanese culture. He knows the language well, so he’s been able to teach us things about the language, about the culture in general. Things you should do, shouldn’t do.
Birdsong (left) & Adeyemi (center) before the Rice Bowl — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3, 2019
Birdsong (left) & Adeyemi (center) before the Rice Bowl — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3, 2019
“That’s something that he told us might have taken for us years to learn. It took him five, six years to learn, so you would expect the same. So having him around has been a true blessing.”
Adeyemi before a game against Challengers — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 15, 2017
Adeyemi before a game against Challengers — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 15, 2017
Adeyemi’s ability to so readily adapt could be linked to his upbringing, from his childhood in Nigeria through his formative years in California. His father had emigrated to the United States and his mother was in the process of joining him when Al-Rilwan was born in Lagos.
Adeyemi grew up playing soccer, tennis and cricket - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Adeyemi grew up playing soccer, tennis and cricket – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
“They decided to leave me in Nigeria for basically the first 10 years of my life,” he says. “My mother left when I was 4. I grew up basically with aunts, uncles and grandparents for the first 10 years of my life, because they wanted me to grow up with more humble beginnings then they thought that American kids would grow up with.”
Fujitsu DB Al Rilwan Adeyemi with rikishi after 2017's Rice Bowl – John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3rd, 2017
Fujitsu DB Al Rilwan Adeyemi with rikishi after 2017’s Rice Bowl – John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Jan 3rd, 2017
While being raised by different relatives, Adeyemi also experienced a wide expanse of lifestyles, at times living in the big city, and other times in small villages.
“Imagine National Geographic, living under a dollar a day,” he says of the rural life. In Lagos, his relatives were educators and politicians, and he got to live the high life, attending private and military schools. “I got the best of both worlds.”
From humble beginnings to XLeague legend - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
From humble beginnings to XLeague legend – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
He showed his athletic prowess at an early age, and grew up playing cricket and soccer, but living in a small village meant some improvising was necessary.

“We’d go into rundown villages and take off the roof and use it as tennis rackets,” he says. “We would take a tennis ball and take a cup and wrap gold tin foil around it, and that would be our World Cup trophy. On weekend, we would set up tournaments with the neighborhood kids, and whoever won that got to keep it for the week.”

Adeyemi during a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
Adeyemi during a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
When he turned 10, it was decided that was a good time to start integrating him into American society, and he joined his parents in Santa Monica, California. At first, he became a source of curiosity for the neighborhood kids.

“There were some kids that were amazing, and then there were some kids that were ignorant,” he says. “Kids are very truthful. They would ask questions like, ‘Did you live in a hut?’ Things they see on TV. ‘Did you guys wear clothes?’ They were so curious. But you couldn’t hold it against the kids. Part of that was educating the kids.

Sport wasn't his only pursuit - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Sport wasn’t his only pursuit – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
“But for me, I come from an athletic background, so making a friend was as simple as, can I play. Soon it was, ‘Yeah you can play,’ and, ‘Oh, he’s good – we’re friends.'”
Adeyemi and friend - Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi
Adeyemi and friend – Photo courtesy of Al Rilwan Adeyemi

At Santa Monica High School, Adeyemi focused mainly on football and track and field, running the 100 meters in 10.8 seconds. Because of his speed, he was even recruited for the baseball team, whose coach was also a coach on the football team. “Come steal some bases for me,” he would plead to no avail.

Because of the defensive system the school used, Adeyemi played safety, resulting in “a lot of interceptions.” An All-Ocean League selection, he still clearly recalls the eight picks he had his senior year, and the four that he dropped. That earned him a full-ride to USD, a Division I-AA school where he was switched to cornerback and became a starter from day one.

He left San Diego tied for the school record for career interceptions with 15. In his senior year in 2011, Adeyemi helped lead the Toreros to a long-awaited Pioneer Football League championship, and was named to the all-league first team for the second straight season. In 2008, he had been the league’s Freshman Player of the Year on defense.

Adeyemi during a USD Toreros game — Courtesy of University of San Diego Athletics
Adeyemi during a USD Toreros game — Courtesy of University of San Diego Athletics
“I finished school in 3 1/2 years, that way I could have that spring to train and get ready for the next level, wherever that may be,” he says.

But he also got a first-hand look at how the odds would never be in his favor.

“I had a pretty good college career, if you put things in perspective. But coming from a small school and being 5’9” [175cm, although he is listed at 178cm], sometimes you get overlooked. And I came out in a very competitive year, 2011-2012. So that year, obviously I wasn’t drafted.

Adeyemi during a game— John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 17, 2017
Adeyemi during a game— John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Oct 17, 2017
“I went to a couple of tryouts. I went to the Giants, and they had like eight corners on the roster, something silly, and that was coming off their Super Bowl year. I was just a body.”

Thom Kaumeyer, who spent three years as an assistant coach at Fujitsu before becoming IBM’s defensive coordinator last season, knows what it takes to make the NFL. He played five seasons with the Giants and Seattle Seahawks.

Thom Kaumeyer (far right second row from front) with the 1989 Seattle Seahawks
Thom Kaumeyer (far right second row from front) with the 1989 Seattle Seahawks
“Sometimes it’s nothing about lacking,” Kaumeyer says. “When you start talking about the NFL, it’s elite. And guys that are taller have a little bit more range to do things and make mistakes. When you’re 6-foot, 5-11, you have to do everything right.”
Adeyemi and Kaumeyer — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
Adeyemi and Kaumeyer — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
Adeyemi was determined to keep trying, and returned to San Diego to work out full time and prepare for a pro day the next season.

“I test pretty well,” he says. “Testing is about preparation. I prepared decently. I had good coaches who helped me prepare well. So I tested pretty well and I had another opportunity that next year with the Lions.”

Facing off against former Baltimore Raven Takashi Kurihara in the JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 18, 2017
Facing off against former Baltimore Raven Takashi Kurihara in the JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 18, 2017
Then he heard the usual spiel.

“They were like, yeah, it’s a numbers game. They kind of give you the same runaround, and I was like, all right, I understand. ‘Well, we’ll call you if someone gets hurt.’ I just went a whole year without anyone calling me. And then the whole Japanese opportunity [came up].”

Adeyemi (right) celebrates a pick-six in the playoffs — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 12, 2016
Adeyemi (right) celebrates a pick-six in the playoffs — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 12, 2016
Like many American players in Japan, Adeyemi came through a door opened by former Fujitsu wide receiver Brad Brennan. His first contact was with a coach of the Nojima Sagamihara Rise who happened to be visiting San Diego. The Rise weren’t in the market for defensive backs, the coach said, but said the Frontiers might be looking for one. Current Rise advisor and longtime XLeague coach David Powroznik connected Adeyemi with Brennan.
Nojima Sagamihara Rise Advisor David Powroznik — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, May 18, 2019
Nojima Sagamihara Rise Advisor David Powroznik — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, May 18, 2019
“We were looking for DBs at that time and we called Brad Brennan, and finally he got him,” said former Frontiers head coach Satoshi Fujita, the architect of the Fujitsu’s championship run and now the team’s senior advisor. “We asked Brad to send him one time to Japan. And we met him, and we really liked him. And he really liked it here.”
Former Fujitsu Frontiers WR Brad Brennan - Inside Sport: Japan
Former Fujitsu Frontiers WR Brad Brennan – Inside Sport: Japan
Says Adeyemi, “I came out here for a visit, and the rest is history.”

Having turned down the Lions, Adeyemi was impressed with what he saw with the Frontiers and the league in general, even though an unexpected off-field incident kept him out of the early part of his first season.

“I thought they had decent talent,” Adeyemi said of the Frontiers, who at that point had been to the Japan X Bowl in three of the previous six years, but had lost each time and had yet to win a championship. “I thought we were missing a couple of things, but I thought we could really compete.”

Adeyemi rues barely missing an INT in the 2016 JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 12, 2016
Adeyemi rues barely missing an INT in the 2016 JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 12, 2016
As for the league itself, “I couldn’t really compare it to anything, because I didn’t know anything about the XLeague.

“Luckily for me, I didn’t play the first half of that season, so I didn’t play against the teams that weren’t as good,” he added, referring to the fact that under the format at the time, the top teams would play weak teams in their division early in the schedule.

Adeyemi and team mates before the JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 12, 2016
Adeyemi and team mates before the JXB — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 12, 2016
It was Adeyemi’s desire to absorb some culture that knocked him out of the early games. He took a trip to Mt. Fuji and, while climbing the iconic mountain, was hit as hard by altitude sickness as some of his open-field tackles on wide receivers.

“I carry the sickle cell trait, and after a certain elevation, my blood starts to thin,” he explains. “My blood starts to lose white blood cells after a certain altitude, and I wasn’t aware of that. I got really sick, and then my spleen was affected, and I was hospitalized for a few days.”

Al Rilwan Adeyemi — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, June 10, 2019
Al Rilwan Adeyemi — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, June 10, 2019
After missing most of the regular season, Adeyemi made a grand entrance. In a showdown with nemesis Kajima (now Lixil) Deers for the East Division title, he picked off a pass in the end zone with 3:34 left to help preserve a 15-7 victory. That win, before 3,878 at Todoroki Stadium, gave the Frontiers their first division crown in four years, and propelled them to the Japan X Bowl – where they ultimately lost to Obic.
Adeyemi after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
Adeyemi after a game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 26, 2017
The next season Fujitsu added Cameron and, after filling in other pieces of the puzzle with players like linebacker (and later running back) Trashaun Nixon, they began a run of four championships in five years.
Colby Cameron's arrival helped spark Fujitsu's run of titles — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016
Colby Cameron’s arrival helped spark Fujitsu’s run of titles — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016

One constant during the dynastic reign has been Adeyemi, who has been the foundation on which the defense is built. He has become that not only with intensity he displays on every play, but also a desire to help his teammates reach their full potential.

To do that properly – that takes the right attitude of seeing the Japanese players not as inferior, but as fellow athletes striving to learn, says Kaumeyer.

Kaumeyer during his time with Frontiers — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
Kaumeyer during his time with Frontiers — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 23, 2017
“I think the best thing about Ade was when he came here…he understood about Japanese football,” Kaumeyer says. “That for him, it gave him a chance to be able to do what he wants to do and enjoy football, but also teach Japanese players how to do different techniques.
Adeyemi celebrates a semi final win despite breaking a tooth in the game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016
Adeyemi celebrates a semi final win despite breaking a tooth in the game — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 27, 2016
“Sometimes guys come over here and they think they know everything because they’re from America and Japanese players don’t. That’s a fallacy. Japanese players study, they know techniques. Sometimes it’s just the grey areas that they got to learn. And Ade did a phenomenal job of being able to show our players the difference between making a play and being aggressive, as opposed to just making a tackle.”
Adeyemi (right) celebrates a pick-six in the playoffs — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 12, 2016
Adeyemi (right) celebrates a pick-six in the playoffs — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Nov 12, 2016
In the same way he had to fend off blockers coming his way on the field, Adeyemi has been adept at handling the adversity of being a black Muslim in America, where public opinion has been less than favorable, even more so under the current administration. He sees ignorance as the core of the problem.
Adeyemi celebrates another title with Frontiers teammates and coach — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 18, 2017
Adeyemi celebrates another title with Frontiers teammates and coach — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 18, 2017
“The political landscape definitely doesn’t make it easy being Muslim in the States,” he says. “But part of being American is being different. At a certain time, the Jews went through those same persecutions. The Irish went through those same persecutions. Right now, the Hispanics are going through same persecutions in terms of immigrant bodies coming into the United States.
Adeyemi at Onoe Sumo Stable — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 29, 2016
Adeyemi at Onoe Sumo Stable — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 29, 2016
“But there are a lot of people who are doing great things in the communities that are partnering with their Muslim neighbors and bringing some of the positive news to light. Usually immigrants, when they come to a foreign country, they’re hungry. They want to grind. That’s why you see a highly educated population in the immigrant communities.”

Coming to Japan, Adeyemi says he has faced none of the animosity found back home. Like the California kids curious about the new Nigerian boy on the block, he finds the Japanese open to learning about an unknown culture.

Egyptian rikishi Osunaarashi was the most high profile Muslim athlete in Japan — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 29, 2014
Egyptian rikishi Osunaarashi was the most high profile Muslim athlete in Japan — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, April 29, 2014
“It’s like being anywhere else,” he says. “There’s no hindrance. The Japanese were very curious. There’s a mosque basically everywhere you look. There are that many, but people don’t know about them. For Islam, you can pray anywhere. Just find your little space and say your prayers. God is everywhere.
Tokyo Camii is a mosque Adeyemi visits regularly - — John Gunning
Tokyo Camii is a mosque Adeyemi visits regularly – — John Gunning
“Japanese humility, kindness and respect, which are all tenets that the Quran teaches us to practice, makes it easy to practice Islam in Japan.”

Differences in religion have not caused any problems with his American teammates; in fact, it has enhanced the bond.

“We talk about it all the time,” says Birdsong, a Virginia native who attended three colleges in the U.S. South. “He took me to my first mosque. I grew up Catholic, and you’re not supposed to like each other. But we get along great. We’re very open, and we talk about everything. We have no problem with it. I like learning.”

Fujitsu QB Michael Birdsong — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018
Fujitsu QB Michael Birdsong — John Gunning, Inside Sport: Japan, Dec 17, 2018