Fiesta Bowl Star Ian Johnson Receiving Death Threats

Hostile

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Fiesta Bowl star Ian Johnson says he's hired wedding security because of racist threats

July 25, 2007

BOISE, Idaho (AP) -- The Boise State running back who scored the winning points in the Fiesta Bowl, then proposed to his cheerleader girlfriend on national television, says he has hired security for their wedding because of racial threats.
Ian Johnson, who is black, and Chrissy Popadics, who is white, are due to be married Saturday in Boise.

Since his Jan. 1 proposal, Johnson said, he has received phone calls, letters and some personal threats from people who object to their marriage plans.

"You take it for what it is -- the less educated, the less willing to change," Johnson, 21, of San Dimas, Calif., told the Idaho Statesman for its Tuesday editions. "But we're not acting like we're naive to all the stuff that's going on.
We know what's been said. We're going to make sure we're safe at all times.
It's an amazing day for us, and we'd hate to have it ruined by someone."

"It's really sad because a lot of people that are probably doing it are the same people who were cheering me on," Johnson said. A Boise State football spokesman, Todd Miles, said Tuesday that Johnson hoped to put the matter behind him and did not want to discuss it further. Popadics' family said she was not available. At the Fiesta Bowl, Johnson used a "Statue of Liberty" play to score the winning two-point conversion as underdog Boise State beat the Oklahoma Sooners 43-42 in overtime. The Broncos ended their season 13-0.
 

gazmc_06

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I find it kinda pathetic that this still goes on, it has nothing to do with these people, it isn't a big deal and it's their life...
 

trickblue

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Idiots...

My wife is Latina and although she is highly educated, speaks three languages, has traveled the world and has two degrees, she has been called a "Stupid Mexican" twice over the last month...

Some people will never learn... :rolleyes:
 

Danny White

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I thought this was going to be about him receiving death threats from irate Sooner fans who still aren't over the loss. :D

Not that I would know anything about that. ;)
 

joseephuss

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Danny White;1565085 said:
I thought this was going to be about him receiving death threats from irate Sooner fans who still aren't over the loss. :D

Not that I would know anything about that. ;)

No, that is the replay official from the Oregon loss still getting death threats from you sore Sooners. :lmao:
 

trickblue

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Danny White;1565085 said:
I thought this was going to be about him receiving death threats from irate Sooner fans who still aren't over the loss. :D

Not that I would know anything about that. ;)

btw... Oklahoma scored a boon with their next Adrian Peterson...

Link

Small-town RB is big-time talent
State's top recruit finds peace and perspective growing up in a little East Texas town
By TODD WILLS / The Dallas Morning News
twills@***BANNED-URL***

VAN, Texas –
Jermie Calhoun admits adjusting to small-town life was tough.

Then he started eating wild hog, fishing and riding horses. He began to enjoy the quiet of Van, population 2,362. Perspective changed for a young man who'd spent most of his childhood in Tyler, which compared to Van is like New York City.

"Now it's cool," Calhoun said. "I guess I am a country boy."That serenity helps Calhoun cope with the attention that comes with being a star running back from East Texas, which produced Earl Campbell and Adrian Peterson.

Video: Jermie Calhoun | In action (YouTube.com)

At 6-0, 210 pounds, with sprinter's speed and 4,234 yards in three seasons, Calhoun is ranked 10th on the rivals.com Rivals100 national recruiting list and is the top player in Texas. He committed to Oklahoma on March 10, spurning Florida, LSU, Alabama and Texas A&M, among others.

When he's alone in this quiet town known for its oil and for the Sky Ranch camp, Calhoun reflects.

"I think about what I want to do with my life," Calhoun said. "I have a chance to make it, to be the first one in my family to go to college.

"And I think about hard times with my family."

Early moves
Annett Calhoun was 12 when she gave birth to Jermie in Tyler. Jermie's father, Annett said, was about 20. Mother and son lived with Annett's mother, Ernestine Buchanan, while Annett attended one hour of school a day.

Annett was a standout in volleyball, basketball and track but was unable to play at Tyler John Tyler because she had a child.

When he was 5, Jermie and his mother moved to Killeen to live with Annett's sister, LaTaucha McKiver. They returned to Tyler when Jermie was 8.

Jermie thought Annett was his sister. During a family conversation around that time, he learned the truth.

"This is your mom," Buchanan told him, "not your sister."

Jermie's reaction?

"He freaked out," Annett said.

"It was funny, but it wasn't," Jermie says today about being raised by a teenage mother. "She was always there for me. She's a hard-working mom."

Jermie was entering the fifth grade when Annett married Stephen McClendon, who was living in Ben Wheeler, a community nine miles south of Van that was a roaring oil town until a fire destroyed most of it in the late 1920s.

Jermie and Annett moved to Ben Wheeler, which is part of the Van school district.

"It was hard at first," Jermie said. "Van is basically an all-white school. I didn't get along with the kids. But after elementary school I got comfortable with Van."

Van had better academic programs for Jermie, who has dyslexia. He became more focused in school, Annett said.

"Van turned out to be a blessing for us," she said.

Annett graduated from John Tyler after taking most of her classes at the East Texas Training Institute, a school for pregnant women. She and McClendon have separated. Jermie says McClendon is like a best friend to him.

Annett lives in Tyler, about 30 miles southeast of Van. Jermie divides his time between her home, McClendon's, and the family of his friend, Peyton Neal, in Van. His girlfriend lives in Tyler.

In Van, there is a church on every block and three-quarter-pound cheeseburgers at The Dinner Bell on Main Street. Jermie says living in Van keeps him from gangs and trouble in Tyler.

"Van is what he's grown up in," said Blake Pennington, Van's football coach. "He's a country boy. That's what he knows."

That, and how to run with the football.

Making an impact
In seventh grade, Neal learned the hard way that Calhoun was a force on the football field.

The 5-5, 100-pound Neal was looking for an opponent to block when he heard, "Move!"

"Jermie goes, 'Boom!' and runs over me," Neal said. "I didn't think I wanted to play ever again. I had this big, blue bruise on my chin. Then I look up, and Jermie's in the end zone. He had gone 80 yards."

At 140 pounds in those days, Calhoun was so intimidating most players moved out of the way and grabbed for his jersey.

"If he touched the ball," Pennington said, "he scored."

Calhoun cried after one of his first high school practices because he wasn't used to the contact. In a preseason scrimmage, he didn't know where to run. But on the eighth play, he scored a 70-yard touchdown.

"I was tuned in after that," he said.

As a freshman safety for a 1-9 Van team, Calhoun showed what Pennington considered leadership. With Wills Point driving, Calhoun screamed at his teammates.

"Get off the field if you don't want to be out here!" he yelled.

Pennington said, "My first thought was, 'Shut up!' I didn't think the older kids would listen. But that day he became a leader."

Calhoun shared the tailback position the next two seasons with Jarvis Crawford, who had a chance to play football at Rice but turned it down to pursue other academic options. Calhoun put up huge numbers when given the opportunity, which brought college recruiters in droves to Van, a Class 3A school.

When Crawford sat out a game with an injury, Calhoun had 359 yards on 38 carries against Gladewater as a sophomore. In 2006, he had 220 yards on 10 carries in a half against Crandall.

His own man
Adrian Peterson signed with Oklahoma in 2004 out of Palestine, a Class 3A school about 70 miles south of Van. The Minnesota Vikings chose him in the first round of the NFL draft in April.

Calhoun met Peterson on a recruiting visit to Oklahoma. Calhoun said he felt tiny next to Peterson.

"He's a beast," Calhoun said. "He makes me look bad. I saw muscles I never knew we had on our bodies."

Calhoun said he doesn't want OU fans to expect another Peterson. Calhoun said he's more of a finesse runner, while Peterson attacks.

"You can't compare someone to another man," he said.

Going into his junior season, Calhoun never thought he'd be the No. 1 running back in the state. When Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops visited Van High School, "It kind of hit me hard," Calhoun said.

The school for which Calhoun grew up wanting to play – Texas – didn't offer a scholarship because of academic concerns, Pennington said.

Calhoun has a 3.4 grade point average but did not meet the NCAA qualifying score on his first attempt at the ACT. He retook the test in June and is awaiting the result. He said he can handle college classes and vows to play four years in college even if the NFL becomes an option after his junior season.

Family on his mind
Annett works as a patient care associate at Mother Frances Hospital and has another job at Pine Crest Nursing Center, both in Tyler. Calhoun worries she works too much. He tries to be a big brother to his 15-year-old sister, Yolundria, who is pregnant.

"It's weird I'm about to be an uncle," he said.

He thinks about the father he met once. He said he believes his dad lives in Houston.

Annett predicts Jermie's father will see Calhoun on TV someday and want a relationship with him. Calhoun said that would be OK.

"I use that as motivation," Calhoun said. "I know he isn't around. I wish he would come around. It would make my day."

For now, the small-town life of Van makes his days.

He works at Sky Ranch as a waiter during summer camp.

He attends Friday morning breakfasts with his teammates at churches around Van.

During the season, he takes bus trips after Friday pep rallies to the elementary school, where each player is assigned to a classroom to mentor students.

Yes, being a country boy is a good thing.

"It's a good town," Calhoun said. "They show me a lot of respect. They show all the football players a lot of respect.

"We are all real close."

JERMIE CALHOUN
Age: 18
High school, class: Van, Sr.
Hometown: Ben Wheeler, Texas
College commitment: Oklahoma. Oral commitments are nonbinding. The first day a recruit can sign a national letter of intent is Feb. 6, 2008.
Scouting report: Like Adrian Peterson, a 2004 Oklahoma signee from East Texas, Calhoun has good moves. "One cut, and they are both gone," Rivals.com recruiting expert Jeremy Crabtree said. Calhoun also has good hands.

HIGH SCHOOL CAREER

4,234 Rushing yards
43 Rushing TDs

JUNIOR SEASON
1,601 Rushing yards
20 Rushing TDs
 

BrAinPaiNt

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Some people need enemas...administered through the nose.
 

Danny White

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Thanks for the info Trick... sounds like a great find. FWIW, we should have a solid group of potential replacements for AD this year as well. OU's RB situation looks stacked!
 

trickblue

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Danny White;1565380 said:
Thanks for the info Trick... sounds like a great find. FWIW, we should have a solid group of potential replacements for AD this year as well. OU's RB situation looks stacked!

He's supposed to really be something...

He's the #1 blue chipper in the state and tenth in the nation...

Van isn't too far away from me. I may try to get down and see him play this year...
 

SA_Gunslinger

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which reminds me....i saw someone driving down the road in their truck with a huge confederate flag flying overhead the other day.

how pathetic.


i'll never understand how you can hate someone based on race.

they are obviously a strong, loving couple, and why that makes someone angry makes no sense to me.

that was one of the greatest moments i've ever seen in sports when he scored and then proposed. i was like.....you win @ life!!!! :laugh2:

i hope they get to enjoy their special day.
 
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