Scott Brown, Steelers Reporter and Author, Heaven Sent: The Heather Miller Story

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Scott Brown,  Author and Staff Writer, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

First, can you let readers know about your new book, “Heaven Sent: The Heather Miller Story,”. What prompted you to write the story and how difficult of a story was it to tell?

The book evolved from a newspaper story I wrote in late June of 2010 about the unique relationship that Heather Miller formed with a handful of people in the Steelers’ organization during her 16-month battle with cancer. There was so much I wasn’t able to get in the story because of space limitations and I later approached Wendy Miller, Heather’s mother, about turning the story into a book.

We met close to ten times in 2011 but the book never really got traction for several reasons, and then I got busy covering the Steelers again and we pretty much lost contact. We set up a meeting in late January of 2012 to see if we could revive the project, and I don’t think either one of us had much optimism in anything happening. But something clicked that day and from there we met regularly and everything started falling into place, and it came out in early December.

It was a difficult book to write and I’d be lying if it wasn’t emotionally draining at times. But, as I’ve told Wendy and others countless times, I had the easy part. She is the one who had to re-live something no parent should ever have to go through. Without her collaboration there is no book. That and the fact that we incorporated some of her writing from when Heather was sick and after she passed is the reason why I insisted that her name also go on the cover of the book.

What surprised you most as you spoke to the Miller family and wrote the book?

The thing that surprised me most is how open Wendy was throughout the interview process. She said from the start that she wanted to give an honest, unflinching look at dealing with cancer as well as the grief after Heather passed away. She held herself to that standard no matter how tough it was at times. I’ve had many people ask me how did I not cry the whole time while writing the book? Part of the reason for that is, again, I had the easy part.

Clearly, the Steelers organization was supportive of the Miller family throughout Heather’s battles. Can you give readers a glimpse of how the players and front office helped show support to Heath and his family?

The Steelers were, simply put, awesome in supporting Heather and the Millers. Probably what Heather cherished most was spending time with the players and not talking about football but simply hanging out and doing things that 10-year-olds love to do, and I think they really appreciated how she treated them as regular people and not just football players.

One story I do write about in the book is what Troy did before Heather’s first major surgery. He left the jersey he wore in the 2008 AFC Championship Game as a surprise for Heather at Children’s Hospital on a Friday, and she was scheduled to have surgery on Monday. Heather was so excited — and kept guessing what the surprise might be — that it took her mind off the surgery that weekend. Then, after receiving the jersey, it allowed her to take an air of confidence into the surgery, and that is one example of what the Steelers did to pick her up when she needed it.

Book proceeds go to several cancer-focused causes. How did you choose which to support and was the Miller family involved in those decisions?

The book benefits a handful of causes from Western Pennsylvania Make-A-Wish Foundation and the Brian Morden Foundation, an Altoona-based charity that supported Heather and the Millers, to Penn State’s Dance Marathon. Also, proceeds are going to the oncology department at Children’s Hospital in Troy’s name. Since he was so gracious in doing interviews and allowing us to use a picture of him and Heather for the book cover we wanted to make sure some of the proceeds went to a cause of his choosing.

Where can readers purchase the book?

The book is available at a variety of stores in the Bedford/Altoona area and some in Pittsburgh. It is probably best for people to buy from the website www.milsonpublishing.com. Orders are shipped the day after they are received and there is a lot of other cool stuff on the site, including videos featuring Heather and the Steelers.

As a journalist, how difficult is it for you when you become close to the players in your daily coverage of them, especially with the added process of book-writing, and still remain impartial and sometimes critical of them in your reporting?

It wasn’t difficult doing the book and covering the team because before I even doubled back and talked to players like Troy Polamalu, Heath Miller and Casey Hampton, I had accepted a move to cover the newly created Penn State/golf beat. The good thing is I still had access to players and coaches since I covered the Steelers through the end of OTAs in June, but I have not covered them at all since then.

What have been some of the most interesting stories and people you’ve reported on so far in your career, and what made them so?

Wow, there have been so many great stories and people I’ve met since I got into the business. And a lot of the best stories are ones that never saw print because they came in off the record sessions with players or coaches/managers in a small group of reporters they trusted and allowed them to put their guard down.

I covered spring training when I worked for Florida Today, and covered Frank Robinson, who managed the Expos/Nationals for a couple of years and was as old school as they come. He would often chat off the record after his morning meeting with the reporters who covered the team every day and keep in mind spring training is relaxed by nature because of the gorgeous March weather and the fact that every team is still undefeated. Those sessions were so memorable because it was a living legend Frank Robinson telling stories and giving his opinions (and he often had strong ones) about the game.

The one I can relay with some editing is this. Someone asked Frank one day about a player who had been a borderline candidate for the Hall of Fame gain entrance one year. Sparing that player’s name Frank said, “(So and so) is in the Hall of Fame, but I am a Hall of Famer.” It was classic Frank, who I think is one of the most underrated all-time greats in any sport. Another side that people didn’t always see to regarding the person who had a reputation for being gruff and at times surly: Robinson sitting on a golf cart after a spring training practice or game and signing for everything that had waited for him. The only thing he wouldn’t sign were bats because he knew people would try to sell them. Good for him.

You’ve written five books – what do you enjoy about that process versus the daily reporting you do?

The thing that I enjoy about books is the process is so different from the daily grind of newspapers. There is time to actually report and write, and you sure as heck better do your reporting if you are writing a non-fiction book or you are not going to have a very long or substantive book. Plus, there aren’t the space limitations that are reality when working for newspapers, especially now when editors are as convinced as ever that shorter is the way to go given everything else that is competing for readers’ attention.

Which has been your favorite book to write so far – and do you have plans for another book soon?

I’m not sure I have a favorite book but “Heaven Sent: The Heather Miller Story” is the most meaningful thing I have ever done professionally and maybe in my life. It has had such a profound effect on my on several levels, and I have become so close with Wendy and her family that they really have become a second family to me. The most gratifying thing is some of the reviews we have gotten from readers who said reading the book helped put something they were dealing with into perspective and how they drew inspiration from the story even though Heather passed away from cancer. That tells you what kind of impact she had on people.

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Mel Holmes, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1971-1973

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

First, after reading certain excerpts of your site, I find it to be a good -long overdue. It interviews real players, and get real facts about life in the NFL, and not second-hand opinion from someone that’s never played the game!

Right now life could not be sweeter! Since leaving pro football, I like many present and former players, ventured out into a few private business ventures of my own, most notably as a Burger King Restaurant franchisee/owner.

Continue reading “Mel Holmes, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1971-1973”

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Al Young, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1971-1972

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

I bumped around a lot and played in the World Football League for it’s two years of existence. Then  I got started in teaching and coaching and have been doing that for the last thirty-six years. Football, basketball and track…. Now I just coach basketball – I gave football up five or six years ago.

What lessons from your playing days do you find yourself applying to your coaching career?

The biggest thing is just the organization of things. I didn’t know how to organize practices when I started, for example. Remembering how the Steelers organized their practices and how we learned – I followed those examples.

Continue reading “Al Young, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1971-1972”

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Is Something Amiss with the Draft Process?

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In years past, one never heard a litany of Steelers veterans speak out so vehemently about young players not listening – not like we’ve heard this season. Larry Foote, Troy Polamalu, Casey Hampton, Ryan Clark have all spoken out about their frustrations with some of the younger players. Veteran defensive end Brett Keisel went so far as to say that the veterans have tried getting the younger players to listen  when they tell them  they need to work harder – but that the younger players simply “weren’t listening to them.”

This invoked questions about the leadership capabilities of these veterans. But ultimately what power do veterans have over other players? And to take the matter further, why has it become such an issue…now?

Over the past few seasons, the Steelers have drafted a number of players with issues. Not so much the character issues – like those of Chris Rainey who was just today arrested on domestic battery charges (he was also arrested for similar charges at the University of Florida), Mike Adams (failed drug test), Sean Spence (involved in a school scandal). More to the issue are the work ethic issues. Cameron Heyward has been called out for playing too nice and taking plays off. Mendenhall has been benched a few times for not preparing well and other issues. Curtis Brown admitted to not properly preparing for the Steelers game versus Baltimore.  Keenan Lewis just this season decided to become more focused. Ditto Evander Hood on getting in shape. Keith Butler this season called out Lamarr Woodley for not staying in shape, hence his hamstring issues that kept him out much of the season. Butler also said Jason Worilds was not playing hard enough – not giving it his all. Jonathan Dwyer has yet to prove he can stay in shape. Alamaeda Ta’amu was drafted with known weight issues. And of course…there’s Mike Wallace.

This latest draft class alone, by the way, has had four players now with legal issue. Alameda, Spence, Adams, and Rainey.

This team was desperate enough this season to reach out to Plexico Burress, as Tomlin called him, as a source of leadership to its young receivers.  Plexico Burress. As a source of leadership.

In that aforementioned mix are three first round picks, two second round picks and a few third round picks. These aren’t the low-round picks you can afford to take character/work ethic issue flyers on.

And we’re starting to see the impact.

Who are the next group of leaders on this team? Maurkice Pouncey has the look of a leader. But, who else? Sean Spence may fill that role – he has a reputation for being so. But this group of young players seems separate and apart from the character of Steelers players we’ve seen this team draft in the past.

Is it a trend? If so, is it a Steelers trend, or a societal trend of more “me-me” people in general?

Or is it an issue with how the Steelers now approach the draft? If so, what changed? Are they taking more risks? Are they foregoing character for talent more so than in the past?

Whatever the cause, this draft needs to turn the tide. Talent can’t overcome work ethic concerns – not in the NFL. And if there’s another draft class of Mendenhalls and Wallaces – this team could find itself resembling the Bengals teams of years past, where players are more concerned about personal stats than winning, and where in-fighting occurs.

The biggest concern – this group of younger players will be the mentors for all that come after them, just as the veterans have mentored them and so on over the years. How comfortable do you feel with these young players acting as mentors to the next wave of draftees?

Keep in mind the sanctity of that mentoring culture in Pittsburgh too. Few if any teams have such a mentoring culture as does the Steelers, where players put aside their own job security concerns daily to coach up the young players that very well may replace them. I’m not certain that is appreciated enough about this team by fans. This uniqueness of this culture in the NFL – really, anywhere.

And it’s in danger of being lost, or corrupted, by this new core of young players who seem much less reliable in this regard.

This draft needs to have the character of the drafts that have delivered the likes of Hines Ward and Carnell Lake, of Aaron Smith and Troy Polamalu. If not for the present, for the sake of all the draftees that come after them.

-Ron

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Jim O’Brien: L.C. Greenwood still working to please his father Moses

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L.C. Greenwood still working to please his father Moses

By Jim O’Brien.For Pittsburgh Business Times

L.C. Greenwood has a look that says he knows something you don’t know.  He is still a formidable figure, at 6-6 ½ and 240 to 250 pounds – don’t forget that ½ inch even though he probably lost it after he turned 60 – but he has a warm smile and a laugh that is more of a deep-throated chortle.  His manner makes one comfortable in his company.

He is 66 now, wiser than ever, and the one thing he is not going to tell you is what L.C. stands for.  It’s his little secret.

The Super Bowl will soon be played, alas without the Steelers this season, and it will be a reminder that Greenwood was one of the stalwarts of The Steel Curtain defensive unit of the Steelers that helped secure six division championships and four Super Bowl titles in a six-year span in the ‘70s when the Steelers ruled the National Football League.

Greenwood is reminded every morning when he gets out of bed of those glory days.  “My back is all messed up,” said Greenwood, as he sat across the table at The Club at Nevillewood in Presto, Pa.  “I’ve had 15 back surgeries and I will probably need another before too long.”

He wasn’t able to play golf this year, but he still showed up to mix with former teammates and the paying customers.

Greenwood loves to play golf and he gets invited to the biggest celebrity golf outings in the country because he was good enough to be named All Pro twice and played in six Pro Bowls and, better yet, mixes well with the field.  He was credited with 73.5 sacks and 14 fumble recoveries in 13 seasons (1969-1981).  Knee injuries forced his retirement right before the 1982 season.

He did some national TV commercials in those Miller Light ads that featured former NFL stars, and he still gets some local commercials to help peddle diamond jewelry.

He gets gigs at this time of year to meet and greet at corporate parties or conferences, as does former teammates Andy Russell, Jack Ham, Mike Wagner and Rocky Bleier.

Ham and Joe Greene, who flanked Greenwood on the left side of the Steelers’ defensive unit, have both gone on record to say that L.C. belongs in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  He came close but failed to garner enough support in his 15 years of eligibility.

He can still make it, on a special veterans’ committee nomination, the way former Steelers such as Jack Butler and John Henry Johnson were eventually inducted.

L.C. Greenwood has kept an office on West Main Street in Carnegie since his playing days.  He used to operate Greenwood Enterprises there and was associated with Monaloh Basin Engineers.  They were involved in engineering, highway work, coal, natural gas and you name it.

Now his company is called Greenwood-McDonald Supply Co., Inc., a supplier of electrical equipment to manufacturers and retail outlets.

His long-time partner Jim McDonald of Washington, Pa., calls Greenwood “patient, humble, cautious and quiet.  What you see is what you get when it comes to L.C.”  Greenwood’s office is sparsely furnished, but there are framed prints of pro football players on the wall behind his desk.  He has a secretary-receptionist fielding his phone calls.

Greenwood still stands out in a crowd even when he’s not wearing gold Nike shoes as he often did during his playing days with the Steelers.  He was known as a flashy dresser and Pittsburgh broadcaster Myron Cope used to conduct “dress-offs” in the Steelers locker room between Greenwood and John “Frenchy” Fuqua, famous for his involvement with Franco Harris in “The Immaculate Reception” and for donning capes and having goldfish in the heels of his shoes.

L.C. grew up in Canton, Mississippi and never dreamed of ever being glorified in Canton, Ohio at the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  He went out for football in high school mostly to get away from the constant chores that awaited him at home.

“My dad wasn’t satisfied unless I was working all the time,” allowed L.C.  “My dad  (Moses Greenwood) left home at 6 in the morning, and he didn’t get back until 6 in the evening.  And then, after dinner, he’d leave the house and go work somewhere else from eight to midnight.  Plus, he kept a farm for us, and he was a lay preacher on weekends.  Football wasn’t important.  Keeping the family fed was.”

Jim O’Brien’s new book is called “Immaculate Reflections.”  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

 

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Dick Shiner, Steelers Quarterback, 1968-1969

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

What I did when I let Pittsburgh…well, first, I played 11 years total in the NFL. Two with the Steelers. I planned on playing another year or two but I reached a point where my back was not real good and I had two Achilles tendons that were bruised. I decided then to retire.

I came back home to Lebanon, PA. I bought a retail beer distributorship and spent six-to-seven years doing that. Then I went to Washington, DC and went into the copier business with Xerox, then Sharp Electronics. That was from about ’83 to 2005. I fully retired afterward – driving 220 miles every day to and from DC was just too much.

Continue reading “Dick Shiner, Steelers Quarterback, 1968-1969”

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Rick Moser, Running Back, 1978-1979, 1981-1982

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First, can you tell readers what you have been doing with yourself since your time in the NFL and how you got involved in acting?

I guess I’ll start at the beginning with the acting.

Just after Super Bowl XIV (1980) I moved out to California for the off-season. Why spend the winter & spring in Pittsburgh, instead of sunny warm California were my thoughts. Off-season workouts with the team were not mandatory back then. Anyway – one day I got a call to come back to Pittsburgh to play a team member in Rocky Bleier’s movie “Fighting Back”. They paid for first class airfare, hotel and I think it was $150 per day to basically be a Player/Extra in the background. I remember going up to the Director the first morning of shooting and saying “Make me a Star”. Later on in the day the Director asked me if I wanted to play the role of “the Rookie”. My first scene was with Joe Greene in the weight room. My lines were “Hey Joe , who’s that guy Audie Murphy?”. That one sentence made me SAG (Screen Actors Guild) scale pay for the week which was about 2-3 times what the other Extra Players were making plus I got residuals which I still get to this day whenever it shows (rarely). All totaled, I probably made $5,000 over the decades vs. probably $750-$1000  for the other guys.

Continue reading “Rick Moser, Running Back, 1978-1979, 1981-1982”

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Mullins pans for black & gold in Saxonburg these days

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Jim O’Brien: Mullins pans for black & gold in Saxonburg these days

By Jim O’Brien From the Pittsburgh Business Times         

Saxonburg is not Pittsburgh, but it suits Gerry “Moon” Mullins just fine.  For one thing, he doesn’t have to wear a suit to the office.  Every day on Saxonburg’s Main Street is Casual Friday.

“I usually wear a golf shirt, sometimes a sweater, jeans and a baseball cap if it’s cold,” said Mullins, looking at ease behind his big desk.  “I’m getting a little thin on top.”

Mullins wore the black and gold uniform of the Pittsburgh Steelers for nine seasons (1972 to 1980).  He was a starting offensive guard most of that time and earned four Super Bowl rings.  Alas, he was also the first of those Steelers from the four league championship teams to be cut, the last casualty of the 1981 training camp.

Then he was traded to the Cleveland Browns, but he decided he’d had enough.  “The body can only withstand so many bumps and bruises,” he said.  “I was pretty beaten up by then.  And I wanted to stay in Pittsburgh.”

He walks a little gingerly these days.  “I’ve got the usual occupational aches and pains,” he said.  “But I can’t complain.  I’m proud to have played for the Steelers and I’m still a Steeler.”

That was quite a switch from when he first came to a Steelers’ orientation camp in January of 1972.  He was a California boy and had played his college ball at Southern Cal.  “It was cold and gray when I got here,” he recalled, “and I wondered what I’d gotten myself into.”

He shared a pad with teammates Terry Bradshaw and Mike Wagner in an unfinished apartment building near the Squirrel Hill Tunnels and it was a bleak beginning.  But it got better.  He went from blocking for O.J. Simpson at USC to blocking for Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier at Three Rivers Stadium.

“I was lucky to be with a team that accomplished some special things,” said Mullins.  “People recall us fondly from those teams and it still makes you welcome at most gatherings.”

Mullins took a year off after his football career came to an abrupt halt, and then he got into his “life’s work,” as his coach Chuck Noll always referred to it.  Legendary Pirates’ broadcaster Bob Prince, of all people, boosted him as a worthy candidate to a next-door neighbor in Upper St. Clair who was seeking someone he could groom to eventually succeed him as president and owner of Industrial Metals & Minerals Company then located in South Fayette, just over the border from Bridgeville.

Bob Keaney took Mullins under his wings and worked with him for 14 years before turning over the company to Mullins in 1995.  “He did a masterful job of preparing me for heading the firm,” said Mullins.  He’s been at it ever since.  “It’s funny how things work out; it really has been my life’s work.”

Now 63, Mullins has moved the company to Saxonburg, just below Butler, and about a 45-minute drive to Pittsburgh.  “I get dressed up in a suit when I have to make business calls,” he said.  He sells raw materials to industrial companies.  “Saxonburg is Small Town America…a couple of stop signs…and that’s fine with me.”

Mullins says the business isn’t as strong as it used to be, like most companies involved in heavy industry, but he makes a good living.  “It’s like playing football,” he said.  “You have to be self-motivated.  Like football, you’re reluctant to let go.  You have to know when to say when.”

He has not tapped into his NFL pension or Social Security, and doesn’t plan to do so until he is 65.  “I have a good life out here,” he said.  “I live just four miles from my office.  Joan is my second wife. She has a good job and we’ve been together for 17 years.  Our kids have gone to college and are out on their own.”

His office is a second floor suite in a quaint two-story white building in Dinnerbell Square.  “I have to be here to answer the phone and write orders.  I’m like a fireman waiting for the alarm to go off and I respond to it.”

There is no Steeler stuff in his office: no trophies, plaques or pictures.  “That’s at my home,” he said.  Instead, his walls are adorned with antlered deer and elk, mounted game fish and birds, and a collection of colored glass bottles and vases behind his head.  He had gone out the day before on the first day of deer hunting in Pennsylvania.  He was one of the Steelers from his era that used to shoot clay pigeons at the Millvale Sportsmen’s Club.

He has gone from being a California beach boy to a Pennsylvania outdoorsman.

“I was always kinda laidback, but I’m not afraid to work.  I had to work hard at football.  I operated out of fear; I didn’t want to incur the wrath of Chuck Noll.”

Author Jim O’Brien has a new book out,” Immaculate Reflections: A Pittsburgh View of Sports.”  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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Mike Logan, Steelers Safety, 2001-2006

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First, can you let readers know about your coaching job – what you like most about the job and how you chose to take it?

I coach High School football at University Prep. Prep is a city league school located in the Hill District. I enjoy mentoring kids. I tell my players that I’m a life skills teacher who understands football.

I want these kids to have success off the field as well as on it. I want to help these kids understand that they have a purpose in life bigger than being an outstanding athlete. These kids are resilient. They don’t have all the resources that bigger schools have available to them, but they press on.

Continue reading “Mike Logan, Steelers Safety, 2001-2006”

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Todd Kalis, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1994, Current President of the NFL Alumni Association’s Pittsburgh Chapter

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First, can you let readers know what you’ve been doing with yourself since football and how you got started in the various ventures you’ve worked in?

I’ve held various sales and marketing positions since leaving the game, both at the local and national level. I also got involved with the NFL Alumni Association which is a 5013c charitable organization. I’ve been president of the Pittsburgh chapter for the past twelve years.

I also wrote a book two years ago – called Pigskin Dreams. It’s about the childhood of twenty-two NFL Hall of Fame players and who influenced the development of their character, co-written with Dr. Stephen Below. I personally conducted all the interviews and highlight twenty-two in the first book. These players were the foundation of the NFL, Ditka, Dorsett, Unitas, Butkus, Csonka, etc…Bob Costas, Art Rooney and Roger Goodell all contributed jacket quotes.

Continue reading “Todd Kalis, Steelers Offensive Lineman, 1994, Current President of the NFL Alumni Association’s Pittsburgh Chapter”

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