ASHBURN, Va. — There
are tangible reminders of Sean Taylor at Redskins
Park.
The wooden plaque near new head coach Jim Zorn's
office, for example. Or the Pro Bowl safety's locker
room stall, still arranged precisely as it was the day
he died.
And then there are the reminders no one can touch or
see, the vivid memories of Taylor that allowed him to
make his way into his former teammates' thoughts
Sunday, when the Washington Redskins opened their first
training camp without him.
"You know how it is when you lose somebody - it's just
personal experiences," said safety Reed Doughty, who
moved into Taylor's spot in the starting lineup last
season. "It might be a drill that we're doing that Sean
used to do so perfectly and I can't quite get right. Or
. . . he might get that extra rep in when everybody's
tired."
Taylor, 24, died of massive blood loss after he was
shot at his Miami-area home during a botched robbery in
November. The Redskins lost the first game they played
after Taylor's death, then immediately went on a
four-game winning streak to reach the playoffs - and
his was a constant presence along the way.
It still is.
"You can't put it behind you," said cornerback Fred
Smoot, who left Sunday's second practice with a
sprained ankle.
"We put it in front of us, actually. I mean, here's how
we look at it: If you want a role model out there, a
player that was relentless, never stopped, a true
athlete, the best I ever played with at that position -
he's a good guy to set that example for us. So we're
going to try to live up to Sean Taylor. That's what we
tried to do at the end of the year, and that's what
we're going to try to do this whole year."
Taylor's uniform number, 21, was on patches stitched
onto the Redskins' jerseys and on stickers affixed to
their helmets last season. Zorn said the NFL won't
allow Washington to continue those tributes, but the
team is working on other ways of honouring Taylor.
And there already is the two-foot-long wooden carving
that hangs on the wall across from Zorn's office door,
with "21" carved at each end to flank the word
"Redskins."
Zorn, who replaced the retired Joe Gibbs, didn't coach
Taylor, but he understands the lasting legacy.
"I would never say, 'Let's move on from this,"' Zorn
said. "It's really a devastating occurrence. Lives
never are the same when a death happens or a tragedy
like that happens. Sean has been a tremendous force
here in D.C. and with the Redskins. We'll just remember
him continually as we go on."
His locker at the team's training facility is intact,
its contents undisturbed.
"It's hard to come here," said agent Drew Rosenhaus,
who represented Taylor and works with more than a
half-dozen current Redskins, "and not think about
Sean."
The locker Taylor used at the Redskins' home stadium in
Landover, Md., is sealed with Plexiglas, containing his
No. 21 jersey stretched over shoulder pads along with a
burgundy helmet, black shoes and white socks.
Cornerback Shawn Springs dresses at an adjoining locker
in the stadium, so he grew accustomed by the end of
last season to seeing that memorial. He wasn't as
prepared for what he saw Saturday, when players
reported for training camp and were shown a
league-prepared film offering advice about personal
safety.
At one point, the screen was filled with the words, "In
Memory of Sean Taylor."
"That kind of hit home a little bit," Springs said.
"But for the most part, it's a new season. That's
behind us. Sean's still going to be with us in our
hearts, but you've got to let it go."
Clearly, not all of the Redskins - or their fans -
share that sentiment.
When players left the field after the morning practice,
one fan handed a framed drawing of Taylor to Clinton
Portis, who was also a teammate of Taylor's at the
University of Miami.
Taylor jerseys dotted the announced crowd of more than
6,000 people who stood in 32-degree Celsius heat to
watch practice - a white shirt with No. 21, not far
from a burgundy one, not far from a blue Pro Bowl
edition.
"You always feel you're a piece of the puzzle away. If
you could go back and fit Sean into this scheme, that's
a piece of the puzzle," Portis said a few hours later,
after Sunday's afternoon session. "To me, it would feel
like, 'We're there. We're the Super Bowl champs. Crown
us.' But not having that, as a team, we've just got to
come together and guys have got to work. You're never
going to replace him."
A few moments later, Portis headed to the locker room
to change out of his sweat-soaked uniform. When he
emerged, Portis was wearing a green-orange-and-white
Miami windbreaker, with Taylor's 21 on the chest.
"Sean - he's always here with us," Portis said. "He's
always in the back of our mind."
(ap.com)