Nov/19/08 11:58 PM Filed in:
Clinton
Portis
Under his game jersey,
Redskins running back Clinton Portis, 27, always
wears a T-shirt honoring his late teammate, safety
Sean Taylor. Powered by his friend's memory,
Portis is on pace for one of his best seasons
ever—and resolute that fear won't control
his life when he steps off the field.
Right now, who is better to target than an athlete?
Bankers are losing jobs. Real estate gurus are losing
jobs. Wall Street is losing jobs. Lots of people
getting humble, but an athlete's money is constant.
I know a lot of players who think, Oh, man they ain't
gonna get me. I watch where I'm going. No one's
sneaking up on me. I say to them, Anybody can be
touched. If somebody wants to get to you, there ain't
no limits. Sean was home with his family, and they got
to him.
But even with what happened, I can't walk around in
fear. Out of fear your reaction is going to be totally
different. If I don't know you and you walk up on me
too fast, do I shoot first and ask questions later?
Because I'm living in fear? You could be running to
tell me my car lights are on. It's tricky, though. When
you put on that uniform, you have to be
fearless—and it's hard to turn off. A banker in
Sean's position would've probably just called the
police that night. But as an athlete, Sean's reaction
was embedded in him.
I don't think the NFL is ever going to be the same.
It's less fun now. Everything's a worry, on and off the
field. People feel like you are obligated to them. I
was at a charity event the other night and I had a man
come up to me and grab me, hard, as if we were close
friends. It was one of those hard grabs, around the
neck, the way people who don't know you shouldn't touch
you. So I turned around looking at him like, uh, do I
know you? And his response was "I pay your salary, I'm
a season ticket holder." Now, what do season tickets
cost? Twenty thousand dollars? Pay my salary? Man, I
don't make $20,000.
I worked hard for what I got. This life wasn't given to
me. It wasn't eenie, meanie, miney, mo: I win. I've
been fighting for what I got my whole life and it was
hard work. I've seen everything. I've lost family
members. I've held an AK-47, I've held assault rifles.
I've seen crack sitting beside me. I've seen cocaine
sitting beside me. But I stayed clean and found a way
to steer myself away from all that. People are upset
with me because I'm successful? You should try being
successful too.
But remembering Sean gives me a power, a will to fight
through. Earlier this season against the Steelers,
we're down 23-6, and the game's kinda over with, and
I'm just in there for blitz pickup to knock heads with
a linebacker. But I'm still fighting, looking for
someone to punish. It's that kinda toughness. That's
what I get from thinking of Sean.
(espn.com)