Article: Pro sports need more guys like this

Angus

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Pro sports need more guys like Herron

By Mike Vandermause

Barely a day goes by without a professional athlete doing something stupid or unlawful.

It has become so bad in the National Football League that Commissioner Roger Goodell recently felt compelled to institute a code of conduct with stricter punishment and enforcement.

There's enough bad behavior in the sports world to keep police, prosecutors and lawyers busy for a long time. It easily could make someone jaded toward all pro athletes.

But then you listen to Green Bay Packers running back Noah Herron, and your perspective changes. You realize not all athletes believe they are the center of the universe. Some actually care about other people. They reach out and offer their time and talent — not for money, but because it's the right thing to do.

For the last three months, Herron has been wearing a bracelet with the inscription, "Here's to the heroes." He got it in March when he and some of his Packers teammates went to Alaska to show support for U.S. soldiers who recently had returned from Iraq.

Imagine a group of Packers choosing to spend a week of their offseason on the true frozen tundra in Fairbanks, Alaska, where temperatures dipped to minus-40. For Herron, along with Dave Rayner, Kevin Barry, Patrick Dendy and Josh Bourke, it was a humbling experience.

"It gives you so much perspective on people who work even harder than us just to protect our way of life, just so we can wake up every morning and feel safe," said Herron of American troops. "There are a lot of hours, a lot of time and a lot of lives lost just to maintain it."

Herron has been busy this offseason, not only training to stay in tip-top football shape, but reaching out to others.

He spent Super Bowl weekend with Navy troops on an aircraft carrier off the coast of Florida. He has spoken at schools and to various community groups. Along with Rayner, he has helped organize a charity golf event this week at Camelot Country Club near Fond du Lac that will raise money to fight domestic abuse.

"I think it's important," Herron said of his community involvement. "There's a lot of bad rep that goes on with professional athletes, football players in particular. … It's important to give back."

While the bad apples tend to dominate the headlines, Herron quietly goes about his business of making positive contributions to society. Many athletes hate the idea of being a role model, but Herron embraces it.

"We're forced to be in that situation whether we like it or not," he said. "The fact that we're at the level that kids dream of obtaining, we're all blessed enough to be there. We've got to use it."

But Herron also views himself as a regular guy.

"We're normal people," he said. "We've got feelings. We've got families. We do all the same things you guys do. We're people too. They just put our work on TV."

Herron again will be battling for a roster spot this season. He knows there are no guarantees.

"It's a fight every year," said Herron, who in two NFL seasons as a backup has 273 rushing yards, 29 receptions and five touchdowns. "Last year, people asked me the same thing: 'Are you going to be here this year?' "

For the sake of the community, here's hoping he sticks around.

http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070528/PKR07/705280465/1989
 

jay cee

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Something tells me this thread won't get any where near the posts as a Mike Vick bashfest.

I agree DE, hats off to Noah Herron
 

bobtheflob

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I liked the article. After seeing the title I was hoping it wasn't another Leonard Davis saves a horse one.
 

Angus

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Iraq visit changes a Titan
Harper's respect for military grows

By JIM WYATT
Staff Writer

Nick Harper laughs when asked about the difficulties of fitting in on a new team, in a new defense and having to learn a new playbook.

After traveling to Iraq last month to visit the U.S. troops, football never has seemed so easy.


"It made me realize we've got it made over here,'' said the former Indianapolis Colts cornerback, who signed with the Titans in March. "If coaches tell me to run a thousand 100-yard sprints, I could do that with no problem knowing what those people go through every day, putting their life on the line.

"After everything I saw, I have to say it changed my whole outlook on life.''

Harper spent 10 days in Iraq as part of the Gridiron Greats Tour, joined by Chris Harris and Israel Idonije of the Chicago Bears.

Harper spoke with soldiers wounded in battle and talked to others who'd lost their friends. He visited 10 bases, including two that had been bombed the day before he arrived.

He recalled one night when he began hearing nearby booms and ran to dive in a bunker. As it turned out, the bombs were going out, not coming in. A soldier explained that incoming bombs make a whistle noise.

"I was like, 'I don't want to hear either. I don't want to hear us shooting them or them shooting at us,' '' Harper said. "There were times when I really didn't know if I'd ever make it out of there. I'm not lying.''

Although Harper spent most of the tour in what had been described as a safe area, looking back, he feels he was in harm's way on several occasions. He tried to keep that a secret from his wife and two children back in the states so they wouldn't worry.

The deaths of 104 American troops made April the deadliest month so far this year for U.S. forces in Iraq, and it was the sixth most-lethal month for the Americans since the U.S.-led invasion four years ago.

Harper, 32, said he left with a great appreciation for all U.S. soldiers.

"I thanked them. I told them, 'You guys are better than me because I couldn't do this job.' I couldn't do that every day, walking down the street and not knowing if the car next to you is going to blow up, or if you are going to be killed some other way," Harper said. "Soldiers are sleeping with one eye open over there. And they have to deal with that every day.''

In harm's way

When Harper's agent, Ian Greengross, first pitched the idea of going to Iraq, Harper nearly hung up on him.

He said no, then changed his mind a week before the tour was to start because he wanted to find out what Iraq was like after following coverage of the war on television.

Organizers preferred players from the Super Bowl, and Harper played a key role when the Colts beat the Bears in February. The players were charged with taking soldiers' minds off the war, even if just for 20 or 30 minutes at a time.

"Whenever you are deployed you have an own personal understanding that your work and your efforts are important to the country and the people back home," said Army Lt. Col. Mark Ballesteros, a Department of Defense spokesman. "When people who have some stature, whether it's an athlete or some celebrity, take time out of their schedule to come visit you, it just kind of reinforces and shows you there is great support for the troops and your efforts.

"There are certain places in Iraq that are not very safe, so I think it makes it more significant that Mr. Harper and any colleagues he had with him were willing to take an element of risk to come visit the troops.''

The itinerary was kept secret. Not even Greengross knew exactly where Harper was going.

"You know they are well-protected; you know they are well armored; you know they are going to be treated like VIPs but … there is only so much they can do for them," Greengross said. "If a grenade is launched into the camp where they are staying, the grenade doesn't say, 'Well, Nick is a VIP, I am not going to spread shrapnel in his direction.' "

Heading home

Often dressed in desert tan and Army green camouflage gear, Harper flew from base to base in helicopters with gunmen on each side. He said he slept outside in the rain one night when "they were shooting mortars right next to the tent'' at 3 a.m.

"There's a lot of stuff I was told that I can't tell you,'' he said. "And I saw a lot of things not many people could see unless they are in the military.''

He visited Saddam Hussein's palace and was photographed sitting in the late Iraqi president's throne. He drove a tank and fired guns. He also made new friends, but said he has no plans to go back.

"Those (soldiers) over there, they love what they do, but it is hard, very hard," Harper said. "And I never heard one person over there complain about it. It takes special people. And I have a special appreciation for each and every one of them.''

http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070528/SPORTS01/705280352/1027
 

ethiostar

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agreed.... hats off to Harper and Herron.

Too bad, the focus on few 'bad apples' in the NFL gets way too much attention than those who are actually doing something positive or at least keeping thier nose clean.
 

5Stars

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ethiostar;1511247 said:
agreed.... hats off to Harper and Herron.

Too bad, the focus on few 'bad apples' in the NFL gets way too much attention than those who are actually doing something positive or at least keeping thier nose clean.


It's the "dirty laundry" factor. The media cannot sell the "good stuff" as well as the "dirty stuff"...
 

burmafrd

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i seem to remember a couple of stations trying to balance out bad news with good news somewhere. I wonder how they did.
 

Muhast

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Its nice to read about guys who "get it". Ya know?

In almost every negative thread there are countless posts saying " Does he not realize there are millions of guys who would switch places in a heartbeat" or "why waste the opportunity" etc.

Well here are two that do get it :)
 

ethiostar

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Muhast;1511449 said:
Its nice to read about guys who "get it". Ya know?

In almost every negative thread there are countless posts saying " Does he not realize there are millions of guys who would switch places in a heartbeat" or "why waste the opportunity" etc.

Well here are two that do get it :)

Its nice to hear about them, thats for sure. However, i believe the vast majority of NFL players do 'get it'. If i remember correctly (and sorry i don't have any links for it) about 50 NFL players are involved with legal issues any given year. And there are about 1800 players in the league. So, that's less than 2.8 % of nfl players that don't 'get it'. Could it be better? yes. Should it be better? absolutely. But, it is the 2.8% who get almost all the attention in the media, which reflects very negatively on the league as a whole and the sport in general.
 

Chuck 54

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I also like the story I heard last week about Ahman Green approaching his new teammate and asking how much to purchase the right to his #. The other player told him it was his if he paid the downpayment on a house for a single mother program.

I thought that was a cool one.
 

Royal Laegotti

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I applaud Heron for his work and Mike Vandermause for actually being a media person who writes something positive.
 
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