Georges Laraque, Penguins Forward, 2007-2008

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Georges Laraque:

First, can you let readers know what inspired you to write your new book, Georges Laraque, The Story of The NHL’s Unlikeliest Tough Guy?

When I was a kid I went through a lot of racism. I  thought of quitting and read the biography of Jackie Robinson – a guy who went through the same obstacles I did and that really inspired me. I knew sharing my experiences could help kids overcome their obstacles too.

How did you overcome those experiences?

Same as Jackie Robinson. I used the racial slurs as motivation – fuel for proving them wrong. There were too many people to get mad at. Instead of getting mad at everyone, I used the slurs as my determination to show that they were wrong. I would not let them shut me down.

How has the NHL dealt with racial issues and diversity – are they doing a good enough job in your opinion?

In my career I only had one incident – the one with Sean Avery. The diversity task force in the NHL does a good job in promoting diversity.

It was in the minors that I experienced racism. But the NHL does a really good job. They have programs like the one in New York to get Black people involved. There are NHL players from all over the world – teams just want the best players, they don’t care what color they are.

You also touch on the issue of steroids in hockey. What are your thoughts on drug testing?

The league has done a lot with drug testing, but the current testing isn’t good enough. You need blood testing like they do in the Olympics. You need to be able to test for all drugs – that way you can learn if guys are suffering from the drugs they take. The effects, like depression, can be helped.

Three  players passed away last year from the effects of drugs. Those could have been prevented with blood tests that could have  revealed the presence of those drugs. Other than a moment of silence, what have we done to prevent more casualties?

We can protect more tragedies like these – it would help the players. We need to come up with a solution. People already forgot.

You were known as an enforcer more than as a well-rounded player. Did that bother you?

I always worked hard. If you got to know me you would know me as more than a fighter. Fighting didn’t define me as a human being. Some saw a big Black man and assumed I was a fighter, sure. – but really, no one except a few I talk about in the book really like fighting.

I was really fortunate to have thirteen years in the NHL. I averaged nine minutes in the playoffs. I was never going to have Crosby’s point totals but I always took pride that I was in the top three in points for tough guys when I played. I was more than just a fighter.

You were traded to Pittsburgh from Phoenix. How did that occur – was it something you were happy with?

I wanted to be traded. Phoenix was out of the playoffs and I wanted a chance to be in the playoffs. I fell in love with the Pittsburgh community fast. Ask Frank Bohannon – the Penguins PR guy – I went into his office every day with a schedule of places to go for charity work. Pittsburgh had some tough neighborhoods with kids that needed help.

I loved Pittsburgh – the people are unbelievable. The team, the fans…it was unreal. They are blue-collar worker guys like the tough guys in hockey.

You left after a year-and-a-half – how difficult was that for you?

The year I left we lost the Stanley Cup in game six to Detroit. Sid wanted me to stay – said if I returned he guaranteed we’d win the cup within three years. I said sure, ok (laughing).

It was tough. I was talking with Ray Shero who I respect very much,. But the team had cap issues – it had to keep it’s core players like Crosby, Staal and Malkin. They could only afford $750,000 for a tough guy, which is why they went and got Godard.

Tough guys have shorter times in the NHL. If I’m making $10 million and go down to $6 million, who cares. But going from $1.5 million to $750,000 – I couldn’t take that pay cut. I almost did anyway but went to Montreal. Of course they won the cup the next season!

You’re  a busy guy. Politics (Canada’s Green Party), charity, hockey, the book….what drives you?

I am fortunate to have played in the NHL and to have this life. Hockey exists because of the fans – we can play hockey for a living because of them. It’s our duty to show our appreciation. They work 9-5 and money is tight but they still come out and pay to see us.

If we can get kids to smile – there’s  no medication that can do that. There are so many things we can do to touch lives. Hockey is just a sport – it doesn’t change lives. When you retire, people don’t care about your play. What you did for the community and kids – making a difference is what matters. Whatever status you are in life, you need to be involved.

How much did  the fact your parents were  born in Haiti and the tragedy there affect the way you live your life? 

I am lucky to be alive – I could have easily still been there. God had a role for me. A bigger role than hockey. Hockey is the stage to help me impact the world.

I’ve been to Haiti four times. I also went to Tanzania for charity too – to help raise  money to prevent suicides here in Montreal. Being in Haiti was shocking – seeing how the kids are living….

Any last thoughts for readers?

The book talks about motivating kids – anyone who has a dream. Any dream is possible not matter what you think the percentage is of succeeding. There’s always a chance. In the book, I talk about kids raised in violence. It’s chain, they say. Well I am a twin and I broke the chain.

I also in the book talk about my time in Pittsburgh, Montreal, animal rights, politics, gay rights, meeting with the Dalai Lama and more. It’s accessible to hockey and non-hockey fans.

I think it’s a book that will inspire anyone.

Where can readers purchase the book?

They can go to my website at //www.georgeslaraque.com/

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Ray Pinney, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1976-1982, 1985-1987

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First, can you let readers know what you are doing now with your post-football career and how you chose that direction?

I am an insurance broker with Wells Fargo Insurance Services in Seattle WA. Seattle is my hometown and wanted to stay in the area and the insurance business allowed me that flexibility.

What were your thoughts after having been drafted by the Steelers – was there any added feeling of intimidation knowing they were a Super Bowl team in a frenzied football city?

Firstly, I was very thankful that I was drafted by the Steelers because they are a great organization and it was a good fit for me. When I was growing up in Seattle, we didn’t have a pro football team locally so I had to follow other teams on the west coast like San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.

Continue reading “Ray Pinney, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1976-1982, 1985-1987”

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Dewayne Washington, Steelers Cornerback, 1998-2003

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First, can you tell readers about your work at the Carolina Skills Academy?

{Former Steeler} Charles Johnson and I started the academy to fill the gaps in fundamentals we saw in a lot of athletes here. You can have the talent but without the fundamentals – the techniques – you can’t let that talent shine. The academy helps kids fill that gap. Those fundamentals were the biggest things that got us where we are in the pros.

They sign up for two months at a time, two-to-three times per week and an hour each time. We drill them on fundamentals for middle school, high school and college players trying to make the NFL.

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Daryl Sims, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1985-1986

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You’re the Athletics Director at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. How did you find yourself in this role and what about it do you enjoy the most?

I have always had a passion for intercollegiate athletics. An opportunity can available to work at UW Osh Kosh as a development officer for  intercollegiate athletics. Then there was a retirement with the previous A.D. and I jumped at the opportunity. Three and a half years later the A.D. retired. I applied along with one-hundred+ other candidates and I was offered the job.

The thing I enjoy the most is working with the student athletes. They all come from different areas of the country, but they all have two things in common: 1) to earn a degree and 2) to be successful in athletic competition.

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Harry Newsome, Steelers Punter, 1985-1989

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First, can you let readers know about your coaching career – what you are coaching and what made you decide to become a coach?

I love to be around competitive sports and I love to work with and teach young people so coaching has been a part of my life going on 20 years now from recreational sports, AAU and high school.

After my retirement from the NFL in 1995 I worked with numerous football camps across the country until I started coaching high school football for Cheraw in 2002. Currently I serve as Receivers/Quarterbacks coach and special teams coordinator as well as the head golf coach.

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Keith Willis, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1982-1991

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First, can you tell readers about your coaching career?

I’m the defensive line coach at North Carolina State – I love it. I love coaching these young men and being able to use my experience getting to the NFL to help teach these kids.

They played spectacularly – we beat number seven ranked Clemson and the they just played great!

What are some of the lessons from the coaches you played under that you use in your coaching today?

Chuck Noll always taught us to keep it simple and I really believe in that. It wasn’t just him. I played under some legendary coaches like Marv Levy, Joe Gibbs…they are all legendary dudes.

I picked up bits and pieces from all of them – but they all really kept the game simple. Nothing real intricate – see the ball, get the ball.

How do your players buy in to that philosophy?

They love it. Great players can play no matter what. But marginal players – you have to keep it simple. That’s my belief – and was Noll’s as well. He taught me paralysis from analysis. It was the first time I ever heard of that expression. No thinking and playing fast.

Who helped you as a rookie free agent in Pittsburgh?

My locker mate Larry Brown schooled me up a lot. Especially in my interview process. I had some pretty good success early as a player and Larry would listen to me do interviews. He said I had to learn to tell them a lot but don’t tell them nothing. That was important to hear as I handled the media.

My making the team was the result of going against him in practice. He had his days and I had mine.

Tunch Ilkin also did once Larry left. We went at each other every day. It was fitting he was an undersized offensive lineman. I was an undersized, under-rated guy too.

Tell us more about how you got past your free agent status and relative inexperience to make it in the NFL.

You have to go back to where I grew up in Norfolk, New Jersey. I didn’t come from a lot. I had no desire to play football early in my career. I played one year in high school and that was it. No Pop Warner…nothing.

I knew I couldn’t live like that – I knew what I had to do. I went to Northeastern and took advantage of my time there.

How did the Steelers discover you?

We were playing New Hampshire at Northeastern. The scouts came to see a linebacker that played for New Hampshire and I had a good game. Bill Nunn was there and saw me and took my number and told me to keep in touch with him.  A couple of weeks later he invited me to go to Boston College to run the 40 with the Boston College players.

Were there other scouts watching you?

N0t many teams saw me. Bill Nunn had a good reputation and Seattle, Dallas and Kansas City scouted me a little. But not many teams were watching a guy from Northeastern.

Who were the guys that kept the team loose when you were in Pittsburgh?

Tunch Ilkin will say I was the comedian. Bradshaw was too – he did off the wall things. Dumb things. He was a goofy dude.

What kinds of things did you guys do?

We’d put stuff in guys’ shoes ands make fun of each other. It was all in fun.

How were the coaches with all of the kidding around?

Oh, the coaches never come on the locker room except on game day!  Once I was established they knew they could count on me to get things done. When we put on pads we knew what we had to do to get it done.

Continue reading “Keith Willis, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1982-1991”

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David Trout, Steelers Kicker, 1981, 1987

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First, can you tell readers what you have been doing with yourself after football?

After I was with the Cowboy’s I was working out with getting ready to go back to camp with the Kansas City Chiefs and prayed if God had a different direction for me with my life. The next night I kicked off and the tee rolled out in front of my follow through and I broke my ankle and decided to go into missions.

Carl Peterson offered to put me on IR but I decided to follow a different path. I then worked on missionaries homes in Florida and then went into Youth Ministry where I was a Youth Pastor at St. Johns church in Turnersville NJ. I then went to Piedmont Bible College In North Carolina where I received my Airframe and Power plant license to build and fly aircraft in 1994 to 1995.

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Kevin Henry, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1993-2000

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First, can you let readers know about the Kevin Henry Foundation – how it got started and what it’s mission is?

The Kevin Henry foundation was started after working with at risk youth in 1994 after my rookie season with the Steelers. Because of many challenges that I faced as a kid, coming from a poverty-stricken area in Mississippi, I thought it was only right that I go back to where it all began for me and be an inspiration to someone just like me.

Although you can’t get much help financially from that town I got something much more important – that love, support and good coaching.

Continue reading “Kevin Henry, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1993-2000”

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Jeremy Staat, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1998-2000

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First, can you let readers know about what you’ve been doing with yourself and your foundation (//www.TheJeremyStaatFoundation.com)

I’m trying to give back and serve the community, especially here in Bakersfield. I have a lot of causes close to my heart – veterans issues especially. I’m trying to cause awareness to make our VA system more efficient – make it a better system and more information centers around college campuses.

Veterans have been treated like second-class citizens – especially here in California. We need a lot more efficient systems. It takes an average of 280 days for a claim to be ratified as a veteran. That’s way too long. It’s easier for an illegal alien to get healthcare than a veteran and that’s not right.

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O’Brien: Al Davis Was Different and He Helped Change the Face of Pro Football

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O’Brien column for The Valley Mirror

Al Davis died at his home in Oakland,California last week.  He was 82 and he had been challenged by ill health for several years.

          I last saw him on Sunday, Oct. 2, when the TV cameras focused on him as he sat behind glass windows in the owners’ box as his Oakland Raiders were defeated by the New England Patriots.  He missed seeing only three games in his 49 years with the Raiders.

          Al Davis didn’t look good.  He hasn’t looked good in a long time.  Some Steelers’ fans felt he never looked good.  His face was the face of the enemy.  The silver and gold never liked the silver and black. Daviswas the Darth Vader of pro football.

          Chuck Noll never liked Al Davis.  They were both assistant coaches under Sid Gillman with theLos Angelesand then San Diego Chargers in the early ‘60s.  Dan Rooney didn’t care much for Al Davis.  He once called him “a lying creep.”  They later made up.

          When Dan Rooney bid goodbye to his fellow owners at one of their meetings a few years ago – he was going to be spending time overseas as our ambassador toIreland– he said, “I’ll miss all of you guys, even you Al.”

          Al Davis came up and embraced Dan Rooney and shook his hand and wished him well on his new assignment.

          Arthur J. Rooney Sr., the late owner and founder of the Steelers, liked Al Davis.  He said, “He’s a good football man, if he’d keep his mind on football.”

         Daviswas always taking the league to court on one issue or another, fighting to keep his Raiders in LA orOakland, or to relocate them wherever he wished. Davishad his own “reality TV series” before there was such a thing.

          I spent time with Al Davis on at least a dozen occasions over a lifetime as a sportswriter and he was always interesting, available and quotable.  I liked Al Davis.

          He died the same week that anotherNorthern Californiaicon died.  Steve Jobs, the founder and CEO of Apple, Inc., died at age 56.  Both were geniuses in their own game.  The Raiders won’t be the Raiders without Al Davis and Apple won’t be Apple without Steve Jobs.   Both were innovative and inspirational and difficult to live with, and they changed their respective worlds.

          ThoughDavisgrew up in a nice home, he liked to portray himself as a tough guy from the streets ofBrooklyn.  But he graduated fromSyracuseUniversitywith a degree in English, so he was never able to pull it off convincingly.

          I had a degree in English from Pitt, and Myron Cope accused me of playing “the poor kid from Hazelwood” role a bit much, so Davis and I had a bond.  We understood each other.

         Davisbecame the youngest coach in the NFL at age 33 in 1963 and he would later become the owner of the Oakland Raiders and one of the leaders of the American Football League.  He’s one of the reasons the Raiders and the AFL lived to merge with the established NFL.  There was no Raider for top talent like Al Davis.

         Daviswas often at odds with the other owners and with NFL Commissioners whether it was Pete Rozelle, Paul Tagliabue or Roger Goodell. Daviswas daring and determined.  “Win, baby, win,” was his slogan in running the Raiders’ operation.  He stressed excellence in his organization.

          He liked black and silver and chose them for the team’s uniforms because he thought the colors were intimidating.  His Raiders won three Super Bowls and they were the chief rival of the Steelers for a long time.  He and Raiders’ coach John Madden never forgave Franco Harris for “The Immaculate Reception” in the 1972 playoffs.

          I first met Al Davis in the office of Beano Cook, when he was the sports information director at Pitt.  This was in 1961 or 1962 and I was an undergraduate at Pitt.  I was the sports editor of The Pitt News and I helped out in Beano’s office at the Pitt Field House.

          This was a Friday before a football game at nearby Pitt Stadium. Daviswas one of four individuals who came to Cook’s office back-to-back in a 15-minute period to pick up their press box credentials for the following day.

          First came Davis, then an assistant coach and scout for the Chargers.  He was followed by Frank “Bucko” Kilroy, a scout for the Washington Redskins who had played for the “Steagles” in 1943; Emlen Tunnell, a scout for the New York Giants who had been a great defensive back for that club in the ‘50s and ‘60s, and then Red Smith, the outstanding sports columnist of the New York Herald-Tribune.

          They are all in one kind of Hall of Fame or another.  I was about 20 at the time and it should have been a tip-off to me that life as a sportswriter would be a good life.

          I have been fortunate ever since to spend time with and interview some of the greatest names in sports.  Al Davis was one of them.  He was the least known of the four when I first met him.

          He was wearing a black leather jacket over a black turtle neck jersey, dark sun glasses, and his hair was combed back in the “ducktail” style, a holdover from the ‘50s. He looked like The Fonz, a wise-cracking street corner guy from the TV Series “Happy Days” as played by Henry Winkler in a cast headed by future movie director Ron Howard.  To the end, Al Davis had a “ducktail” hair style.

          I ran into Davisabout eight years later in a hotel swimming pool in Atlanta.  I was covering a pre-season contest involving the Miami Dolphins.  I was writing for The Miami News at the time.

          We were both splish-splashing away when we came upon each other face to face.  I introduced myself and he said, “I know who you are, Jim O’Brien.  I’ve read your stories.”

          I later learned that Al Davis read the sports sections of the daily newspapers in all the cities in the league.  This was 1969, the last season of the AFL before the merger with the NFL in 1970.

          Al Davis was a lot like Yankees’ owner George Steinbrenner in that respect.  They both read the sports sections from cover to cover and they were aware of what was going on in all sports, not just their sport.  Art Rooney was like that, too, a man for all seasons.

          I would see Al Davis at the NFL Owners’ Meetings at Maui and Scottsdaleand Palm Springswhen I was covering the Steelers for The Pittsburgh Press in the ‘80s.  Imagine getting paid to spend time in those exotic places, partying and playing tennis with the owners and coaches in pro football.  I was also fortunate enough to do that in pro baseball and basketball as well.  I miss those days.

         Daviswas always delightful company.  He liked to talk to sportswriters and share his opinions on any subject.  He said he didn’t seek the spotlight, but other owners accused him of being a showboat.

          I remember seeing Al Davis when he attended the funeral Mass of Art Rooney at St. Peter’s Church on the North Side in late August, 1988.

          Something ironic happened that day. The church was filled. It was SRO. There had to be sixty or seventy priests there that day.  George Young, the general manager of the Giants and a long time pal of Art Rooney Jr., the team’s player personnel director in the ‘70s, said, “No Catholic in Pittsburgh better have died that day or there’d be no priest available to give them the last rites.”

          Pete Rozelle came into the church to pay his respects and an usher took him down the center aisle, and seated him in the last seat available on the aisle.  I was sitting in a pew directly across the aisle.  Al Davis was sitting directly ahead of Rozelle on the aisle seat.

          I knew what was coming.  When the officiating priest told those in attendance to turn and offer a peace greeting to those in front and behind them, I smiled as Al Davis turned and, to his surprise, saw Rozelle there.  They shook hands and offered thin smiles.  I thought that Art Rooney Sr. was smiling overhead and that he’d had a hand in this peace offering as well.

         Daviswas accompanied by his wife Carol at St. Peter’s. Daviswas always quick to introduce his wife. He called her “Caroli.”  She had a stroke in 1979 and nearly died.  When she was deathly ill in the early ‘80s,Davisrecalled how Art Rooney was in constant touch, sent her flowers often, sent her encouraging words, and went to visit her. Davissaid he would never forget Rooney’s concern and personal kindness toward him and his wife.

          Carol Davis confirmed the goodness of Art Rooney. “He’s one of the last of a vanishing breed,” she said.  “When you find somebody as special as him, you better treasure him.  He’s such a good man. He said he remembered me in his prayers.”

          Carol is still living.

          I used to go to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Weekend activities inCanton,Ohiomost summers in the ‘80s and ‘90s.

Daviswould be there. Daviswas often chosen by his Raiders’ players to present them for the Hall of Fame induction. 

          I saw him present Fred Belitnikoff, Art Shell and Gene Upshaw. Daviswas also inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  Some of my friends feel he is undeserving, but that’s mostly because they don’t like him and thought him a bit of an outlaw, always opposing the league in one way or another.

          I talked to him inside the Hall of Fame in the summer of 1989.  John Henry Johnson and Joe Greene of the Steelers got in that year, and so did Gene Upshaw.

          I was with my buddies Bill Priatko and Rudy Celigoi, both from North Braddock, and we were talking to a former Raider fromYoungwood,Pa., the great George Blanda, and then Mike Ditka, of Aliquippa and Pitt.

         Davisstrolled by, dressed in black.  He saw us talking to Blanda and Ditka, and he thundered, “You guys fromPittsburghare always hanging out together.”

          He smiled and posed for some pictures.

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien has copies of “The Chief” and “Steeler Stuff” available at area bookstores.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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