Say, remember that NFL player who quit his pro career to enlist?

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Sad news:
Former NFL Player Killed in Afghanistan
WASHINGTON - Pat Tillman was killed in Afghanistan after walking away from a multimillion-dollar NFL contract to join the Army Rangers, U.S. officials said Friday.

Tillman, who served with the Army Rangers, was 27.

Although the military had not officially confirmed his death, the White House put out a statement of sympathy that praised Tillman as "an inspiration both on an off the football field."

Former Cardinals head coach Dave McGinnis said he felt both overwhelming sorrow and tremendous pride in Tillman, who "represented all that was good in sports."

"Pat knew his purpose in life," McGinnis said. "He proudly walked away from a career in football to a greater calling."

Several of Tillman's friends have said the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks influenced his decision to enlist...

Kingfish Disraeli (Kingfish), Friday, 23 April 2004 17:56 (twenty-two years ago)

AMERICA IN CARING MORE ABOUT THE LIVES OF CELEBS THAN ANYONE ELSE SHOCKER

andrew 'dean!' clay (deangulberry), Friday, 23 April 2004 18:06 (twenty-two years ago)

He wasn't a "celeb". That's kinda the whole point. He gave up the potential to become any kind of "celeb" to become an anonymous military man. And now he's dead. It's really fucking sad.

Broheems (diamond), Friday, 23 April 2004 18:39 (twenty-two years ago)

AMERICA IN CARING MORE ABOUT THE LIVES OF CELEBS THAN ANYONE ELSE SHOCKER

Oh WHAT A REALLY NICE THING TO SAY, you fucking fuckface.

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Friday, 23 April 2004 18:47 (twenty-two years ago)

I went to high school with Pat Tillman. He was in my driver's ed class. Nice guy, and the most dominating athlete I've ever seen anywhere (he was the best punter, kicker, offensive player, defensive player, and kick returner in our league, which was really good at the time). His college/NFL career was amazing -- he was so undersized, but just kicked ass all over the place because he wanted to. This whole story is just so weird to me.

Kris (aqueduct), Friday, 23 April 2004 19:22 (twenty-two years ago)

He almost kicked my ass once. Would've been quite justified at the time, and in hindsight, quite an honor, but he was on his way out with some girl and probably thought it would be unseemly to soil his clothes with my deathblood.

Kris (aqueduct), Friday, 23 April 2004 19:26 (twenty-two years ago)

one of my neighbors, who drove me & his sister to freshman year of high school and went on to play Div-II football, got tired of his post-school econ job and went and signed up himself in the mid-90's. i think he did ranger training at one point, and last i heard was over in the phillipines. not sure if he's been redeployed to iraq/afg yet...

Kingfish Disraeli (Kingfish), Friday, 23 April 2004 19:45 (twenty-two years ago)

http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=wojnarowski_adrian&id=1788533


By Adrian Wojnarowski
Special to ESPN.com

Pat Tillman never wanted to be a big story nor an American hero. He just wanted to do his duty, as proudly and anonymously as the soldiers who stood by his side.

There were no news conferences, no interviews, no parades, no self-congratulations. A year ago, Tillman left his new wife, Marie, his $3.6 million NFL contract and disappeared into the desert night.

He fought with the Army Rangers in Eastern Afghanistan, chasing al-Qaida and Taliban into the dark corners and dangerous shadows. In the end, he turned out to be one more soldier returning home to the sad, sad sound of Taps.

With his ultimate sacrifice, Tillman serves as a reminder that there are so many more coming home just like him: Draped under an American flag, tears flowing over the casket.

He never explained one of the most surprising stories in sports, an Arizona Cardinal leaving the glamour, the money, the good life for an enlistment wage of $18,000 and the risk of that firefight on Thursday that cost him his life.

September 11, 2001 didn't inspire Tillman to wear a flag on his football helmet or sing the "Star Spangled Banner" a little louder on Sundays. It inspired an epiphany that most Americans would've never stopped long enough to consider -- never mind act upon.

Without ever meeting him, without ever hearing him completely detail his motives, it seems that what Pat Tillman would've wanted today was for everyone to remember those Americans and allies dying every day in Afghanistan and Iraq. The ultimate sacrifice wasn't walking away from football and a fortune, because clearly his principles and priorities transcended the values of the culture. To Tillman, it seemed, the ultimate sacrifice belonged to the fathers and mothers who left families back in the States, whose deaths merit a story in the hometown paper and a red, white and blue wreath in the cemetery.

Tillman is a face for today, and maybe America needed that, because everyone had started to grow numb to the mounting losses overseas, that lost sense of the tragedy that unfolded every day there. The big, fancy battles that finished with the fall of Baghdad no longer fill television screens, and maybe Americans who became lost again in the every day minutia needed a kick in the stomach.

Today's loss turned out to be Pat Tillman. Maybe he never believed that this could be the result of his brave choice to enlist, but more than a year later, there is clearly a bright lining to his dark loss: The way that no one else could have -- for better or worse, for whatever it says of our society -- one familiar face made millions of Americans stop and consider the sacrifices of those serving with him.

Selflessness is thrown around too carelessly in sports -- ballplayers made out to be heroes when they're willing to switch positions. Pat Tillman, though, has transcended even the highest standards of selflessness and sacrifice, and his life and death will take on what they deserve: mythical proportions.

There will be no footage, no tape, no real records of him describing the details of his decision, of talking on and on about the choice he made. And maybe, he understood: Such navel-gazing was completely unnecessary.

In a climate where everyone talks so much about so little, Pat Tillman believed that sometimes a man needed to make a stand in his life. His spoke for himself, yes, but in the end, his death spoke too -- for the sacrifice of every soldier without a voice.

An American hero died in Afghanistan on Thursday, but what Pat Tillman was able to remind everyone back home was that, tragically, this isn't so unusual. They are dying every day.

Broheems (diamond), Saturday, 24 April 2004 03:36 (twenty-two years ago)

one year passes...
A very interesting San Francisco Chronicle piece.

alex in montreal (alex in montreal), Monday, 26 September 2005 15:52 (twenty years ago)

America needs its heroes.

And this is why.

Sad.

mark grout (mark grout), Tuesday, 27 September 2005 09:05 (twenty years ago)


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