Potts, who coached his daughter's AYSO team, noticed the quick turnover of soccer gear and thought the equipment could be put to a better purpose.
Potts asked himself: "What do all these kids do with all this stuff when they're done?"
"It's a shame to see them just throw them away," he said.
That's when his sister, working as a professor at Los Angeles Harbor College, introduced him to her former student, Sesay, who was sending school supplies back to his African home country.
Sesay told him, "It's like Christmas. You just don't understand what it means."
Sesay said soccer draws children into schools.
"If you have a soccer program in your school, every child wants to go to your school," Sesay said in an interview. "It's a lifesaver, because sometimes the only thing that brings us together [is soccer]. If there's fighting, people say, 'Take the fight to the field' and play soccer … It makes a difference."
The two have been partnered about a month, and in that time Potts said 195 articles of gear for children 12 and under have been collected. That number isn't enough for the pair, though, who are hoping to gather even more cleats, shinguards, balls, shorts and anything else people are willing to part with for the next shipment to Sierra Leone in March or April.
Those interested in making a donation can drop off supplies at the Crossline Community Church, 23331 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills, and Soccer Garage, 21098 Bake Parkway, No. 106, Lake Forest.
lauren.williams@latimes.com
Twitter: @lawilliams30