Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/1276571
T
he sport that Malick Meiga :rst fell in
love with as a kid isn't the one Penn
State fans think of when they hear the
word "football." There weren't any
gridirons in Ivory Coast, where Meiga was
born and lived for six years, but there
were soccer pitches, and that's where the
incoming wide receiver spent a lot of his
time growing up.
Meiga continued to play soccer as a de-
fender and striker when he moved to Italy
with his mother and brother, and then
Canada a>er that. In fact, it wasn't until
middle school that the now 6-foot-4
wideout traded in his shin guards for
shoulder pads.
"I played soccer my whole life – that
was my first love," Meiga said. "Then I
did a football camp during one summer
called All Out Camp, and I got coaches
who wanted me to play. I'm a pretty fast
guy, so they were hype about me. I
played [in middle school] and then went
to high school to continue to play foot-
ball."
Meiga ;ew somewhat under the radar
for most of his high school career, but he
continued to learn the game and he also
matured o< the :eld. When he was a
teenager, Meiga's mother le> Canada to
move back to Ivory Coast and eventually
France, leaving Meiga and his older
brother, Ben, to live with a friend of hers.
Eventually the brothers moved to Mon-
treal, where they lived alone during Mal-
ick's high school years.
Prior to even enrolling in college, Meiga
had lived on three continents, spoke
French, Italian, Spanish and English and
had been independent for a few years.
"Living with your brother alone, that's
pretty good preparation for college,"
Meiga said. "You don't have a lot of the
help that you can have when you live with
your parents. … You have to do stu< by
yourself, so I think I have an advantage
when it comes to that part."
His winding journey to playing Division
I college football in the United States took
a sharp turn toward Penn State when he
burst onto the scene at The Opening in
Ohio in March 2019. His 4.53-second 40-
yard dash, 4.28-second shuttle and 36-
inch vertical jump turned heads –
enough, in fact, to go from only one o

