Welcome one and all to another edition of Tha Weatha Report.
There’s a lot going on in the world of sports lately, but only one topic can
bring me from the dark caves of silence to drop some knowledge on you. So,
relax your mind and let your conscience be free and roll with Tha WeathaMan as
we hit this journey.
2013
|
Aaron Hernandez, NFL
|
Murder
|
2013
|
A. Walcott, NFL
|
Murder
|
2013
|
O. Pistorius, Running
|
Murder
|
2012
|
Josh Brent, NFL
|
Mans.
|
2009
|
Donte' Stallworth, NFL
|
Mans.
|
2005
|
Dany Heatley, NHL
|
Homic.
|
2004
|
Tammy Crow, Swim
|
Mans.
|
2003
|
Dwayne Goodrich, NFL
|
Homic.
|
2001
|
Rae Carruth, NFL
|
Murder
|
2000
|
Ray Lewis, NFL
|
Murder
|
1998
|
Leonard Little, NFL
|
Mans.
|
1995
|
Brian Blades, NFL
|
Mans.
|
1992
|
Charles Smith, NBA
|
Homic.
|
1989
|
Bruce Kimball, Diving
|
Mans.
|
1988
|
Reggie Rogers, NFL
|
Homic.
|
1986
|
Derrick Fenner, CFB
|
Murder
|
1984
|
Craig MacTavish, NHL
|
Homic.
|
- -Credit to ESPN research for this list-
The above list is just the pro athletes that have been
arrested and/or convicted of murder, homicide, and/or manslaughter in my
lifetime. Granted, not all of these involve
weapons but there are enough that do to give pause. What’s the point? The point
is that this is a list that just keeps growing.
As I’m sure you’ve heard by now, the latest incident
involves the former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez. There’s no
need to retell the story (click here
if you need to catch up), but the same cycle that has caught up to previous
athletes seems to have engulfed Mr. Hernandez into its web. Kid is born, people
discover that said kid has athletic talent, kid becomes popular, popularity
attracts unsavory characters (commonly known as “thugs”), kid goes on to be
drafted by *insert team name here*, unsavory characters follow along said kid’s
path, kid ALLOWS (key word here) unsavory characters to hang around, unsavory
characters bring said kid down in a heap of fire and brimstone. We’ve seen it too
many times to be surprised at this point. The biggest issue is that these “kids”
keep making the same mistakes.
Adam “Pacman” Jones has made the move to speak at the NFL’s
annual Rookie Symposium about this very cycle. We’ve seen upstanding citizens
such as Ray Lewis caught in this cycle. Michael Vick was the last big name to be
involved in something similar. Now true, Lewis and Vick were able to rebound
from their incidents to resurrect their careers but something tells me that
Hernandez won’t be able to say the same. Hell, at this point he needs to be
more worried about his personal freedom versus catching passes from Tom Brady,
Peter Brady, or even Peter Pan.
The problem is that these athletes don’t realize that in
order to live a life like no one else, they have to live a life like no one
else. Meaning, not everyone around you is for you. Sometimes the folks that are
behind you are the individuals that have the knife that will be inserted into
your spine. As opposed to finding out the hard way, these athletes need to
realize that cutting off the folks that are hanging on by a thread is the only
way to live. A five year $40 million contract is enough motivation to “turn
your back on the hood”.
I understand the stigma of “forgetting where you came from”.
It is the most common thing that successful people hear. As soon as you become
something special and move up in the world, the crab in a bucket mentality
kicks in. People want to pull you back in because you’re leaving them behind,
and we all know that it isn’t fair that you get to make it big while Pookie,
Ray-Ray, and ‘dem stay in the old neighborhood wasting their lives away. Heaven
forbid that the athletes deserve to live a nice lifestyle because they showed
the dedication and determination necessary to do something with their lives.
There’s a lot of information still yet to come concerning the
Aaron Hernandez situation. He might even make it out of this mess with no jail
time and only a ton of press clippings to his name. But that really isn’t the
point now is it? The point is that he allowed himself to be put in this
situation to begin with. Somewhere along the line Hernandez allowed all of the
pre-draft concerns that teams had about him to become a reality and now he will
have to live with the consequences of his actions. There has been too many NFL
players (28 since Feb 3 of this year) and athletes in general that find
themselves on the wrong side of the law. Yeah, they may be targets because of
their wealth. But they also create that target by allowing the openings needed
to hit the target. You can either close the cycle, or find yourself scrolling
across the bottom of the ESPN screen like Aaron Hernandez, Michael Vick, and Plaxico
Burress. The choice is yours professional athletes…us “common folk” can only
hope that you make the right one.
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