Kendall Simmons, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 2002-2008

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First, can you let readers know how you are doing these days and about your Swing 4 Diabetes and other efforts to help others with Diabetes?

Since retiring from the NFL, I am busy at home with my family. Soccer, gymnastics, dances; date night and homework with my three little girls and wife keep me busy.

Outside of the efforts to combat Diabetes, what else have you been doing since your time in the NFL?

I’m currently a National Spokesman for Novo Nordisk. Graphic design has always been a passion of mine, so I’ve doing a little freelance work. I’ve also taken advantage of the NFL Career Transition Program. The Swing 4 Diabetes Golf event my wife and a friend of ours put on every year is very important to us.

 

You were the first round pick of the Steelers in 2002 – how much pressure did you feel as a first rounder and how did you prove yourself to the players and coaches your rookie season? 

The first round pick has a lot of pressure on them to play immediately. There were two ways I wanted to prove myself to my team. I wanted to keep my mistakes to a minimum and to play fast. I would rather have had the coaches tell me to slow down then speed up.

You were a star defensive lineman in high school. What caused the conversion to the offensive line in college and how do you think playing defensive line in high school helped you as an offensive lineman?

I had to play both sides of the ball in high school. The offensive line coach at Auburn University who recruited me during that time was Rick Trickett.  Coach Trickett was the only coach that wanted me to play offense instead defense. He felt that I had a better chance of starting as a freshman on offense and making it to the NFL as an offensive lineman.

Who helped take you under their wing as a rookie and helped you adjust to life in the NFL – both on and off the field? How did they do so? 

Marvel Smith, Alan Faneca and Jeff Hartings all contributed to my growth while I was in Pittsburgh. Marvel Smith is like my brother off the field. Alan Faneca’s knowledge of the game and his physical approach is something I have always admired. I watched him closely and asked a lot of questions.

I owe Jeff Hartings a special thanks for letting me lean on him when it came to blocking assignments my rookie year. Hartings also taught me how to relax on the field.

You were diagnosed in 2003 with Diabetes – how did you take the news at first and how did the front office and coaches work with you after the diagnosis was made?

When I was diagnosed with diabetes in 2003 I did not know what was going on with me physically and if I would ever play again. I owe Mr. Dan Rooney, the owner of the Steelers at the time, special thanks. I really appreciate how he checked on me every time I saw him downstairs. I also owe the training staff John Norwig and Ryan Grove huge credit for going to all my doctors’ appointments at Faulk Clinic with me. They also did a great job with all my needs on the field.

How did the disease affect your play and preparation for the game after you returned to the field? What extra precautions and steps did you have to take to prepare for games each week? 

I did not realize at the first how hard it would be to feel normal again. It was very hard to get back to the level of performance needed to play in the NFL. I had to constantly check my blood glucose levels. I would test five to six times on practice days and on game days it went to about eight times. The only way I could feel well enough to play was when I kept my blood sugars below 180. That was extremely hard because adrenaline causes your blood sugar levels to rise.

My target numbers were 120 and 170. If I dropped below 80 or were higher than 180, it affected my performance.

Who were some of the biggest characters on those Steelers teams you played for – what made them so? Any examples?

Troy Polamalu! One night, Troy and a couple of the guys were hanging out. They decided to play a prank on my wife and I at 3 a.m. They rang our doorbell and ran away after leaving old food at our door. They came back again and this time, I let my Great Dane out on them. A year or so passed by until I found that Troy was behind it all.

You were released in 2009 and went on to play for the Patriots. How difficult was that release for you and how did playing for those new teams comparing not the Steelers?

Well putting those feelings into words is still very hard. It hurt and I really didn’t see it coming. It is difficult to get over until you realize football is a business.

Once I became a free agent, I had two options New England and Buffalo. The time I spent with the Patriots taught me to lean on God more and to realize that the grass isn’t always greener on the other side.

I felt as if I fit in at Buffalo from the time I got there. Sean Kugler was the offensive line coach while I was there.  He made the transition easier for me. Neither team compared to Pittsburgh.

What were your best memories of your time in Pittsburgh and what made them so?

The first game that I started at Heinz Field versus the Raiders. Bringing my family down onto the field for Super Bowl XL. Some of the best memories for me during my time in Pittsburgh were the life long relationships I built with some of the players and front office personnel.

Any last thoughts for readers?

There are no other fans like Steeler fans in professional sports.  My NFL career changed me a lot as a person but I will ALWAYS be a Steeler.  That will never change.

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Lynn Swann, Owner Pittsburgh Power, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1974-1982

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How did you learn the skills to be an owner – did you use NFL post-career services or other means to learn?

It’s a business number one. I think years of playing sports  and being around sports – working in broadcasting, talking to  owners, GMs – you learn a good deal. You learn what your role has to be and what you want it to be.

And what did you decide your role with the Power organization would be?

Some owners like Jerry Jones in Dallas want to be hands on on a weekly basis. They want that appearance – who knows what they are really doing behind closed doors. Al Davis was like that as well – intimately involved in every decision.

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Courtney Hawkins, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1997-2000

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Courtney Hawkins:

First, can you let readers know about your job as a high school football coach and  Athletic Director at your alma mater  – how did you get started and what do you enjoy most about the position?

I moved back to Michigan and when I got here, my alma mater was struggling on the football field. They won eleven games over a ten year period. A lot of people there knew I was living nearby and they approached me about coaching. At first I was apprehensive, but then I applied and got the job.

About four or five weeks later, the athletic director got another job so I applied for that too and got it.

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Chuck Logan, Steelers Tight End, 1964

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First, can you let readers know how your NFL career got started?

In 1964, I was drafted in the seventh round by the Chicago Bears and in the 15th round by the Denver Broncos of the AFL. I was selected 1st team All-Big 10 and third team All American at Northwestern University.

In those days, you had to play both offense and defense. I played both tight end on offense and defensive end. I selected the Bears since I was born and raised in Chicago and lived one mile from Wrigley Field, home to both the Cubs and Bears.

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Dwight Stone, Steelers Wide Receiver/Return Specialist, 1987-1994

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First, can you let readers know about your post-NFL career in law enforcement – what area of law enforcement you’ve been working in and how you got involved?

SRO/Patrol/Emergency Officer – ten years on the force  .

What lessons from your days in Pittsburgh – coaching and playing – have influenced you most since your time in the NFL, and how so?

Be accountable…Make no excuse… What you do when nobody looking…tells the Character of the person…. Finally, “PUT THE LORD FIRST THE REST WILL FALL IN PLACE”

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Craig Veasey, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1990-1992

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First, can you let readers know what you’ve bene doing with yourself since the NFL?

I’m back in school now, at the University of Houston. I’m getting my B.S. in Construction Management. I worked at a remodeling company for a time, then became a superintendent and project manager for a home building company.

I left that company to become the vice-president elsewhere, then went on to own my own custom home building company. But after my mother died, and with the recession, I just got tired of it.

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Frank Lambert, Steelers Punter, 1965-1966

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First, can you let readers know about your career as a history professor – how did you get started and what appeals to you most about it? 

As a young boy I was an avid reader, with a special interest in history and biography. In 1985, with much encouragement from my wife Beth, I enrolled in the Ph.D. program in American History at Northwestern University.  I was forty-three years old and not at all sure that a university with be interested in someone as old as I would be when I graduated.

But, in 1991, I landed a great position at Purdue University as professor of Colonial and Revolutionary American History.  I have been there now for twenty-one years, and what a great life it has been.  I spend my time reading, thinking, teaching, and writing, and I get to do all of that on a beautiful campus with bright young people.

For me it is a dream job.

Continue reading “Frank Lambert, Steelers Punter, 1965-1966”

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Chris Calloway, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1990-1991

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First, can you let readers know what you’ve been doing with yourself since you retired from the NFL and how you got involved in this work?

Since retiring from the NFL in 2001, I got into some entrepreneurial things such as real estate, night club ownership, IT executive recruiting and Network Marketing which all ended around 2009.

After that I interned with a couple of NFL teams (Miami and the Ravens). Currently I am looking for an opportunity in sports, preferably as an assistant player development guy with a NFL team.

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Hardy Nickerson, Steelers Linebacker, 1987-1992

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First, can you tell readers about your coaching career – how you got started and what you enjoy most about coaching?

I got started when I began coaching my kids after I retired from the NFL. I found myself coaching the kid’s baseball, softball, basketball and football games. I took an internship afterwards with the Bears in 2004 and enjoyed it. I guess I caught the coaching bug.

I coached the kids’ school teams and then became the linebackers coach for the Bears in 2007. My mother-in-law got sick and passed away, so I resigned from my position with the Bears and went back to coaching my kids in North Carolina. When my daughter got accepted to Cal, we moved out there.

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Jerame Tuman, Steelers Tight End, 1999-2007

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First, can you tell readers about R.A.W. Training and what else you’ve been doing since you retired from the NFL? 

Since my retirement from the NFL, my wife (Molly) and I along with co-owner Amy Butteri have opened a training facility called R.A.W. (Realize the Athlete Within) Training in the North Hills.  Our foundation for our facility is Crossfit based.  In short we are strength and conditioning system built on constantly varied, if not randomized, functional movements executed at high intensity.

We have been operating our gym for about three years now.  I have also been competing in Crossfit competitions for the last three years with my wife and members from our gym.

Most importantly, since my retirement I have been able to spend more time with my son and three daughters.  I have coached their football, softball, soccer, basketball, wrestling, and baseball teams.

Continue reading “Jerame Tuman, Steelers Tight End, 1999-2007”

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