PORT ARTHUR - Kevin Everett
walked toward the football field at Memorial High
School and paused for yet another photograph
Monday.
Sheri Richmond, a Port Arthur resident who attended
Lincoln High School with Everett's mother, Pat, held up
a cell phone and snapped a shot.
"I hadn't seen him since right after he finished high
school," said the 46-year-old Richmond, who introduced
herself as his mother's old classmate. "I wanted to
come here and see him for myself."
Moments later, Everett turned and had another photo
taken, this time with 10-year-old Trey Pitre of Port
Arthur.
"Kevin has been a role model for all these kids," said
Trey's mother, Ramona, a 48-year-old teacher at a Port
Arthur alternative school.
Everett, a former National Football League player whose
recovery from a spinal cord injury suffered last season
is considered miraculous by many, held his second
annual football camp for children between ages 4 and 18
years old Monday at Memorial.
Everett, 26, did not participate in any drills during
the three-hour camp but spent much of that time filling
a new role. His tasks included posing for photos,
signing autographs and shaking hands with many who
continue to draw inspiration from his courageous
recovery.
Now, during a time when he normally would be preparing
for another NFL season, Everett makes public
appearances on behalf of the Kevin Everett Foundation,
mostly giving speeches to help raise money for spinal
cord injury research.
Wednesday, he'll be in Los Angeles to be presented the
Jimmy V Award for Perseverance in a ceremony that will
be aired Sunday on ESPN.
The award is named for former college basketball coach
Jim Valvano, who died of cancer in 1993.
As for Monday, Everett deflected attention to children
in his hometown on a clear, sunny day in which the
temperature topped 95 degrees.
"It feels great that I can come back and show these
kids that just because you have tough times, don't let
it hold you down," said Everett, whose six-inch scar on
the back of his neck is evidence of his obstacle. "Be
true to yourself. That's what I'm trying to pass along
to these kids."
In doing so, Everett has learned to embrace the kind of
fame he never thought would come his way before he
suffered a spinal cord injury Sept. 9 while with the
Buffalo Bills.
'From the heart'
Seldom does Everett go anywhere without
being told he's an inspiration. He gives away more
handshakes and smiles than a grocery store sample tray.
He said the attention can be unsettling, but he's used
to it.
"I don't really need all the pats on the back," Everett
said. "I'm doing this from the heart. I love what I'm
doing here. I'm excited and happy that I am doing it."
Through the afternoon, Everett conducted about a
half-dozen interviews and posed for several photos.
After the camp, he spent almost an hour signing
autographs as many of the more than 300 campers ate
pizza and hot dogs and collected athletic footwear
given away by a shoe company.
"Kevin has always been a very quiet, shy,
behind-the-scenes guy, even when he was playing
football," said Everett's Houston-based agent, Eric
Armstead. "He's really, really quiet - laid back - but
you can't tell kids no. They may find inspiration in
him."
Anthony Thomas, a former Bills teammate to Everett,
also characterized Everett as "a quiet guy."
"You pretty much have got to poke him to say much to
you," said Thomas, who played two seasons with Thomas
in Buffalo. "If he don't know you, he's kind of quiet
and 'Aw, shucks.'"
Thomas, who will attend the award ceremony in Los
Angeles, said Everett "never wanted the attention in
this way, but he's glad he's getting it in this way."
Lessons learned
As for the campers, many were
thrilled to learn lessons from players with NFL
experience. Helping at the camp were Thomas, Port
Arthur natives James Johnson (Cincinnati Bengals) and
brothers Jordan (Seattle Seahawks) and Jonathan
Babineaux (Atlanta Falcons).
Other players with NFL ties at the camp were Cedric
Griffin (Minnesota Vikings) and Rex Hadnot (Cleveland
Browns).
Campers ranged in age from 4-year-old Marcus Hill of
Port Arthur to 16-year-old Dionte Forney of Nederland.
Beaumont resident Terran Vaughn, 14, said he learned a
new way to catch a football: "Instead of turning around
to catch the ball, I look over my shoulder."
West Brook student Michael Jolivet, 15, said he admired
Everett's enthusiasm.
"Just to see him and know what he overcame gives me
energy," Jolivet said.
In the end, Everett said the turnout - large enough for
organizers to run out of T-shirts before everyone got
one - made him feel good.
"I knew it would be a much larger turnout than it was
last year based on all the attention I've been
getting," Everett said. "Just coming home and seeing
all the kids, them wanting to meet me, I knew it would
be a much larger turnout, and it has been."
(beaumontenterprise.com)