Neil Stratton, President, Inside the League, NFL/CFL Consulting

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Neil Stratton, President, Inside the League, NFL/CFL Consulting

First, can you let readers know how you got started as a consultant for college and pro football and how you started Inside the League?

In the late 90’s, I had a buddy who wanted to be the next Mel Kiper Jr. We started a print draft publication in the time when the Internet was just starting to explode, and it lasted about four years. At about Year three, it was easy to see there was too much competition out there to make money with the business model, so I had started looking around for Plan B. At the Senior Bowl one year, I started to meet agents who made it clear there was no publication specifically for them. At the time, there were about 1,500 agents registered by the NFLPA (there are around half that now due to a rule change instituted about eight years ago). It looked like a ready-made, easy-to-reach market.

At any rate, when I launched ITL, it was half about draft evaluation (mock drafts, rankings, etc.), and half about the industry and the stuff it has become today. However, after I returned from my stint as Executive Director of the ’08 Hula Bowl and relaunched ITL, my wife urged me to make it unique and just focus on the things no one else was doing, which was the football business, insider-type stuff. It was the right move.

How has having played football in college (U.S. Naval Academy in ’88) helped you in this role as a consultant?

I think anyone could do what I do if they are willing to take a chance and work hard, regardless of whether they played college football. However, I will say that it gives me credibility when I meet a coach, player, agent, or anyone in the industry and I can tell them that I know what it’s like to be a player, even if it was a LONG time ago, and I was far from a star. The blood, sweat and tears that every player sheds from the bonds that link people in this industry, and what gives it the camaraderie that glues people to this business and to each other.

In working with agents, what have you found to be the key attributes that make up a top-tier agent?

Persistence, plain and simple. And money, of course. You HAVE to have resources given how the business model has changed so drastically in the last 5-7 years. That’s where I feel ITL gives its clients an edge – we are out there actively trying to help our clients make good business decisions and spend their money wisely, while simultaneously bringing them discounts on hotel stays, training, or whatever. And we’re always, always accessible.

But at the end of the day, I always tell my clients that if you’re not willing to get the door slammed in your face or the phone slammed on you, or if you’re not willing to stand outside the locker room in the rain to get five minutes with a player, or you’re not willing to drive four or five hours one way to make a contact some night when you have to be up at 7 a.m. the next day, then you should think long and hard about being in this business. You’ll have to pay your dues, just like in any other business, even if you’ve been very successful in another line of work. There’s a misperception that the NFLPA helps its licensed contract advisors by providing them contact info, tips, information, discounts or whatever. Nothing could be further from the truth. It’s Dodge City out there.

What are the biggest misperceptions you find players have when entering the NFL as rookies?

There are several, so I’m going to approach this question during the period between the end of college play and the draft.

The biggest and most recent one is that once your eligibility is over, and it’s time to focus on the draft, you deserve expert-level combine training along with a stipend, signing bonus or some other form of subsidy from your agent. There is an incredible sense of entitlement that has been bred among college players in the last 3-4 years. If you’re not rated in the top 100 for a draft – in other words, expected to go in the first three rounds – good representation and good entitlements become an either/or proposition; it’s hard to find both if you’re a late-rounder.

The other is that all players who start for some period of time at a Division I school are entitled to a 3-4 year NFL career. Playing in college, even playing well, offers absolutely no guarantees. No one deserves anything, and the NFL doesn’t award camp invites based on what someone wrote on the Internet. There is no guaranteed happy ending. That’s why, though it’s a cliché, education and getting a degree are critical. There’s nothing more heartbreaking than seeing players hanging around some indoor league into their late 20s/early 30s.

The third is that if you don’t make the NFL, it’s somebody’s fault, and most likely your agent’s. There are literally thousands of players each year that are very, very good college players, but that doesn’t make you an NFL player, or even an NFL prospect. Sometimes, you just aren’t good enough. There’s no shame in that. I know it’s never easy to let go of a dream, but sometimes part of being a grownup is knowing when it’s time to move on.

What are the most common mistakes you see agents make with clients and the teams they negotiate with, and how do you help them overcome those mistakes?

The first that many agents make is that once you sign a player, he’ll automatically get invited to an all-star game, then he’ll automatically get evaluated in March by an NFL scout, and if he’s not drafted, he’ll automatically get a camp invite.

If you’re an agent, there’s no time for waiting. You have to be spring-loaded at all times and take nothing for granted. Once you get him signed, start finding out how he can get into an all-star game and who you need to talk to on his behalf, especially if he’s a guy who’s on the bubble to get drafted. You should even start cultivating game contacts as soon as you get certified.

Once that’s resolved, find out about pro days. I usually advise my clients that if they are considering signing a player from a small school and don’t know if they will have a pro day or not, don’t sign them. Bottom line, if you don’t work out for a scout who gets your 40 time, etc., it’s almost like you don’t exist. Schools can no longer just take for granted that they will have a well-attended pro day, and many, many schools that are not Division I-A don’t get scouts to come to their workouts (and some don’t even schedule one). Trying to get a small-school kid into a Division I-A workout is a serious uphill battle anymore. Schools are wary of giving a player from another school a chance at a job one of their players might otherwise fill. Finally, as they go through the spring, they should be cultivating scouts (we maintain a list of who to contact and how on our site) because sometimes those relationships wind up making the difference on getting a kid into a camp. They need to leverage those relationships when it comes time to get kids into camps.

With so much discussion on how players handle their post-NFL careers and lives and the difficulties they have in doing so at times, how do you work with your clients to ensure players have a healthy mindset entering their post-NFL years, and how do you go about doing so?

It’s tricky. Earlier this year, I approached a financial planner who’d been a longtime client and asked him if it would serve his clients if I put together a kind of post-career seminar to give players tips on how to succeed. He basically said it was no use, because it’s so hard to get players to understand how fragile their careers are, and either they get it or they don’t. It’s kind of the nature of the business. You better believe you’re invincible or pretty soon you won’t have the edge, the confidence, the attitude that you need. Start talking about the end, and pretty soon it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Obviously, at the end of the day, the answer is education, but you can talk all you want; if people don’t want to listen, it won’t matter. I don’t mean to sound fatalistic about things, but addressing this issue is something I’m always thinking about, and I still have no answers. The NFL has developed several seminars and programs to answer this question, and for the most part, they are under-attended.

How do you go about helping players selecting the right marketing/endorsement opportunities? How do you know when the fit is right?

The difficulty here is in realizing how few marketing opportunities there are for NFL players. Because players are hidden behind a facemask, getting these dollars isn’t easy, and if you don’t score touchdowns (i.e., QB, wide receiver, running back), it becomes even harder to get marketing dollars. Agents are always being asked why they can’t get marketing opportunities, and the truth is that for more players, these chances are rare beyond the occasional appearance at a trading card show, or chance to get a free car lease from a local dealership in return for tickets and an appearance in a newspaper ad. If you’re rated in the top 100 players in a draft class, you’ll have no problem getting an apparel/shoe deal, trading card deal and maybe an autograph signing in your college town, but after that you really have to prove yourself to get anything significant once you’re a veteran. If you really get established in a city, and your team has success, you may be able to land a weekly radio gig or whatever. But beyond that, the general rule is that you should take whatever you can get, because opportunities are rare.

You work with combine preparation specialists. How would you address concerns that the combine rather than a player’s on-field play is becoming too important in a player’s pre-draft evaluation, and is there concern that the pre-combine preparation can help give a “false read” on a player’s ability?

Everyone loves to talk about the workout warriors in the mid-00s that were overdrafted due to their triangle numbers, the Mitch Marrows of the world and the Mike Mamulas, but that’s because the NFL allows that to happen. There’s a good argument to be made that the combine prep industry creates athletes, not football players, but you have to understand that the trend in scouting departments is to ask your area scouts to bring back facts only, and the real evaluation will be made by a handful of top executives at the team headquarters. This is done, partly, so teams can contain the costs of their scouting departments by paying low-level guys pennies. At any rate, when you become that dependent on facts, on measurables, it’s only natural that these numbers would rise in significance.

I remember Charley Casserly used to tell players at the Shrine Game in the early 00’s that 80 percent of their draft ‘grade’ was complete when they walked off the field after their last college game, then 10 percent was the all-star game and 10 percent was their pro day/combine. I wonder if all teams subscribe to that formula anymore. So measurables have become bigger, and therefore combine prep specialists have become more important. You combat that by stressing that film study has to be the deciding factor, and making sure every scout knows that, and by trusting your scouts’ opinions.

One thing that has really become true the last few years is that there’s a ‘lottery’ mentality when it comes to the sixth and seventh round for many teams. They consider these picks as less meaningful, so they roll the dice on players who blow up their respective pro days, gambling that if the kid is a great pure athlete he can be made into a good football player. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t, but that’s part of what makes the NFL draft so fascinating. When you find a kid 6-6, 360 with magic feet, it matters less that he couldn’t stay on the field due to injuries, or had off-field issues, or just doesn’t like football.

From your perspective, what are some of the biggest misperceptions fans have of the role of agents in sports? How do you dispel those?

It’s a myth fed by many – but not all – coaches and schools that all agents are evil. SOME agents are evil, but not all. Not by a long shot. Also, I’m going to say something that’s not popular but still true: if most elite student-athletes didn’t have their hands out, there would be fewer agents around that would put something in them. If you’re a highly rated player, you have a set of expectations that allows these unscrupulous agents to operate. These players are kids, and they make mistakes, and I get that, but there’s still good and evil out there, and many of these young men are very skilled at taking advantage of people.

The other thing to understand is that the rank-and-file fan has no idea how agents and agencies work, and how that side of the business works, and couldn’t care less, anyway, so it’s really easy to paint with a wide brush. I understand that; part of what makes my job so addictive is that I’ve been doing this for a decade and I still learn stuff all the time. I know a lot of people want to believe in the purity of athletics, especially at the college level, but it’s hard to call anyone playing Division I-A college football an amateur, because they’re getting some kind of inducement to play. A scholarship isn’t the same as a wad of cash handed to someone under the table, and I get that, but these guys aren’t playing strictly for the love of the game. Every college athlete I’ve ever been around harbored NFL dreams, and there’s nothing wrong with that. By and large, agents just provide a means for achieving that dream.

With more and more of players’ personal lives – especially legal issues – becoming public, how do you help prepare players to protect themselves from these situations and has that become a bigger part of your player preparation?

It’s hard to impress upon a young man how the Internet, and social media, are forever, but it’s something most agents try to do anyway. You read the Twitter posts of some players, and it almost makes you cringe. It’s the same for the voice mail answers they leave on their phones, and a number of other things. There are so many places where a young man’s throwaway line, post made in frustration, impulse action, or whatever else becomes what everyone judges you by, so as an agent you have to be proactive and try to choose clients who understand that. The truly elite athletes can do whatever they want to, and I guess that will always be true, but if you are a bubble NFL roster type, you just can’t do that. Unfortunately, I think that’s something that’s going to be learned through trial and error more than education. Some young men are going to have to really mess up, and on a national scale, for some athletes to finally get it, and that’s a shame.

Have you worked with any Steelers/Steelers front office personnel – directly or indirectly? If so, how does the team go about it’s negotiations and how are the different from other teams?

I haven’t had a lot of dealings with them. The one thing I will say is that they have had rare success in melding the coaching staff and front office into one mind when it comes to evaluation. Given how the Steelers handle things, rarely handing out big contracts and relying on the draft to replenish its roster regularly, you have to hand it to them for how seamlessly they’ve been able to do it year after year, especially after the exit of one of the most successful head coaches of the 00s. Tomlin and Colbert deserve a lot of credit not just for their success, but for their willingness to work together. No Jerry-Jimmy kinds of blowups. That’s unique.

Any last thoughts for readers?

If you don’t already read Bo Marchionte at www.college2pro.com, you’re making a big mistake. He regularly covers the Steelers, and it’s amazing what kind of a work ethic he has. He will run through walls to do a good job. He also interviews nearly every player leading into the draft every spring, and it’s incredible all the names he compiles. Check him out. He’s going to do big things.

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LeRoy Thompson, Steelers Running Back, 1991-1993

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First, can you let readers know what you’ve been doing with yourself since your time in the NFL, and how you got started in that line of work?

I own my own Real Estate Development and Construction Management Firm. The name of it is BDT Development & Management which is named after my three kids Brooke (17) Dezmond (15) and Tionna (13). I build retail centers, residential developments, and provide project management services on public and federal projects. Oh yeah, I am working on 20 years of marriage with my high school sweetheart also.

I got started in this line of work by a board member of an inner city nonprofit which I was Executive Director. He was so impressed with how I ran the organization that he approached me to co-found a company with him to focus on center city retail and urban development. Three years later, I bought him out and 12 years later I am still here even though the real estate business with me in it took a huge hit in 2008 till the present.

Continue reading “LeRoy Thompson, Steelers Running Back, 1991-1993”

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Chris Hoke, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 2001-2012

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First, has retirement sunk in yet, and have you started planning for “what’s next”?

It hasn’t sunk in yet no. Nothing has started up yet in the offseason. I think it will hit me when the guys show up in camp and start taking the field and I’m not there.

I’ve been dabbling in the media right now – tv and radio… I’m keeping my options open. My whole life I’ve been rushing for deadlines – training camp, practices…I’m enjoying my kids and family and we’ll see what’s out there.

Continue reading “Chris Hoke, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 2001-2012”

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Jim O’Brien: Gibson, Grays and ‘Gridiron Glory’ headline Heinz History Center calendar

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Jim O’Brien:  Gibson, Grays and ‘Gridiron Glory’ headline Heinz History Center calendar

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien

 Josh Gibson and the Homestead Grays and ‘Gridiron Glory: The Best of the Pro Football Hall of Fame” will be featured in exhibitions at the Senator John Heinz History Center this summer and fall.

         These ambitious and attractive shows will also draw more people to the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum at the History Center, a permanent and ever-improving testimonial to the many sports achievements in this region.  It certifies Pittsburgh as “the City of Champions.”

         I am a charter member of the Champions Committee that is chaired by Steelers’ Hall of Famer Franco Harris and we were treated last week to the unveiling of a life-size statue of Josh Gibson and a new exhibition that calls attention to Negro League Baseball.

         “We Are The Ship” displays 33 of the 41 paintings by American artist Kadir Nelson that appear in a book “We Are The Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball.”  They are bright, vivid images of an era when talented baseball players of color were forced to play in separate leagues and had to settle for segregated means of travel and housing and entertainment.

         A light shows through these paintings in a Thomas Kinkade kind of glowing manner.

         Gibson was once a mythical figure who was called “the black Babe Ruth,” but baseball historians have researched the sketchy statistics and records that remain from Negro League Baseball and there’s no doubt the husky catcher and his prodigious home runs were the real deal.  Gibson also starred for the Pittsburgh Crawfords.  Pittsburgh was the only city that had two teams in the Negro League.  The Grays played half of their home schedule at Forbes Field in Oakland, and the rest in Washington D.C.

         Gibson’s grandson, Sean Gibson, and members of his family were pleased to see Josh Gibson honored in this way at the Heinz History Center.  Young Gibson is executive director of the Josh Gibson Foundation as well as a member of the Heinz Champions Committee.

         There’s a lot to celebrate this year and plans were revealed that will make the Heinz History Center and its Sports Museum a destination point for any serious sports fan in the country.

This will be the 120th anniversary of pro football, the 80th anniversary of the founding of the Pittsburgh Steelers, the 50th anniversary of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame, and the 40th anniversary of “The Immaculate Reception” by Franco Harris.  Talk about a perfect storm for sports fans.

         “It’s unreal that there are so many anniversaries all at once,” said Harris, who headed the meeting.  “This is great for Pittsburgh; it’s great for the History Center.”

         They showed a revamped series of sports images that will serve as an entryway to the Sports Museum, and it included magic moments like Bill Mazeroski’s game-winning home run in the seventh game of the 1960 World Series, and, of course, Franco’s famous catch and TD run to snatch victory from defeat against the Oakland Raider in a 1972 AFC playoff game.

         Franco requested that they run the images past everybody a second time, with the sound up.  It was more dynamic the second time around, and Franco sat at the head of the table, his chin resting on folded hands, like he was praying that he wouldn’t drop the ball this time.

         “No, I never get tired of watching it,” Franco confided when we later toured the Kadir Nelson painting exhibition.

         “How many times have you seen it?”

         “Ah come on,” said Franco.  “I can’t answer that.”   

         “Do you ever wonder how your life would be different if you dropped the ball?” I asked Franco.

         He smiled that Franco smile and said, “I’d have been famous either way.”

         As part of its 50th year anniversary, the Pro Football Hall of Fame is taking its show on the road, and Pittsburgh will be the premier city for the Hall’s first-ever large-scale traveling exhibit, “Gridiron Glory.”

         It will include over 200 artifacts from the recently-expanded Pro Football Hall of Fame.  The exhibit will open here on October 6, 2012.  The Heinz History Center has acquired new space in an adjoining building and has plans to expand its offerings as well.  It enjoys a working relationship with the Smithsonian Institution.

         The Steelers are stepping up their promotional game this fall to celebrate the team’s 80th anniversary.  In April the team unveiled a logo commemorating the 80 seasons (1933-2012) calling this “The Year of the Fan.”  There will be broad range of events to celebrate the legacy of the team, its players and its fans throughout the 80th season. 

There will also be the annual book fair at the Heinz History Center during the holiday season in December.

         I never saw Josh Gibson and the great players of the Homestead Grays who are now properly enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame in action, but I do remember that, as a 10-year-old, I saw the Homestead Grays play a game at Burgwin Field in Hazelwood.

         That was in 1952.  Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in baseball in 1947, and the Negro League folded after the following season.  But local ballplayers continued to play on sandlots wearing the Grays’ uniforms.

         I checked with local historian Rob Ruck, a University of Pittsburgh professor who has written several books and articles about the Negro Leagues and he said, as I expected, that the Grays I saw were like the singing groups today that call themselves “The Platters” and “The Coasters” but aren’t always the original singers.

         Pittsburgh sports author Jim O’Brien has written 20 books in his “Pittsburgh Proud” series that are available in area bookstores. His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.

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Robin Cole, Steelers Linebacker, 1977-1988

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First, can you let readers know about the Obediah Cole Foundation – your involvement and how it got started?

Well, I’m a cancer survivor myself. In November of ’08 I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. I have three other brothers who were diagnosed with prostate cancer. My father was diagnosed with prostate cancer when he was 43 and passed away at 49.

We started a race for prostate cancer awareness out of an organization in Denver called Us Too. Then we created our own race out of Pittsburgh out of our foundation called Man Up. Men get prostate cancer just like women get breast cancer, but you hear little about prostate cancer. More men die from prostate cancer every year than women do of breast cancer. 280,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer every year and 25,000 die every year. Continue reading “Robin Cole, Steelers Linebacker, 1977-1988”

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Hank Williams Jr.

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Hank Williams Jr.

First, can you let readers know about your upcoming album – what should readers expect from your latest work and when does it release?

My new album comes out on July 10th.  It is traditional Hank! You know I was pretty motivated after last year’s ESPN situation.  Songs started coming to me in the middle of the night and I would grab the ipad and start writing.  This album has a lot of what America wants to hear but so many are afraid to say it.  This album is dedicated to all hard working Americans.

Tell us about your upcoming tour – and are you coming to the Pittsburgh area?

The Taking Back The Country Tour is just another tour.  You know I only do twenty-five shows a year.  So I get to choose where I perform and when I perform.  I love Pittsburgh.  My friends from Pittsburgh include Dan and Art Rooney as well as John Wodarek from the Steelers organization.  They have been real good to Bocephus!

How much of an influence was your father in your approach to music – both in what you wanted to emulate and in the desire to create your own direction?

I am who I am.  When I was young everyone wanted me to be exactly like daddy.  But that wasn’t me.  So the music now speaks for itself.

 You were born in Louisiana but are a self-professed Steelers fan. How did that come about – what about the Steelers made you become a fan?

You know I was born in the Shreveport Sanitarium in the same hospital as Terry Bradshaw.  I have been a fan and friend of the Steelers for many years!!!!

Who are some of the players you’ve gotten to know over the years and how?

I love soo many of the players.  Heinz Ward, Terry Bradshaw, Troy Palamalu, Ben Roethlisberger .. but I am very close with Bill Cowher.  I loved Cowher as we both understood each other very well.

What are some of your most memorable moments interacting with team members?

In my career with Monday Night Football, I have been to six Super Bowls.  But nothing is as fun as when I am at a Super Bowl with The Rooney Family at the After Party and we are celebrating the BIG Win!!

What are your thoughts about the team’s chances this season?

I think they have a chance.  Its about the rebuild and having strong players.

How familiar are you with the Pittsburgh music scene? Any musicians from the area you follow  – and how do you think the Pittsburgh music industry can improve and get more talent to be seen and heard nationally?

Well my buddy Wodarek with the Steelers has a band The Stickers.  I have been asked to sing on their record, so who knows what will happen.

What are some of your more memorable experiences playing in front of crowds in Pittsburgh?

Being on the stage is what we do.  Everything else is work.

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Theron Sapp, Steelers Fullback, 1963-1965

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First, can you let readers know what you  have been doing with yourself since your time in the NFL?

I retired from the Steelers in 1965 and got into the fried chicken business. I opened up a Maryland Fried Chicken franchise and ran that for thirty-five years. Along the way I opened a seafood restaurant and country western club in the early 70’s when country music was strong. Then I retired after thirty-five years is work.

You were known as the “Drought Breaker” in college. How did that name come about?

Georgia hadn’t beaten Georgia Tech in eight years and didn’t score a touchdown against them in three years. We played them in ’57 at Tech. I played both ways as most players did then and had a good game on offense and defense. I recovered a fumble and had the game winning touchdown. A Georgia politician wrote a poem about it – it was a big thing then in Georgia (laughing).

Continue reading “Theron Sapp, Steelers Fullback, 1963-1965”

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O’Brien: She knew Homestead and the Grays

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She knew Homesteadand the Grays

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien

I met a wonderful woman last week at the Heinz History Center.

Dolores Redwood is a spry 97-year-old treasure, with bright eyes and champagne-colored smooth skin, a quick wit and a memory that would be envied by anyone over 60.

         She is small in stature but big in my eyes because she experienced things I never experienced, and saw and heard things I never saw and heard, and I have always been excited to be in the company of someone like Dolores Redwood.

         I felt like I was on a first date, even though my wife of nearly 45 years, Kathleen, was sitting at my side.  Kathleen was just as captivated by the company of Dolores Redwood, a rare woman, indeed.

         This woman not only remembered her hometown ofHomesteadin a different era, but also the Homestead Grays.  She not only saw the Homestead Grays play but she also partied with the Homestead Grays.

         “They were a fine group of men,” she said with a wink of those bright eyes, “and they were fun to be around.  They liked to dance and I liked to dance.  When they were in town it would be a big weekend for the girls.”

         Ms. Redwood was at theHeinzHistoryCenter, along with her son Carl Redwood Jr., to be witness to a special event involving their good friend, Herb Douglas Jr.  The late Carl Redwood Sr. had been one of Herb’s closest friends.

         Young Carl teaches in theSchoolofSocial Workat theUniversityofPittsburghand is a community activist; always fighting for what he feels is deserved byPittsburgh’s African-American community. He serves as chairman of the Hill District Consensus Group which represents a host of community organizations.  He’s in frequent communication with the powers-that-be of the Pittsburgh Penguins to make sure the redevelopment of the Lower Hill has input from the community’s black leaders.

         HerbDouglasis proud of Carl Redwood Jr. and what he stands for, and the feeling is mutual.  HerbDouglaswas one of my boyhood heroes and he has stood the test of time.  He grew up in Hazelwood and still owns and maintains his boyhood home at160 Hazelwood Avenue.

         When I was in seventh and eighth grades at St. Stephen’sCatholicGrade Schoolback in 1955 and 1956, I often stood in front of theDouglashome, hoping to catch a glimpse of Herb Douglas, whom I heard had won a bronze medal in the 1948 Olympic Games.  Even then, I was a big fan of the Olympic Games, and even formed my own track & field team in my neighborhood.

         I would pass the home each Friday on the way to released-time classes in metal shop or wood shop atGladstoneJunior High School, just up the street from theDouglashome.  This was in the same neighborhood, mind you, where August Wilson lived for about four years as a teenager. Wilsonsaid he educated himself at the Carnegie Library branch between his home and the home of Herb Douglas. Wilsonwon two Pulitzer Prizes for his playwright efforts.

         More often than not, I would see Herb Douglas Sr., a proud blind man with his seeing-eye dog, a successful business man in an auto repair and storage shop in Shadyside, when it was unusual to see anyone with a seeing-eye dog.  Mr. Douglas had gone blind after suffering a stroke at age 41. His wife, Herb’s mother, was 27 at the time.

         Their son, Herb Jr., had been a star athlete at Gladstone Junior High and then Taylor Allderdice High, and then theUniversityofPittsburghafter a brief stay atXavierUniversityinNew Orleans.

         Herb was a sprinter and long jumper, and the second black behind Connellsville’s Jimmy Joe Robinson, to play football at Pitt in 1945, two years before Jackie Robinson broke the color line in Major League Baseball.

         Herb finished third in the long jump in the 1948 Olympic Games at Wembley Stadium in London.  Pitt is sponsoring Herb’s return to Londonfor this summer’s Olympic Games.  He is 90 now and still standing tall, even if he can’t do the long jump anymore.  Like Dolores Underwood, he still likes to dance, as he did for five minutes at his 90th birthday party that was held at theHeinzHistoryCenter.  “They pushed me into doing that,”Douglas declared.

         There were many prominent athletes at his 90th birthday party, such as Franco Harris and Tony Dorsett and Edwin Moses and Roger Kingdom, and other Olympic medal winners, as there always are at any shindig Herb hosts.  We were fortunate enough to attend his 80th and 85th birthday celebrations but couldn’t make his 90th shindig because we were inNew York at the Big East Basketball Tournament this past March.

         He has kept company with four American Presidents, Barack Obama being the latest, and the likes of South African President Nelson Mandela.  President Obama put his arm around Herb and told him, “I’m standing on your shoulders.  And I hope, when I’m 90, I look as good as you do.”

         HerbDouglas, along with Jackie Robinson and Joe Black of the Brooklyn Dodgers, were the first black athletes to parlay their success in sports into prominent positions with national corporations. Douglaswas an executive with Schieffelin & Somerset Co., a major importer of premium wine and spirits.

         I attended a church service inHomewoodwhen Herb’s friend Carl Redwood Sr., died 12 years ago.  I was there to offer my support to my friend Herb Douglas.  He had lost one of his closest friends and allies.  I had been advised by Art Rooney Sr. years earlier that it was more important to attend a funeral when a family member or friend loses someone than it is to attend that person’s funeral.

         I told Ms. Underwood I was there that day and she smiled.  “My husband was a good man,” she said.  “He was a handsome man and that got him in trouble a few times with me.  He could stray.  We separated for a long time, but we got back together.  That’s why I’m glad Carl Jr. is so busy.  He doesn’t have time to get in trouble.  He does a lot of community work.”

         Later, she referred to those comments as “trash talk.”  I found it intriguing and fascinating that a 97-year-old woman would use that phrase.

         Back in the ‘30s and ‘40s, the Homestead Grays played half their home games at Forbes Field inPittsburghand half their games at Griffith Stadium inWashington,D.C.  That was when segregation was rampant and blacks were not invited to play in the big leagues.

         “We’d even go to D.C. sometimes to see them play,” said Ms. Redwood.  “But my girlfriends and I loved it when they were back inPittsburghto play.  That would be a big event.”

         She rattled off some of the Grays she remembered, such as Josh Gibson, “Smokey” Joe Williams, Cool Papa Bell and Buck Leonard.  She said she’d never met Satchel Paige.  He pitched for the other Negro League team in town, the Pittsburgh Crawfords, who played their home games at Greenlee Field in The Hill.

         I was talking to Ms. Redwood on Friday afternoon.  My wife Kathie dropped me off afterward at theRobertoClementeBridgeso I could join my friend Ken Codeluppi and some of his fraternity brothers fromWest VirginiaUniversityat a Pirates’ game with the Detroit Tigers atPNCPark.

         As I passed through the turnstile near the corner of Robinson and Federal, near left field atPNCPark, I checked out the life-size statues of players from the Negro Leagues.  The Pirates put a mini-museum of the Negro Leagues in that large runway, and it was the first of its kind at a major league baseball park.  There are statues of the ballplayers Ms. Redwood had mentioned to me earlier, as well as those of Oscar Charleston and Judy Johnson, who played for the Pittsburgh Crawfords.

         Men who had played baseball as well as anyone in the country, and are enshrined at the Baseball Hall of Fame inCooperstown,N.Y., and perhaps had danced with Dolores Thompson, her name back then, were now statues.  They are also honored at the Black Baseball Hall of Fame inKansas City.

         It’s a shame Dolores Redwood won’t be in attendance at theHeinzHistoryCentertoday when there will be a tripleheader at theSportsMuseumto celebrate black baseball history.

         In a way I’m glad because I want to keep Dolores Redwood and her colorful stories to myself.

         I am a charter member of the Champions Committee at theWesternPennsylvaniaSportsMuseumat theHistoryCenterso I will be present for today’s activities.

         We will get the first look at the SportsMuseum’s new overture video and a sneak-peek of the new exhibit, The Story of Negro League Baseball: We Are the Ship.       

         There will be an unveiling of the new Josh Gibson life-like figure with the Josh Gibson Foundation and local media members present.  Sean Gibson, the grandson of Josh Gibson, who is a charter member of the Champions Committee, will be there.  Franco Harris, the committee chairman, should attend.

         There will be a preview party for the new exhibit withHistoryCentermembers featuring ballpark favorites such as hot dogs, popcorn and Cracker Jacks.

         Dolores Redwood was Dolores Thompson when she lived near the Homestead High-Level Bridge, which was renamed theHomesteadGraysBridgeback in 2002.

         Ms. Redwood knew Cum Posey and his family.  Cum Posey founded the Homestead Grays in 1912 and they stayed in business for 38 seasons.  Cum Posey had been the first black to play basketball atDuquesneUniversity.

         She knew the family of Mal Goode, who got his start as a newscaster on WHOD in Homesteadand went on to become the dean of African-American media, reporting on network television from around the world.  Mal Goode teamed up with his sister Mary Dee on WHOD, and they were thought to be the only brother-sister radio team in the country.  Ms. Redwood knew Mary Lou Williams of East Libertywho went on to become a singing star.           Ms. Redwood went to Pitt for two years on an academic scholarship.  “That’s where Herb and my husband first became friends,” she said.  “They both went on to graduate.”  She said she even did some writing for The Pittsburgh Courier, the city’s African-American weekly newspaper.

         Her family was originally from just outside ofLynchburg,Virginia.  “There were seven girls and one boy in our family,” she recalled.  “During the war they were looking for men to come and work in the mills inHomestead.  My brother and my father came here first.  Then my mother came here with seven girls on the train.

         “We lived in the lower part ofHomestead,” she said.  “Back then the people who lived high on the hill thought of themselves as high society.  Imagine that.  We were the common people down by the railroad tracks, the wrong side of the tracks I suppose.

         “We lived onSecond Avenue.  I graduated from Homestead High.  Mr. William Campbell was the athletic director back then, as I recall.  We went to see teams play at West Field, up near the cemetery.  We’d do things to help out at the ballpark.

         “When I went to Pitt, I used to walk across the High-Level Bridge and get a street-car, otherwise you had to pay two fares.  That was in 1931 and 1932, the height of The Great Depression.  Streetcar tokens were 10 cents apiece or three for 25 cents.  If you got on the street car on theHomesteadside of the bridge you had to pay two fares.

         “Our lives revolved around church back then.  We’d be there Saturday night and just about all day Sunday.  We never missed.  I sang in the church choir.  That was at the SecondBaptistChurchon 12th Avenue.  It’s still there.”

         And, thank God, so is Dolores Redwood.  As she spoke, I swear I could hear a church choir singing “Amazing Grace” in the background.  I went to theHeinzHistoryCenterto see Herb Douglas put many of his personal memorabilia into a time capsule, but I came upon a wonderful woman who proved to be the highlight of the day.

         It didn’t hurt that the Pirates played a terrific game that evening before a full house and tamed the Tigers, 4-1.

         Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien has books in his Pittsburgh Proud series called “Hometown Heroes” and “Glory Years.”  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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Jon Staggers, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1970-1971

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First, can you let readers know about your work teaching Breema, what Breema is and how you got started?

Breema is about self-understanding and self-realization. It’s about being present in the moment – it helps to support the finding of meaning and purpose to life by being in harmony with the mind, body and feelings. Finding harmony with life.

You can ask the mind to participate with the body, but you can’t control your feelings. In high school and college, you’re mostly working with the mind. As an athlete, you work with the body and ask the mind to participate. The feelings come naturally afterwards.

Continue reading “Jon Staggers, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1970-1971”

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