Anthony Denham is a receiver on the rise

The senior from Los Angeles Wilson has drawn comparisons to New England star Randy Moss.

Eric Sondheimer

September 19, 2008

Anthony Denham is, at 17, 6 feet 4 1/2 , 190 pounds, and can palm a basketball and glide through the air as if he were a stunt double for Michael Jordan.

"Coaches tell me I'm gifted," he said.


Those who have seen him catch passes for Los Angeles Wilson don't waste any time in offering comparisons to NFL receivers.

"He reminds me of Randy Moss," said Steve Clarkson, the renown private football tutor. "He's got long strides, soft hands and phenomenal leaping ability."

Wilson Coach Eddie Martinez wonders if Denham realizes how special he is.

"I don't think he understands what kind of body he has," Martinez said. "To be a monster out there is the next step."

Last season as a junior, Denham caught 41 passes for 632 yards and nine touchdowns. Last Friday, in a season opener against Roosevelt, he caught an 81-yard touchdown pass. He figures to routinely face double coverage this season, though Wilson quarterback Jonathan Rojas doesn't seem concerned about passing to someone who's a marked man.

"I know it's going to be caught," Rojas said. "It's 100% certain."

Denham's impressive physical skills provide only a glimpse into the story of a teenager who endured a tumultuous childhood that saw him taken away from his mother by social workers when he was 11 and put into the foster care system.

Hilda Montano, who has taken in 37 children through the years, became his legal guardian, establishing firm guidelines and a structured environment, with teachers sending her Denham's weekly schedule so she can keep watch.

Denham said he has been "blessed" by Montano's guidance. "I stayed in school and my cousins went on the wrong track and into gang banging," he said.

He said he never met his father and hasn't seen his mother since the day he was taken away. His mother recently started writing him letters, a hopeful sign that she could be on the way to recovery from previous problems. He remains in contact with his grandmother and uncle.

All the while, he keeps smiling, something that's hard to believe considering what he has gone through.

"Over the years, I never took a lot of things seriously," he said. "I guess that's what made me smile a lot. I didn't let it get to me. I didn't stay emotional about it. I moved on."

It's a message Montano passed on to Denham and her other foster children.

"You have a future on your own," Montano tells Denham. "You have to forgive, but don't forget."

Denham has improved his academics immensely, achieving a 3.5 grade-point average in the last semester. But passing the necessary 16 core classes to qualify for a college scholarship will be a challenge.

Anyone who comes in contact with Denham seems convinced of his potential.

It's up to him to make sure it doesn't slip away.

"I have to take advantage of what I have," he said.