Bears DE always had 
big smile on his face

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Friends of the late Bears defensive tackle, and former Clemson University football player, Gaines Adams embrace after his funeral Friday at the Rock Springs Baptist Church in Easley, S.C. (Alice Keeney (FRE))
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EASLEY, S.C. – Defensive end Gaines Adams was remembered for his enormous talent, quiet humility and an amazing smile that drew people to him during his football career.

“They all talked about that smile,” Tommy Bowden, Adams’ college coach at Clemson, recalled Friday.

More than 1,000 family members, friends, fans and teammates gathered at Rock Springs Baptist Church to celebrate the life of Adams, the 26-year-old defensive end who died Sunday from an enlarged heart.

Adams was an All-American at Clemson and taken fourth overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2007 NFL Draft. Adams was traded to the Bears midway through this season.

It was not Adams’ way to complain or worry about things that didn’t go as planned. Bears coach Lovie Smith told the crowd that soon after the trade, Adams called to ask how he could best help his new team.

“He came in like a man, ready to work,” Smith said.

Bowden, who left the Tigers in 2008, said Adams always carried that positive demeanor.

During hot, summer workouts he smiled while his teammates were griping.

“He smiled going down to practice, he smiled at practice, he smiled during stretches, he smiled after practice,” Bowden said in his eulogy. “I thought something was wrong with him.”

No, it was just Adams’ approach to life.

Adams’ first name, according to officiating pastor Sheldon Shipman of Greenville Memorial AME Zion Church, means “quiet, brilliant, nobility.”

That was quickly evident to former NFL defensive back Merton Hanks, currently the league’s director of football operations and development. Hanks was at the 2007 draft, handing out each players’ new jersey after selections.

Adams stood out to Hanks as a thoughtful, humble person eager to succeed the right way.

“I left him with the sense that something great was going to happen,” Hanks said.

Adams’ friend and former Tigers teammate, Ray Ray McElrathbey, told the gathering that when he took on the challenge of raising younger brother Fahmarr, “Gaines was the first to ask me what he could do.”

Several past and current teammates attended the service. The Bears contingent included linebacker Brian Urlacher, quarterback Jay Cutler, team owner Virginia McCaskey and her son, Michael, the team chairman.

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